Doutrina Do Novo Testamento Volume 1
Doutrina Do Novo Testamento Volume 1
Doutrina Do Novo Testamento Volume 1
McConkie
Doctrinal New
Testament
Commentary, vol. 1
by Bruce R. McConkie
Contents
Preface
What Is Scripture?
Prophets Record Certain Scripture
How to Interpret the Scriptures
Modern Need to Search the Scriptures
Which Bible Version Shall We Use?
Why the King James Version
Value of the Inspired Version
What Is the New Testament?
What Are the Gospels?
Nature of Gospel Harmonies
This Doctrinal New Testament Commentary
Luke Prefaceth His Gospel
John Announces Christ's Pre-Existence
John the Baptist Bears Witness of Christ
Saints Given Power to Become Sons of God
"The Word Was Made Flesh"
What Is the Fulness of the Father?
Who Has Seen God?
Aaronic Priesthood Had Among the Jews
Gabriel Reveals Birth and Mission of John
Annunciation Made to Mary and Then to Joseph
Elizabeth and Her Unborn Child Salute Mary
How Men Eat the Flesh and Drink the Blood of Jesus
Strong Doctrine Rids Jesus of Weak Disciples
Jesus Discourses Upon Cleanliness
Jesus Heals a Gentile's Daughter
Miraculous Healings Multiplied
Jesus Feedeth the Four Thousand
Jesus Teaches: Beware the Leaven of Evil Men
Jesus Restores Sight by Stages
Church Founded on Rock of Revelation
Jesus Foretells His Death and Resurrection
Jesus Teaches Worth of Human Soul
Jesus Will Mete Out Rewards at His Second Coming
What Happened on the Mount of Transfiguration?
Who Is the Elias of the Restoration?
Some Healings Require Fasting and Prayer
Jesus Again Foretells His Death and Resurrection
Jesus Miraculously Provides Tribute Money
Salvation Gained by Becoming as Little Children
Only Righteous Men Cast Out Devils
Why Sinners Must Be Excommunicated
Brethren Commanded to Forgive One Another
Keys of the Kingdom Conferred Upon the Brethren
All Things Are Possible by Faith and Unity
Parable of the Unmerciful Servant
Jesus Sendeth the Seventy Forth
Reject Jesus: Reap Damnation
Jesus' Kinsmen Believe Not
Jesus Came to Save, Not to Destroy
Jesus Teacheth His Father's Doctrine
Jesus Rejected Because of False Traditions
Jesus Again Proclaims His Divine Sonship
Jesus Offereth Living Water to All Men
"Never Man Spake Like This"
"Thou Shalt Not Commit Adultery"
"I Am the Light of the World"
Jesus Again Proclaims His Messiahship
"The Truth Shall Make You Free"
Who Are the Children of Abraham?
Preface
"Understandest thou what thou readest?"
So asked Philip of one who was diligently searching the scriptures.
"How can I," came the answer, "except some man should guide me."
Jesus said: "Search the scriptures," and gave the promise, "Whoso treasureth up my word, shall not
be deceived."
Today the Lord's command is: "Teach one another the doctrine of the kingdom."
This Doctrinal New Testament Commentary is designed to enable gospel students to learn and live
the doctrines of the New Testament; to grasp the greatness and glory of our Lord's mortal ministry;
to comprehend the doctrines of the Master Teacher and of those commissioned by him to reveal pure
religion to the world.
Salvation centers in Christ. He is the Creator and Redeemer; the Way and the Truth; the Light of the
World; the One Man who could say: "Follow thou me."
Most of our knowledge of his earth-bound ministry is contained in the four Gospels. It is devoutly
hope that this Commentary will help make the Gospels a living reality in the lives of gospel scholars,
that it will help them understand what they read. Jesus himself is real; the Gospels are his life story;
of him they teach and testify; and a knowledge of them is essential to salvation.
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What Is Scripture?
Anything spoken by the Father, Son, or Holy Ghost, by the angels of heaven, or by mortal man when
moved upon by the Holy Ghost, is scripture. Such spoken words are the will, mind, word, and voice
of the Lord. (D. & C. 68:1-5.)
Since it is a comparatively rare thing for mortal man to hear the personal voice of Deity, or to
converse with angels, it follows that most scriptural utterances are given to man by revelation from
the Holy Ghost. These statements, made by the power of the Holy Spirit, consist of the identical
words which the Lord himself would speak under the same circumstances. They are indeed the
Lord's words because he authorizes and directs the Holy Ghost to influence and guide men in giving
utterance to them.
It is by the power and guidance of the Holy Ghostthat Spirit Personage who, as a member of the
Godhead, has power to speak with unerring certainty to the spirit within manthat the saints "have
the mind of Christ." (1 Cor. 2:16.) That is, when moved upon by the Holy Ghost, the saints are
enabled to think what our Lord thinks, to give voice to the very words he does or would speak, and to
act as he would act in the same situation. What is true of the mortal saints is also true of the heavenly
saints, for "Angels speak by the power of the Holy Ghost; wherefore, they speak the words of
Christ." (2 Ne. 32:3.)
All scripture is true. It is composed wholly and solely of pure, unvarnished, irrefutable, and eternal
truth. "Thy word," O God, "is truth." (John 17:17.) "By the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know
the truth of all things." (Moro. 10:5.)
All scripture comes by revelation. Whenever any revealed truth is expressed in words, those words
are scripture. "The Holy Ghost is a revelator," Joseph Smith said. "No man can receive the Holy
Ghost without receiving revelations." (Teachings, p. 328.) And when those revelations are either
spoken or written, they are scripture.
Most scripture has been, is now, and will continue to be oral and unrecorded. Throughout the length
and breadth of his earthly kingdom, the Lord's agents are frequently moved upon to speak, testify,
prophesy, exhort, expound, preach, and teach by the power of the Holy Ghost. Such inspired
utterances benefit and bless those who speak them and the spiritually endowed among the hearers.
(Mormon Doctrine, p. 614.)
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prophecy"; but just as scientific and medical writings can be better understood by those trained in
science and medicine, so those schooled in interpreting prophecies are in a better position to
determine their full meanings. "I know that the Jews do understand the things of the prophets," Nephi
said, "and there is none other people that understand the things which were spoken unto the Jews like
unto them, save it be that they are taught after the manner of the things of the Jews." (2 Ne. 25:1-8.)
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"English versions that have come forth since the King James Version, and particularly the Revised
Standard Version, have been translated by individuals and groups who have questioned the divinity
of Christ and his mission. As a consequence, many of these versions throw doubt on his Divine
Sonship and question basic doctrines of the gospel. It is no wonder that the King James Version has
been and remains the official version of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This
official usage most assuredly will not be changed until such time as the Lord directs that the needed
corrections in the Inspired Version be completed." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 385-386.)
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is given unto many to know the mysteries of God; nevertheless they are laid under a strict command
that they shall not impart only according to the portion of his word which he doth grant unto the
children of men, according to the heed and diligence which they give unto him.' (Alma 12:9.)
"Such Biblical revisions as have been made may be used with safety, and parts of these are now
published by the Church in its standard works. The first 151 verses of the Old Testament, down to
Genesis 6:13, are published as the Book of Moses in the Pearl of Great Price. But as restored by the
Prophet the true rendition contains about 400 verses and a wealth of new doctrinal knowledge and
historical data. The revised 24th chapter of Matthew is also found in the Pearl of Great Price.
"Most of the Prophet's corrections were made in Genesis, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and the first six
chapters of John. Some important doctrinal changes were made in Exodus and other Old Testament
books. Very little was done in Acts, but a reasonable number of corrections were made in the various
Epistles and in Revelation. In all cases where major changes were made, the student with spiritual
insight can see the hand of the Lord manifest; the marvelous flood of light and knowledge revealed
through the Inspired Version of the Bible is one of the great evidences of the divine mission of
Joseph Smith.
"The fact that some changes were made in a particular passage or chapter does not mean that all
needed corrections were given even in that portion of the Bible. Important changes were made in
several thousand verses, but there are yet thousands of passages to be revised, clarified, and
perfected. After his work of revision, the Prophet frequently quoted parts of the King James Version,
announced that they contained errors, and gave clarified translationsnone of which he had
incorporated into his prior revisions of the Bible." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 351-352.)
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to have had only the lesser or Mosaic covenant. If we were using this manner of naming these
scriptural compilations today, we would probably call them the Old Covenant and the New Covenant.
In the New Testament there are 27 books by eight authors. Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John were
written by the ancient saints whose names they bear. Acts is the work of Luke. Romans, the two
Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, the two Thessalonians, the two Timothys,
Titus, Philemon, and Hebrews came from the inspired pen of Paul. James is the author of his own
epistle, the two Peters were written by Peter, the three Johns by John, Jude by himself, and
Revelation by John. The specious theorizing of the higher critics that these inspired documents were
composed by other and various unknown authors is as false as the rest of their vagaries.
It is common to classify Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Acts as historical books, though they all
abound in doctrinal matter. The writings of Paul, James, Peter, and Jude, and the three letters of
John, 21 books in all, are classified as epistles. The book of Revelation is reserved in an apocalyptic
category of its own. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 483-484.)
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teachings, and mission are the center and core of the whole gospel plan, and because they deal with
the gospel or glad tidings which he preached, they are known as the gospels, or the gospels according
to Matthew, Mark, and the others.
"Many volumes have been written by the scholars of the world analyzing, comparing, dissecting, and
criticizing the gospels. As is always the case when 'the things of God' are subjected to evaluation by
'the spirit of man' (1 Cor. 2:11-16), the conclusions reached are, in the main, false, speculative, and
destructive of faith.
"It is true that the four New Testament gospels do present different aspects of our Lord's personality
and teachings. It appears that Matthew was directing his gospel to the Jews. He presents Christ as the
promised Messiah and Christianity as the fulfilment of Judaism. Mark apparently wrote with the aim
of appealing to the Roman or Gentile mind. Luke's gospel presents the Master to the Greeks, to those
of culture and refinement. And the gospel of John is the account for the saints; it is pre-eminently the
gospel for the Church, for those who understand the scriptures and their symbolisms and who are
concerned with spiritual and eternal things. Obviously such varying approaches have the great
advantage of presenting the truths of salvation to people of different cultures, backgrounds, and
experiences But the simple fact is that all of the gospel authors wrote by inspiration, and all had the
same purposes: 1. To testify of the divine Sonship of our Lord; and 2. To teach the truths of the plan
of salvation." (Mormon Doctrine, p. 307.)
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insignificance when the true use and purpose of the gospel testimonies is remembered. It is not
overly important whether Luke wrote his record in 61 or 80 A. D. or whether our Lord announced a
particular eternal truth during his Judean or Perean ministry. It may be of some academic interest to
know that he discussed the matter of being born again with a man whose name was Nicodemus, who
had a high standing in the community, but the matter of real import is the truth that men cannot be
saved unless they are born again. (John 3.) The gospels are of surpassing worth because of the
witness which they bear of Christ and of the doctrines of salvation that are taught in them. The
details of time and circumstance under which the truths were taught are relatively unimportant.
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conversations with the Jews and a record of what he saw when our Lord was baptizedall of which
matters would have been unknown to John the Apostle whose ministry began somewhat later than
that of the Baptist's. There is little doubt but that the Beloved Disciple had before him the Baptist's
account when he wrote his gospel. The latter John either copied or paraphrased what the earlier
prophet of the same name had written. The only other possibility is that the Lord revealed to the
gospel author the words that had been recorded by the earlier messenger who prepared the way
before him.
John 1:1-2. The Word] Christ is the Word or Messenger of Salvation. Thus, John's meaning is: 'In
pre-existence was Christ, and Christ was with the Father, and he, the Son, had himself also attained
godhood.' I. V. John 1:1-2; D. & C. 93:7-8. Further, the gospel itself is the word, and it is because the
gospel or word of salvation is in Christ that he, on the principle of personification (Mormon
Doctrine, p. 516), becomes the Word.
3. All things] Under the Father, Christ is the Creator of all things: the heavens and the earth, all that
in them are, and also worlds without number. (D. & C. 38:1-3; Moses 1:33.)
4-5. Life was the light of men] Life abounds, all things exist, and the very planets roll on their
course because of the light of Christ, "The light which is in all things, which giveth life to all things,
which is the law by which all things are governed." It is the same light which enlightens men and
quickens their understandings. (D. & C. 88:7-13; Mormon Doctrine, pp. 407-409.)
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given to every man, that he may know good from evil." (Moro. 7:12-19.)
D. & C. 93:10. Men were made by him] It was the Father, not the Son, who created man both in the
spirit and in the flesh. The Lord Jesus was one of the created persons, both in the spirit in preexistence and in the flesh in mortality. This statement of John the Baptist speaks of our Lord as the
Creator of man on the basis of divine investiture of authority. On this principle our Lord sometimes
speaks in the first person as though he were the Father because the Father has put his name upon the
Son; and similarly, scriptures speak of the works of the Father as being those of the Son, because the
Son represents the Father and the two exalted Personages are so perfectly and completely united as
one in all things. (Mormon Doctrine, p. 122.)
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D. & C. 93:13. Continued from grace to grace] From intelligence to intelligence; from achievement
to achievement; from obedience to obedience; from glory to glorysuch is the process whereby our
Lord worked out his exaltation. Similarly, as the prophet taught: "You have got to learn how to be
gods yourselves, and to be kings and priests to God, the same as all gods have done before you,
namely, by going from one small degree to another, and from a small capacity to a great one; from
grace to grace, from exaltation to exaltation, until you attain to the resurrection of the dead and are
able to dwell in everlasting burnings, and to sit in glory, as do those who sit enthroned in everlasting
power." (Teachings, pp. 346-347.)
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Joseph
Gabriel came to Mary before her conception, and to Joseph after it became apparent that his
espoused wife was with child, to announce that she should be "the mother of the Son of God, after
the manner of the flesh." (1 Ne. 11:18.) In both visits the unborn child was heralded as the promised
Messiah, the heir to the throne of David, the Lord God Omnipotent who should come down and
through the normal birth process make flesh his tabernacle. (Mosiah 3:5-8.)
Virgin birth] Mary was a virgin "A virgin, most beautiful and fair above all other virgins" (1 Ne.
11:15)until after the birth of our Lord. Then, for the first time, she was known by Joseph, her
husband; and other children, both sons and daughters, were then born to her. (Matt. 13:55-56; Mark
6:3; Gal. 1:19.) She conceived and brought forth her Firstborn Son while yet a virgin because the
Father of that child was an immortal personage.
Jesus is the Son of God, not of the Holy Ghost] Just as Jesus is literally the Son of Mary, so he is
the personal and literal off-spring of God the Eternal Father, who himself is an exalted personage
having a tangible body of flesh and bones. (D. & C. 130:22.) Apostate religionistsunable to
distinguish between the Father, Son, and Holy Ghostfalsely suppose that the Holy Ghost was the
Father of our Lord. Matthew's statement, "she was found with child of the Holy Ghost," properly
translated should say, 'she was found with child by the power of the Holy Ghost.' (Matt. 1:18.)
Luke's account (Luke 1:35) accurately records what took place. Alma perfectly describes our Lord's
conception and birth by prophesying: Christ "shall be born of Mary, ... she being a virgin, a precious
and chosen vessel, who shall be overshadowed and conceive by the power of the Holy Ghost, and
bring forth a son, yea, even the Son of God." (Alma 7:10.) Nephi spoke similarly when he said that at
the time of her conception, Mary "was carried away in the Spirit," with the result that the child born
of her was "the Lamb of God, yea, even the Son of the Eternal Father." (1 Ne. 11:19-21.) As Gabriel
told Luke, he was the "Son of the Highest" (Luke 1:32), and "the Highest" is the first member of the
godhead, not the third.
Matt. 1:18. Mary was espoused to Joseph] According to Jewish law, marriage took place in two
steps, first came the espousal or betrothal, later the formal marriage ceremony. Both formalities
preceded assumption of the full privileges and responsibilities of the marital state. In a sense,
espoused persons were viewed as already married, so that the angel in counseling Joseph to fulfill his
marriage plans properly referred to Mary as his "wife." Espoused persons were considered bound to
each other so that their betrothal could only be broken by a formal action akin to divorce. This is
what Joseph had contemplated prior to receiving direction from the angelic visitant.
22-23. Matthew takes frequent occasion to quote Old Testament Messianic prophecies and to show
their fulfillment in the birth, life, and ministry of Jesus.
Luke 1:31. Thou shalt conceive in thy womb] Our Lord was destined to have all of the essential
experiences of mortality, including conception and birth in the natural and literal sense. Jesus] Greek
form of the Hebrew Yeshua, Jeshua, Joshua, or Jehoshua, meaning Jehovah is salvation or
deliverance.
32. The throne of his father David] Our Lord was heir to David's throne in both the temporal and
eternal sense of the word. Mary his literal mother and Joseph his foster father were descendants of
David. Indeed, their lineage was in the royal house itself. "Had Judah been a free and independent
nation, ruled by her rightful sovereign, Joseph the carpenter would have been her crowned king; and
his lawful successor to the throne would have been Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the
Jews." (Talmage, pp. 87, 90.) Thus Jesus was an heir to the throne of the temporal kingdom. But in a
far greater sense, he is the Eternal King of Israelthe King whom they once served in all their
ancient trials and tribulations, the King whom they shall serve again when the scattered remnants of
Israel are gathered into one great millennial kingdom, with our Lord, the King, reigning personally
upon the earth. (Ezek. 37:21-28; Tenth Article of Faith.)
38. Be it unto me according to thy word] This affirmation of submission, conformity, and
obediencies, even of anxious willingness to do the will of Deityranks in sublimity and majesty
with the declaration of the pre-existent Christ, who responding to the Father's search for a Redeemer,
volunteered: "Father, thy will be done, and the glory be thine forever." (Moses 4:2.)
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42. Blessed art thou among women] This is a Hebraic way of saying, 'Thou art the most blessed of
all women,' a statement which is literally true. As there is only one Christ, so there is only one Mary.
And as the Father chose the most noble and righteous of all his spirit sons to come into mortality as
his Only Begotten in the flesh, so we may confidently conclude that he selected the most worthy and
spiritually talented of all his spirit daughters to be the mortal mother of his Eternal Son. Such an
understanding, however, in no way condones or mitigates the unscriptural practice whereunder Mary
and graven images of her are worshiped and prayers are offered to her in the false hope that she will
intercede with her Son on behalf of those who so pray.
43. The mother of my Lord] To Elizabeth the Holy Ghost revealed that Mary was to be the mother
of the Son of God.
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69. An horn of salvation] In Jewish idiom, Messiah's power and strength is signified by comparing
it to a horn. (1 Sam. 2:10; 2 Sam. 22:3; Ps. 18:2; 132:17.) This is a natural figure of speech for a
pastoral people to use, a people who saw the strength of the bull or wild ox manifest by use of his
horns.
72. His holy covenant] 73. The oath] With an oath the Lord Jehovah promised Abraham that all
nations would be blessed through the holy covenant (meaning the fulness of the everlasting gospel),
in that all who accepted the gospel would be adopted as the seed of Abraham and become inheritors
of "the blessings of the Gospel, which are the blessings of salvation, even of life eternal." (Abra.
2:10-11; Gen. 22:15-18.)
77. Remission of their sins] As the clarification added in the Inspired Version shows, remission of
sins is gained only by baptism.
78. The dayspring] Christ is the dayspring from on high, a figure of speech which has lost most of
its force through translation, but which according to the original Greek word had two possible
meanings: (1) That he was the Branch (Jer. 23:5-6; 33:15; Zech. 6:12); or (2) That he was the Sun or
Star of Israel. Perhaps the meaning is similar to his own expression that he is the bright and morning
star. (Rev. 22:16.)
79. Our Lord's mission included bringing the gospel, which is "the way of peace," to those in
apostate darkness.
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me and thee, and thy seed after thee, in their generations; that thou mayest know for ever that
children are not accountable before me until they are eight years old. . .. Every man child among you
shall be circumcised. And ye shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin; and it shall be a token of the
covenant betwixt me and you. And he that is eight days old shall be circumcised among you, every
man child in your generations." (I. V. Gen. 17:11-17; Mormon Doctrine, pp. 134-136.)
80. As is the case with his kinsman Jesus, the scriptures are virtually silent on the life and labors of
John prior to his formal ministry, which commenced, according to Levitical law, when he was thirty
years of age. (Num. 4:3, 47.) We do know that "he was baptized while he was yet in his
childhood" (D. & C. 84:28), meaning when he was eight years of age; that his parents were faithful
and righteous people; that he "was a priest after his father, and held the keys of the Aaronic
Priesthood, and was called of God to preach the Gospel of the kingdom of God" (Teachings, pp. 272273); that he "waxed strong in spirit," that is, became a tower of spiritual strength; and that he was
guided during his whole life by the Holy Ghost. It naturally follows that he was trained in obedience
to the law of Moses, officiated in the Levitical ordinances and performances, was married (an almost
mandatory social requirement among the Jews), and probably had children.
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Christmas is the traditional rather than the actual birthday of our Lord. As to the actual day and year,
scholars generally are in such complete disagreement that reference to their various views does little
more than multiply confusion and uncertainty. Authorities can be cited who contend his birth was
during every year from B. C. 1 to B. C. 7. Perhaps most of them lean to the conjecture that it was in
late 5 B. C. or early 4 B. C.
From the first sentence of the revelation given to Joseph Smith on the day the Church was organized
in this dispensation, it appears that the latter-day kingdom formally came into being on the eighteen
hundred and thirtieth anniversary of our Lord's birth. In other words, Christ was born April 6, B. C.
1. (D. & C. 20:1.) As pointed out by Elder James E. Talmage, the Book of Mormon accounts that the
Messiah would come "six hundred years from the time that Lehi left Jerusalem" (3 Ne. 1:1; 1 Ne.
10:4), seem to corroborate this B. C. 1 birthdate. (Talmage, pp. 102-104, 109.)
I. V. 7. There was none to give room for them in the inns] Inns were square buildings, open
inside, in which travelers commonly put up for the night; back parts of these erections were used as
stables. Mary's condition probably required slow travel so that the inns were all filled upon their
arrival in Bethlehem, necessitating their use of the stable part of one of them for shelter. It was the
traveling hosts of Judah generally, not just an innkeeper or an isolated few persons, who withheld
shelter from Joseph and Mary. Though her state was apparent, the other travelerslacking in
courtesy, compassion, and refinementwould not give way so she could be cared for more
conveniently and commodiously. This rude rejection was but prelude to the coming day when these
same people and their children after them would reject to their eternal sorrow the Lord who that
night began mortality under the most lowly circumstances.
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and as son of Heli by Luke; but Jacob and Heli were brothers, and it appears that one of the two was
the father of Joseph and the other the father of Mary and therefore father-in-law to Joseph. That
Mary was of Davidic descent is plainly set forth in many scriptures; for since Jesus was to be born of
Mary, yet was not begotten by Joseph, who was the reputed, and, according to the law of the Jews,
the legal, father, the blood of David's posterity was given to the body of Jesus through Mary
alone." (Talmage, pp. 83-87, 89-90.)
Matt. 1:1. Book of the generation] That is, table of the genealogy; it has reference not to the whole
gospel account of Matthew, but to the first seventeen verses in which the royal line age of Jesus is
shown. Compare Gen. 5:1.
The son of David, the son of Abraham] Writing particularly for Jewish converts, Matthew traces
our Lord's lineage from Abraham and David, both of whom received promises that the Messiah
would be among their seed. (Gen. 12:3; Ps. 132; Isa. 11; Jer. 23:5; Gal. 3:16; D. & C. 113:1.) Luke,
on the other hand, writing for Gentile readers, traces the descent from Adam, the first man.
Luke 3:38. Adam, which was the son of God] This statement, found also in Moses 6:22, has a deep
and profound significance and also means what it says. Father Adam came, as indicated, to this
sphere, gaining an immortal body, because death had not yet entered the world. (2 Ne. 2:22.) Jesus,
on the other hand, was the Only Begotten in the flesh, meaning into a world of mortality where death
already reigned.
I. V. Luke 3:45. The first man upon the earth] There were no so-called pre-Adamites. When Deity
"formed man from the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life," that noble
personage, thereafter to be named Adam, "became a living soul, the first flesh upon the earth, the
first man also." (Moses 3:7; 1:34; 6:45; Abra. 1:3; D. & C. 84:16; 1 Ne. 5:11; 1 Cor. 15:45.) Adam
was the first man from the standpoint of ancestry, lineage, pre-eminence, power, and position; he
was the first flesh meaning the first mortal flesh. All things were first created in immortality, in a
state devoid of death; then after Adam fell, the effects of his transgression passed upon the earth and
all life thereon. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 249-250, 262.)
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eyes open, see within the veil, and having their ears unstopped, hear the angelic hosts praise God and
proclaim tidings of joy and peace on earth for men of good will everywhere.
Nephite kinsmen of the Jewish shepherds, though removed by half a world from the angelic choirs,
were also blessed with miraculous assurances that the God of Israel was now the Son of David.
During the preceding day, the voice of Jehovah had said to Nephi, grandson of Helaman: "Lift up
your head and be of good cheer; for behold, the time is at hand, and on this night shall the sign be
given, and on the morrow come I into the world, to show unto the world that I will fulfil all that
which I have caused to be spoken by the mouth of my holy prophets. Behold, I come unto my own,
to fulfil all things which I have made known unto the children of men from the foundation of the
world, and to do the will, both of the Father and of the Sonof the Father because of me, and of the
Son because of my flesh." Then it was that there was a day and a night and a day on the Western
Hemisphere in all of which there was no darkness; and then it was that all the people beheld the rise
of the promised new star. (3 Ne. 1:4-21; Hela. 14:2-5.) Thus the very heavens and all the hosts of
them bore record that God himself had come down among men.
Luke 2:8. Shepherds] These particular shepherds were righteous and devout men who by lives of
holiness and purity had prepared themselves to behold the angelic presence and hear the heavenly
choirs.
10. All people] Not just to the Jews, not just to the house of Israel, not merely to a favored fewthe
glad tidings of salvation were to go to all the ends of the earth; every ear should hear, every eye see,
and every heart be penetrated.
11. The city of David] Bethlehem, where David was born. A Saviour] The one who would work out
the infinite and eternal atonement bringing immortality as a free gift to all (thus saving them from the
temporal effects of the fall of Adam) and bringing eternal life to those who would hearken to his
teachings (thus saving them from the spiritual fall).
12. Swaddling clothes] Bands of cloth commonly wrapped around newborn infants. I. V. 12. And
this is the way you shall find the babe] The swaddling clothes and the manger were not a "sign"
which would identify Jesus; the angel was merely describing where he was and how he was dressed.
Luke 1:14. And on earth peace, good will toward men] Marginal readings give what is probably a
more accurate translation of the "Gloria in excelsis" song: "On earth peace among men of good will,"
or, "On earth peace among men in whom he is well pleased."
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Jesus
According to the terms of the eternal plan of salvation, men in mortality walk by faith and not by
sight. Hence Deity, in his infinite wisdom, deigns to offer salvation to them by the mouths of
witnesses whom he raises uprighteous men who can testify of what they have heard and seen and
know. These shepherds, devout and believing souls, were the first mortals to go forth bearing witness
that the promised Messiah, the Lord Omnipotent "whose goings forth have been from of old, from
everlasting" (Mic. 5:2), had been born of woman.
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sons and plundering slaves, detesting all and detested by all, longing for death as a release from his
tortures yet dreading it as the beginning of worse terrors, stung by remorse yet still unslaked with
murder, a horror to all around him yet in his guilty conscience a worse terror to himself, devoured by
the premature corruption of an anticipated grave, eaten of worms as though visibly smitten by the
finger of God's wrath after seventy years of successful villainy, the wretched old man, whom men
had called the Great, lay in savage frenzy awaiting his last hour. As he knew that none would shed
one tear for him, he determined that they should shed many for themselves, and issued an order that,
under pain of death, the principal families of the kingdom and the chiefs of the tribes should come to
Jericho. They came, and then, shutting them in the hippodrome, he secretly commanded his sister
Salome that at the moment of his death they should all be massacred. And so, choking as it were with
blood, devising massacres in its very delirium, the soul of Herod passed forth into the
night.'" (Talmage, pp. 97-98, 106-108.)
Evil and wicked though his reign was, we need not suppose that Herod was in a class by himself. In
ordering the slaughter of a host of innocent children, he was but following the iniquitous path of all
autocratic rulers, rulers whose thrones rest on the bones and are bathed in the blood of the slain.
Ghengis Kahn, Caesar, Nero, Gadianton, Hitler, Stalin, Kruschev, and thousands of others, are guilty
of similarly gross crimes and mass murders.
16. Two years old and under] When did the wise men come to Jerusalem and Bethlehem, and how
old was the child Jesus when they bowed before him? Though this date cannot be known with
certainty, there is strong reason to suppose that more than seven weeks and quite possibly several
months or even nearly three years elapsed between this visit and the nativity. It could not have taken
place during Mary's forty days of purification, because immediately following them the holy family
went to Nazareth to live (Luke 2:21-24, 39) Whereas following the visit of these eastern prophets,
Joseph, Mary, and Jesus, fled into Egypt for a season.
It is worthy of note that the wise men found Jesus in a house, not a stable, inn, or temporary abiding
place; that he is called a "young child," not a baby, a total of seven times in the course of fourteen
consecutive verses; that Matthew makes two pointed references to the diligent nature of Herod's
inquiry as to the actual time of the birth; and that a child is two years of age until the time of his third
birthday. Now assuming that Herod would order the massacre of all young children in the general
age bracket involved, still the presumption arises that a number of months or even one or two years
may have elapsed before the arrival of the eastern visitors.
17. Jeremy] Jeremiah.
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Where Jesus lived] Although the chronological order of the travels and sojournings of our Lord's
early years is not entirely clear, the following seems reasonably certain:
(1) At the time of their espousement and marriage, Joseph and Mary lived in Nazareth in the eastern
part of the province of Galilee. (Luke 1:26-35; 1 Ne. 11:13.)
(2) Guided by divine providence, they traveled to Bethlehem, the city of David, where Jesus was
born in a stable. (Luke 2:1-7.)
(3) On the eighth day, while the couple was still in Bethlehem, Jesus was circumcised. (Luke 2:21.)
(4) Following the days of Mary's purification, a forty-day period (Lev. 12), the holy family traveled
to Jerusalem where Jesus was presented in the temple, with Simeon and Anna then bearing record of
his divine Sonship. (Luke 2:22-38.)
(5) Thus, having "performed all things according to the law of the Lord," they then went immediately
to Nazareth. (Luke 2:39.) Obviously the wise men had not yet come to worship their King, because
following their visit comes the flight to Egypt. That they could not have gone to Egypt and returned
to Bethlehem within the forty-day period is clear (a) because they were in Egypt at the time of
Herod's death which did not occur until about two years after the nativity, and (b) because they
returned from Egypt to Nazareth, not Bethlehem.
(6) Next, for some unknown and unrecorded reason, Joseph and Mary and the child returned to
Bethlehem, obtained a house there, and were part of the community life when the wise men came.
(Matt. 2:1-12.)
(7) Warned of God, the holy family now fled to Egypt for a sojourn of unknown length, possibly one
of only a few weeks or months. (Matt. 2:13-15.)
(8) After Herod's death they returned with obvious purpose of settling again in Bethlehem, where
they must have had an adequate place to live. But fearing Archelaus, son of Herod, they foresook the
Judean province for the greater security of the Galilean. Hence their return to and abode in Nazareth.
(Matt. 2:19-23.)
(9) From then until his formal ministry began, a period of perhaps twenty-seven or twenty-eight
years, our Lord continued to live in Nazareth. (Luke 2:51-52; I. V. Matt. 3:22-26.)
Matt. 2:20-21. Land of Israel] Joseph was not told in the first instance to go to Nazareth; it took a
second angelic visitation to specify the chosen part of the land of Israel. He was required to walk by
faith; revelation came to him, as it does to all the faithful, line upon line as necessity requires.
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person who ever lived. That he was obedient and sinless is evident; yet, with it all, he was subject to
the restrictions and testings of mortality, was in all points tempted as other men are (Heb. 2:10-18;
5:8-9), and having "continued from grace to grace," he finally (after the resurrection) "received a
fulness of the glory of the Father," and perfected his own salvation. (D. & C. 93:6-16.)
Luke 2:40. A summary of his life from the age of forty days to that of twelve years. 51-52. Covers
the period from twelve to thirty years of age. I. V. Matt. 3:24-26. From the return out of Egypt to the
beginning of his ministry, a period of perhaps twenty-seven or twenty-eight years.
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God, and you can get it, and I am coming after you; and if you don't receive it, you will be damned';
and the scriptures represent that all Jerusalem went out unto John's baptism. There was a legal
administrator, and those that were baptized were subjects for a king; and also the laws and oracles of
God were there; therefore the kingdom of God was there; for no man could have better authority to
administer than John; and our Savior submitted to that authority himself, by being baptized by John;
therefore the kingdom of God was set up on the earth, even in the days of John." (Teachings, pp. 272273.)
4. John wore the dress and ate the food of the poor and the lowly, a course which in effect rebuked
the rich and haughty of Judea for centering their hearts on costly robes and elaborate feasts.
Mark 1:1. The beginning of the gospel] Mark is about to tell the story of Jesus, to proclaim the good
news about him through whom salvation comes, to record salient facts about the life, ministry, death,
resurrection, and glorification of him who had life in himself. The "beginning" of that gospel is that
men must repent, be baptized, and receive the Holy Ghost. (D. & C. 39:6.) This "beginning" merely
puts them on the path leading to eternal life; to gain salvation they must thereafter "press forward
with a steadfastness in Christ, having a perfect brightness of hope, and a love of God and of all
men, . . . feasting upon the word of Christ, and endure to the end." (2 Ne. 31:20.)
2. My messenger] In two dispensations, before both the first and second comings of our Lord, John
has come as a messenger before the Lord's face. Malachi's promise that the Lord would send a
messenger to prepare the way of his coming, though properly here quoted by Mark, also refers to the
Lord's coming in glory, to the day few can "abide," the day he shall sit in "judgment," "the great and
dreadful day of the Lord." (Mal. 3; 4.) In the full and complete sense, however, the latter-day
messenger is the Prophet Joseph Smith; and the everlasting gospel, restored through his
instrumentality, is the revealed message. (D. & C. 45:9.) John came to Joseph Smith and Oliver
Cowdrey on May 15th, 1829, as a messenger, to commence the actual restoration of the latter-day
kingdom, he being the first to bring actual priesthood and keys back to earth again. (D. & C. 13.)
4. The baptism of repentance for the remission of sins] There is no other true baptism. This holy rite
is a cleansing ordinance; it is the sole ordained way for accountable people to free themselves from
sin. No unclean thing can enter the celestial kingdom, and without repentance and baptism no
accountable person is free of sin. (3 Ne. 27:19-21.) Such was the eternal law, and the Jews knew it.
John's procedure was not new to them. Baptism had been performed by them and their forebearers
for four thousand years. It was a well known ordinance which of itself caused no stir among them.
To be binding on earth and in heaven baptism must be preceded by repentance. Little children cannot
repent, need no baptism, are alive in Christ, and shall be saved by virtue of his atoning sacrifice.
"Repentance and baptism" are for "those who are accountable and capable of committing sin; . . .
they must repent and be baptized, and humble themselves as their little children, and they shall all be
saved with their little children. And their little children need no repentance, neither baptism. Behold,
baptism is unto repentance to the fulfilling the commandments unto the remission of sins." (Moro.
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8:5-26.)
Luke 3:2. The word of God came unto John] He held the priesthood, received revelations, enjoyed
the companionship of the Holy Ghost, angels ministered to him, and he was expressly commanded to
stand forth as the Lord's forerunner. (D. & C. 84:26-28.) "John, it that time, was the only legal
administrator in the affairs of the kingdom there was then on the earth. And holding the keys of
power, the Jews had to obey his instructions or be damned, by their own law." (Teachings, p. 276.)
4. Prepare ye the way of the Lord] Isaiah (Isa. 40:3-5), Lehi (1 Ne. 10:7-10), and Nephi (1 Ne.
11:27), all prophesied "concerning a prophet who should come before the Messiah, to prepare the
way of the Lord." As Nephi recorded: "Yea, even he should go forth and cry in the wilderness:
Prepare ye the way of the Lord, and make his paths straight." (I Ne. 10:7-8.) This Book of Mormon
account pertains only to John's ministry in the meridian of time. Isaiah, however, in his prophecy, is
speaking only incidentally of the preparatory work of John and more particularly and extensively of
the Second Coming when every valley shall be exalted and the Lord shall be revealed to reign
personally on earth.
Matthew and Mark record John's true claim that he came to fulfil Isaiah's promise that one should
come in that day to prepare the Lord's path. Luke does the same, but then continues the quotation,
leaving the false inference that John claimed he was then fulfilling the glorious predictions relative to
the Second Coming. But in Luke's account, as found in the Inspired Version, the Prophet inserted
more than five verses which show clearly that John was claiming to be the promised forerunner of
time's meridian, and that the Isaiah quotation about the mountains being brought low and all flesh
seeing the salvation of God, had reference not to the first but to the Second Coming of the Lord.
I. V. Luke 3:4. Esaias] Isaiah.
5-10a. These newly revealed words of John present an inspiring summary of the mission and
ministry of the Master.
5. Salvation unto the heathen nations] 6. Gospel unto the Gentiles] 7. Light unto all, ... unto the
uttermost parts of the earth] John knew, and all Israel should have known, that the mission of the
great Messiah would not be limited to one chosen nation and people. Salvation is offered to all men
everywhere on the same terms and conditions.
8. Keys of the kingdom shall be delivered up again unto the Father] The keys of the kingdom are
the rights and powers of presidency; they consist of the authorization and obligation to preside over
the Church (which is the kingdom of God on earth) and to regulate all of its affairs. In due course
these keys were given to Peter, James, and John, and then to all the Twelve of that day. They were
restored to Joseph Smith and his associates in this day and are now held by the living oracles of this
dispensation. When the great gathering at Adam-ondi-Ahman takes place those who have held keys
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on earth will make accounting of their stewardships, Christ will take back the keys, and then the
millennial era shall be ushered in, an era in which the rightful King of the kingdom shall reign
personally upon the earth. Finally, there shall be a day when the salvation of man shall be completed,
a day in which the keys shall be returned to the Father. Or, as Paul expresses it, "Then cometh the
end, when he [Christ] shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when he shall
have put down all rule and all authority and power." (1 Cor. 15:24; Mormon Doctrine, pp. 377-379.)
9-10. Reference is here made to the Second Coming, a day of "judgment, ... a day of power."
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and majesty the Father then and there decreed: "Hear ye him."
I. V. Luke 3:28. Luke alone preserves the vital truth that the heavens were opened, the manifestation
of the Holy Ghost seen, and the voice of the Father heard because of Jesus' prayer.
Personages in the Godhead] Our Lord's baptism is one of the classical illustrations of the separate
and distinct individualities who comprise the eternal Godhead. Jesus is present in mortality; the
personage of the Holy Ghost is seen descending from heaven to be with him; and the voice of the
Father is heard introducing his Son to the world.
Jesus dwelt in mortality as a man. He was subject to all of the passions, desires, appetites, and
temptations that go with this mortal probation. To work out his own salvation, he had to overcome
the flesh, bridle his passions, control his desires and appetites, and resist the tempting wiles of
Lucifer. Thus he was called upon to "suffer temptations, and pain of body, hunger, thirst, and
fatigue." (Mosiah 3:7; 15:5.) Though he dwelt in the flesh as the Son of God, "yet learned he
obedience by the things which he suffered." (Heb. 5:8.)
True, he remained obedient and faithful in all things, and never at any time did sin gain power over
him. Though he "was in all points tempted like as we are, yet [he remained] without sin." (Heb.
4:15.) But in accordance with the eternal laws of free agency he could have succumbed to
temptation; he could have lost his own soul and failed in his divinely appointed mission. That he
remained true to his trust, that he was faithful and obedient to the whole law, made him the great
Exemplar, the light of the world, who could say to all men, "Follow thou me." (2 Ne. 31:10.)
As with all men, Jesus was tempted from time to time. (Luke 4:13; Heb. 2:18.) The particular
temptations occurring after he had fasted and prayed for forty days presumably were some of the
most severe. From the abbreviated scriptural accounts available to us it is useless to speculate as to
how rapidly Jesus gained knowledge of his divine Sonship and as to the full nature of the temptations
he suffered. That they were real, and that overcoming them constituted a major spiritual triumph is
evident. Such record as we have probably was preserved because Jesus told his early disciples of his
experiences in the wilderness. In analyzing what took place it is particularly important to note the
changes made by the Prophet in the Inspired Version.
I. V. Matt. 4:1-2; I. V. Luke 4:2. Jesus did not go into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil;
righteous men do not seek out temptation. He went "to be with God." Probably he was visited by the
Father; without question he received transcendent spiritual manifestations. The temptations came
after he "had communed with God," "after forty days." The same was true in the case of Moses. He
communed with God, saw the visions of eternity, and was then left unto himself to be tempted of the
devil. After resisting temptation he again communed with Deity, gaining further light and revelation.
(Moses 1.)
I. V. Matt. 4:5-9; I. V. Luke 4:5-6, 9. Lucifer did not transport Jesus to the pinnacle of the temple or
into a high mountain. Such is not his power or prerogative. In each instance Jesus was taken to these
locales by the Spirit, and then the devil came to tempt him. Nor did Lucifer show him all the
kingdoms of the world; such was done by the Spirit; it was after he had seen the vision that the devil
made his false offer.
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26; 28. From the ancient prophecies available to them (but not to us) the Jews knew that Christ,
Elias, and the Prophet of whom Moses spoke, would all perform baptisms of both water and the
Spirit. John showed that he was not fulfilling such prophecies because his baptisms were of water
only.
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(1) That the meek and lowly Nazarene was a man of action; a dynamic forceful character; a man of
courage and physical strength; one whose soul filled with righteous indignation upon seeing the
desecration of sacred things; one who responded zealously and vigorously in the cause of
righteousness, though all men opposed him;
(2) That God was his Father; and
(3) That the temple was still his Father's house, though virtually all who worshiped there were
walking in dark and direful apostasy.
13. The Jews' passover] See Matt. 26:17-20.
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from truth to truth. He progressed from intelligence to intelligence until finally after the triumph of a
glorious resurrection he gained all power, all knowledge, and all truth. It is only in this exalted and
resurrected state that he came to a knowledge of all things in the ultimate and unlimited sense. (D. &
C. 93:6-28.) However, in the course of his mortal probation, he knew all things in the sense that,
having the constant companionship of that Spirit (the Holy Ghost) who does know all things, Jesus
could and did receive revelation of all that was needed for his ministry from time to time. He knew
all things in the sense that a knowledge of all things was constantly available to him.
In this same sense faithful saints are entitled to receive revelation from the Spirit, or in other words
to "have the mind of Christ." (1 Cor. 2:16.) Those who gain their exaltation will, like Christ, be
glorified in truth and light and know all things in the ultimate and absolute sense, meaning there will
be no truth they do not know, no knowledge they have not mastered. (D. & C. 93:27-28.)
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and all Israel bore the same record in the day that poisonous "fiery serpents" came among them.
(Num. 21:4-9.) Nephi, son of Helaman, used this same episode in Israel's ancient history to bear
witness of the Son of Man who came down from heaven. Did not Moses "bear record that the Son of
God should come," he asked. "And as he lifted up the brazen serpent in the wilderness, even so shall
he be lifted up who should come. And as many as should look upon that serpent should live, even so
as many as should look upon the Son of God with faith, having a contrite spirit, might live, even unto
that life which is eternal." (Hela. 8:13-15.)
15. Perish] Lose salvation. Eternal life] See John 17:3. An inheritance in the highest heaven of the
celestial world.
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Matt. 14:3-5. Was it not ever thus? Prophets are always persecuted for telling the truth, for "the
guilty taketh the truth to be hard, for it cutteth them to the very center." (1 Ne. 16:2.)
I. V. Mark 6:21. Even the wicked and ungodly fear and respect holy men who serve God and keep
his commandments.
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10. Gift of God] Christ is the gift of God; because he was given by the Father, immortality and
eternal life and all things incident to them become available. (John 3:16.)
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example of perfect obedience and devotion after which all other men might pattern their lives.
However, healing miracles whereby diseases are cured and physical and mental health is conferred
by divine power were and are a vital and important part of the authoritative presentation of the
gospel.
As performed by Jesus, healings followed this pattern: (1) They came because of the faith of the
people among whom he ministered; (2) To the Jewish mind they were and should have been
convincing evidence of the divine mission of the Lord of heaven who walked among them; (3) As
acts of mercy and compassion, they were of inestimable benefit and blessing to the suffering and
diseased of the day; and (4) Their occurrences came in accordance with the Messianic utterances of
inspired men of former ages. To King Benjamin, for instance, a holy angel in telling of Jesus' mortal
ministry had said, he "shall go forth amongst men, working mighty miracles, such as healing the
sick, raising the dead, causing the lame to walk, the blind to receive their sight, and the deaf to hear,
and curing all manner of diseases." (Mosiah 3:5.)
Healings are of two kinds: (1) Those which confer physical and mental health to suffering mortals;
and (2) Spiritual healings which cure those who are suffering from spiritual maladies and which
awaken to spiritual life those who are dead to righteousness. Healing of the sick by the Master's
touch is but symbolical of the greater and more important rejuvenation that must take place for all
accountable persons if they are to be healed spiritually and thus become heirs of salvation. With
reference to these spiritual healings, he who rose "from the dead, with healing in his wings" (2 Ne.
25:13), and with whose "stripes we are healed" (Isa. 53:5), issues this proclamation: "Return unto
me, and repent of your sins, and be converted, that I may heal you." (3 Ne. 9:13.)
John 4:46b-54. Though he was in Cana, Jesus gave the command and the nobleman's son, some
twenty miles away in Capernaum, was healed. By the power of faith the sick are healed regardless of
their geographical location. God is God of the universe; his power is everywhere manifest.
54. Second miracle] Not the second miracle performed by Jesus, but the second performed in Cana.
He had worked miracles in Jerusalem at the passover (John 2:23-25); indeed, it was the reports of
what had taken place at the passover which caused the nobleman to plead for help.
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Nazareth. Why can't we see a sign, some great exhibition of your purported power? Don't you know
that charity begins at home, that unless the physician heals himself of his own diseases we cannot
believe he has power to heal others?'
24. What prophet or great man ever found full acceptance in the eyes of petty neighbors, in the eyes
of people whose penchant is always to magnify the supposed failings and foibles of their fellow
mortals?
25. Elias] Elijah. 27. Eliseus] Elisha. How aptly Jesus chose his illustrations! Both of these ancient
prophets, dishonored by their own, conferred great blessings upon foreigners. So it was with the
Nazarenes; others, not they, had seen his great works.
30. Evidently our Lord's enemies were restrained in some unusual way from carrying out their
murderous intentions.
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Mark 1:20. Hired servants] Zebedee was not poor. That he and his sons engaged in manual labor was
in keeping with the custom of the day. Even the sons of the wealthy were expected to learn trades.
Luke 5:1. Lake of Gennesaret] Sea of Galilee.
5. Toiled all the night] The usual time for fishing. (John 21:3.)
8. Peter's purpose was not to separate himself and his fortunes from those of his Lord. Rather, he was
overwhelmed with the renewed realization that he was in Messiah's personal presence. It was as
though he had said: 'I am unworthy of this honor; a sinner such as I is not fit company for "the King,
the Lord of hosts" (Isa. 6:5); depart from me that another more deserving may see thy countenance
and behold thy person.'
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Mark 1:23. He cried out] When a devil manages to enter the body of a mortal person, such person
loses his free agency, and his acts then become and are those of the devil by whom he is possessed.
Thus when the devil speaks it is by the mouth of the person whose tabernacle he has stolen.
24-25. Though Jesus was known to the devils because of his dealings with them in the pre-existent
sphere, he consistently refused to permit them to bear record of his divinity. Converting testimony
comes from God, not from Lucifer. Had Jesus let unclean spirits go unrebuked, or had he acquiesced
in their testimony of him (though in fact it was true), the Jews would have claimed greater
justification for their false charge against him, "He hath a devil, and is mad; why hear ye him?" (John
10:20.)
26. He came out of him] The evil spirit who had possessed the man stepped, literally, out of his
body. Similarly, in April 1830, when Joseph Smith cast a devil out of Newell Knight, Brother Knight
"saw the evil spirit leave him and vanish from his sight." (Joseph Fielding Smith, Essentials in
Church History, pp. 95-96.)
27. What new doctrine is this?] Actually there was nothing new in any of the healing miracles of
Jesus. Prophets before and since have cured diseases, cast out devils, and raised the dead. But as with
modern healing miracles, they were new to the apostate people among whom they were performed.
Unbelief always causes miracles to cease among a people. (Moro. 7:27-38.)
Luke 4:34. Art thou come to destroy us?] Not annihilation, for there is no such thing. The destruction
of the souls of men or of devils, by definition, consists in such souls being cast down to hell to suffer
spiritual ruin and death. (Mormon Doctrine, p. 175.)
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Matt. 4:23. All Galilee] It would take several months for Jesus to travel, preach, and heal in the cities
of Galilee.
I. V. Matt. 4:22. Which believed on his name] Healings were not showered upon people
promiscuously; they were reserved solely and exclusively for those who had faith in Christ.
Matt. 4:25. Though miracles were performed for believers only, yet the fact of their performance
attracted great multitudes to hear the Master's teachings. It was to such assembled hosts, for instance,
that the Sermon on the Mount was delivered. And who knows what other great truths saluted the ears
of the scores of thousands who came to see manifestations of his healing power? The synoptists
condense whole months of preaching and teaching with the simple statement that he proclaimed "the
gospel of the kingdom."
I. V. Mark 1:27; Luke 4:38. They besought him for her] Since administrations and healings follow
the exercise of faith, and since the condition of the sick person sometimes precludes a personal
request for the blessings of the priesthood, it is proper for friends and loved ones to make such
requests and use their faith for the ailing person.
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feels that he is being eaten as by a fiend, who consumes him slowly in a long remorseless meal that
will not end until he be destroyed. He is shut out from his fellows. As they approach he must cry,
'Unclean! unclean!' that all humanity may be warned from his precincts. He must abandon wife and
child. He must go to live with other lepers, in disheartening view of miseries similar to his own. He
must dwell in dismantled houses or in the tombs." (Deems, Light of the Nations, p. 185, cited,
Talmage, p. 199.)
If thou wilt] Possibly this is the first instance of healing by Jesus during his ministry of so lasting
and dread a disease as leprosy, and yet the afflicted believer came to him with abundant faith. The
question was not, 'Can you heal me? but, Will you?'
I. V. Matt. 8:2. Worshipping him] The leper knew Jesus was the Messiah, and the worship here
involved included the payment of divine honors to a Deity. Faith in Christ and proper worship of him
are conditions precedent to the exercise of that faith which begets healing power.
Matt. 8:4. By sending the cleansed leper to the priests so that the detailed cleansing rituals of the
Levitical law might be obeyed (Lev. 13; 14), Jesus recognized and made honorable that law he
himself had given through Moses. Two reasons are apparent why this manifestation of healing
should have been kept secret: (1) To enable the healed leper to obey the Levitical requirements for
ceremonial cleanlinessa thing which might have been difficult had the priests been aware that
Jesus had performed the miracle involved; and (2) To avoid feeding the flames of persecution that
already were igniting on every hand against the Master and his cause.
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sick rise up and walk?' there could be only one answer! They are as one; he that can do the one, can
do the other.
Matt. 9:2. Palsy] A form of paralysis.
Thy sins be forgiven thee] Forgiveness of sins comes only by compliance with that law of
forgiveness which the Lord has ordained. That the paralytic here healed had complied with that law
is evident; otherwise the Lord Jesus, whose law it is, would not have pronounced the heartening
benedicition. "Thy sins be forgiven thee." Our Lord's ministry was in conformity, not in opposition,
to his own laws.
For nonmembers of the Church, forgiveness is gained through repentance and baptism for the
remission of sins under the hands of a legal administrator. Sins committed after baptism are forgiven
through repentance and renewing the covenant made in the waters of baptism. Godly sorrow,
abandonment of sin, confession, restitution, and renewed obedience are part of the process of
cleansing oneself from sin. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 271-274.)
The overwhelming probability is that the paralytic here restored to health and vigor was a member of
the Church who had already been baptized for the remission of sins. It is not logical to suppose that a
man who believed in Jesus as the Christ, who had grown in faith to the point that he had power to
rise from his bed of palsy at the Master's word, who had lived in Capernaum where for months Jesus
and his disciples had been baptizing converts, it is not reasonable to believe that such a person would
have remained outside the sheepfold of the Good Shepherd.
If the man cured of palsy was a member of the Church, then the forgiving of his sins would have
been comparable to the gracious cleansing extended to Joseph Smith and many of the early elders in
this dispensation, a cleansing and forgiveness bestowed upon them by the Lord after their baptisms.
(D. & C. 29:3; 36:1; 50:36; 60:7; 62:3; 64:3; 108:1; 110:5.) If, however, the subject of Jesus' healing
power was not a baptized convert, then the forgiveness of sins here given must be understood to be
predicated upon the subsequent keeping of the commandments of Jesus, including the direct and
express command to repent and join the Church through the waters of baptism. Such would be the
only way whereby the penitent nonmember of the kingdom could retain a remission of his sins.
Where members of the Church are concerned, there is a very close connection between
manifestations of healing grace and the forgiveness of sins. When the elders administer to faithful
saints, the promise is: "And the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up;
and if he have committed sins, they shall be forgiven him." (Jas. 5:15.) The very fact that a member
of the kingdom has matured in the gospel to the point that he has power through faith in Christ to be
healed, means that he also has so lived that he is entitled to have his sins remitted. Since all men
repeatedly sin they must all gain successive remissions of their sins, otherwise none would
eventually stand pure and spotless before the Lord and thus be worthy of a celestial inheritance.
I. V. Matt. 9:2. Sin no more] "Go your ways and sin no more; but unto that soul who sinneth shall the
former sins return, saith the Lord your God." (D. & C. 82:7; Ezek. 18; 33:7-20.)
Matt. 9:3. This man blasphemeth] See John 10:33.
4. Knowing their thoughts] Jesus frequently exercised the prophetic gift of reading the thoughts of
others. Except by revelation from the Spirit, the thoughts of men cannot be known to other men. (D.
& C. 6:16; Jac. 2:5; Alma 10:17.)
Mark 2:1-12. Presumably the man sick with palsy was healed in Peter's home in Capernaum. Mark,
writing primarily what he learned from Peter, includes a few detailed touches not preserved by
Matthew or Luke.
2. He preached the word unto them] Jesus always, continuously, repeatedly, everlastingly, preached
the word of salvationnot just ethical principles, but the plan of salvation: faith, repentance,
baptism, the gift of the Holy Ghost, and enduring in righteousness to the end.
Luke 5:17. By this time in his ministry, Jesus was so prominent and his work was so well heralded
through all the provinces of the Holy Land that doctors of the law and learned men from all regions
assembled to hear him.
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Both Jesus and Joseph Smith were restoring the gospel in their respective days. All organizations
except the restored kingdom were false. And reformation is not restoration. Who ever heard of
adding live branches to a dead tree?
18. We keep the whole law] It was with the Pharisees as it is with Christendom today; they thought
their religion was true; they were amply supplied with ritualistic performances; they had a form of
godliness, but denied the power thereof; outwardly they kept the law, but inwardly they were without
the Spirit; pure religion and undefiled was not theirs.
19. I am he who gave the law] Again Jesus says plainly that he is the Messiah, the God of Israel, the
Jehovah of the ancient prophets. (3 Ne. 15.)
Matt. 9:16-17. What, new baptism in an old church, new revelation in a dying kingdom, new
doctrine in an apostate organization! Could Jesus add Christian ordinances, with their spirit and
power, to the dead formalism and ritual of the Mosaic procedures? Could new wine be put in old
bottles (animal skins used as containers) without breaking the bottles and losing both the old and the
new?
Luke 5:39. Probably Jesus made some statement to John's disciples and clinched it in their minds by
using this one sentence parable. The sense and meaning is: 'In following John, who was sent of my
Father to prepare the way before me, you have conformed to the law of Moses. Now, however, a
greater than Moses is here, even the Messiah, and as John taught, you must now follow him, even
though it is difficult for you to "straightway" turn from your old teachings and accept the new.'
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any notion that an angel came down and troubled the waters, so that the first person thereafter
entering them would be healed, was pure superstition. Healing miracles are not wrought in any such
manner. If we had the account as John originally wrote it, it would probably contain an explanation
that the part supposedly played by an angel was merely a superstitious legend comparable to some
that have since been devised by some churches of Christendom.
8-16. Few things illustrate more pointedly the direful apostasy of the Jewish nation than their
perverted concepts about Sabbath observance. What had once been a holy and sacred law, which
stood as a sign identifying the Lord's own peculiar people, had been turned into a hollow mockery of
the original divine intent.
"The Scribes had elaborated from the command of Moses, a vast array of prohibitions and
injunctions, covering the whole of social, individual, and public life, and carried it to the extreme of
ridiculous caricature. Lengthened rules were prescribed as to the kinds of knots which might legally
be tied on the Sabbath. The camel-driver's knot and the sailor's were unlawful, and it was equally
illegal to tie or to loose them. A knot which could be untied with one hand might be undone. A shoe
or sandal, a woman's cup, a wine or oil-skin, or a flesh-pot might be tied. A pitcher at a spring might
be tied to the body-sash, but not with a cord. . .
"To kindle or extinguish a fire on the Sabbath was a great desecration of the day, nor was even
sickness allowed to violate Rabbinical rules. It was forbidden to give an emetic on the Sabbathto
set a broken bone, or put back a dislocated joint, though some Rabbis, more liberal, held that
whatever endangered life made the Sabbath law void, 'for the commands were given to Israel only
that they might live by them.' One who was buried under ruins on the Sabbath, might be dug for and
taken out, if alive, but, if dead, he was to be left where he was, till the Sabbath was over." (Geike,
Life and Words of Christ, chap. 38, cited, Talmage, pp. 215-216.)
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they specify that all men must believe on his Son and obey the fulness of the gospel of the Son.
Acting through the Son, the Father is the creator, preserver, and upholder of all things.
Son] Christ is the Son, the Firstborn in pre-existence, the Only Begotten in the flesh. As the Jehovah
of old, he was more faithful, obedient, and diligent than any of the spirit hosts of heaven, and while
yet in the pre-existent sphere, he attained that intelligence and power which made him a god; he
became like the Father. Under the Father he became the creator of this world, of worlds without
number, and of all things that in them are.
In that pre-existent world the Son was foreordained to be born into mortality as the literal Son of
God, to work out the infinite and eternal atonement, to be the lamb slain from the foundation of the
world. After the fall of Adam, he acted as mediator between man and the Father. All revelation came
through him; he was the God of Israel, the promised Messiah, the Redeemer and Savior; through his
atoning sacrifice all men gain immortality, and those who believe and obey his laws also inherit
eternal life.
He was crucified, died, and rose again the third day with an exalted, perfected, glorified, and
resurrected body like the Father's. In his exalted state Christ has attained all power both in heaven
and on earth so that the fulness of the godhead dwells in him; he has been exalted to the right hand of
the Father, from whence, in due course, he shall come to judge all men.
17. As pertaining to the Sabbath healing situation which called these words forth, they are an
announcement that the works of the Father may be performed on the Sabbath; that is, the Lord's
work may be performed on the Lord's day. True, man must rest from his temporal pursuits"ye
shall do no servile work there in" (Lev. 23:8)but there is no rest where the work of salvation is
concerned.
But in their broadest signification these words proclaim the eternal law of unending work. For the
Father and the Son there is no end to their laborstheir creative and redemptive enterprises whereby
they bring immortality and eternal life to innumerable hosts on worlds without number. (Moses 1:2739.)
My Father] Not "our Father," not Father in any general sense, but "my Father" in a personal and
unique sense; or, in other words, 'I am the Son of God, the promised Messiah.'
18. God was his Father] There was no misunderstanding of Jesus' meaning. The Jews knew he was
announcing his divine Sonship, repeating his oft heralded proclamation that he was their Messiah.
Equal with God] Though the Father is greater than the Son and takes precedence over him, yet the
Son is equal with the Father in the sense that the Father has given all things into the hands of the
Son, and that the Son has attained all power, all wisdom, all knowledge, all truth, and the fulness of
all of the attributes of godliness.(D. & C. 93:6-26.) In this same sense, all men who gain exaltation
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shall "receive their inheritance and be made equal with" the Father and the Son. (D. & C. 88:107;
93:27-34.)
19-20. It would be difficult, perhaps impossible, to find two verses of scripture with deeper and more
glorious meaning than these two. Jesus is the replica of his Fatherthinking, saying, doing,
achieving, attaining, as the Father has done before.
"It is the first principle of the gospel to know for a certainty the character of God," the Prophet said
in the King Follett Sermon, "and to know that we may converse with him as one man converses with
another, and that he was once a man like us; yea, that God himself, the Father of us all, dwelt on an
earth, the same as Jesus Christ himself did; and I will show it from the Bible.
"What did Jesus say? ... The scriptures inform us that Jesus said, As the Father hath power in
Himself, even so hath the Son powerto do what? Why, what the Father did. The answer is obvious
in a manner to lay down His body and take it up again. Jesus, what are you going to do? To lay
down my life as my Father did, and take it up again. Do you believe it? If you do not believe it, you
do not believe the Bible.
"What did Jesus do? Why; I do the things I saw my Father do when worlds came rolling into
existence. My Father worked out his kingdom with fear and trembling, and I must do the same; and
when I get my kingdom, I shall present it to my Father, so that he may obtain kingdom upon
kingdom, and it will exalt him in glory. He will then take a higher exaltation, and I will take his
place, and thereby become exalted myself. So that Jesus treads in the tracks of his Father, and
inherits what God did before; and God is thus glorified and exalted in the salvation and exaltation of
all his children. It is plain beyond disputation, and you thus learn some of the first principles of the
Gospel, about which so much hath been said." (Teachings, pp. 345-348.)
19. The Son can do nothing of himself] Jesus is not independent of the Father, is not his rival, and
does not act except in conformity with the Father's will. The Son has all power because the Father
has bestowed it upon him. So it is with all righteous men; none ever act independent of Deity; rather,
their power and authority comes from and is centered in the Almighty.
20. Sheweth him all things] There is nothing which the Father has done which has not been
revealed to the Son.
He will shew him greater works] Meaning those thereafter to be performed, those pertaining to the
atoning sacrifice, the resurrection, and the judgment, which works are referred to in the verses
immediately following.
21. The resurrection comes because of the Son, through the power of the Father.
22. The Son, not the Father, is the Judge of the whole earth, but his judgment is made in accordance
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with the will of the Father and therefore is just. (V. 30.)
23. Two exalted personages, the Father and the Son, are oneone in purpose, plan, and power; one
as to character, perfections, and attributes; one in all things; and therefore one in the receipt of
worship and honor. In the true sense no one can believe in or know the one without having the same
belief and knowledge of the other; or can one be accepted and the other rejected. They are one.
24. 'He who believes and obeys my words, who believeth in me and my Father, shall have exaltation
and shall not be damned; yea, such already have passed from spiritual death to spiritual life, for they
have been born again.'
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After millenniums of waiting, the hour had now almost come in which the Messiah, while his
crucified body lay in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea, would herald the glad tidings of salvation to
the spirits in prison. (1 Pet. 3:18-21; 4:6.)
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Now this caused us to marvel, for it was given unto us of the Spirit. And while we meditated upon
these things, the Lord touched the eyes of our understandings and they were opened, and the glory of
the Lord shone round about. And we beheld ..." (D. & C. 76:15-20.) Then follows what is generally
accepted as the most glorious recorded vision ever received by mortal man.
I. V. John 5:29. Salvation grows automatically out of the resurrection, and the coming forth in the
resurrection constitutes the receipt of whatever degree of salvation has been earned. By one degree of
obedience or another, all men, in this life, develop either celestial, terrestrial, or telestial bodies (or in
the case of those destined to be sons of perdition, bodies of a baser sort). In the resurrection all men
receive back again "the same body which was a natural body," whether it be celestial, terrestrial, or
what have you. That body is then quickened by the glory attending its particular type, and the person
receiving the body then goes automatically, as it were, to the kingdom of glory where that degree of
glory is found. (D. & C. 76; 88:16-33; 1 Cor. 15:35-58; Mormon Doctrine, pp. 573-579.)
It is from these revelations which recite that resurrected beings come forth with different kinds of
bodies that we learn a few of the many revealed reasons why there is not and cannot be progression
from one degree of glory to another after the resurrection.
Resurrection of the just] Resurrection of life, the first resurrection. Those coming forth in the
morning of this resurrection do so with celestial bodies and shall inherit a celestial glory; these are
they who are Christ's the firstfruits. Those coming forth in the afternoon of this resurrection do so
with terrestrial bodies and consequently shall inherit that kingdom; they are described as being
Christ's at this coming. All who have been resurrected so far have received celestial bodies; the
coming forth of terrestrial beings does not commence until after the Second Coming. (D. & C. 76:5080; 88:95-99.)
Resurrection of the unjust] Resurrection of damnation, the second resurrection. In this day of
sorrow and remorse the bodies and spirits of the rest of mankind will be inseparably connected in
immortality. At the end of the millennium, and in the morning of this second resurrection, those shall
come forth who merit telestial bodies, and they shall be rewarded accordingly. Finally, in the
afternoon of the second resurrection, those who "remain filthy still," those who having been raised in
immortality are judged and found wholly wanting, those whom we call sons of perdition, shall be
cast out with Lucifer and his angels to suffer the vengeance of eternal fire forever. (D. & C. 76:2549, 81-113; 88:101-102; 2 Ne. 9:14-16.)
30. As I hear, I judge] That judgment which grows out of the fact of resurrection will be automatic,
meaning that it will operate according to law, and all men will receive exactly what they merit,
neither adding to nor diminishing from. Power of judgment will rest with the Son, but he will
exercise it in accordance with the laws ordained by the Father; hence, "my judgment is just."
31. I can of mine own self do nothing] Independent action on the part of the Son is impossible; his
power comes from the Father, according to the laws ordained by the Father. The Son has become and
is a god because of obedience to the laws of the Father, and he is now so completely one with the
Father that everything he thinks, says, and does is precisely what the Father would do under the same
circumstances.
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(6) The scriptures and recorded revelations of the past and present.
"How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth
peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion, Thy God
reigneth!" (Isa. 52:7.)
John 5:31-32; I. V. John 5:32-33. Though worded differently, the meaning of these passages is
virtually identical. If Jesus was the only witness testifying of his Messiahship, then according to the
law of witnesses, his hearers would have been justified in rejecting his testimony.
John 5:32. Another that beareth witness] His Father. In the full and final sense no one but the Father
could bear the conclusive and absolute testimony of the Son's Messiahship. Anyone else, as was the
case with John the Baptist, would have to rely on revelation from the Father, and therefore in a sense
would be repeating the witness of Deity.
John 5:33-37; I. V. John 5:35. John's testimony was binding; it was sufficient to damn those who
rejected it. Among those born of woman there was not a greater prophet than John. Yet his testimony
is not to be compared in binding power and force with the witness of the Father or with the works
performed by Jesus.
John 5:37. Seen his shape] God the Father has a shape; he is a personal being in whose image man is
created. He is not a congeries of laws, floating like a fog in the universe; he is not an immaterial,
uncreated, spirit essence that is everywhere and nowhere in particular present. He is Man of
Holiness, a holy man, whose body has shape, occupies space, travels from place to place, and is in
but one place at one time, though his influence may be felt throughout the immensity of space.
38. No one can believe in the Father without first believing in the Son; and no one has the Father's
word abiding in him who has not first accepted the Son.
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39. Search the scriptures] Gospel scholarship is woefully lacking both in the Church and in the
world. There is only a handful of people now living who have an intelligent and comprehensive,
working knowledge of the recorded revelations. None know as much as they should. Many of the
rising generation in the Church take the gospel and its truths for granted without ever coming to a
personal knowledge of the basic doctrines of salvation.
Yet man's hope of gaining salvation is in direct proportion to his knowledge of God and the laws of
salvation. No man can be saved in ignorance of Jesus Christ and the laws of the gospel. Man is saved
no faster than he gains knowledge of God and the saving truths recorded in the scriptures. A fountain
cannot rise above its source; a people cannot live laws of which they are ignorant, nor believe in a
Christ about whom they know little or nothing. The Lord expects his people to learn the doctrines of
salvation. "Search these commandments" (D. & C. 1:37), is a decree which applies in principle to all
revelations of all ages.
40. Life] Spiritual life while here in mortality and eternal life in the celestial realms hereafter.
I. V. John 5:41. Lest ye should honour me] What petty jealousies keep men from receiving gospel
blessings! They will not accept the prophets sent of God, lest in doing so they thereby certify to the
greatness and honor of the prophet-servant sent to minister to them. They reject the Son himself, lest
in hearkening to his voice, they should honor him in the eyes of the people. What does it detract from
one person because another is honored? Rightly viewed, is there not enough honor and to spare in
God's kingdom for all who will receive it?
John 5:41. I receive not honour from men] What honor could man bestow upon the Son? What
college degree, honorary or otherwise, could be conferred; what political appointment made; what
position of wealth or influence given, which would add to his position and stature? Similarly, what
of eternal worth can prophets, apostles, and elders of Israel gain by seeking the honors of men?
44. Struggles for the honors of men keep men from believing in and centering their hearts upon
Christ, and they therefore lose their salvation.
Honour that cometh from God] Among others: priesthood, revelation, visions, healing powers, that
peace which the Spirit gives, the companionship of the Holy Ghost, eternal life itself.
45-47. Just as no one can believe in Christ without believing in his Father also, so no one can accept
the Son without accepting the prophets who testify of him. "Believe in Christ and deny him not,"
Nephi said, "for by denying him ye also deny the prophets and the law." (2 Ne. 25:28.) Christ and his
prophets are one.
45. One that accuseth you, even Moses] Though the Jews trusted in Moses, they were damned for
rejecting the great law-giver's testimony concerning the Messiah. Similarly, though modern
sectarians trust in Peter, falsely supposing they believe what that ancient apostle taught, they shall be
damned for refusing to accept Peter's testimony about the restoration of all things in the last days.
(Act 3:19-21.) In the same sense that Moses stands as the accuser of the Jews, so Peter, James, and
John and the apostles of old will stand as the accusers of an apostate Christendom.
46. Had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed me] Similarly, if men today believed in Christ
and the apostles of old, they also would believe in Joseph Smith, the Book of Mormon, and the
restoration of the gospel. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 75-77.)
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So great were the throngs pressing upon Jesus, desiring to be taught and healed, that for his own
safety he had to teach from a small ship. Great multitudes were taught; many with diseases and
plagues were healed; and unclean spirits were cast out. But what is of particular interest here is the
lineage and nationalities of the hosts who came to hear him and, if possible, touch him, that they
might be healed.
Mark makes special mention that in the multitudes were people from Tyre and Sidon, from beyond
Jordan, and from Idumeaall areas inhabited in part by Gentiles. Matthew takes occasion to say that
Jesus' ministry to these specific hosts of investigators was in fulfillment of Isaiah's prophecy that the
Messiah would bring salvation to the Gentiles. It is clearly evident that there were many Gentiles
among Jesus' hearers at this time, and quite likely some of them were among those healed by his
miraculous powers. Gentile converts then made would have been the beginning of the great harvest
yet to be reaped among those non-Israelitish peoples.
What happened on this occasion, however, was merely a sign and indication of a future day when the
gospel would go to the Gentiles in full measure. As pertaining to his mortal ministry, Jesus was not
sent except to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. It took special pleading and abundant faith to
prevail upon him to so much as heal a Gentile. (Matt. 15:21-28.) After the chosen seed were given
the first opportunity to hear the gospel, it would go to the Gentiles through the ministry of the
apostles, soon to be chosen.
In explaining to the Nephites that they were the "other sheep" who should hear the Master's voice
and join his "one fold" (John 10:16), Jesus said with reference to the disciples in Jerusalem: "They
understood me not, for they supposed it had been the Gentiles; for they understood not that the
Gentiles should be converted through their preaching. And they understood me not that I said they
shall hear my voice; and they understood me not that the Gentiles should not at any time hear my
voicethat I should not manifest myself unto them save it were by the Holy Ghost." (3 Ne. 15:2223.)
Matt. 12:17-21. An interpreting translation of part of Isaiah's great Messianic prophecy promising the
gospel to the Gentiles. (Isa. 42:1-4.)
18. My servant] The Messiah.
19. "He shall not court popularity." (Dummelow, p. 667.)
20. Bruised reed . . . smoking flax] Figurative expressions meaning persons weak and afflicted in
body, whom Jesus healed, and those of little faith, who were strengthened in faith and testimony by
his teachings. The indication is that Jesus is tender and compassionate toward the weaknesses of his
fellow mortals. "Whereas one rough touch will break a bruised reed, and quench the flickering,
smoking flax, His it should be, with matchless tenderness, love, and skill, to lift up the meek, to
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strengthen the weak hands and confirm the feeble knees, to comfort all that mourn, to say to them
that are of a fearful heart, Be strong, fear not." (Jamieson, p. 40.)
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brethren were selected to replace the missing apostles. Apostasy on both hemispheres brought an end
to authoritative apostolic administration as given by Jesus. Indeed, the presence or absence of true
apostles in any church is conclusive proof of the divinity or falsity of that ecclesiastical organization.
(Mormon Doctrine, pp. 47-48.)
Mark 3:20-21. So zealous and untiring was Jesus in his ministerial labors, not even stopping to eat or
rest, that his friends were concerned over his physical well-being; driven by an unstopable
compulsion, he seemed to them as one "beside himself."
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in Luke's rendition. All four of these versions follow the same general pattern, present the same
general truths, and do it in the same sequence. But in certain particulars, there are radical variations
between all versions. Undoubtedly all are accounts of the same sermon, but all are abridgements
only, and the same truths were not abridged in every particular into each of the accounts. The most
comprehensive and complete report is in the Matthew-Inspired Version record.
Beatitudes] Jesus' statements expressing the "blessedness" of those having certain special virtues are
commonly so-called.
Luke 6:17. In the plain] On a level place. Probably a plateau well up in the mountains. (Matt. 5:1.)
I. V. Matt. 5:3-4; 3 Ne. 12:1-2. What a new perspective it gives to the Sermon on the Mount to learn
that Jesus began it by announcing, in effect, 'Blessed are they who believe in me, receive my gospel,
repent of their sins, are baptized, and receive the Holy Ghost!" Truly his teachings were the gospel of
the kingdom, not just ethical principles! And when properly understood the Beatitudes themselves
are far more doctrinal than ethical in nature.
I. V. Matt. 5:5. Poor in spirit] Those who are humble and contrite, who have a broken heart and a
contrite spirit, who are devoid of pride, self-righteousness, and self-conceit.
Who come unto me] Not just the poor in spirit in general, but those who accept Christ by accepting
his gospel.
Theirs is the kingdom of heaven] They gain entrance to the Church or kingdom on earth and
become heirs of the kingdom or celestial world in the realms of immortality.
3 Ne. 12:4. Mourners who believe the gospel and who gain an understanding of the part grief,
sorrow, and death play in this mortal probation, shallin this life and through that knowledge gain
comfort and peace from the Spirit; then, eventually, perfect comfort shall be theirs in that glorious
day when "God shall wipe away all tears." (Rev. 7:17.)
Matt. 5:5. The meek] The godfearing and the righteous, those among the true saints who are living a
celestial law. Shall inherit the earth] Not in this day when wickedness reigns, but in that coming
day when the earth is sanctified, cleansed from all unrighteousness, and prepared for celestial glory.
(D. & C. 88:16-32.)
I. V. Matt. 5:8. Those who hunger and thirst after truth and righteousness accept the gospel, join the
Church, and receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, in consequence of which it is their right to "be filled
with the Holy Ghost."
Matt. 5:7. Working out one's salvation consists in gaining and developing the attributes of godliness
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in this life so that those same attributes, in the exact measure earned by the laborer, may be restored
to him in the state of immortality. Thus Alma said: "The meaning of the word restoration is to bring
back again evil for evil, or carnal for carnal, or devilish for devilishgood for that which is good;
righteous for that which is righteous; just for that which is just; merciful for that which is merciful.
Therefore, my son, see that you are merciful unto your brethren; deal justly, judge righteously, and
do good continually; and if ye do all these things then shall ye receive your reward; yea, ye shall
have mercy restored unto you again; ye shall have justice restored unto you again; ye shall have a
righteous judgment restored unto you again; and ye shall have good rewarded unto you again. For
that which ye do send out shall return unto you again, and be restored." (Alma 41:13-15.)
I. V. Matt. 5:10. This promise is to be understood literally. Every living soul who is pure in heart
shall see God, literally and personally, in this life, to say nothing of the fact that he shall dwell with
and see him frequently in the celestial world hereafter. (Ether 3:19-20, 26; D. & C. 67:10-14;
Teachings, pp. 9, 149-151.) "Verily, thus saith the Lord: It shall come to pass that every soul who
forsaketh his sins and cometh unto me, and calleth on my name, and obeyeth my voice, and keepeth
my commandments, shall see my face and know that I am." (D. & C. 93:1.)
11. Peacemakers] In the full sense, only those who believe and spread the fulness of the gospel are
peacemakers within the perfect meaning of this Beatitude. The gospel is the message of peace to all
mankind. Children of God] Those who have been adopted into the family of God as a result of their
devotion to the truth. By such a course they become heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ. (Rom.
8:14-18; Gal. 3:26-29; 4:1-7.)
Matt. 5:10-12; I. V. Matt. 5:12, 14. Persecution for his name's sake is the heritage of the faithful; in it
they rejoice, for it evidences that they have forsaken the world and come unto Christ, so as to be
future inheritors of the fulness of his Father's kingdom. "And whoso layeth down his life in my
cause, for my name's sake, shall find it again, even life eternal." (D. & C. 98:13.)
Luke 6:24-26. Opposite every blessing stands a curse; obedience brings the blessing, disobedience
the curse. All men shall gain either the one or the other; there is no such thing as neutrality. Either
men believe in Christ or they do not; either they obey his laws or they do not. All of the Beatitudes
could be rewritten in negative form to show the woes that result from taking a course opposite to that
counseled by Jesus.
Jesus does not mean all rich people, only those whose hearts are set upon wealth in preference to the
things of the Spirit. It is not money, but the love of money that leads men to damnation. (1 Tim. 6:712.)
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Concerning the law of Moses, Jesus, appearing as a resurrected being to the Nephites, taught:
"Marvel not that I said unto you that old things had passed away, and that all things had become new.
Behold, I say unto you that the law is fulfilled that was given unto Moses. Behold, I am he that gave
the law, and I am he who covenanted with my people Israel; therefore, the law in me is fulfilled, for I
have come to fulfil the law; therefore it hath an end. Behold, I do not destroy the prophets, for as
many as have not been fulfilled in me, verily I say unto you, shall all be fulfilled. And because I said
unto you that old things have passed away, I do not destroy that which hath been spoken concerning
things which are to come. For behold, the covenant which I have made with my people is not all
fulfilled; but the law which was given unto Moses hath an end in me. Behold, I am the law, and the
light. Look unto me, and endure to the end, and ye shall live; for unto him that endureth to the end
will I give eternal life. Behold, I have given unto you the commandments; therefore keep my
commandments. And this is the law and the prophets, for they truly testified of me." (3 Ne. 15:2-10.)
18. Jot] Smallest letter in the Hebrew alphabet. Tittle] A minute marking or stroke by which similar
Hebrew letters are distinguished from each other.
I. V. Matt. 5:21; Matt. 5:19-20. As long as the Mosaic law remained in force salvation came only in
and through obedience to its terms and conditions. The scribes and Pharisees by not walking in the
lightfirst of the law and then of the gospel fulnesslost their salvation.
3 Ne. 12:19-20. When Jesus spoke to the Nephites the law had been fulfilled. Nothing but gospel law
was then in force. As far as the Nephites were concerned, they were obligated to keep the
commandments which Jesus then gave them, or they could in no case gain the celestial world. There
was, for instance, no such thing as salvation for the dead for them; they had the opportunity then and
there to obey the gospel; and for people who have such a chance in this life, there is no such thing as
an opportunity to gain salvation through hearing the gospel preached in the spirit world. (Mormon
Doctrine, pp. 617-619.)
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Matt. 5:22. Without a cause] Deleted from both the Inspired Version and the Book of Mormon
accounts. According to the gospel standard, unrighteous anger is evil whether provocation precedes
it or not.
I. V. Matt. 5:23-25; 3 Ne. 12:23-24. Members of the Church, and those who desire such affiliation,
who have differences among themselves, or who bear grudges one toward another, have an
affirmative obligation to resolve their difficulties, so that perfect peace, love, and charity will prevail
in the kingdom.
I. V. Matt. 5:25. Thy brother hath aught against thee] Not a remembrance that you are angry with
your brother, for it is assumed that the true saint will have overcome his own ill feelings, but a
remembrance that your brother hath aught against you! The command: 'Go to him; do not wait for
him to come to you, simply because you are the one who has been wronged.' How often one person
supposes he has been wronged, or imagines another is offended at him, when a simple brotherly
explanation would remove the source of all possible ill feeling. Or, how often are actual cases of
resentment and antagonism cleared up when the hand of fellowship, literally and verbally, is
extended.
Matt. 5:25-26; 3 Ne. 12:25-26. Counsel to avoid law suits and entangling legal difficulties, lest fine
and imprisonment result, is directed particularly to the apostles and missionaries as they go forth to
carry the gospel message to a wicked world. It is more important that they suffer legal wrongs than
that their ministries be hindered or halted by legal processes.
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promise. These statements, usually made in the name of the Lord, by people who valued their
religion and their word above their lives, could be and were relied upon with absolute
assurance." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 486-488.)
Beginning in the meridian of time, Jesus revealed a higher standard relative to truthfulness in
conversation. It was simply that Yea meant Yea, and Nay meant Nay, and that no oath was required
to establish the verity of any promise or thing. Every man's every word was to be as true and
accurate as if it had been spoken with an oath.
33. Moses' law provided: "If a man vow a vow unto the Lord, or swear an oath to bind his soul with a
bond; he shall not break his word, he shall do according to all that proceedeth out of his
mouth." (Num. 30:2.) Under such a system there is always the possibility that man will not keep his
promises unless they are accompanied by a sworn statement.
34. Christ's law assumes that man will keep his word without an oath. If every man were perfectly
honest it would not be necessary to take oaths in court or to prepare affidavits and other sworn
statements to prove controversial matters.
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interests. In their ministry it would be better to suffer material loss or personal indignity and
imposition at the hands of wicked oppressors, than to bring about an impairment of efficiency and a
hindrance in work through resistance and contention." (Talmage, pp. 235-236.)
I. V. Luke 6:29-30. Contention leads to bitterness and smallness of soul; persons who contend with
each other shrivel up spiritually and are in danger of losing their salvation. So important is it to avoid
this evil that Jesus expects his saints to suffer oppression and wrong rather than lose their inner peace
and serenity through contention. "He that hath the spirit of contention is not of me," he told the
Nephites, "but is of the devil, who is the father of contention, and he stirreth up the hearts of men to
contend with anger, one with another." (3 Ne. 11:29.)
Matt. 5:41. Compel thee to go a mile] Apparently Jesus had reference to the Roman law which
authorized troops passing a district to commandeer the people and compel them to carry their
luggage. To comply with this law often resulted in great inconvenience. The principle involved is
that the saints should pay their taxes, abide by the laws of the land, and submit to those public
burdens attendant upon citizenship.
42. Manifestly, charitable contributions and lending to others is to be done in conformity with
principles of sound sense and judgment.
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33. This verse was deleted from the Inspired Version, indicating that it is an unauthorized addition to
Luke's record.
35. He is kind unto the unthankful and to the evil] The Father is kind to all men, both the
righteous and the wicked, in the sense that he has given them life, and breath, and being; in the sense
that he has created the earth and placed men in mortal bodies, so that through the redemptive
sacrifice of his Son they all shall attain immortality; in the sense that he sends them sunshine and
rain and enables them to garner the wealth of the world. But the unjust and unthankful shall not
receive mercy or salvation in the day of judgment. Temporal blessings are bestowed upon all men in
mortality, but eternal blessings are reserved for those who keep the commandments.
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precept upon precept, with the assurance that greater understanding and direction would be given as
rapidly as the spiritual progression of the saints permitted. The Lord's Prayer, for instance, does not
conclude in the name of Christ, as all complete and proper prayers should. Later Jesus was to
command his disciples to pray in his name (John 14:13-14; 15:16; 16:23), explaining that though
they had "hitherto asked nothing" in his name, yet that should be the order from thenceforth. (John
16:24.)
But this prayer was given as a sample or illustration of how Deity might appropriately be addressed
in prayer, of the praise and adoration that should be extended to him, and of the type and kind of
petitions men should make to him. As far as it goes it is one of the most concise, expressive, and
beautiful statements found in the scriptures. It does not, however, reach the heights of one of Jesus'
later prayers among the Jews, the great Intercessory Prayer (John 17), nor does it compare with some
of the prayers he uttered among the Nephites. (3 Ne. 19.)
9. Our Father which art in heaven] The common sectarian concept that none but a Christian who
has put on Christ and been adopted as a son of God (Rom. 8: 14-17) can rightly use the Lord's Prayer
is a fantastic heresy. (Dummelow, p. 646; Jamieson, pp. 25-26.) Rather, within the meaning of this
prayer, all men are the children of Deity. God is literally the Father of the spirits of all men. He begat
them in pre-existence, and he invites them all, Christian and pagan alike, to address him as their
Father, to hallow his holy name, to come unto him, keep his commandments and receive of his Spirit.
Hallowed be thy name] Deity's name identifies him for what he is. To hallow and revere that name
is to accept him as God and to worship him in spirit and in truth.
10. Thy kingdom come] Already the kingdom of God on earth, meaning the Church, had been set
up by Jesus. This petition relative to the coming of a future kingdom has reference to the millennial
or political kingdom which shall be established at the Second Coming. Similarly the ecclesiastical
kingdom of God on earth, the Church, has been restored in this day, but the saints still pray for the
coming of a future kingdom, the kingdom which shall prevail when the kingdoms of this world
become the kingdom of our God and of his Christ. (Rev. 11:15.)
Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven] When that triumphant Messianic kingdom is finally
set up in all its glory and perfection, then the will of Deity shall prevail in all things on earth. War,
tumult, and dissension shall cease; wickedness, worldliness, and crime shall end; all things shall
return to a state of perfect peace and harmony; and Christ shall reign personally upon the earth.
11. Give us this day our daily bread] Pray for temporal needover your crops and herds, for
sufficient of this world's goods to meet your needs and have a surplus to use in doing good and in
furthering the programs and interests of the Lord's earthly kingdom.
12. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors] Debts, sins, trespasses, offenses, evils,
and the like, for which we are accountable, will upon our repentance, be forgiven us, provided we
forgive our fellow men who have similarly offended us. Forgive and be forgiven; forgive not and the
burdens of our own trespasses remain.
13. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil] God does not lead men into temptation
except in the sense that he has placed them here on earth where temptation is found so they can be
tried and tested in accordance with the terms and provisions of the eternal plan of salvation. Rather,
this is a plea to be able to avoid greater temptation than we can successfully withstand. It is a request
to be delivered from enticements and seductions which are so great as to overcome the normal
powers of resistance. Obviously it would be nothing short of hypocrisy to utter this prayer and then
go out where sin and lust and evil are found. Implicit in the prayer to avoid being led into temptation
is the promise on the petitioner's part to avoid the places where sin and evil are found.
For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever] These words, called the
doxology, are erroneously believed by many scholars to have been added in later years to the prayer
originally uttered by Jesus. That our Lord actually said them, however, is evident from the fact that
they are in the Book of Mormon record, and that they were added, in substance, to Luke's account in
the Inspired Version. The words themselves bear record of the glory, might, omnipotence, and
eternal fulness that dwells in the Almighty.
Amen] So let it be; that is, with this single word the suppliant endorses, approves, and solemnly
attests his agreement with the whole prayer.
Luke 11:15-8; I. V. Luke 11:5. From this parable we learn that the Father will give us whatever we
ask of him in faith. Need we think that a loving Father will reject our pleas, when we know that a
churlish and uncooperative friend will not do so?
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prayer it is proper to go about one's normal and usual affairs, without attempting to advertise an
assumed status of piety.
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I. V. Luke 12:36. Provide not for yourselves bags which wax old] Do not put your trust in purses
which wear out and from which earthly treasures will be lost.
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Kingdom
I. V. Matt. 7:9-11. Jesus is sending his disciples out to teach the gospel to the world with the express
stipulation that they leave the mysteries alone and confine their teachings to the basic, simple,
fundamental doctrines of salvation. They are to refrain from presenting more of the truths of the
gospel than their hearers are prepared to receive. At this early day, even the disciples are scarce able
to bear the mysteries.
To his elders in this dispensation, our Lord gave the same counsel in these words: "Thou shalt
declare glad tidings, yea, publish it upon the mountains, and upon every high place, and among every
people that thou shalt be permitted to see ... And of tenets thou shalt not talk, but thou shalt declare
repentance and faith on the Savior, and remission of sins by baptism and by fire, yea, even the Holy
Ghost." (D. & C. 19:29-31.)
This same restriction on the proclamation of the gospel is superbly expressed by Alma, who said: "It
is given unto many to know the mysteries of God; nevertheless they are laid under a strict command
that they shall not impart only according to the portion of his word which he doth grant unto the
children of men, according to the heed and diligence which they give unto him." (Alma 12:9.)
In this day the message of the restoration which the elders carry to the world is: (1) That Jesus Christ
is the Son of God who worked out the infinite and eternal atonement thereby making salvation
available for all who will abide the gospel law; (2) That Joseph Smith is the prophet through whom
the knowledge of Christ and of salvation has been restored again to earth; and (3) That the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the kingdom of God on earth, the only place where there are legal
administrators to teach the truth and perform the ordinances of salvation so they will be binding on
earth and in heaven.
It follows that missionaries ordinarily confine their teachings to such things as the nature and kind of
being that God is, the atonement of our Lord, the apostasy from and restoration of the gospel, and the
plan of salvation. After people are converted and have the gift of the Holy Ghost to enlighten their
minds it is time enough for them to learn the deeper things pertaining to exaltation in the eternal
worlds. The sacred teachings revealed in temple ordinances, for instance, are mysteries reserved for
selected and faithful members of the kingdom who have attained sufficient stability and background
to understand them.
9. The kingdom of heaven has come nigh unto you] 'The Church of Jesus Christ (which is the
kingdom of heaven on earth) has come nigh unto you, for we, the elders of the kingdom, have power
to admit you to the kingdom by baptism if you will repent.'
I. V. Matt. 7:12; Matt. 7:7-11. How will those in the world be able to recognize the gospel and
receive its truths? How can they learn the mysteries of the kingdom? Jesus answers: 'Ask of God.'
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True conversion is not born of contention or debate. The things of God are known only by revelation
from the Spirit of God. (1 Cor. 2:11.) To gain a knowledge of the truth men must abide the law
which enables them to gain personal revelation from the Lord. They must desire to know of the
divinity of the message, must learn what is being taught, must practice its principles, and must pray
in faith for guidance and direction from on high.
I. V. Matt. 7:14-17. How similarly the spiritually closed mind operates in all ages! These Jewish
attempts, to justify adherence to a false religion, sound as though they had been made by the
ministers of modern Christendom. 'We ourselves are righteous, and what can these Mormon Elders
teach us. True it is that God spoke to prophets of old, but revelation has ceased; there is no modern
communion with heaven. We have the Bible and are Christians, and that is sufficient for us.' But
Jesus' counsel is: 'Tell them to humble themselves, repent of their sins, and pray to the Father in
mighty prayer so they may learn where the truth really lies.'
Matt. 7:12. The Golden Rule! Truly, never man spake as this man!
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many on earth claiming to be prophets of God. Some will be true prophets whose teachings shall lead
men to my Father's kingdom; others shall be false prophets whose doctrines shall damn those who
heed them. Beware of false prophets, cleave unto the true. How shall the false and true be
distinguished? By their fruits.'
Matt. 7:15. Prophets: "A prophet is a person who knows by personal revelation from the Holy Ghost
that Jesus is the Son of God, 'for the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.' (Rev. 19:10;
Teachings, pp. 119, 312.) Accordingly, every prophet bears record of Christ. 'To him give all the
prophets witness' (Acts 10:43; Jac. 4:4), and if a professing minister of salvation is not a witness for
Christ, he is not a prophet.
"Nothing more than the testimony of Jesus is needed to make a person a prophet; and if this revealed
knowledge has not been received, a person is not a prophet, no matter how many other talents or gifts
he may have. But when a person has received revelation from the Spirit certifying to the divinity of
Christ, he is then in a position to press forward in righteousness and gain other revelations including
those which foretell future events. On this basis, should the necessity arise, those who are prophets
are in a position where they 'could prophesy of all things.' (Mosiah 5:3.)
"The mission of prophets is not alone to foretell the future. Even more important is the witness they
bear to the living of the divinity of Christ, the teachings they give of the plan of salvation, and the
ordinances which they perform for their fellowmen. All of the great prophets are possessors of the
Melchizedek Priesthood; as legal administrators some have possessed keys enabling them to
administer the fulness of gospel ordinances." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 544-547.)
False prophets] "When a man goes about prophesying, and commands men to obey his teachings,"
Joseph Smith taught, "he must either be a true or false prophet. False prophets always arise to oppose
the true prophets, and they will prophesy so very near the truth that they will deceive almost the very
chosen ones." (Teachings, p. 365.)
Joseph Smith also said: "If any person should ask me if I were a prophet, I should not deny it, as that
would give me the lie; for, according to John, the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy;
therefore, if I profess to be a witness or teacher, and have not the spirit of prophecy, which is the
testimony of Jesus, I must be a false witness; but if I be a true teacher and witness, I must possess the
spirit of prophecy, and that constitutes a prophet; and any man who says he is a teacher or preacher
of righteousness, and denies the spirit of prophecy, is a liar, and the truth is not in him; and by this
key false teachers and impostors may be detected." (Teachings, p. 269.)
20. By their works it shall be known whether professing ministers of religion are true or false
prophets. Joseph Smith was a true prophet. What fruits did he leave? There is probably more
evidence of his divine call and mission than of any other prophet who ever lived, Jesus himself only
excepted. Joseph Smith has left us the Book of Mormon, and the revelations in the Doctrine and
Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price. He restored all of the basic doctrines of the gospel, perfected the
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organization of the Church, performed a host of miracles, saw God, was visited by angels, uttered
hundreds of prophecies which have been literally fulfilled, and finally sealed his testimony with his
own blood. (D. & C. 135.)
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never received the fulness of my gospel and came into my Church, and hence, Ye never knew me';
Or, 'Ye never knew me so fully as to be sealed up unto eternal life with your callings and elections
made sure, and since you did not magnify your callings in the priesthood, you shall be cast out and
be as though I never knew you.'
Matt. 7:24-27. These graphic statements are applicable to many situations. For instance: Those who
build their houses of faith on the rock of revelation, rather than on the sands of sectarian delusion,
shall have a spiritual structure able to withstand every temptation and turmoil. Or: Those who build
celestial bodies by obedience to celestial law shall have a bodily structure that can abide the day,
with all its tumultuous changes, in which this earth becomes a celestial sphere. (D. & C. 88:17-32.)
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diminished. But the millennium itself must arrive before "the violent shall have no power."
14. All of the prophets spoke of Christ and his day.
15. Elias] See John 1:19-28 John was the Elias who was to prepare all things, not the one who was to
restore all things.
Luke 7:30. For those who would gain salvation, baptism in water is mandatory. No accountable
person can be saved without it. Such is the counsel and command of God. To suppose that water
baptism is merely an outward sign of some inward grace, or that baptism of the Spirit without prior
immersion in water, is all that Deity requires is the purest sectarian delusion. The very baptism by
immersion for the remission of sins which John performed (followed, of course, by the baptism of
the Spirit which Jesus administered) is the thing which the Almighty has commanded.
Matt. 11:16-19; Luke 7:31-35. 'What illustration can I choose to show how petty, peevish, and
insincere are you unbelieving Jews? You are like fickle children playing games; when you hold a
mock wedding, your playmates refuse to dance; when you change the game to a funeral procession,
your playmates refuse to mourn. In like manner you are only playing at religion. As cross and
capricious children you reject John because he came with the strictness of the Nazarites, and ye
reject me because I display the warm human demeanor that makes for pleasant social intercourse.'
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sought me out to exhibit the unbounded gratitude of one who was filthy, but is now clean. Her
gratitude knows no bounds and her love is beyond measure, for she was forgiven of much. Had she
been forgiven of but few sins, she would not have loved me so intensely.'
48. Jesus reaffirms the forgiveness previously gained through repentance and baptism. He is not
forgiving sins contrary to the law which he himself has ordained, which law is that men must believe
the gospel, repent, and be baptized for the remission of sins.
50. 'Thy faith hath saved thee from thy sins so that thou art now clean and pure in the Father's sight.
By enduring in righteousness to the end thou shalt have eternal salvation in the Father's kingdom.'
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By casting out devils Jesus offered conclusive and irrefutable proof that he was the promised
Messiah. This conclusion is evident from the following reasoning:
(1) Devils are not cast out except by the power of faith and the authority of the priesthood. Lucifer's
ministers exercise the power to perform many miracles in imitation of those done by the Lord's
authorized servants. But no one, acting pursuant to a delegation of authority from the devil, ever
casts one of his kindred spirits out of the mortal tenement such spirit has unlawfully inhabited. Satan
is not divided against himself anymore than angelic ministrants of the Lord are rebelling against each
other. Hence, the fact that Jesus did in reality cast out devils, as was evident to the Pharisees and all
the people, establishes that he operated in harmony with "the Spirit of God," and that "the kingdom
of God," which is the true Church, had come forth again among men.
(2) Jesus bore frequent testimony that he was the Son of God, which testimony he would not have
borne, if it had been untrue, because he had the Spirit of God with him, as evidenced by the fact that
he cast out devils. In other words, if his testimony had been untrue, he could not have enjoyed the
Spirit, for the Spirit will attest and seal only that which is true, and without the Spirit our Lord would
have been without the power to cast out devils. But the fact that he did cast out devils, because he
had the Spirit, proves his harmony with the Father, through the Spirit, and therefore his witness of
himself was true.
Matt. 12:22. One possessed with a devil] One of the fallen spirits subject to Lucifer had entered the
body of a blind and dumb man.
23. 'Is not this the Messiah?'
24. These Jews believed both in devils and in an organized kingdom of evil spirits which was
presided over by the prince of devils. Beelzebub] One of the name-titles of the devil. It was also
applied in ancient Israel to a heathen god. (2 Kings 1:3.)
26. Satan] Literally, adversary, a formal Hebrew name for the devil, which signifies that he wages
open war with the truth and all who obey its principles.
27. By whom do your children cast them out?] Sectarian commentators, almost universally, have
assumed that by exorcism, magic, or incantation of some sort the false religionists of Christ's day
were able to cast out devils. With nothing but the King James Version before them it should be
evident that this conclusion is absurd and illogical, for the whole tenor of this passage is that Satan
cannot cast out Satan. But from the Inspired Version we learn that those others of the Jews who were
casting out devils were persons who had gained the Spirit of God, that is they had been baptized,
were members of the Church, held the priesthood, and were walking uprightly and faithfully before
the Father. False ministers have not, do not, will not, and cannot cast out devils.
30. There are no neutrals where Christ is concerned. All men are either for him or against him. Those
who are not for him, who do not take an affirmative stand in his behalf, by virtue of that fact standing
alone are in reality against him. (Alma 5:34-39.)
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76:81-107.) Those who have committed the unpardonable sin, however, will not be redeemed from
the devil, and instead, after their resurrection, will be cast out as sons of perdition to dwell with the
devil and his angels in eternity. (D. & C. 76:30-49.)
"Commission of the unpardonable sin consists in crucifying unto oneself the Son of God afresh and
putting him to open shame. (Heb. 6:4-8; D. & C. 76:34-35.) To commit this unpardonable crime a
man must receive the gospel, gain from the Holy Ghost by revelation the absolute knowledge of the
divinity of Christ, and then deny 'the new and everlasting covenant by which he was sanctified,
calling it an unholy thing, and doing despite to the Spirit of grace.' (Teachings, p. 128.) He thereby
commits murder by assenting unto the Lord's death, that is, having a perfect knowledge of the truth
he comes out in open rebellion and places himself in a position wherein he would have crucified
Christ knowing perfectly the while that he was the Son of God. Christ is thus crucified afresh and put
to open shame. (D. & C. 132:27.)
"'What must a man do to commit the unpardonable sin?' the Prophet asked. 'He must receive the
Holy Ghost, have the heavens opened unto him, and know God, and then sin against him. After a
man has sinned against the Holy Ghost, there is no repentance for him. He has got to say that the sun
does not shine while he sees it; he has got to deny Jesus Christ when the heavens have been opened
unto him, and to deny the plan of salvation with his eyes open to the truth of it; and from that time he
begins to be an enemy. This is the case with may apostates of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints.
"'When a man begins to be an enemy to this work, he hunts me, he seeks to kill me, and never ceases
to thirst for my blood. He gets the spirit of the devilthe same spirit that they had who crucified the
Lord of Lifethe same spirit that sins against the Holy Ghost. You cannot save such persons; you
cannot bring them to repentance; they make open war, like the devil, and awful is the
consequence.' (Teachings, p. 358.)
"Among other things, this statement from the Prophet, explodes forever the mythical fantasy that the
sons of perdition are so few they can be numbered on the fingers of the hand." (Mormon Doctrine,
pp. 739-740.)
Matt. 12:32. Son of man] See Matt. 16:13. Holy Ghost] See John 14:26. Forgiven him, . . . in the
world to come] There is a difference between gaining forgiveness of sins and gaining salvation in
the celestial kingdom. All men who do not commit the unpardonable sin will gain eventual pardon;
that is, they will be forgiven of their sins; but those so forgiven, having been judged according to
their works, will then be sent either to a telestial, terrestrial, or celestial kingdom, as they case may
be. As a matter of fact, those destined to inherit kingdoms of glory will not be resurrected until they
have repented and gained forgiveness of their sins. The telestial kingdom will be inhabited by those
who have been tormented and buffeted in hell until they have gained forgiveness and become worthy
to attain a resurrection.
Those who do not have opportunity in this life to receive the gospel, but who would have accepted
its saving truths with all their hearts had the glad tiding been offered to them, will hear and accept it
in the spirit world. They will then repent of their sins, gain forgiveness through baptism for the dead,
and become heirs of the celestial kingdom itself. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 605-606.)
I. V. Mark 3:24. Shall inherit eternal damnation] They shall be sons of perdition, citizens of Lucifer's
kingdom, in which realm they shall be damned to all eternity, for they have committed the
unpardonable sin.
Matt. 12:33. 'Be consistent, you Pharisees; make the tree good or bad; if it is good to cast out devils,
and I cast them out, then my work is good, for a tree is known by its fruits; but if I am evil, as you
say, then it must be a wicked thing to heal those possessed of evil spirits, for a corrupt tree bringeth
forth evil fruit.'
34-37. Trapped by the inexorable logic of Jesus' rebuke, convicted within themselves by his cutting
invective, it is as though the Pharisees were attempting to back away from their evil accusations that
he cast out devils by the power of Beelzebub. They say: 'Why get so excited about it; why make so
much of it; we merely offered a supposition which might explain your miracles; if we are wrong,
let's forget it. Are we to be damned forever because we made a little mistake in judgment?' Jesus
replies: 'It was not a little thing: you spoke falsely and with malice; your words manifest the evil and
wickedness in your hearts, showing you up as a generation of vipers; and know this, also, even if
they had been idle or insignificant, yet shall they stand against you in the day of judgment as a true
manifestation of your real character.'
43-45; I. V. Matt. 12:37-39. Having already taught that every sin shall be forgiven except the sin
against the Holy Ghost, Jesus now illustrates why. In effect he says: 'If you gain a perfect knowledge
of me and my mission, it must come by revelation from the Holy Ghost; that Holy Spirit must speak
to the spirit within you; and then you shall know, nothing doubting. But to receive this knowledge
and revelation, you must cleanse and perfect your own soul; that is, your house must be clean, swept,
and garnished. Then if you deny me by speaking against the Holy Ghost who gave you your
revelation of the truth, that is if you came out in open rebellion against the perfect light you have
received, the Holy Ghost will depart, leaving you to yourself. Your house will now be available for
other tenancy, and so the evil spirits and influences you had once conquered will return to plague
you. Having completely lost the preserving power of the Spirit, you will then be worse off than if
you had never received the truth; and many in this generation shall be so condemned.'
I. V. Matt. 12:37. Every sin shall be forgiven] In so quoting the scribes were referring to some
passage of scripture available to them, but since lost from the knowledge of men.
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mother. The clear inference is that Joseph was dead and hence the sons of Mary were attending to
her needs. Then he reminds them that though they have the same mother, yet God is his Father and
that he must continue about his Father's business.
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are doctrines that are beyond the comprehension of the spiritually untutored; when a person is
enlightened by the Spirit so as to understand the doctrine, it is no longer a mystery to him. (Mormon
Doctrine, pp. 473-474.)
I. V. Matt. 13:10-11. "It is given unto many to know the mysteries of God; nevertheless they are laid
under a strict command that they shall not impart only according to the portion of his word which he
doth grant unto the children of men, according to the heed and diligence which they give unto him.
And therefore, he that will harden his heart, the same receiveth the lesser portion of the word; and he
that will not harden his heart, to him is given the greater portion of the word, until it is given unto
him to know the mysteries of God until he know them in full. And they that will harden their hearts,
to them is given the lesser portion of the word until they know nothing concerning his mysteries; and
then they are taken captive by the devil, and led by his will down to destruction. Now this is what is
meant by the chains of hell." (Alma 12:9-11.)
Matt. 13:13-15. Isaiah foretold the darkened, benighted, and apostate condition of the Jews of Jesus'
day. (Isa. 6:9-10.)
Mark 4:10-13. Only the disciples learned why Jesus taught in parables; only they heard the
interpretation of the parable of the sower and of the wheat and tares.
33-34. Apparently the doctrine contained in all the parables given on this occasion was restated in
plainness by Jesus to the disciples "when they were alone."
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Similarly when the gospel is preached to men whose souls are hardened by rebellion against the
Lord's servants; when it is presented to those who have hearkened to the whisperings of Satan rather
than the promptings of the light of Christ; when its truths are offered to people who are prejudiced
and bigoted, it falls on stony hearts and finds no place to take root. No conversion takes place and the
hearers continue to walk in darkness.
Joseph Smith, in interpreting this part of the Parable of the Sower, said: "Men who have no principle
of righteousness in themselves, and whose hearts are full of iniquity, and [who] have no desire for
the principles of truth, do not understand the word of truth when they hear it. The devil taketh away
the word of truth out of their hearts, because there is no desire for righteousness in
them." (Teachings, p. 96.)
(2) If the seed falls upon stony places where there is only a small layer of good soil, though the seed
readily sprouts, it soon dies, for the roots attain no strengthening depth. Likewise, those who gain
testimonies of the truth, but who do not give their whole souls to Christ; those who gain only a
superficial knowledge of the doctrines of salvation; those without sufficient strength of character to
keep their enthusiasm alive in the face of obstacles; those who are only lukewarmthe cause of
righteousness; those whose testimonies are weakened because they discover other men have
weaknessesall such are offended and fall away when persecutions arise and when they are called
upon to make major sacrifices for the cause of Zion.
(3) If the seed falls among thorns, it is in good soil, as is evidenced by the growth of the undesirable
plants. But the good plant is soon choked and dies because it cannot overcome the influence of the
weeds and thistles. So it is with the members of the Church who know the gospel is true, but who are
not valiant in the testimony of Jesus, who are not affirmatively and courageously striving to further
the interests of the Church. So it is of the saints who think more of the honors of men, the
educational standards of the world, political preferment, or money and property, than they do of the
gospel. They know the Lord's work has been established on earth, but they let the cares of the world
choke the word. And instead of gaining eternal life, they shall be burned with the tares which
overcame them.
(4) If the seed falls on productive, fertile soil, and if it is thereafter nurtured and cared for, it
bringeth forth a harvest. But even here crops of equal value are not harvested by all the saints. There
are many degrees of receptive belief; there are many gradations of effective cultivation. All men, the
saints included, shall be judged according to their works; those who keep the whole gospel law shall
bring forth an hundred fold and inherit the fulness of the Father's kingdom. Others shall gain lesser
rewards in the mansions which are prepared.
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Though Jesus used parables to hide the full meaning of his teachings from the Jews, yet those
rebellious hearers could have understood if they had sought the light, and their failure to believe and
understand rose to condemn them. Jesus here tells them, in effect, that gospel light does not burst
upon men in full noonday splendor, but that it arises in their hearts gradually, line upon line, precept
upon precept, here a little and there a little. "He that receiveth light, and continueth in God, receiveth
more light; and that light groweth brighter and brighter until the perfect day." (D. & C. 50:24.)
Eventually the faithful, having continued to grow in light and truth, shall have all things revealed to
them and shall know all things. (D. & C. 76:5-10; 93:26-28; 101:32-34; 121:26-29.)
Matt. 13:9. Those who are capable of understanding shall understand. Those whose spiritual ears are
open shall hear the whisperings of the Spirit.
Luke 8:16. 'No man who is a true minister, when he brings gospel light, covereth it with mystery and
confusion (as in the case, for instance, with the sectarian creeds describing God), but he holds forth
as much light before men as they are able to bear.'
17. 'For no parable, no teaching, no mystery, no hidden thing, is to be kept from the knowledge of
the faithful; eventually all things shall be revealed, and the righteous shall know them.' "There is
nothing which is secret save it shall be revealed; there is no work of darkness save it shall be made
manifest in the light; and there is nothing which is sealed upon the earth save it shall be loosed.
Wherefore, all things which have been revealed unto the children of men shall at that day be
revealed." (2 Ne. 30:17-18; Ether 4:7-12.)
18. 'But take heed how ye hear and accept gospel truth, for you shall be rewarded with new
revelation only if you are prepared to receive it. The measure of attention you give to the truths a!
ready revealed will dictate how much new truth shall be meted to you. If you continue to receive
light and truth, and abide in them, eventually you shall be perfected in the truth and know all things.
But if you do not continue to receive gospel light, and to walk in that light, from you shall be taken
even that light which you once had, and you shall walk in darkness.'
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who plants the seed. Paul plants, Apollos waters, but it is God who giveth the increase. (1 Cor. 3:6.)
True it is that the soil should be cultivated, that the planted seeds should be watered, fertilized, and
given every opportunity for growth. But the ultimate sprouting and growth depends upon a power
beyond that of the sower. The earth brings forth of herself; seeds grow by the power of God. And so
the minister continues on the Lord's errand, preaching to others, planting more seeds, raising the
warning voice, offering salvation to others of the Father's children, and later returns to thrust in his
sickle and harvest the original field.
26. Kingdom of God] Church of Jesus Christ. A man] Any legal administrator sent to preach the
gospel. Cast seed into the ground] Preach the gospel.
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abominable church," which fights the pure religion of Christ and his apostles. (Rev. 17; 18; 1 Ne. 13;
14.)
Drive the church into the wilderness] Satan, using his own Church to fight his battles, drove the
true Church from among mortal men. (Rev 12:12-17.)
4-11. In giving the parable of the wheat and the tares, Jesus was actually summarizing the doctrines
of the apostasy, the restoration of the gospel in the latter-days, the growth and development of the
latter-day kingdom, the millennial cleansing of the earth, the glorious advent of the Son of Man, and
the ultimate celestial exaltation of the faithful.
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God covers the earth as the waters cover the sea. (D. & C. 65; Isa. 11.)
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said, after quoting the parable. "See the Church of the Latter-day Saints, selling all that they have,
and gathering themselves together unto a place that they may purchase for an inheritance, that they
may be together and bear each other's afflictions in the day of calamity." (Teachings, p. 101.)
Matt. 13:44. Kingdom of heaven] The Church of Jesus Christ with all its saving powers and graces.
Treasure] Gospel of salvation. Selleth all that he hath] No set price tag is attached to the gospel; men
cannot buy it for a fixed amount; it is not for sale on the bargain counter. Instead, it is available to all,
rich and poor alike, all who are willing to sacrifice everything they have to gain it.
I. V. Matt. 13:46. Treasure which is hid] Though the formally organized Church and kingdom
operates openly among men, and though the gifts of the Spirit and the fruits of the gospel are seen on
every hand, all these things are hidden treasures to the spiritually illiterate. "The things of God
knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God." (1 Cor. 2:11.)
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priesthood offices or to serve in administrative capacities in the Lord's true kingdom. It is a false
sectarian heresy to believe that men are called to the ministry simply because a desire to serve arises
in their hearts. Men do not choose to be ministers of Christ; rather, he selects whom he will to
represent him. "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you," is the way he
later explained this doctrine to the Twelve. (John 15:16.) Accordingly, though this scribe offered his
services, Jesus, who knew the hearts of all men, declined the offer, pointing out as he did so, the
sacrifice commonly required of those chosen as the Lord's agents. They must be ready to deny
themselves the seeming security of worldly possessions, the association of loved ones, and the
enjoyment and comfort of their homes, if the needs of the ministry demand.
20. Son of man] See Matt. 16:13. Hath not where to lay his head] During his formal ministry Jesus
apparently was not a householder, but travelled and ministered without purse or script. Capernaum
was then his home city, where it is presumed he frequently stayed with Peter. When in Jerusalem,
Jesus probably abode with John, who appears to have had a house there. (John 19:26-27.)
Luke 9:59-60. When men are called of God by the spirit of revelation, called in the omnipotent
wisdom of him who knoweth all things, those calls take precedence over all conflicting interests.
Missionaries so sent forth habitually forsake all personal and family obligations. Loved ones may
pass away, but missionaries remain at their posts, preaching the kingdom of God.
60. Let the dead bury their dead] Let those who are spiritually dead, who have not been born again,
whose lives have not been consecrated to over-riding spiritual concerns, let them bury the dead and
attend to all temporal matters.
62. 'No man having joined the Church of Jesus Christ is fit for salvation in the celestial kingdom
unless he endures to the end in keeping the commandments.'
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Because of their fear they were themselves devoid of that confidence and assurance which would
have enabled them to still the storm; yet, almost instinctively, they knew their Master could do what
they hesitated to attempt, and soas all men should when their own weak powers are ineffective
they turned for help to the fountain from which perfect help flows.
(3) Jesus, the Lord of nature and Creator of all things, had and freely exercised power over the
creature of his creating. By his word, as he acted in the power of his Father, heaven, earth, and sea
had their beginning. Now he spoke and winds and water obeyed.
(4) Deity intervenes in temporal things, even controlling and moderating the elements for the
faithful. True, he makes the sun to shine and sends his rains upon the just and the unjust (Matt. 5:45),
for all men have come to earth to receive the experiences and undergo the vicissitudes of mortality.
But he maintains special watch care over those who by obedience and righteousness become his
especial friends. For them storms are stilled, barren soil becomes productive (Isa. 35), special
needed rains fall and bounteous harvests mature (Lev. 26:3-5; Deut. 11:13-15; 28:11-12), vines do
not cast off their ripened fruits untimely (Mal. 3:11), climatic conditions of whole regions are
changed, mountains are moved, and rivers are turned out of their courses. (Moses 6:34; 7:13-14.)
(5) As with almost all men in their divers walks, greater faith should have been evidenced by the
disciples as their ship struggled in the surging waves of the Galilean sea. "O ye of little faith," and
"Where is your faith?" were the Master's mild but pointed expressions of reproof.
(6) Implicit in Jesus' reproof of the weak faith of the disciples is the assurance that by faith they also
could have commanded the elements and had them obey. By faith all things are possible, and when
the Lord's servants rise in the full majesty of their call they have "power to command the waters." (D.
& C. 61:27.)
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(3) That persons possessed by evil spirits are subjected to the severest mental and physical sufferings
and to the basest sort of degradationall symbolical of the eternal torment to be imposed upon those
who fall under Satan's control in the world to come;
(4) That devils remember Jesus from pre-existence, recognize him as the One who was then
foreordained to be the Redeemer, and know that he came into mortality as the Son of God;
(5) That the desire to gain bodies is so great among Lucifer's minions as to cause them, not only to
steal the mortal tabernacles of men, but to enter the bodies of animals;
(6) That the devils know their eventual destiny is to be cast out into an eternal hell from whence
there is no return;
(7) That rebellious and worldly people are not converted to the truth by observing miracles; and
(8) That those cleansed from evil spirits can then be used on the Lord's errand to testify of his grace
and goodness so that receptive persons may be led to believe in him.
Matt. 8:29. Jesus, thou Son of God] Our Lord's true identity is known to unclean spirits. Mortal men
may profess not to know of his divinity, but there is no doubt in the minds of the devils in hell. They
remember him from their pre-existent association. They know he was foreordained to be the
Redeemer, that he was born into the world as the literal offspring of the Father, and that their course
in opposing him is one in open rebellion against Deity. (Moses 4:1-4; Abra. 3:26-28; Rev. 12; D. &
C. 29:36-40; 76:25-29.)
Torment us before the time] There is a set time appointed when devils shall have no more power
over mortal men and when they shall be cast out into that eternal hell prepared for them. This fact is
known to them, in consequence of which they labor with inordinate zeal to overthrow the work of
God during the "short time" allotted to them. (Rev. 12:12.)
I. V. Matt. 8:29-30. As both Mark and Luke correctly attest, there was only one man possessed of
evil spirits, not two.
Mark 5:3-5. Evil spirits can completely transform a person physically and mentally. Here we see a
demoniac whose mind is deranged and whose physical strength is such as to break chains and fetters
at will. From all outward appearances he would be classed by doctors as violently insane.
7. Torment me not] Devils now suffer eternal torment because of the realization they cannot gain
bodies. Even the momentary possession of stolen bodies seemingly gives them some satisfaction and
lessens the sting of their torment. Eventually, following the day of final judgment, "the devil and his
angels . . . shall go away into everlasting fire; prepared for them; and their torment is as a lake of fire
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and brimstone, whose flame ascendeth up forever and ever and has no end." (2 Ne. 9:16.)
9. My name is Legion] Names used by Gods, angels, and devils, have specific meanings which
connote to the mind something about the personalities, attributes, or missions of the bearers. And
what is more apt than for a host of evil spirits to be named Legion! Mortal man cannot calculate the
total number of rebel spirits who followed Lucifer when one-third of the hosts of heaven assembled
under his banner, but certainly their number and name is Legion. Some idea of their number may be
seen by estimating how many people have and do live on earth and by speculating how many more
will live before the final winding up scene. Presumably the earth's millennial population will so far
exceed that of any past comparable age that there will be no comparison.
In this instance it is evident that a great host of spirits had taken up unlawful tenancy in the body of
one man. Literally, a legion in the Roman army amounted to some six thousand men; figuratively, a
legion is an indefinitely large number. The number here was so great as to cause some two thousand
swine to careen crazily down a steep slope and drown themselves in the sea.
11-13. Skeptics criticize Jesus for the supposed wanton destruction of the property of others because
he commanded or allowed the devils to enter the swine, thus, in effect causing their death. 'How can
we justify the destruction of the swine?' they ask, as though any of the acts of him whose very course
of conduct identifies what is right and wrong need justifying! Jesus did it; therefore, it was right. As
well might we condemn Deity for sending or permitting hailstorms to destroy our crops, or for
sending drouths upon the earth, or for creating desert land where crops will not grow, as to question
the right of the giver of all to take back all or part of what he has given.
In the instant case, if the swine were owned by Jews, they drove an illegal trade; if the hog farm
belonged to Gentiles, its very existence was an insult to the national religion. In either event, even
according to the local customs and laws, the destruction of the swine was justified.
14-17. Why did the whole city beseech Jesus to depart from their region? A dramatic miracle had
come to their personal knowledge, and it created fear rather than faith in the hearts of the people.
Why? Some few, perhaps, were fearful and angry because of the loss of their property. But the real
reason was far more basic. These people, worldly and carnal by nature, actually preferred their way
of life to that which they would have been obligated to pursue, had they accepted the gospel.
Millions of people in the world today have a similar outlook. Such persons are not converted to the
truth by miracles; they prefer to gratify their own sensual appetites rather than forsake the world.
People whose whole hearts and desires are set on the things of the world would not accept the
gospel, "though one rose from the dead" and taught it to them. (Luke 16:31.) Similarly they would
not believe the Book of Mormon even if they had a view of the Gold Plates and the Urim and
Thummim. (D. & C. 5:8-10.) Men, in the ultimate analysis, are controlled and governed by the
desires of their hearts. When they desire and love darkness rather than light, neither miracles nor any
thing else is sufficient to convert their benighted souls. Rather they rebel against the truth, reject the
prophets, and pray Jesus "to depart out of their coasts."
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18-20. Even people whose bodies have housed unclean spirits may be cleansed by the power of God,
and may be called to serve as witnesses of his divine power. Frequently the great Healer commanded
the recipients of his blessings to remain silent, lest their repeated recital of his goodness to them
should bring persecution upon him. After each healing Jesus gave such instructions as applied to the
particular case. No doubt this healed demoniac was commanded to testify in Decapolis, the region of
ten cities, of his miraculous return to normality, because the bitterness against Jesus was not so great
in that area, and some, perchance, hearing of the miracle would be led to investigate and believe the
truth.
I. V. Mark 5:6. Jesus did not ask the devil to give his name; he commanded him to declare it.
Luke 8:31. Into the deep] Into outer darkness, "into the lake of fire" (Rev. 20:14-15), prepared for the
devil and his angels in eternity.
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Luke 8:55. Her spirit came again] Her spiritthe intelligent, sentient, living part of the human
personalityreturned from the spirit world and entered the body again, thus causing the maid to live
again as a mortal personage.
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to the sick, blessing little children, or confirming, is liable to become weakened." (Teachings, pp.
280-281.)
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power exercised in their behalf. Jesus was not going about healing people and leaving them free to
continue in the ungodly practices and beliefs of the Jews. After being made whole by the Master
Physician, the healed persons were obligated to keep the commandments, to join the Church of Jesus
Christ, if they had not already done so, and to endure in righteousness to the end so that an eventual
celestial inheritance would be assured.
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free" (2 Ne. 2:4) to all who will receive it. "Come, my brethren, every one that thirsteth, come ye to
the waters; and he that hath no money, come buy and eat; yea, come buy wine and milk without
money and without price."' (2 Ne. 9:50; Isa. 55:1.)
9-10. In keeping with the social customs of the day, Jesus sent his disciples out without purse or
scrip. They were to dress modestly, carry no money, food, or extra clothing, have only one staff, and
rely on the hospitality of the people for food, clothing, and shelter. Shoes (made in that day of soft
leather) were forbidden as too luxurious; sandals (of more rugged construction) were approved. A
purse was a girdle in which money was carried; scrip was a small bag or wallet used to carry
provisions. Later Jesus revoked the requirement to rely on the hospitality of the people and
commanded instead, "Now, he that hath a purse, let him take it, and likewise his scrip." (Luke 22:3536.)
Similar but not wholly identical divine direction was given to missionaries in the early days of this
dispensation. "Thou shalt take no purse nor scrip, neither staves, neither two coats," the Lord said,
"for the church shall give unto thee in the very hour what thou needest for food and for raiment, and
for shoes and for money, and for scrip." (D. & C. 24:18.) "It is expedient that I give unto you this
commandment, that ye become even as my friends in days when I was with them, traveling to preach
the gospel in my power; For I suffered them not to have purse or scrip, neither two coats. . . .
Therefore, let no man among you, for this commandment is unto all the faithful who are called of
God in the church unto the ministry, from this hour take purse or scrip, that goeth forth to proclaim
this gospel of the kingdom." (D. & C. 84:77-78, 86.)
Acting through his duly appointed representatives on earth, the Lord has now withdrawn this
requirement that all modern missionary work should be done by laborers who go forth without purse
or scrip. Legal requirements, and different social, economic, and industrial circumstances, have made
such a change necessarya fact which illustrates the need for continuous revelation so that the
Lord's affairs on earth always may be conducted as befit the existing circumstances. Instead of
relying for food, clothing, and shelter upon those to whom they are sent, missionaries are now
expected to support themselves or be supported by their family or friends. There is, of course, no
paid missionary force in the Lord's true Church.
11-15. The basic policies and procedures governing missionary work and the carrying of the message
of salvation to the Father's other children are ever and always the same. By latter-day revelation the
Lord has commanded: "In whatsoever place ye shall enter, and they receive you not in my name, ye
shall leave a cursing instead of a blessing, by casting off the dust of your feet against them as a
testimony, and cleansing your feet by the wayside." (D. & C. 24:15.)
"Let all those take their journey, as I have commanded them, going from house to house, and from
village to village, and from city to city. And in whatsoever house ye enter, and they receive you,
leave your blessing upon that house. And in whatsoever house ye enter, and they receive you not, ye
shall depart speedily from that house, and shake off the dust of your feet as a testimony against them.
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And you shall be filled with joy and gladness; and know this, that in the day of judgment you shall
be judges of that house, and condemn them; And it shall be more tolerable for the heathen in the day
of judgment, than for that house; therefore, gird up your loins and be faithful, and ye shall overcome
all things, and be lifted up at the last day." (D. & C. 75:18-22.)
"He that receiveth you not, go away from him alone by yourselves, and cleanse your feet even with
water, pure water, whether in heat or in cold, and bear testimony of it unto your Father which is in
heaven, and return not again unto that man. And in whatsoever village or city ye enter, do likewise.
Nevertheless, search diligently and spare not; and wo unto that house, or that village or city that
rejecteth you, or your words, or your testimony concerning me. Wo, I say again, unto that house, or
that village or city that rejecteth you, or your words, or your testimony of me; For I, the Almighty,
have laid my hands upon the nations, to scourge them for their wickedness." (D. & C. 84:92-96.)
10. The workman is worthy of his meat] See Luke 10:7.
13. Your peace] See Luke 10:5-6.
15. 'It shall be more tolerable in the day of judgment, for heathen nations who had no opportunity to
accept the gospel in this life, than for the more enlightened races who rejected the truths of salvation
when such were offered to them.' "For of him unto whom much is given much is required; and he
who sins against the greater light shall receive the greater condemnation." (D. & C. 82:3.)
Day of judgment] Day when all men shall be judged according to their works and awarded their
place in the kingdoms which are prepared.
Mark 6:12. To preach repentance is to preach the gospel in its fulness, for it is through repentance
that men accept the gospel, have their sins washed away, and get on the path leading to eternal life.
The latter-day command, "Say nothing but repentance unto this generation" (D. & C. 6:9; 11:9), is
tantamount to saying, 'Preach my gospel to this generation.'
13. Anointed with oil] According to the revealed pattern, part of the ordinance of administering to
the sick consists in anointing with consecrated oil. (Jas. 5:14-16; D. & C. 42:43-44; Mormon
Doctrine, pp. 21-22.) In sending the apostles forth they were expressly commanded to conform to the
proper form of the ordinance, as well as to exercise the faith needed for the successful performance
of healings.
Luke 9:1. Gave them power and authority] Men become true ministers of Christ, not by their own
choice, not because they desire to preach the gospel, not because they choose to go to a divinity
school, but because they are called of God. "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and
ordained you." (John 15:16.) Unless ministers receive power and authority from God, they do not
have it; unless they receive the priesthood by the laying on of hands of those empowered so to act,
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they do not become legal administrators whose acts are binding on earth and in heaven.
"A man must be called of God, by prophecy, and by the laying on of hands, by those who are in
authority to preach the Gospel and administer in the ordinances thereof." (Fifth Article of Faith.) To
raise the dead, to cast out devils, to cure diseases, to heal the sicksuch things take the power of
God. Among those who have the power of God these miracles are performed; and where they are not
performed, there the power of God is not. Professing ministers without this power are false ministers.
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authority when ye shall see me, and we shall stand before God at the last day." (Ether 5:4, 6.)
And the Gentiles] An intimation that in due course the apostles would carry the message of
salvation to the Gentiles.
19. Take no thought how or what ye shall speak] Whether preaching the gospel while in bonds
before kings and rulers, while in the congregations of the wicked, while assembled with the saints of
God, or wherever the Lord's true ministers may be, they are subject to this decree: "Neither take ye
thought beforehand what ye shall say; but treasure up in your minds continually the words of life,
and it shall be given you in the very hour that portion that shall be meted unto every man." (D. & C.
84:85.) One of the chief identifying characteristics of the Lord's true servants is that they speak forth
divine truths "as they are moved upon by the Holy Ghost." (D. & C. 68:2-4.) False ministers, on the
other hand, "teach with their learning, and deny the Holy Ghost, which giveth utterance." (2 Ne.
28:4.)
21-22. Lucifer would slay every servant of God if he could. Accordingly, whenever he gains
sufficient control over his mortal followers, he plants in their hearts the desire to slay the saints, even
though this means that his followers shed the blood of their own kindred and family.
21. See Matt. 10:34-37.
22. He that endureth to the end shall be saved] Salvation is available to all men because of the
atoning sacrifice of Christ. If he had not worked out the infinite and eternal atonement, men could
gain neither immortality nor eternal life. Personal salvation results from "obedience to the laws and
ordinances of the Gospel." (Third Article of Faith.) To gain a celestial inheritance men must accept
the gospel, have faith in Christ, repent of their sins, receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, and then
endure in faith, devotion, and righteousness to the end of their lives. (D. & C. 20:29.) Belief alone, as
so many of the sects of the day falsely suppose, is not enough. Nor does belief coupled with baptism
and church membership suffice; these are the beginning, not the end, of the path leading to eternal
life.
After baptism, as Nephi expressed it, "ye must press forward with a steadfastness in Christ, having a
perfect brightness of hope, and a love of God and of all men. Wherefore, if ye shall press forward,
feasting upon the word of Christ, and endure to the end, behold, thus saith the Father: Ye shall have
eternal life. And now, behold, my beloved brethren, this is the way; and there is none other way nor
name given under heaven whereby man can be saved in the Kingdom of God." (2 Ne. 31:20-21.)
23. So extensive is the labor of preaching the pure gospel that the Lord will come again to usher in
the millennial reign before his servants have gone over the cities where the remnants of scattered
Israel abide. When he comes, to complete the work, then "he shall send his angels before him with
the great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together the remainder of his elect from the four
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winds, from one end of heaven to the other." (Jos. Smith 1:37.)
Matt. 10:24-25a; Luke 6:40. The disciple who is as his master in enduring persecution for
righteousness' sake (Matt. 10:24-25a) shall be as his Lord in eternity (Luke 6:40), that is, he shall be
a joint-heir with Christ, receiving, inheriting, and possessing equally with him in the eternal family
of the Father. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 238-240.)
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accomplished this very mission and ordeal for which I came into the world.'
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world and joined with the congregation of the Lord's own peculiar people. (D. & C. 121:19.) A cup
of cold water] Even the smallest service rendered to one of the Lord's chosen one"because ye
belong to Christ"shall not go unrewarded.
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loaves and fishes in an orderly way, treating all with fairness and impartiality.
Luke 9:16. Jesus blessed the loaves and fishes, not to cause them to multiply, but to set a pattern of
thanksgiving for his disciples. (John 6:11.) In performing miracles it was not his wont to ask the
Father to do the deed; rather, as evidence of his own power and divine Sonship, he spoke in his own
name and heaven and earth obeyed his commands. In conformity with the pattern here set, it is
proper for devout persons to give frequent thanks for their daily bread and to covenant to use the
strength derived from it in righteous works.
John 6:12. Gather up the fragments, that nothing be lost] An object lesson in economy and the wise
use of the temporal bounties so graciously bestowed by an omnipotent Deity. True the Incarnate
Creator had but to speak and food and all needful things would be immediately at hand. But waste is
sin. And his grace and compassion having been manifest, now the Twelve must make wise use of the
excess food he had provided.
13. Twelve baskets] Traveling Jews, as part of their luggage, carried baskets, containers for their
provisions. The dozen baskets here used presumably were part of the equipage of the Twelve.
Matt. 14:22-23. Apparently the disciples hesitated to leave him alone with the multitude, even as the
multitude was reluctant to leave him and return to the camps and villages. Rather, valuing his power
to supply their temporal wants above his ability to feed them spiritually and lead them to eternal life,
they sought to make him king by force. (John 6:15.)
Mark 6:46. How often we find Jesusthe Great Exemplarcommuning with his Father in secret
prayer!
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(3) To bear testimony that he was indeed the promised Messiah, the Son of God, the Incarnate Word,
who though made flesh to fulfil the Father's purposes, yet had resident in him the powers of divinity.
Here in the boat with weak mortals was he "who hath gathered the wind in his fists, who hath bound
the waters in a garment" (Prov. 30:4), he who "spreadeth out the heavens, and treadeth upon the
waves of the sea." (Job 9:8.) And that the disciples knew him for what he was, and saw in this
renewed manifestation of his power the proof of his eternal godhood, is evident from the fact that
they then worshiped him and acclaimed, "Of a truth thou art the Son of God." (Matt. 14:33.)
John 6:16-17. Leaving the rural area near Bethsaida, where Jesus had fed five thousand and more
with five loaves and two fishes, the apostles started by boat "toward Capernaum." Their plan was to
meet Jesus again enroute, apparently at the city of Bethsaida (Mark 6:45), so that he also could
continue the journey by boat. But a sudden and violent storm arose, kept the boat from shore, and
would have prevented the scheduled meeting had not Jesus come to them walking on the water.
Matt. 14:25. In the fourth watch of the night] According to the Roman system, which the Jews had
then adopted, the night was divided into four watches of three hours each, the first beginning at six p.
m. Thus it was sometime between three and six a.m. when Jesus came to succor his weary followers.
John 6:19. They had rowed about five and twenty or thirty furlongs] Unable to sail against the head
wind, and knowing that any attempt to sail with it would have invited a disastrous wreck, the
disciples had kept themselves afloat and traveled only some three and a half miles in eight or ten
hours. A furlong is one hundred and twenty paces or an eighth of a mile.
Jesus walking on the sea] Literally on the surface of the raging waves, walking as easily and ably as
he ever walked the streets of his own city of Capernaum.
Matt. 14:26. It is a spirit] See Luke 24:36-48.
27. Be of good cheer; it is I; be not afraid] How perfect this salutation! not alone for the weary and
despairing disciples, but for all the storm tossed voyagers of life, all who toil in faith through the
turbulent waters, all who need the steadying hand of the now unseen Master.
28-32. Peter also walked on the water. True, frightened by the boisterous wind, his confidence
weakened, and he began to sink. But in faith he had walked forth amid the unruly waves, and
reassured by the Master's hand, the chief apostle had returned to the boat walking on the sea.
John 6:21. They willingly received him into the ship] Supposing him to be a spirit, they at first had
been terrified at his approach, but now, recognizing him as their Lord, they willingly, yea anxiously,
received him into the ship.
Matt. 14:32. The wind ceased] "Peace, be still." (Mark 4:39.) Again by his miraculous power, Jesus
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stills a storm.
33. Thou are the Son of God] This is the first time in the Synoptic Gospels, as now recorded, that
men apply this title to Jesus. Long before, as recorded by John, Nathaneal had made a similar
affirmation. (John 1:49.)
Mark 6:51-52. Why were the hearts of the apostles hardened with unbelief, wonder, and amazement
to see Jesus walk on the sea and again calm a raging storm? Had they not just seen five loaves and
two fishes feed five thousand men besides women and children? The answer is found in the fact that
the chosen disciples had not yet received the gift of the Holy Ghost. Though they were all pillars of
spiritual strength and righteousness, save Judas only, yet "the things of God knoweth no man, but the
Spirit of God." (1 Cor. 2:11.) Until the natural man becomes a new creature of the Holy Ghost, until
man is born again, until his stony heart is touched by the Spirit of the living God, he cannot, by any
power of his own, stand sure and steadfast in the cause of truth.
John 6:21. Immediately the ship was at the land whither they went] Contrasted with the laborious toil
and slow progress of the night, it now seemed as though the boat hastened of itself. At the moment of
their deepest peril, the Master had spoken peace to their troubled souls, and now their perils and fears
had vanished and their destination was at hand.
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John 6:22-24. On the day following the miracle of the loaves and fishes, the multitude (knowing the
disciples had taken the only available boat and yet finding Jesus unaccountably absent) hailed other
boats coming from Tiberias and thus made their way to Capernaum in search of him.
25-26. What a contrast between those in the land of Gennesaret who believed and were healed and
those who, meeting Jesus in Capernaum, sought him merely because of the loaves and fishes! One
group, through faith, accepted the gospel and came into his kingdom, as we may confidently
suppose; the other, thinking chiefly of their hungry bellies, were fed once with temporal food and
went ever thereafter spiritually hungry.
27. Metaphorical expressions of eating and drinking spiritual truths were as common among the Jews
as they are today. We speak, for instance, of "devouring" a book, or of "drinking in" the words of a
sermon. Everlasting life] See John 17:3. Son of man] See Matt. 16:13.
Him hath God the Father sealed] Him hath God the Father marked out or authenticated as his only
Son; that is, he is the One, chosen, appointed, and openly approved (by unnumbered signs and
evidences) to give the spiritual meat which endureth to everlasting life, for he is the Son of that holy
Man who is the Father.
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show us some great sign. True, you fed five thousand and more of us yesterday near Bethsaida with
five loaves and two fishes, but surely you won't claim that as proof of the exalted claim to divinity
which you now make. Why Moses, who was a man and not a god, fed millions of our fathers daily
for forty years with manna from heaven. His miracle far exceeded yours of yesterday. Surely, if you
are the Son of God, as you say, you will do some great work so we may believe on thee. Yea, we
challenge your claim of divinity by asking, What miraculous work dost thou do?'
32-33. 'Then Jesus said unto them, With all force and solemnity, I tell you that ye do err. It was not
Moses who gave you that bread from heaven; rather, it was I, the God of Israel; and further, that
ancient manna, as used by your fathers, supplied only their temporal needs; they ate daily and
hungered daily. But now my Father giveth you the enduring, spiritual bread from heaven, that bread
of which men may eat and never hunger more. This bread which my Father giveth is his own Son
who was with him in the beginning, who cometh down from heaven, and who offers eternal life to all
men.'
34. 'Then said they unto him, Lord, evermore give us this spiritual bread, this bread which will feed
not our bodies only but our souls also; yea, give us this bread of which we may eat and never hunger
more, so that we may press forward and gain eternal life.'
35. 'And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life; I am the living manna sent down by the Father;
I am come to feed you spiritually. He that cometh to me, and obeyeth my gospel, shall be fed
spiritually; yea, he shall never hunger more; and he that believeth that I am the Son of God, sent
down from the Father, shall find in my gospel rivers of living water from which to drink and quench
his spiritual thirst; yea, he shall drink and never thirst more.'
36. 'And now, why say ye, Evermore give us this spiritual food and drink, for I have already offered
it unto you, and you received it not; yea, though ye have heard my words and even seen my miracles,
yet ye have not believed that I am he through whom salvation cometh.'
37. 'Nevertheless, all those among you who believe in me and my words, and who obey my law,
have been given to me by my Father; and such shall come unto me and be fed spiritually; yea, the
invitation is to all, and none are denied: if men will come unto me, they shall in no wise be cast
out.' (2 Ne. 26:33.)
38. 'For I came down from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of my Father who sent
me.' (3 Ne. 27:13-16.)
39. 'And this is the Father's will who hath sent me, that I should work out the infinite and eternal
atonement, so that all men shall be raised in immortality at the last day; yea, it is his will that all
should come forth from the grave and that none should be lost.'
40. 'And this also is the will of the Father who sent me, that everyone who receiveth me as the Son of
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God, and who believeth that I am the Christ, and who obeyeth the laws and ordinances of my gospel,
enduring in righteousness to the end, shall have everlasting life; yea, it is his will that all such shall
come forth in the resurrection of the just, raised in immortality and unto eternal life.' (D. & C. 29:4344.)
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46. 'Think not because the prophets have written of the righteous, And they shall all be taught of
God, that ye shall see him or be taught by him, except ye repent and believe in the Son. For no man
shall see the Father except the Son and he to whom the Son shall reveal him; yea, only those who are
born of God shall see the Father, for no others can enter his presence.'
47. 'Solemnly and soberly I say unto you, He that believeth in me as the very Son of God, and who
receiveth my gospel, obeying all the laws and ordinances thereof, and who endureth in righteousness
and truth unto the end, behold, he shall have everlasting life, which is exaltation in my Father's
kingdom.'
48-51. 'I am the bread of everlasting life, even that spiritual bread of which men must eat to gain
everlasting life. This spiritual bread is that which cometh down from heaven, that a man may eat
thereof and not die spiritually, which spiritual death is to be cast out of the presence of the Lord and
to die as pertaining to things of righteousness. True, your fathers did eat manna in the wilderness, but
they are dead, for this manna satisfied their temporal hunger only; it was not that spiritual bread of
which men may eat and gain spiritual or eternal life. But I am the living bread, even the Son of God
who came down from the Father in heaven. If any man shall eat of this spiritual bread, he shall live
forever in that, being born again, he shall be spiritually alive in this world and inherit eternal life,
which is spiritual life in the presence of the Father, in the world to come. And to eat the living bread
is to accept me as the Son of God and to obey my commandments. And this living bread, which I
shall give unto all who believe in me and obey my law, is my own flesh, in that it shall be because of
my atoning sacrifice and temporal death that men shall have power to eat of the living bread and gain
eternal life. Therefore say I unto you, I will give my flesh for the life of the world.'
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full sense, with no reservation whatever, as the personal offspring in the flesh of the Eternal Father;
and, secondly, it is to keep the commandments of the Son by accepting his gospel, joining his
Church, and enduring in obedience and righteousness unto the end. Those who by this course eat his
flesh and drink his blood shall have eternal life, meaning exaltation in the highest heaven of the
celestial world. Speaking of ancient Israel, for instance, Paul says: They "did all eat the same
spiritual meat; And did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that
followed them: and that Rock was Christ." (1 Cor. 10:3-4.)
In the waters of baptism the saints take upon themselves the name of Christ (that is, they accept him
fully and completely as the Son of God and the Savior of men), and they then covenant to keep his
commandments and obey his laws. (Mosiah 18:7-10.) To keep his saints in constant remembrance of
their obligation to accept and obey himor in other words, to eat his flesh and drink his bloodthe
Lord has given them the sacramental ordinance. This ordinance, performed in remembrance of his
broken flesh and spilled blood, is the means provided for men, formally and repeatedly, to assert
their belief in the divinity of Christ, and to affirm their determination to serve him and keep his
commandments; or, in other words, in this ordinancein a spiritual, but not a literal sensemen eat
his flesh and drink his blood. Hence, after instituting the sacramental ordinance among the Nephites,
Jesus commanded: "Ye shall not suffer any one knowingly to partake of my flesh and blood
unworthily, when ye shall minister it; For whoso eateth and drinketh my flesh and blood unworthily
eateth and drinketh damnation to his soul; therefore if ye know that a man is unworthy to eat and
drink of my flesh and blood ye shall forbid him." (3 Ne. 18:25-29.)
52. How can this man give us his flesh to eat?] This querulous, unbelieving attitude on the part of the
Jews was, not only wholly unwarranted, but from Jewish lips it bordered on absurdity. Probably no
people in all history understood better or had made more extensive use of symbolical and figurative
language than they had. Further, Jesus had just taught them the doctrine of the Bread of Life. For
them to pretend not to know that eating the flesh of Jesus meant accepting him as the Son of God and
obeying his words could only mean that they were wilfully closing their eyes to the truth. Their lack
of spiritual understanding was comparable to that of modern sectarians who profess to find in our
Lord's statements, about eating and drinking his own flesh and blood, justification for the false
doctrine of transubstantiation.
In substance and effect Jesus then said to the Jews:
53. 'Solemnly and soberly I say unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of God, and drink his
blood, by accepting me and my mission and obeying my gospel, ye have no spiritual life in you, but
rather are spiritually dead and are not born again.'
54. 'Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my bloodby accepting me, keeping my commandments,
and enduring unto the endshall have eternal life; and I will raise him up in the resurrection of the
just to an inheritance of exaltation in my Father's kingdom.'
55. 'For my flesh is spiritual meat indeed, and my blood is spiritual drink indeed.'
56. 'He that spiritually eateth my flesh by accepting me as the Son of God, and spiritually drinketh
my blood by keeping all my commandments, by the power of the Holy Spirit, he shall dwell in me
and I in him; yea, we shall then be one, in that we are perfectly united in character, perfections, and
attributes; we shall then have the same mind and the same judgment in all things.' (1 Cor. 1:10; 2:16.)
57. 'As the living Father, who himself hath spiritual and eternal life, hath sent me; and as I have
spiritual life and shall have eternal life because I keep my Father's commandments; so he that
spiritually eateth me by keeping my commandments, even he shall gain spiritual life and eternal life
because of me and my atoning sacrifice.'
58. 'These things which I have told you are the true doctrine of the Bread of Life, that bread which
came down from heaven. This true bread from heaven is not, as you falsely supposed, that manna
which your fathers (who are dead) ate to sustain themselves temporally, for he that eateth of this true
bread from heaven shall have spiritual and eternal life forever.'
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command them." (Abra. 3:25.) After they accept the gospel and join the Church, this testing process
continues, indeed, is often intensified. "I have decreed in my heart, saith the Lord, that I will prove
you in all things, whether you will abide in my covenant, even unto death, that you may be found
worthy. For if ye will not abide in my covenant ye are not worthy of me." (D. & C. 98:14-15.)
In this dispensation, the promulgation of the law of plural marriage had an effect similar to the
presentation of the doctrine of the Bread of Life in the meridian dispensation. Opposition from
without the Church increased, while some unstable members of the kingdom itself found themselves
unable to accept the fulness of the revealed program of the Lord. There were many important reasons
why the Lord revealed the doctrine of plurality of wives. But if plural marriage had served no other
purpose than to sift the chaff from the wheat, than to keep the unstable and semi-faithful people from
the fulness of gospel blessings, it would have been more than justified.
After his discourse on the Bread of Life, Jesus and his disciples had the following discussion, in
substance and effect:
60. 'Many therefore of his disciples, who believed in him and had been baptized into his kingdom,
when they heard this sermon on the Bread of Life said, This is too much for us to believe. True, we
have seen your miracles and believed that God hath chosen you as a great prophet, even as he chose
Moses. But now thou makest thyself greater than Moses and all the prophets; thou settest thyself up
as the living manna of which men must eat to gain salvation. This is an hard saying; who can hear it?'
61-65. 'When Jesus heard that his disciples murmured and manifest unbelief at his doctrine, he said
unto them, Doth this plain statement of my position as the Son of God offend you? If ye cannot
accept this testimony of my divinity and mission, what would ye think if I should show you my
ascension to the Father? for there are some who shall see the Son of God ascend up where he was
before. But know this: All these things which I have spoken unto you are spiritual and lead to eternal
life, and they can only be understood by those who are spiritually enlightened. The Spirit must
quicken your understanding if you are to comprehend the things of God. No man by his own intellect
and reason can understand the things of the Spirit; the wisdom of the world, standing alone, profiteth
nothing in comprehending the things of God. And there are some among you who rely on your own
wisdom rather than the whisperings of the Spirit, and as a consequence some of you believe not my
words. (For Jesus had spiritual insight and revelation and knew from the beginning who they were
that believed not, and also who should betray him.) And he said, It was for this reason that I said
unto you, that no man can come unto me, except he doeth the will of my Father who hath sent me,
for only those who do the will of my Father by keeping the commandments can receive the Spirit
which shall bear record to them that all things which I have said about myself are true.'
68. To whom shall we go?] Not only did Peter bear inspired testimony as to the divinity of his
Master, but with perfect logic he showed the utter futility of leaving the true spiritual bread to eat at
other tables. It is the absolute right of every accountable person who will do the will of the Father to
gain by personal revelation a testimony of the divinity of the Lord's work on earth. Those who gain
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such testimonies, and who then leave the Church, never again find peace of mind. Apostates never
prosper spiritually. The Spirit of the Lord withdraws from them, and they sink into spiritual oblivion
where there is no light and revelation, no guidance from on high, and where none of the gifts of the
Spirit are made manifest.
70-71. Peter professed to speak for all of the Twelve, but Jesus knew that one of them was a traitor
who had sold himself to Lucifer, thereby becoming "a devil" himself, as it were.
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11. It is Corban] God had commanded Israel, "Honour thy father and thy mother" (Ex. 20:12), which
included caring for their temporal needs, but according to the rabbinical teachings, a wealthy son
could say to destitute parents, "It is Corban," and thus be free of his obligation to support them.
Originally this had meant, in effect, 'My property is Corban or has been pledged or given to God, and
therefore it cannot be used to support you in your poverty.' Then the selfish son could continue to use
his property as long as he lived. But by Jesus' day the practice and teaching was so corrupt that
Corban meant merely to take a vow; and so by saying, "It is Corban," the son meant, 'I have vowed
not to support you'; and so he was free of the command to honor his parents, for according to "the
tradition of the elders," it was more important to keep his vow than obey God and honor his parents.
Matt. 15:7-9. This quotation from Isaiah (Isa. 29:13), describing perfectly as it did the apostate
condition of the Jews, was also the one used by Lord Jesus when he appeared in glory with his
Father, to Joseph Smith in the Spring of 1820, to usher in the dispensation of the fulness of times.
(Jos. Smith 2:19.) Isaiah's prophecy, though applicable to the Jews, was spoken with particular and
specific reference to the latter-day conditions which were to precede the final restoration of the
gospel. As with so many ancient prophecies, these words of Isaiah are subject to the law of dual
fulfillment. In both instances our Lord gave a substance rather than a verbatim quotation.
9. In vain they do worship me] There is no salvation in worship as such, even though it be directed
to the true God; worship based on false principles is in vain. Men may worship Deity their whole life
long, according to their traditions and rituals, and never gain true faith, forgiveness of sin, or
sanctifying grace. Worship leads to salvation only when it conforms to the revealed, divine pattern,
only when it is based on the rock foundation of eternal truth. "Not every one that saith unto me,
Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is
in heaven." (Matt. 7:21.) There is no salvation in false worship.
I. V. Mark 7:10-11. By professing to believe in the prophets, while in practice rejecting their
teachings, the Jews were in reality rejecting the prophets. Thus, those Jews were placing themselves
in the same position which their fathers occupied when those fathers slew the prophets; and so the
blood of the prophets would be required at the hands of the Jews and their fathers, for both rejected
them. Similarly, some today, by rejecting the teachings of the ancient apostles and prophets, are
classifying themselves as people who would have slain the holy men of old, and so the blood of the
true martyrs of religion shall be upon them.
Matt. 15:12-13. It is as though Jesus had said: 'If these false ministers are offended because I preach
the truth, let them take offense. I have more important things to do than worry about their feelings.
They are corrupt and apostate, and in due course shall be rooted out by the very truths which I now
declare.'
14. Let them alone] There is no profit in debating or quarreling with false ministers who are steeped
in tradition, whose deeds are evil, and who are affirmatively trying to prevent the spread of gospel
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truth.
Mark 7:19. Purging all meats] Or, as per the marginal reading, "This he said, making all meats
clean." In other words, Peterwho received the divine command to eat meat which had been
unclean according to Mosaic standards (Acts 10)speaking through Mark, his scribe, is showing
that Jesus here revealed that the old prohibitions as to eating certain meats was ended.
22. An evil eye] "The lust of the eyes." (1 John 2:16.) That is, evils or lusts of any sort which are
born or fostered by what is seen with the eye. For instance, "Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust
after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart." (Matt. 5:28. )
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applies today also. That is, the children of the kingdomthose who belong to the Church, those who
love the Lord and are seeking to keep his commandmentsare the ones who are entitled to the
healing power of the priesthood; while those who are without and who have not yet covenanted in
the waters of baptism to devote themselves to righteousness, are entitled to healing graces only on
conditions of unusual faith and desire, a faith and desire which should lead them to join the Church
when their petitions are granted.
26. Dogs] Literally, little dogs, household pets, who begged for the surplus morsels from the table;
figuratively, according to Jewish usage, the Gentiles were so designated.
28. O woman, great is thy faith] Why did Jesus delay the granting of this Gentile woman's petition?
For the very reason apparently, that she was a Gentile and not a Jew, for the gospel (with all its
healing powers and graces) was to be offered to the Jews before it went to the Gentiles. Jesus' mortal
ministry was with Israel, not with other nations. His healing of this or any Gentile person came by
special dispensation because of great faith. Previously he had commanded the apostles to go only to
the lost sheep of the house of Israel and not to preach the message of salvation to the Gentiles. (Matt.
10:5-6.) Certainly the course he followed in this instance was instructive to his disciples, tested the
faith of the Gentile woman, taught that persistence and importunity in prayer will bring reward, and
showed that greater faith is sometimes found among heathens than in the chosen lineage of Israel.
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purpose in mind, Jesus had once asked an impotent man, "Wilt thou be made whole" (John 5:6);
before opening the eyes of two blind men, he had engendered faith in their souls by asking, "Believe
ye that I am able to do this?" (Matt. 9:28); and to two other blind men, on a coming occasion, he
would ask, "What will ye that I shall do unto you?" (Matt. 20:32.)
But now the Lord is dealing with a believing soul who cannot hear his words or give fluent answer to
them. And so what is more natural than to make use of common signs, known to and understood by
the deaf and speech inhibited man, to indicate what the Master could and would do in accordance
with the law of faith? Thus we find Jesus putting his own fingers in the man's ears, to indicate that by
faith the hearing obstruction would be pierced; we find the Master spitting and placing his own saliva
on the man's tongue (a practice commonly believed by the rabbis and Jews to be one having healing
virtue), to indicate that the tongue would be loosed and gain fluency; and finally, our Lord, looking
up to heaven, spoke the divine command, "Ephphatha, that is, Be opened," to signify to the man that
the power of God was opening his ears and loosing his tongue.
36-37. On some occasions a knowledge of healing miracles may engender faith, on others it fosters
unbelief and persecution. Accordingly, Jesus sought either to advertise or keep secret his miraculous
healings, depending upon the needs of the ministry at the particular time and place. On a previous
occasion, when he was leaving this very region, he had commanded the man out of whom a legion of
devils was cast to publish the miracle through all Decapolis. (Mark 5:19-20.) But now, sojourning,
for a season in the area, the Master Healer sought to keep secret the dramatic nature of this particular
miracle.
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men, plus an uncounted host of women and children, staying with him in a solitary area, without
food or other necessities for three days; they are now faint from fasting and weary for want of beds
and other normal home conveniences, yet they remain to hear every spoken word and rejoice in
every gracious healing. Would they so have acted except for the inward assurance that here indeed,
as they themselves had frankly avowed, was "the God of Israel"? (Matt. 15:31.)
4. From whence can a man satisfy these men with bread here in the wilderness?] Those speaking
were the apostles who had participated in the feeding of the five thousand. They knew full well the
miraculous creative powers of the Master whom they followed. The question as here put is rather an
expression of their own inability to feed such a multitude with the scanty provisions at hand. We may
suppose also that in their subservient position as followers of him who exceeds all men in power and
might, they modestly and properly left to their Lord the decision as to what should be done. It is
evident that Jesus did not deem it necessary to test their faith, as he had done before, by saying,
"They need not depart; give ye them to eat" (Matt. 14:16); this time he simply asked what provisions
were at hand and gave directions as to their distribution.
10. The parts of Dalmanutha] Matthew says, "the coasts [region] of Magdala [Magadan] "
presumably an area on the west of the Sea of Galilee, which cannot now be located with certainty.
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Luke 12:57. By natural inheritance, as a free gift from God, every accountable person is enlightened
by "the Spirit of Jesus Christ." By hearkening to the promptings of this Spirit or light of Christ men
are led to believe in Christ and accept him as the Son of God. (D. & C. 84:44-48.) Thus Jesus is here
saying: 'Even if you cannot read the signs of the times, yet if ye would hearken to the light of Christ,
to the light of reason and conscience, ye would know that I am he who should come.'
Matt. 16:5-12. Literally, leaven is a substance that produces fermentation, as for instance yeast which
causes bread to rise. Figuratively, leaven is any element which, by its fermenting, spreading
influence, affects groups of people so that they believe and act in particular ways. Thus to beware of
the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees is to shun their false doctrines, their concept that the
Messiah must prove his claim to divinity by signs, for instance. Similarly, today, the warning is to
beware of the leaven of any group whose false doctrines and antichrist philosophies work to keep
men from accepting the truths of the restored gospel.
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frequently means territory or region according to the usage of the King James translators. Mark
designates the area as "the towns of Caesarea Philippi." (Mark 8:27.)
Luke 9:18. Luke alone, though his whole account is the briefest of any of the Synoptists, preserves
for us the fact that Jesus and the disciples were alone praying when the Master asked the question
which elicited Peter's dramatic testimony.
Matt. 16:13. Whom do men say that I the Son of man am?] That is, 'Who do men say that I the Son
of God am?' The name-titles Son of God and Son of Man are synonymous; they are as identical in
meaning as two phrases containing different words can be. In the pure Adamic language, the name of
Elohim, the Father, is Man of Holiness (signifying that God is a Holy Man), and the name of Christ,
the Son, is Son of Man of Holiness or Son of Man. (Mormon Doctrine, p. 671; Moses 6:57.)
14. Some say that thou art John the Baptist] Apparently others shared the superstitious views of
Herod Antipas that the martyred John had been raised from the dead. (Matt. 14:1-2.)
Elias] Elijah, who as was well known among the Jews, was to return to earth and perform a mighty
work before the ushering in of the final Messianic Era. (Mal. 4:5-6; D. & C. 110:13-16.)
Jeremias] Jeremiah. According to Jewish legends, Jeremiah as well as Elijah, was to return to prepare
the way before the Messiah. Jeremiah "was said to have hidden the ark when Jerusalem was captured
by the Babylonians, and to have called Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Moses from their tombs to assist
him in mourning for the destruction of the Temple. In the days of the Messiah it was said that he and
Elijah would dig up the ark from the cave on Mt. Nebo in which it was concealed, and replace it in
the Holy of Holies." (Dummelow, p. 680.)
16. Thou are the Christ, the Son of the living God] Peter spoke as the Holy Ghost gave him
utterance, bearing his own personal testimony and acting as mouth for his brethren of the Twelve.
But great and majestic as Peter's confession was, it brought forth no new or novel doctrine; it was not
forthcoming as the climax of a long period of training and schooling which convinced the apostles
that their Master was the Messiah, as some have falsely supposed. Rather, it was the spoken
averment of what had long been in the hearts of each of them; it was a plain and inspired restatement
of the same testimony the true disciples had been bearing from the very time of Jesus' birth.
Shepherds to whom his birth was announced (Luke 2:7-20), Simon and Anna in the temple (Luke
2:25-39), wise men from the east (Matt. 2:1-12), John the Baptist (John 1:1-36; 3:22-36; Matt. 3),
Elizabeth (Luke 1:41-45), Andrew (John 1:37-42), Phillip (John 1:43-45), Nathaneal (John 1:46-51),
the Samaritan woman (John 4:28-29, 39), the apostles as a group (Matt. 14:33), mortal men
possessed with devils (Luke 4:33-37), the people generally (Matt. 9:27; 12:23; 15:22)all these on
previous occasions, using language having exactly the same sense and meaning as Peter's, had born
testimony of our Lord's divine Sonship. And for that matter, he himself had taken frequent
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opportunity, both in plain language and by symbols which were clearly understood by his Jewish
hearers, to bear testimony of his own divinity. (Luke 2:41-50; 4:16-32; John 2:13-22; 3:13-21; 4:445; 5:17-47; Matt. 12:1-8.)
17-19. See Matthew 18:18. Jesus here promises to give Peter, at a future time, the keys of the
kingdom by which he shall have power to bind, seal, and loose on earth and in heaven. These keys,
and the sealing power which is inherent in them, have been held by righteous men in all gospel
dispensations.
When Christ, some twenty or more years before his birth into mortality, conferred these same keys
upon Nephi the son of Helaman, he described the power and magnitude of them in these words:
"Blessed art thou, Nephi, for those things which thou hast done; for I have beheld how thou hast with
unwearyingness declared the word, which I have given unto thee, unto this people. And thou hast not
feared them, and hast not sought thine own life, but hast sought my will, and to keep my
commandments. And now, because thou hast done this with such unwearyingness, behold, I will
bless thee forever; and I will make thee mighty in word and in deed, in faith and in works; yea, even
that all things shall be done unto thee according to thy word, for thou shalt not ask that which is
contrary to my will. Behold, thou art Nephi, and I am God. Behold, I declare it unto thee in the
presence of mine angels, that ye shall have power over this people, and shall smite the earth with
famine, and with pestilence, and destruction, according to the wickedness of this people. Behold, I
give unto you power, that whatsoever ye shall seal on earth shall be sealed in heaven; and
whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven; and thus shall ye have power among
this people. And thus, if ye shall say unto this temple it shall be rent in twain, it shall be done. And if
ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou cast down and become smooth, it shall be done. And
behold, if ye shall say that God shall smite this people, it shall come to pass. And now behold, I
command you, that ye shall go and declare unto this people, that thus saith the Lord God, who is the
Almighty: Except ye repent ye shall be smitten, even unto destruction." (Hela. 10:4-11.)
Because of his own unwearying devotion to the Master's cause, and so that he might preside over all
the affairs of the kingdom of God on earth, Peter was soon to receive and exercise these same keys
and powers, as was to be the case also with all of his brethren of the Twelve. (Matt. 18:18.)
17. Simon Bar-jona] Literally, Simon son of Jonah (John 1:42), a formal name of Peter, here aptly
used to contrast Peter's mortal paternity with Jesus' birth as the literal Son of an immortal Father.
Flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven] Mortal man was
not the source of Peter's knowledge that Jesus was "the Christ, the Son of the living God." He hid
learned it by personal revelation from the Father who hid sent the Holy Ghost to Peter to testify of
the Son. The Holy Ghost is a Revelator; one of his chief assigned missions is to bear testimony to
receptive mortals that Jesus is the Christ. Peter had received such a revelation on previous occasions
(John 6:69), and here we find the Holy Ghost speaking to him again, certifying anew of the divinity
of his Lord.
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It is a false notion to suppose that the apostles and other righteous men did not receive revelation
from the Holy Ghost while Christ was with them in the flesh. It is true that (with the apparent
exception of John the Baptist) they did not enjoy the gift of the Holy Ghost, meaning the constant
companionship of that member of the Godhead, until after the day of Pentecost. But they did receive
flashes of revelation from time to time from the Holy Ghost, as Peter did in this instance. Simeon's
testimony, for instance, "was revealed unto him by the Holy Ghost." (Luke 2:26); and so it was with
the testimonies of all the disciples. John the Baptist, howeverbecause of his position as the Lord's
forerunner, and possibly because he did not enjoy the close personal relationship with Jesus that the
other disciples hadwas "filled with the Holy Ghost from his mother's womb." (D. & C. 84:27.)
Jesus himself, of course, had the Holy Ghost with him at all times and operated in all that he did in
conformity with that member of the Godhead.
18. Thou art Peter] That is, 'Thou art a mortal man; Jonah is thy father. I, thy Lord, though I dwell
in mortality, am the Son of God in the same sense that thou, Simon, art the son of Jonah; as thou hast
testified of my parentage, so I also, by way of contrast, certify of thine. And now, though I have
inherited because of my birth the powers of immortality, which sets me apart from thee, yet because
of faith and obedience thou shalt receive and exercise the powers and keys which I hold, and in my
name thou shalt bind and loose, seal and unseal, both on earth and in heaven. Though thou art mortal,
for thou art Peter, the son of Jonah, yet thy power shall prevail in the immortal sphere where I, who
have the power of immortality, for God is my Father, reign forever and ever.'
This same vivid contrast between the powers of mortality and the powers of immortality was made
by Christ when he said to Nephi the son of Helaman, "Behold, thou art Nephi, and I am God" (Hela.
10:6), and then continued, in effect, to say to Nephi that though he was a man as contrasted with
Deity, yet Nephi should exercise the power of God himself, binding and sealing in heaven as on
earth, smiting the earth with famine and pestilence, moving mountains and the like.
Upon this rock I will build my church] "What rock? Revelation!" (Teachings, p. 274.) What
church? The Church of Jesus Christ of the Meridian of Time, or of Latter-day Saints, or of whatever
dispensation is involved. That is, 'Upon revelation, a rock of secure foundation, I will continue to
build up my Church, for that Church which I have already organized among you is not yet perfected,
but it shall be perfected in due course, for I will continue to give you revelation after I have ascended
unto my Father.'
This whole passage, containing our Lord's questions and promises and Peter's great confession, is
one that has engendered endless wrangling in Christendom. Catholics virtually rest their whole claim
to being the true Church upon the contention that Jesus here promised to build the Church upon Peter
as an individual. Protestant apologists point outand their contention is true that the position of
Peter in the primitive Church was entirely unlike that of a modern pope and that in fact Peter
received no power and no keys that were not held jointly and equally by all of the Twelve, as though
proving this would show the divinity of their lost cause.
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But when the passage is considered, as all properly interpreted scripture must be in its context and
historical setting, and in its proper perspective and relationship to all of the revealed wordits intent
and meaning is so clear that no intelligent person is justified in misunderstanding it. God's work does
not rest on individuals, but upon doctrines and principles. The Lord Jesus, himself, standing alone,
separate from all other men, is the sole person, under God, in whom faith is or properly can be
centered. Peter had his agency; he could have fallen from grace, fought the truth, and become a son
of perdition; so could each of the Twelve. There is no compulsion in the gospel of our Lord. Peter
was the greatest man of his day, just as Joseph Smith ranks pre-eminent above all others in this
dispensation. But neither of them was Christ, and neither of them was God. The work of Deity rests
not on the arm of flesh, but upon the eternal principles that he ordained before the world was and in
conformity to which he has operated in all dispensations.
What then is the principle upon which the Lord has built up his Church and established his kingdom
in all ages? Always, invariably, eternally, exclusively, Deity has and does operate upon the principle
of revelation. By revelation his mind and will is made known and his kingdom established; without it
he becomes an unknown God, an immaterial nothing; without it men substitute their own creeds and
theories for his plans and purposes. Adam, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Moses, the Brother of Jared,
Nephi, Joseph Smith, and every prophet through whom the God of heaven set up his earthly
kingdom, received their commission and direction by revelation. Where there is revelation, there is
the kingdom of God on earth; where there is no revelation, there the kingdom of God is not.
Thus, by viewing this passage in harmony with the whole body of revealed truthand any other
course will result in a distorted and perverted understanding of itit is plain beyond question that
our Lord is saying to Peter: 'Blessed art thou Peter, for thy unwearying devotion to my cause and for
the testimony which thou hast borne of my divine Sonship; and this testimony was not revealed to
thee by mortal man, but it came by revelation from my Father, by the power of the Holy Ghost. And
now Peter, my chief apostle, know this: It is upon this very rock of revelation that I have built up my
Church in all ages past, and upon which I will build and perfect it in this your day; for after I have
ascended to my Father, ye and your brethren and all the worthy saints shall receive the gift of the
Holy Ghost, so that you may receive revelation from me and learn all things that are expedient for
you to know concerning the building up and rolling forth of my kingdom.'
It is fruitless for uninspired scriptural exegetes to argue and debate about this passage in an attempt
to sustain the particular leanings with which they chance to have encumbered themselves. What does
it matter that the name Peter in Greek happens to mean a rock or a stone? What difference does it
make that Peter was promised the gift of seership, or anything else for that matter? And what bearing
does it have on the problem to show that all of the Twelve held all of the keys of the kingdom? None
of these things establish the divinity of any false church.
But suppose it were true that the wholly untenable apostate view were correct, and that the Lord had
set up his kingdom with Peter as the rock, still any church claiming to trace its authority back to
Peter would be a false church unless it believed in and operated on the principles of modern
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revelation. Why? Simply because conditions are so different in the world today that a church without
daily revelation cannot make the change necessary to meet those new conditions. How would the
modern church know what stand to take with reference to the use of tobacco, or coffee, or the atomic
bomb, or motion pictures, or television, or a thousand things that were not so much as known to men
in Peter's day?
Clearly it is only by revelation that the Lord establishes his work among men. In the final analysis,
no person can have conclusive knowledge as to the true meaning of this passage without revelation
from that God who is no respecter of persons and who giveth wisdom liberally to all who ask of him
in faith. And how can those who deny the very existence of revelation for this age, and who
deliberately refrain from seeking such for themselves, how can they, in their uninspired state, ever
come to a sure knowledge of this or any other eternal, spiritual truth?
I will build my church] This is not a promise to organize the Church of Christ in a future day. Our
Lord had already set up this Church among men; it was the very kingdom of God on earth, the
doctrines of which kingdom he and his apostles had been preaching on every hand. Converts
baptized by him and his disciples were already members of the Church; persons ordained to offices
in the Melchizedek Priesthood, including the apostles themselves, were operating in church offices.
By speaking in the future tense, Jesus is conveying the thought that his Church will be amplified and
perfected by the apostles after he ascends to his Father. In building up the kingdom both doctrines
and matters of organization come line upon line, precept upon precept, as the needs of the growing,
spreading kingdom require. It was the same in this day; the Church itself was formally organized on
the sixth of April, 1830, but it was still to be built up on earth, as added growth and changing
circumstances necessitated the revelation of new doctrines and the addition of new organizations and
officers.
My Church] There is and can be only one true Church, even as there is only one true science of
mathematics or chemistry. Two different churches, teaching conflicting doctrines, cannot both be
true. If one group of religionists affirms that God is a personal being in whose image man is created,
and that he has a body of flesh and bones which is as tangible as man's; and if another assembly of
so-called believers professes to think that Deity is a spirit essence which fills the immensity of space,
an immaterial nothingness that is everywhere and nowhere in particular present, a spirit that is
incorporeal, uncreated, immaterial and unknowable (all of which is found in the false creeds of
Christendom)then both of these concepts cannot be true. Two and two cannot be four and also
three.
Christ's Church is the one true Church. In this dispensation it is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints, "the only true and living church upon the face of the whole earth." (D. & C. 1:30.) And
since truth is eternal, this one true Church, founded as it is upon the rock of revelation, has every
key, power, priesthood, grace, and authority, that was enjoyed by the saints of God in any past age.
Further, such of the doctrines and principles of salvation as have been revealed in this age are
identical with and constitute the same concepts and views that were revealed anciently to men of
The effective use to which they can be putthe benefits that result when souls fill the full measure
of their creation and take their rightful place in the eternal scheme of things.
To use these standards of judgment it is necessary to view human souls in their relationship to the
eternal plan of creation, progression, and salvation. Souls had their beginning, as conscious
identities, when they were born as the spirit offspring of Deity. There then followed an infinitely
long period of training, schooling, and preparation, so that these spirits might go on and attain their
exaltation. "God himself," as the Prophet Joseph Smith expressed it, "finding he was in the midst of
spirits and glory, because he was more intelligent, saw proper to institute laws whereby the rest could
have a privilege to advance like himself." (Teachings, p. 354.)
As part of this schooling process this earth was created; spirits were given temporal bodies; gospel
dispensations were vouchsafed to men; prophets were sent forth to labor and preach; oftentimes they
were persecuted, tormented, and slain; and even the Son of God taught and served among mortals,
climaxing his ministry by suffering beyond mortal endurance in working out the infinite and eternal
atonement. All this is included in the price already paid toward the purchase of human souls.
Such of these souls as keep all the commandments shall attain eternal life. They shall go on to
exaltation and glory in all things, becoming like the Father, begetting spirit offspring, creating worlds
without number, and forever and endlessly rolling forth the eternal purposes of the Infinite God.
How much is a human soul worth? No man can say, no tongue can tell, no mind can comprehend it.
How apt, then, is Jesus' illustration. If a maneven if such a thing were possibleshould gain the
whole world, and lose his soul in the process, the acquired wealth would be slight indeed as
compared to the value of his own soul.
It is because of their understanding of this doctrine of the worth of souls that our Lord's ministers go
forth with all the energy and capacity they have to labor in the vineyard, pleading with men to repent
and save their souls, that they may have eventual eternal joy in the Father's kingdom. (D. & C. 18:1016.)
I. V. Matt. 16:27. Better a martyr's crown, attained as a consequence of obedience to Jesus'
commandments, than to escape death and lose one's own soul because of disobedience! And how
many of the disciples, then present and hearing this teaching, accepted martyrdom rather than violate
their Master's charge!
28. Eternal life is the martyr's reward. (D. & C. 98:13-14.)
29. Forsake the world] See John 15:18-19.
I. V. Luke 9:24. Willing to lose his life] Martyrdom is not an essential condition precedent to the
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attainment of eternal life. Men are judged according to their desires and the intents of their hearts as
well as their works. Even though the dispensation of the meridian of time was one of martyrdom and
slaughter of the saints, there were many who were able to escape these things. Through obedience to
the gospel standards, their guarantee of attaining eternal life is equal to that of those who laid down
their lives, because those who escaped the sword would have submitted to it rather than deny or
forsake the gospel cause. In this latter-day dispensation relatively few have been called upon to lay
down their lives in the gospel cause, but all saints are expected to be willing to do so if the necessity
is laid upon them.
25. Receive him . . . whom God hath ordained] Jesus, the one person who men of all ages and
dispensations must receive in order to gain salvation.
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42. That resurrection when he cometh] The morning of the first resurrection, or resurrection of the
just, or of life. At the Second Coming of our Lord the graves of those meriting a celestial kingdom
"shall be opened; and they also shall be caught up to meet him in the midst of the pillar of heaven
They are Christ's, the first fruits." Thereafter those destined to inherit a terrestrial kingdom shall
come forth, and finally, after the millennium, those entitled to a telestial inheritance and those who
shall be cast out as sons of perdition shall come forth from their graves. (D. & C. 88:95-102.)
43. Gospel martyrs shall gain exaltation. (D. & C. 98:13.)
44. Again] It is apparent that on a previous occasion, of which we have no present scriptural record,
Jesus taught his disciples the truths about the doctrine of translation and promised that some of them
would continue to live on earth until his Second Coming. John the Beloved is the only known one of
those disciples who has continued to live without tasting death. (John 21:20-24.) Until the identity of
any others is revealed, we have no way of knowing who they are or what mission they have been
able to perform because of their translation.
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(4) John the Baptist, previously beheaded by Herod, apparently was also present. It may well be that
other unnamed prophets, either coming as translated beings or as spirits from paradise, were also
present.
(5) Peter, James, and John saw in vision the transfiguration of the earth, that is, they saw it renewed
and returned to its paradisiacal statean event that is to take place at the Second Coming when the
millennial era is ushered in. (D. & C. 63:20-21; Mormon Doctrine, pp. 718-719.)
(6) It appears that Peter, James, and John received their own endowments while on the mountain.
(Doctrines of Salvation, vol. 2, p. 165.) Peter says that while there, they "received from God the
Father honour and glory," seemingly bearing out this conclusion. It also appears that it was while on
the mount that they received the more sure word of prophecy, it then being revealed to them that they
were sealed up unto eternal life. (2 Pet. 1:16-19; D. & C. 131:5.)
(7) Apparently Jesus himself was strengthened and encouraged by Moses and Elijah so as to be
prepared for the infinite sufferings and agony ahead of him in connection with working out the
infinite and eternal atonement. (Jesus the Christ, p. 373.) Similar comfort had been given him by
angelic visitants following his forty-day fast and its attendant temptations (Matt. 4:11), and an angel
from heaven was yet to strengthen him when he would sweat great drops of blood in the Garden of
Gethsemane. (Luke 22:42-44.)
(8) Certainly the three chosen apostles were taught in plainness "of his death and also his
resurrection" (I. V. Luke 9:31), teachings which would be of inestimable value to them in the trying
days ahead.
(9) It should also have been apparent to them that the old dispensations of the past had faded away,
that the law (of which Moses was the symbol) and the prophets (of whom Elijah was the typifying
representative) were subject to Him whom they were now commanded to hear.
(10) Apparently God the Father, overshadowed and hidden by a cloud, was present on the mountain,
although our Lord's three associates, as far as the record stipulates, heard only his voice and did not
see his form.
Matt. 17:1. After six days] Mark agrees that it was six days; Luke says it was eight. In other words,
one week elapsed between Jesus' promise to Peter, to give him the keys of the kingdom, and that
glorious day of transfiguration when the keys were actually conferred upon Peter and his two
associates. Two of the synoptists are excluding the two terminal days from their count, the other is
including them.
Peter, James, and John] Why were these three repeatedly singled out and given special blessings
and privileges? They alone witnessed the raising of Jairus' daughter from the dead. (Mark 5:22-24,
35-43.) They alone beheld the glory and majesty of the transfigured Jesus; they alone received from
him, and from Moses and Elijah the keys of the kingdom, being prohibited from so much as telling
the others of the Twelve of these transcendent events until after our Lord's resurrection. They alone
were taken to a spot in Gethsemane where they could behold his agony as he took upon himself the
sins of the world. (Mark 14:32-42.) They were the ones who came to Joseph Smith and Oliver
Cowdery in this dispensation to confer priesthood and keys. (D. & C. 27:12-13; 125:20.)
Why always these three and not various ones or even all of the Twelve? The plain fact is that Peter,
James, and John were the First Presidency of the Church in their day. From the fragmentary New
Testament accounts we have no way of knowing whether they served as a quorum distinct from the
Twelve or whether they continued to serve both in the Presidency and in the Twelve. But by latterday revelation we know that they held and restored "the keys of the kingdom, which belong always
unto the Presidency of the High Priesthood" (D. & C. 81:2), or in other words, they were the First
Presidency in their day.
An high mountain] Long held by tradition to have been Mt. Tabor, a less then eighteen hundred
foot plateau in southern Galilee, which in that day was capped by a fortress and upon which, in the
sixth century, three churches were erected, presumably to commemorate Peter's desire to erect three
tabernacles. Later a monastery was built on Mt. Tabor. But more probably the site of the
transfiguration was Mt. Hermon, a nine thousand foot emminence north of Caesarea Philippi, where
Jesus had been the week before. Mt. Hermon is north of Galilee, and the record shows that after
Jesus departed from the mount he then went through Galilee. (Mark 9: 30.)
2. Transfigured] As a host of scriptures attest, many prophets in all ages have been transfigured, but
none more majestically and dramatically than the Chief of all prophets on this occasion on the
mount. "Transfiguration is a special change in appearance and nature which is wrought upon a
person or thing by the power of God. This divine transformation is from a lower to a higher state; it
results in a more exalted, impressive, and glorious condition." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 725-726.)
3. Moses and Elias] Moses, the great prophet-statesman whose name symbolized the law, and Elijah
the Tishbite, a prophet of so great fame that his name had come to typify and symbolize the
collective wisdom and insight of all the prophets. Moses held the keys of the gathering of Israel and
the leading of the ten tribes from the land of the north; Elijah, the keys of the sealingpower. These
are the keys which they conferred upon Peter, James, and John upon the mount, and which they also
conferred upon Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery in the Kirtland Temple nearly two thousand years
later. (D. & C. 110:11-16.) Both of them were translated beings and had bodies of flesh and bones, a
status they apparently enjoyed so that they could confer keys upon mortal men. We have a detailed
scriptural account of Elijah's translation (2 Kings 2) and a number of scriptural references concerning
Moses which can only be interpreted to mean that he too was taken to heaven without tasting death.
(Alma 45:18-19; Mormon Doctrine, pp. 726-730; Doctrines of Salvation, vol 2, pp. 107-111.) When
these two holy men appeared in this dispensation to restore again their keys and powers, they came
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record of the proceedingsJohn played some other part in the glorious manifestations then
vouchsafed to mortals. Perhaps he was there, as the last legal administrator under the Old Covenant,
to symbolize that the law was fulfilled and all old things were done away, thus contrasting his
position with that of Peter, James, and John who were then becoming the "first" legal administrators
of the New Kingdom.
Luke 9:28. To pray] How often it is that visions and revelations and the opening of the heavens grow
out of fervent and devout prayer.
32. Heavy with sleep] Apparently Jesus and his three associates spent the night in the mountain, and
the glorious theophanies there manifest were shown during the hours of darkness. The next day they
returned to the other disciples and the multitude. (Luke 9: 37.)
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shall restore again the keys of the sealing power, and Elias shall bring to pass the restoration of all
things. All this is yet future; it is not for your day. But as pertaining to this dispensation, that Elias
who is John the Baptist has already come; he it is who prepared the way before my face; he it is who
taught what the prophets had foretold about me; and as was also foretold concerning him, he was
rejected and slain.'
Elijah the prophet, the same person who appeared on the Mount of Transfiguration, came to Joseph
Smith and Oliver Cowdery on April 3, 1836, and conferred upon them the keys of the sealing power.
(D. & C. 110:13-16.) Elias, a name-title used to signify the combined ministries of all the ancient
prophets who came to restore keys and authority in modern times, has also performed his assigned
ministry. Between May 15, 1829, when the resurrected John the Baptist returned to confer keys and
priesthood, and September 6, 1842when Joseph Smith, writing by way of revelation, recorded the
list of ancient prophets who, each in turn, had returned bringing their "dispensations, and keys, and
powers, and glories" (D. & C. 128:18-21)the work of Elias of the restoration was accomplished.
(Mormon Doctrine, pp. 203-206.)
I. V. Matt. 17:10. As the prophets have written] Prophets of all ages told of the final great age of
restoration, and apparently some of them specified that the keys and authorities incident to this
restoration would be conferred by Elias.
I. V. Mark 9:11. As it is written of him] Some ancient and now unknown prophecies foretold that
John the Baptist, acting as the Lord's Elias, would be rejected and slain by the Jews.
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Mountain, Remove hence] Not a mere rhetorical expression, but a promise capable of literal
fulfilment. By faith both Enoch and the Brother of Jared removed mountainsliterally. (Moses 7:13;
Ether 12: 30.)
21. Prayer and fasting] See Matt. 5:16-18.
Mark 9:15. Why were all the people greatly amazed when Jesus made his appearance? Obviously his
coming was dramatic and striking in nature. Many have supposed, and it could well be, that some of
the glory, which but a few hours before had shown forth from him on the Mount of Transfiguration,
was still manifest. We know that such was the case with Moses, when that ancient prophet returned
to Israel after communing with Deity for forty days upon the mountain. Indeed, "the skin of Moses'
face shone" with such brilliance that he wore a veil while talking to the children of Israel. (Ex. 34:2835.)
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to accompany prayers beseeching forgiveness from personal sins. (Ex. 30:11-16.) Jesus, of course,
was without sin and needed to offer no such supplication. Indeed, in his days, rabbis and priests
generally claimed exemption from this tax.
25. The house] Probably Peter's own home in Capernaum, where Jesus was wont to stay when in
that city.
I. V. Matt. 17:24. Rebuked him] Peter had erred; Jesus was not obligated to pay the atonement
money. As Jesus then explained, even earthly princes were free from capitation taxes; why then
should it be supposed that the Son of God was obligated to pay for the upkeep of the house of his
Father?
Matt. 17:27. A piece of money] A stater, a coin equal to the exact amount of the tax for two persons.
Why did Jesus pay this tax? As the King's Son he need not have done so. But such a course would
have offended the Jews unnecessarily, perhaps hindering the conversion of some of them. Why was
the money provided in a miraculous way? If our Lord had paid the levy from available funds, or
from money earned by catching and selling fish, he would have thus submitted to the tax as though
he were a man in the same class as Peter and the others. But by providing the money through the use
of knowledge which no mortal man possessed, he dramatized both the voluntary nature of his
submission to the law and the exalted nature of his position as the King's Son.
Me and thee] It is significant that Jesus did not say us but me and thee. Such careful choice of words
was in keeping with his in varying custom of maintaining a distinction between himself and other
men. He was the Son of God, literally; other men had mortal fathers. Thus, for instance, he was
careful to say. "I ascend unto my Father, and your Father; and to my God and your God" (John
20:17), not unto our Father and our God.
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sacrifice of our Lord, all spirits begin their mortal life in a state of innocence and purity without sin
or taint of any sort attaching to them.
"'Little children are redeemed from the foundation of the world through mine Only Begotten,' the
Lord has revealed. 'Wherefore, they cannot sin, for power is not given unto Satan to tempt little
children, until they begin to become accountable before me,' (D. & C. 29:46-47.) Children, as spirits,
are in the presence of God before birth, and since they begin their mortal life innocent and free from
sin, it follows that if they die before they arrive at the years of accountability, they are still in the
state of purity and innocence which entitles them to go back into the presence of God and have
salvation." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 606-607.)
Since God is no respecter of persons and deals fairly and impartially with every person, it follows
that if an adult is to gain salvation, he must cleanse himself and become "as a child, submissive,
meek, humble, patient, full of love, willing to submit to all things which the Lord seeth fit to inflict
upon him, even as a child doth submit to his father." (Mosiah 3:19.)
Matt. 18:1. Kingdom of heaven] The Church or kingdom which the promised Messiah was to set up
on earth when he came. The apostles had been contending about precedence in the earthly kingdom
of their Lord. Peter, James, and John had been singled out for special blessings, among them those
given just before on the Mount of Transfiguration. But who of them all should be the greatest? Who
should be the prime minister? The chief judge? And so forth. Or, as is sometimes wondered in the
Church today, who will be chosen as the new bishop, or stake president, or apostle?
2. A little child] As this discussion apparently took place in Capernaum in the home of Peter, it is
not unlikely that this was one of Peter's young children.
3. Be converted] See Luke 22:32. As little children] Childlike, not childish. "Brethren, be not
children in understanding: howbeit in malice be ye children, but in understanding be men." (1 Cor.
14:20.) Enter into the kingdom of heaven] Jesus is here saying in so many words that little children
shall enter into the celestial kingdom of heaven in the eternal worlds.
4. True greatness in the Lord's earthly kingdom is measured, not by positions held, not by preeminence attained, not by honors bestowed by mortals, but by intrinsic merit and goodness. Those
who become as little children and acquire the attributes of godliness for themselves, regardless of the
capacity in which they may be called to serve, are the "greatest in the kingdom of heaven."
Mark 9:35. Those who seek personal honors and glory rather than the welfare of Zion, and the
triumph of the Lord's own purposes, are not chosen of God to be first, but by him they are cast out
and made last and least of all. But those who put themselves last, and become the servants of all for
the sake of Christ and the gospel, shall be accounted by him as the first, and they shall gain eternal
life.
I. V. Mark 9:34. Those who receive Christ in humility of heart and contrition of soul are to be
received into his Church by baptism. "Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that receiveth my gospel
receiveth me; and he that receiveth not my gospel receiveth not me. And this is my gospel
repentance and baptism by water, and then cometh the baptism of fire and the Holy Ghost, even the
Comforter, which showeth all things, and teacheth the peaceable things of the kingdom." (D. & C.
39:5-6.)
35. "He that receiveth me receiveth my Father; And he that receiveth my Father receiveth my
Father's kingdom." (D. & C. 84:37-38.)
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Ne. 2:11.) But such in no sense lessens the penalties justly imposed upon those who rise up in
opposition to the truth.
I. V. Mark 9:40. Thy hand] "Thy brother." 41. Cast into hell; into the fire] See Luke 16:23. 42. Thy
foot] "Thy standard," or a leader in the family or Church.
44-45. Place your faith in principles, not in people. Believe the gospel because it is true, not because
some compelling or dynamic person accepts it. People fail; gospel principles triumph. Seek the
Father, rather than trusting solely in men. 46. Thine eye] "Him that is appointed to watch over thee,"
that is, thy leader in the family or Church who should guide you in paths of righteousness.
49-50. Every member of the Church shall be tested and tried in all things, to see whether he will
abide in the covenant "even unto death" (D. & C. 98:14), regardless of the course taken by the other
members of his family or of the Church. To gain salvation men must stand on their own feet in the
gospel cause and be independent of the spiritual support of others. If some of the saints, who are
themselves the salt of the earth, shall fall away, still all who inherit eternal life must remain true,
having salt in themselves and enjoying peace one with another.
Matt. 18:10. Their angels] Their spirits, prior to entering the mortal body. This is a clear allusion to
the doctrine of preexistence. Because of the atoning sacrifice of Christ all children are born into the
world free from sin, innocent, clean, pure, without any taint whatever attaching to them. They remain
in this state until they "begin to become accountable." (D. & C. 29:46-50; 68:2527; 93:38-39.)
Should they die before arriving at the years of accountability, their angels or spirits, being pure and
clean, are qualified to return to the presence of the Father, that is, they are saved in the celestial
kingdom of heaven. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 606-607.)
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this dispensation (D. & C. 42:88-89), and the Lord has also applied them in principle to instances in
which their enemies transgress against the saints. (D. & C. 98:39-48.)
Also in this dispensation, the Lord has revealed: "My disciples, in days of old, sought occasion
against one another and forgave not one another in their hearts; and for this evil they were afflicted
and sorely chastened. Wherefore, I say unto you, that ye ought to forgive one another; for he that
forgiveth not his brother his trespasses standeth condemned before the Lord; for their remaineth in
him the greater sin. I, the Lord, will forgive whom I will forgive, but of you it is required to forgive
all men. And ye ought to say in your heartslet God judge between me and thee, and reward thee
according to thy deeds." (D. & C. 64:8-11.)
Matt. 18:15. It is not the sinner, the trespasser, the offender, who is to take the initiative in restoring
peace and unity among brethren. If perchance he should do so, well and good. But the Lord
commands the innocent person, the one without fault, the one who has been offended, to search out
his brother and seek to repair the breach. Thus: 'If thy brother trespass against thee, wait not for him
to repent and make restitution; he is, already somewhat hardened in spirit because of the trespass
itself; rather, go to him, extend the hand of fellowship, shower him with love, and perchance "thou
hast gained thy brother."'
16. Witnesses] See John 5:31-38. 17. Tell it unto the church] Not the congregation in general, for
such would spread the knowledge of sin and might create gossip, but tell it unto the church officers
who are appointed to handle such matters. "And if thy brother or sister offend thee, thou shalt take
him or her between him or her and thee alone; and if he or she confess thou shalt be reconciled. And
if he or she confess not thou shalt deliver him or her up unto the church, not to the members, but to
the elders. And it shall be done in a meeting, and that not before the world." (D. & C. 42:88-89.)
The Church] "Our Lord's true Church is the formal, official organization of believers who have
taken upon themselves the name of Christ by baptism, thus covenanting to serve God and keep his
commandments. (D. & C. 10:67-69; 18:20-25.) It is literally the kingdom of God on earth (D. & C.
65; 84:34; 136:41), and as such its affairs are administered by apostles, prophets, and other legal
administrators appointed by Christ the King. (1 Cor. 12:27-29.) It is the congregation or assembly of
saints who have forsaken the world by accepting the gospel, a formal society of converted persons
and not the unorganized spiritual vagary termed the Christian Church by apostate
sectarianism." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 124-126.)
Let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican] Let him be excommunicated, cast out of
the Church, dropped from fellowship in the brotherhood of Christ. (D. & C. 64:12-14.)
21:22. There is no limit to the number of times that brethren should forgive each other their personal
trespasses upon conditions of true repentance. This, however, is not intended to mean that the Church
itself shall continue times without end to forgive and fellowship its erring members. There are
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instances in which sinners must be cast out of the kingdom no matter how sorry they may be for their
unrighteous acts. (D. & C. 42:24-26.)
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held the keys whereby revelation comes from God to man, it follows that any of them could have
presided over the Church had the occasion required. Because they, as apostles and prophets,
following in the footsteps of their Master, were the agents appointed to receive revelation for the
Church, thus keeping the kingdom in the course charted by the Lord himself, Paul properly
concluded that the Church was "built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ
himself being the chief corner stone." (Eph. 2:20.)
Since keys include the right of presidency, and there can never be two equal heads at the same time,
it follows that the keys of the kingdom can be exercised in their fulness only by one man at a time on
earth. (D. & C. 132:7.) Thus, as far as their full and unlimited exercise was concerned, the keys lay
dormant in each of the Twelve as long as Peter lived. Peter's pre-eminence lay in the fact that as the
senior apostle who presided over all others, he could direct all of the affairs of the kingdom including
the labors of his fellow special witnesses of the Lord.
In the dispensation of the fulness of times, the keys of the kingdom were restored in much the same
way as was the case in primitive times. First Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery received them from
various angelic ministrants sent by Deity. (D. & C. 13; 27:5-14; 128:18-21; 132:46-47.) Then in the
Nauvoo Temple these keys were given to all of the modern Twelve, after which the prophet said: "I
have sealed upon your heads all of the keys of the kingdom of God. I have sealed upon you every
key, power, principle, that the God of heaven has revealed to me. . .. Ye apostles of the Lamb of
God, my brethren, upon your shoulders this kingdom rests; now you have got to round up your
shoulders and bear off the kingdom." (G. Homer Durham, Discourses of Wilford Woodruff, p. 72.)
From that day to this, every man who has been ordained an apostle and set apart as a member of the
Council of the Twelve has received all of the keys of the kingdom (including the sealing power), and
such of these brethren as have attained the seniority to serve as presidents of the Church have been
able to exercise the keys so held in their fulness.
These sealing keys and powers have been exercised by righteous men in all dispensations from
Adam to the present time. They "belong always unto the Presidency of the High Priesthood." (D. &
C. 81:2.) Indeed, there can be no true Church and kingdom of God on earth unless the keys of the
kingdom are held and exercised by its presiding officers. Where the keys of the kingdom are found,
there is the true Church; if these keys are not found, there is no divine Church among men.
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who have made covenant in the waters of baptism to serve the Lord and who have, as a consequence,
been promised the guidance of the Holy Ghost. Such great blessings as are here promised are not
given automatically or promiscuously; they are reserved for those who through faith and obedience
are conforming their lives to the divine standard.
Agree] Join in perfect harmony, accord, and unity of thought, intent, desire, and purpose. United
prayers carry greater weight.
Anything that they shall ask] By faith all of the righteous desires of the saints can be gained. There
are no limits to the power of faith; nothing is too hard for the Lord. Prayer is the mode of
communication by which the petitions of the saints are presented to their Eternal Father. "Ye must
always pray unto the Father in my name," Jesus said to the Nephites, "And whatsoever ye shall ask
the Father in my name, which is right, believing that ye shall receive, behold it shall be given unto
you." (3 Ne. 18:19-20; Moro. 7:26.)
My Father] Not your Father, though such he is, but my Father; that is, Jesus is again affirming his
own divine Sonship.
I. V. Matt. 18:19. That they may not ask amiss] There is no promise that even the most sincere and
devout prayers will be answered unless they are in harmony with the will of Deity. Petitions which
are "amiss" are denied, for no one can "exercise faith contrary to the plan of heaven." (Teachings, p.
58.) As James expressed it, "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it
upon your lusts." (Jas. 4:3.)
On the other hand, "If ye are purified and cleansed from all sin, ye shall ask whatsoever you will in
the name of Jesus and it shall be done. But know this, it shall be given you what you shall ask." (D.
& C. 50:29-30.) That is, the Spirit will manifest what petitions should be made. Such will be the case
during the millennium, for "in that day whatsoever any man shall ask, it shall be given unto him." (D.
& C. 101:27.)
Matt. 18:20. There am I in the midst of them] Not literally but by the power of the Spirit. Speaking
similarly, Paul said to the members of the Church, "Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be
reprobates." (2 Cor. 13:5.) In other words, the saints have the gift of the Holy Ghost which reveals to
them "the mind of Christ" (1 Cor. 2:9-16), so that Christ in effect dwells in each righteous member of
the Church and reigns in the midst of their congregations.
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This parablespoken following our Lord's statement to Peter that brethren should forgive each other
"seventy times seven" offensesteaches that as Deity forgives men the immeasurable debt they owe
to him, so men should forgive their fellowmen the relatively slight debts incurred when brethren sin
against each other.
Men are indebted to God for all that they have and arefor life itself, for the probationary
experiences of mortality (including some measure of food, clothing, and shelter), for redemption
from death, and for the hope of eternal life in his presence. These and all other debts owed to Deity
are listed on an account that shall never be marked paid. As King Benjamin expressed it, "In the first
place, he hath created you, and granted unto you your lives, for which ye are indebted unto him. And
secondly, he doth require that ye should do as he hath commanded you; for which if ye do, he doth
immediately bless you; and therefore he hath paid you. And ye are still indebted unto him, and are,
and will be, forever and ever." (Mosiah 2:23-24.)
From this parable we also see an illustration of the true order for dispensing mercy. Though the
unmerciful debtor did not come voluntarily, but was brought before the king, yet the servant's
entreaties gained for him a merciful cancellation of the debt. Then he in turn having dealt mercilessly
with his fellow servant, the sovereign revoked the original pardon, changed his merciful intent, and
inflicted a dire and deserved penalty. Why? Not because the debtor had defaulted in his payments,
but for lack of mercy after having received so abundantly himself of that precious commodity.
And so it is in the dealings of the Eternal King with his servants. Sooner or later all face an enforced
rendering of accounts, all are subjected to temptation, trials, and impending death, and all are
rewarded with mercy or justice as their situations merit. Mercy is for the merciful; justice,
retribution, and punishment fall upon those who have dealt harshly with their fellow servants. "With
what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again." (Matt. 7:2.) "Forgive us our debts, as we
forgive our debtors." (Matt. 6:12.)
Matt. 18:23. Kingdom of heaven] The Church of Jesus Christ, which is the kingdom of God on earth.
A certain king] Deity. His servants] Members of his Church or kingdom.
24. Ten thousand talents] 28. An hundred pence] These sums present a contrast of striking
proportion. Their use shows the great disparity between the infinite debt owed by man to his Maker
and the insignificant sums which men, because of obligations incurred, owe each other. Talents as
such carried different values. The Attic silver talent was worth about $1200, the Hebrew talent nearly
twice that much, and a gold talent some 25 times as much. A pence was valued at some 17 cents.
Thus, in effect, the king was saying: 'I have cancelled your million dollar obligation to me and yet
you demand from your fellow servant the one thin dime he owes you.'
25. Attempts to find in this verse any approval of slavery or serfdom are wholly unwarranted. Our
Lord's statement is merely an admission or recognition that such systems did exist in the then
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prevailing social order. The gospel itself is "the perfect law of liberty" (Jas. 1:25), and one of its
eternal principles is, "It is not right that any man should be in bondage one to another." (D. & C.
101:79.) But where the laws of men permit slavery or involuntary servitude, the gospel law requires
conformity to the law of the land, rather than rebellion against it, even though the civil requirement
does not meet the divine standard. (Eph. 6:5; Col. 3:22; 1 Tim. 6:1-3; 1 Pet. 2:18.)
31. It is mete and proper that the saints should importune at the throne of grace for the well-being of
their fellow servants.
34. Pay all that was due] If men repent and obey the gospel law, they are forgiven of their sins; they
inherit mercy from the Lord's hands, Christ himself through the infinite and eternal atonement
bearing their burdens and paying the penalty for their transgressions. But if men do not repent and
keep the commandments, if they continue to transgress against their brethren and to walk after the
manner of the world, they are denied the full mercies of the atonement and instead are required to
pay the penalty for their own sins. (D. & C. 19:4-20.)
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"It appears from the Old Testament account that at least from the days of Moses the elders of Israel
have been ordained seventies and given special priesthood blessings and obligations. It was 'seventy
of the elders of Israel' who went up with Moses, Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu and 'saw the God of
Israel,' thus certainly becoming especial witnesses of his name. (Ex. 24:1-11.) And when the Lord
gave Moses additional administrative help to aid in bearing the burdens of the multitudes of Israel, it
was the seventy whom he chose. 'I will come down and talk with thee,' the Lord said to Moses, 'and I
will take of the spirit which is upon thee, and will put it upon them; and they shall bear the burden of
the people with thee, that thou bear it not thyself alone.' Those seventy became mighty prophets in
Israel. (Num. 11.)" (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 637-638.)
It is worthy of particular note that the presence of living apostles and living seventies in a church is
one of the great evidences of the divinity of that organization. Where these officers are found serving
as actual legal administrators, with power and authority from on high, there the kingdom of God on
earth is found; where they are absent, there the kingdom of God is not. As is well known, the
generality of professing Christian churches do not so much as claim to have modern apostles and
seventies.
Luke 10:1-11. See Matt. 9:35-38; 10:1, 5-15.
1. Other seventy also] There is no scriptural account of the organization of the first quorum of
seventy in the meridian dispensation, but it is clear that Jesus was here organizing an additional
quorum. The language is the same as that used by the Lord in directing the organization of quorums
subsequent to the first in this dispensation. (D. & C. 107:96.)
2. See Matt. 9:38.
4. Neither purse, nor scrip, nor shoes] See Matt. 10:9-10. Salute no man by the way] 'Do not stop
by the way to make or renew personal friendships; your message is urgent; be about your Father's
business.'
5-6. That is: 'Pray that the spirit of peace, light, and discernment may rest upon those who hear your
message. If they are receptive to the gospel of peace, then peace will well up in their hearts;
otherwise, you will feel that your invocation on their behalf was void.' Son of peace] A Hebrew
idiom meaning, one inclined to peace.
7. The labourer is worthy of his hire] Those who give their full time to the ministry, who spend all
their time serving the Church and their fellow men, must still eat, wear clothing, and find shelter
from the elements. Such are entitled to be supported by those they serve. Similarly, when
missionaries serve without purse or scrip, they are entitled to receive assistance from those among
whom they minister. "Behold, I send you out to prove the world," the Lord says of them, "and the
laborer is worthy of his hire. . . . Whoso receiveth you receiveth me; and the same will feed you, and
clothe you, and give you money. And he who feeds you, or clothes you, or gives you money, shall in
nowise lose his reward." (D. & C. 84:79, 89-90.)
Go not from house to house] There is nothing mechanical or routine about proselyting procedures;
it is not a matter of knocking on every door, but of seeking out the honest in heart; missionaries must
have the Spirit to guide them in where they go so that receptive vessels may be found and filled with
living water.
8. Further, those traveling without purse or scrip are seeking souls to save, not houses where they
may be banqueted and coddled. They are to join with the family in partaking of whatever sustenance
is commonly available.
9. Heal the sick] See Luke 9:1. The kingdom of God is come nigh unto you] See Matt. 10:7.
10-11. See Matt. 10:11-15.
16. See Matt. 10:38-42; 11:1.
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rejected them, having this assurance: "That in the day of judgment you shall be judges of that house,
and condemn them; And it shall be more tolerable for the heathen in the day of judgment, than for
that house." (D. & C. 75:18-22.)
Matt. 11:20-24. See Matt. 10:15.
20. The cities wherein most of his mighty works were done] How little we know of the mortal
ministry of Jesus! True, Capernaum was "his own city" (Matt. 9:1), the headquarters from which he
conducted his ministry, the place where he lived, apparently with Peter (Mark 9:33), and in it he
taught extensively and worked many miracles. (Matt. 8:5-17; Mark 2:1-12; John 4:46-54.) But as to
Bethsaida, we know only that he healed a blind man there (Mark 8:22-26), and that he healed the
sick and fed the five thousand in a desert place not far distant from that city. (Mark 6:30-46; Luke
9:10-17.) There is no record at all of any ministry in Chorazin.
21. Chorazin] Supposed to have been located on the Sea of Galilee some two miles north of
Capernaum. Bethsaida] Probably located astride the Jordan River where it flows into the Sea of
Galilee from the north. It is the native city of Peter, Andrew, and Philip. (John 1:44; 12:21.) Tyre
and Sidon] Famous Phoenician seaports with long histories of commercial wealth and moral
degeneracy. Sackcloth and ashes] Symbols of sorrow and mourning.
22. Day of judgment] That dreadful and awesome day when all men shall stand before the bar of
Deity to be judged according to their works and be given their places in the mansions and realms
which have been prepared.
23. Capernaum] One of the chief cities in which Jesus ministered; located on the west shore of the
Sea of Galilee. Sodom] One of five cities whose wickedness was so debasing that God reigned fire
and brimstone upon them to slay all their inhabitants. The others were Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboiim,
and Zoar. (Gen. 14:2; 19; Deut. 29:23.) Ever since the day of Abraham, Sodom has been referred to
as the symbol of all that is evil and degenerate in the world. (Gen. 13:13; Isa. 3:9.)
I. V. Luke 10:13. People . . . who received him not] These damning woes were pronounced only
upon the unbelievers in the wicked cities named. Those persons living in them who forsook the
world, and came unto Christ and his gospel, thereby saved themselves from the condemnations
which are to burden the ungodly in the day of judgment.
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A testimony of the divinity of Christ and of the saving power of his gospel is not bestowed
automatically because of family relationship. It comes only by personal obedience to those eternal
laws upon which its receipt is predicted. In nearly all ages there have been prophets and righteous
men whose sons and daughters have forsaken the faith of their fathers and have chosen to walk after
the manner of the world.
Frequent special reference is made to the sons of Joseph and Mary as the "brethren" of Jesus, though
in fact they were his half-brothers. (Matt. 12:46; 13:55; John 2:12; Acts 1:14; 1 Cor. 9:5.) Though
they were reared in the same household and came under the benign influence of Joseph and Mary,
though they were aware of the teachings, ministry, and miracles of Jesus himself, yet these his close
relatives had not so far accepted him as the Messiah. However, all of them, apparently, were
converted later (Acts 1:14); one of them, identified by Paul as "James the Lord's brother" (Gal. 1:19),
was to minister in the holy apostleship; and yet another, Judas, who calls himself, "Jude, the . . .
brother of James" (Jude 1), wrote the epistle of Jude.
2. Feast of tabernacles] Three great annual, week-long feasts or "holy convocations" characterized
the religious devotions of ancient Israel: (1) The Passover or Feast of Unleavened Bread, which
commemorated Israel's deliverance from Egyptian bondage; (2) Pentecost, also known as the Feast
of Weeks, or of Harvest, or of First Fruits, which commenced fifty days after the beginning of the
Passover and was an agricultural festival; and (3) The Feast of Tabernacles, or of Booths, or of
Ingathering, a feast marking the completion of the harvest of fruit, oil, and wine. During this last
named holy convocation the people lived in booths for eight days in memory of their wanderings in
the wilderness following their Egyptian deliverance. (Ex. 23:14-19; 34:21-26; Lev. 23; Num. 28:1631; Deut. 16:1-17.)
These feastscomparable in purpose to conferences in latter-day Israelwere occasions of worship,
of offering sacrifices, and of paying one's devotions to the God of Israel. The entire male population
was obligated to assemble at the temple or other appointed sanctuaries to participate in the solemn
and sacred services. Aside from their social and recreational values, these holy convocations, as
periods of rest from temporal pursuits, of assembling together in a common purpose, and of
worshiping in harmony with the revealed pattern, had the effect of uniting Israel religiously and
politically through the ages.
3-8. Jesus' unbelieving kinsmen are apparently chiding him for remaining in Galilee to avoid those in
Jerusalem who "sought to kill him." (v. 1.) Their argument: 'If you are what you claim to be, then all
men should see your miracles and hear your message. Why then do you hide out here in Galilee,
when you could go to Jerusalem where all Israel will be assembled to keep the Feast of Tabernacles?'
Spurning their presumptuous attempt to interfere in the affairs of his ministry, Jesus replied that he
would govern the locale of that ministry and go to Jerusalem at a time of his own choosing. They
could go any time for there was no organized campaign of hatred against them; they were of the
world, and the world receives its own; but he had testified of the evil in the world, and now he had to
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arrange his travels in the face of the fierce opposition which that testimony had brought upon him.
3. His brethren] See Matt. 12:46-50.
7. World] See John 17:14.
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55. Even devout and good men are sometimes swayed by the influence and spirit of Satan rather than
by the Spirit of the Lord. Though they were unaware of its source, James and John were here
influenced in their proposal by a spirit from beneath rather than a Spirit from above.
56. Blessings not cursings, salvation not damnation, life not death, hope not despairall such
exemplify the true spirit of the gospel. (John 3:17.) Another village] Here Jesus followed his own
counsel, being rejected in one community, he fled to another. (Matt. 10:23.)
John 7:10. Not openly, but as it were in secret] He did not travel with the general caravan, as his
brethren had, but went quietly, with his intimate disciples, perhaps on some less travelled route.
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and validity.
17. Every living soul is entitled to personal revelation as to the divinity of the Lord's work. Such
comes as a result of obedience to that law upon which its receipt is predicated. "If any of you lack
wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given
him." (Jas. 1:5.) "By the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know the truth of all things." (Moro. 10:5.)
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Now the same Eternal One, tabernacled in the flesh, ministering as the Lord Jesus unto the seed and
offspring of them of old, proclaimed his willingness to give the Holy Ghost to men so that floods of
living water might be poured out upon them. His solemn invitation, "If any man thirst, let him come
unto me, and drink," was a plain and open claim of Messiahship. In making it he identified himself
as the very Jehovah who had promised drink to the thirst through an outpouring of the Spirit. After
such a pronouncement his hearers were faced with two choices: Either he was a blasphemer worthy
of death, or he was in fact the God of Israel.
For the publicizing of such a sobering and transcendent doctrine Jesus chose one of the most solemn
and dramatic moments of Jewish worship. On each of the eight days of the feast of Tabernacles, as
most authorities agree, it was the custom, for the priest as part of the temple service, to take water in
golden vessels from the stream of Siloam, which flowed under the temple-mountain, and pour it
upon the altar. Then the words of Isaiah were sung: "With joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of
salvation." (Isa. 12:3.) And it was at this very moment of religious climax that Jesus stepped forth
and offered draughts of living refreshment which would satisfy the deepest spiritual cravings of the
thirsty soul.
John 7:37. That great day] The eighth and crowning day of the feast.
38. He that believeth on me] 'He that believeth that I am the Lord Jehovah who told your fathers
that by the power of my Spirit I would pour out living waters upon their seed.'
As the scripture saith] There is no single Old Testament passage which promises that living waters
shall flow from the disciples to others. Jesus is either quoting a prophecy which has not been
preserved for us or he is combining such statements as those found in Isaiah 44:3, 55:1, and 58:11, in
such a way as to give an interpretive rendition of them.
Out of his belly] A Hebraism meaning out of his inmost soul. That is, from the true believers, from
those actually enjoying the gift of the Holy Ghost, the living waters of salvation were to flow to
others.
Living water] See John 4:10-15.
39. The Holy Ghost is a Personage of Spirit, the third member of the Godhead. The gilt of the Holy
Ghost is the right to receive the constant companionship of this Holy Personage on conditions of
personal worthiness, that is to receive revelation and guidance from him and to be subject to his
sanctifying power. Sometimes the scriptures speak simply of the Holy Ghost when from the context
it is clear that what is meant is the gift of the Holy Ghost. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 286-288, 328-329.)
In this instance John is explaining two things about the Holy Ghost: (1) That it is by the power of the
Holy Ghost that rivers of living water flow forth from the true disciples to all who will drink of them;
and (2) That the actual enjoyment of the gift of the Holy Ghost by the disciples is yet future; the
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promise has been made that they shall have the coveted companionship; but the fulfilment of the
promise is not to be realized until after Jesus returns to the Father in resurrected glory. The fact that
the enjoyment of the gift or companionship of the Holy Ghost was yet future did not mean that the
disciples had not on occasions and from time to time received revelation and guidance from that
member of the Godhead. The testimonies previously borne by them were born of the Spirit. (See
Matt. 16:17.)
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ahead of their rabbis, is seen by the multitudes before it is comprehended by their ministers, is
accepted by the people in advance of their priests!
50-51. How right Nicodemus was, as his fellow San Hedrinists well knew, for their whole system of
jurisprudence was built around the revealed injunctions: (1) That men should not raise a false report,
nor join with the wicked as unrighteous witnesses (Ex. 23:1); (2) That the judges in Israel were to
hear the causes of the people before deciding them, and then they were to judge righteously (Deut.
1:16); (3) That issues could be decided only upon the prior, formal testimony of two or three
competent witnesses. (Deut. 19:15.)
52. Art thou also of Galilee?] 'Art thou one of his disciples?' Out of Galilee ariseth no prophet] No?
What of Jonah, Nahum, Hosea, and Elijah? All these were said to have been from that belittled area.
But even suppose no prophet had come from Galilee, does this mean no prophet can come from
there? Or, are the rulers, overwhelmed by Nicodemus' logic, turning now to a personal attack upon
him?
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who themselves stood as the witnesses against convicted adulterers in ancient Israel, were obligated
to cast the first stone when the death penalty was imposed by the judges. Jesus, therefore, could not
have meant that penalties are to be imposed only by persons who are themselves wholly free from
sin. Rather, he was here dealing with men who themselves were guilty, either actually or in their sinladen hearts, of the same offense charged against the woman; that is, they were in effect adulterers
worthy of death according to the terms of the very law they now sought to invoke against the
woman. (Matt. 5:28.)
11. Neither do I condemn thee] This is not in any sense a pardon, nor is our Lord condoning an
adulterous act. He does not say, 'Go in peace, thy sins are forgiven thee.' He merely declines to act as
a magistrate, judge, witness, or participant of any kind in a case that legally and properly should
come before an official tribunal of which he is not a member.
Go, and sin no more] Could this woman gain forgiveness of so gross a crime as adultery? Certainly.
Through faith, repentance, baptism, and continued obedience, it was within her power to become
clean and spotless before the Lord and a worthy candidate for his celestial presence. Repentant
persons have power to cleanse themselves even from so evil a thing as sex immorality. (1 Cor. 6:911; 3 Ne. 30.) That such seemingly was the course taken by this woman is inferred from the Inspired
Version statement that she believed in Christ and glorified God from that very hour.
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their wrongdoings with all their hearts; (3) Thereafter they must be baptized in water for the
remission of sins, under the hands of a legal administrator; and (4) Following this, also under the
hands of a legal administrator, they must receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Those who take these steps and who endure in righteousness thereafter are saved; all others are
damned. Thus by rejecting their King-Messiah these Jews would inevitably and surely die in their
sins and be precluded from going to that eternal kingdom where the Eternal King reigns forever. And
what was true for them applies in principle to men of all ages.
25. Who art thou?] Again and again and again, frequently, emphatically, in language which they
understood, Jesus had claimed divine Sonship, told them that God was his Father, that he was the
very Christ. True, they did not and would not believe his witness. Why then do they ask for a further
self-identifying assertion? Obviously they were seeking a statement from Jesus in which he would
say the very words, "I am the Messiah." Such a plain statement would further inflame the multitudes
against him, and would be more concrete and specific evidence to use in any trial for blasphemy.
25b-26. 'From the beginning of my ministry I have told you I was the Messiah. There are also other
truths I must tell you, and you shall be judged by them. But know this, him whom ye say is your
God, who also is the Father who sent me, he is the source of my teachings, and I speak only those
things which I have received from him.'
27. They understood not] Those who were trying to ensnare him and who thirsted for his blood,
those in spiritual darkness who had closed their minds to light and truth; not those spiritually
receptive persons who but a moment later would be classed with those who believed our Lord's
testimony of himself. (V. 30.)
28-29. Here Jesus identifies his murderers and foretells the mode of his death: 'When ye have caused
my death on the cross, and when it shall be made known unto you that I have risen again from the
dead, meaning in that day when every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus is the
Christ, then shall ye know that I am the Messiah and that the message I taught you came from the
Father. But for the present, suffice it to say that the Father is with me and I do nothing of myself
alone. Whatever you may think, know this also that what I do pleases him.'
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32. Truth] See John 18:38. Ye shall know the truth] How will this knowledge of spiritual truth
come? By heeding the words of Christ; by seeking to live in conformity to every word that
proceedeth forth from the mouth of God, "for the word of the Lord is truth" (D. & C. 84: 44-45); by
devout, personal desire; by sincere scriptural study; and by fervent personal prayer.
Spiritual truths are known only by revelation. "The things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of
God." (1 Cor. 2:11.) "When he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth." (John
16:13.) "By the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know the truth of all things." (Moro. 10:5.)
Christ himself set the pattern; he progressed from grace to grace until "He received a fulness of truth,
yea, even of all truth; And no man receiveth a fulness unless he keepeth his commandments. He that
keepeth his commandments receiveth truth and light, until he is glorified in truth and knoweth all
things." (D. & C. 93:26-28.)
The truth shall make you free] Free from the damning power of false doctrine; free from the
bondage of appetite and lust; free from the shackles of sin; free from every evil and corrupt influence
and from every restraining and curtailing power; free to go on to the unlimited freedom enjoyed in its
fulness only by exalted beings.
33. This reply, obviously spoken by unbelievers in the multitude, can not rationally be interpreted as
presenting a claim that the Jews had never been subject to temporal bondage. At that very time, they
were vassals of Rome, and between that day and the time of Father Abraham, as a nation of slaves,
they had bowed in toil through centuries of Egyptian bondage, and had been unrooted and carried
bodily into Babylonian captivity.
Rather, Jesus' unbelieving respondents were saying: 'We are the chosen seed, and as such we have
the truth; never have our minds been darkened by error; our fathers had the truth, and we have it.
Why at this late date do you think to reveal to us the truths which will give us that spiritual freedom
which we already have?'
Abraham's seed] See John 8:37-50.
34-36. What masterful analogy, what infallible logic Jesus here uses. As there are restrictions and
limitations in temporal matters, so there are also in the spiritual realm. Temporally speaking, only
members of the family abide permanently in the house; servants come and go in their menial
ministrations; they cannot abide forever in the house unless freed from their station as bondsmen;
they remain outside the inner circle unless adopted as members of the family, thus being made legal
heirs of all its privileges.
Similarly in spiritual things, only the family members, the freemen, the sons and daughters of God,
shall abide forever in his kingdom; the servants, those bound by the chains of sin, shall minister in
their assigned spheres; they cannot abide in the Father's house unless freed from sin through the
cleansing power of the Son. To gain an inheritance in the spiritual kingdom, they must be spiritually
begotten of the Father, adopted into his family as joint-heirs with the Son.
Thus Jesus is saying: 'You may belong to the household of Abraham now in mortality, but it may not
be so always. Only those who believe in me as the Son of God shall abide in the household of
faithful Abraham in the eternal worlds. If ye forsake sin, and believe in the Son, he shall make you
free from spiritual bondage, and only the free shall be Abraham's seed hereafter.'
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41. 'Ye are apostates who walk in the way of wickedness, being led by the devil whom ye have
adopted as your father.' They reply: 'The devil is not our father; we are not spiritually illegitimate; we
are the children of Abraham and have the true religion, and hence God is our Father.'
42. 'If ye had the true religion, thus making God your Father, ye would accept me, for God sent me
to lead men to him.' Paul explained this same principle in this way: "They which are of faith, the
same are the children of Abraham. ... Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus. . . . And
if ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." (Gal. 3:7, 26, 29.)
44. Your father the devil] See Luke 10:18. Just as surely as the obedient "receive the adoption of
sons" (Gal. 4:5), becoming "children of God" (Rom. 8:14-17), so the disobedient are adopted into the
Church or kingdom of the devil, thus becoming children of the devil.
He was a murderer from the beginning] The same thing is said of Cain (Ether 8:15)who along
with Satan is also known as Perdition (D. & C. 76:25-27; Moses 5:18-25)the meaning being that
each of them murdered "against the light and knowledge of God." (Alma 39:6.)
There is no truth in him] Satan neither originates nor sponsors truth. He may use truth interlarded
with error for his own destructive purposes, but in the long perspective his purpose is to blot out the
light and enshroud the world in darkness. "tight and truth forsake that evil one." (D. & C. 93:37.)
45. A follower of the devil will not believe the truth when he hears it.
46. 'I am without sin; my course of life is perfect. Since none of you can find any sin in me, it should
be apparent that my life and teachings are in perfect harmony with the truth, and consequently what I
tell you is true. Why then do ye not believe me?'
47. 'If ye had the truths of salvation so as to be the children of God, ye would accept the word of God
which I now deliver unto you. But the very fact you do not accept my words shows you are not of
God and do not have the true religion which is of God.'
48. Thou. . . hast a devil] His works were seen and known on every hand; they could not be
spiritualized away. In utter desperation these rebellious Jews had no recourse other than to accept the
works or attribute them to an evil power.
49-50. 'I am not possessed of a devil. If I were, my teachings and works would not honor and glorify
my Father as they do. But ye dishonor me because I am of God and ye are not. I seek not mine own
glory, as do those who are of the devil; but there is one, even God, who seeketh it for me, and he will
judge those who dishonor me.'
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Of a later manifestation, the King James Version has Deity say: "I am the Lord: And I appeared unto
Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto Jacob, by the name of God Almighty, but by my name JEHOVAH
was I not known to them." (Ex. 6:2-3.) From latterday revelation we know that one of our Lord's
great pronouncements to Abraham was: "I am the Lord thy God; . . . My name is Jehovah" (Abra.
2:7-8), and accordingly we find the Inspired Version account reading: "I appeared unto Abraham,
unto Isaac, and unto Jacob. I am the Lord God Almighty; the Lord JEHOVAH. And was not my
name known unto them?" (I. V. Ex. 6:3.)
59. That the Jews understood Jesus' plainly stated claim to Messiahship is evident from their
belligerent attempt to stone himdeath by stoning being the penalty for blasphemy, a crime of
which our Lord would have been guilty had not his assertions as to divinity been true. But Jesus,
evidently exercising divine powers, passed unknown out of their midst.
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Three great truths are propounded in this solemn affirmation of our Lord:
(1) Spiritual realities, gospel truths, the doctrines and principles of salvation, come only by
revelation; they are only known to and understood by the spiritually literate, those who so live as to
attune their souls to the spirit of revelation; they are withheld from and remain unknown to the
worldly wise and those who trust in the arm of flesh.
(2) All things which the Father hath are committed unto the Son. See Luke 10:22.
(3) The Father and the Son, perfectly united as one in the eternal Godhead, reveal and manifest each
other to those prepared by righteousness to know God. And only those so qualified do or can see or
know the Gods of heaven.
The entire passage as found in Matthew, following as it does Jesus' upbraiding of the wicked cities of
Palestine, seems misplaced. Luke's placement of it after the report of the seventies is logical and
seemingly correct. The insertion found in the Inspired Version of the fact that it was made in answer
to a message spoken to Jesus from heaven makes the whole presentation coherent and sensible.
Without this addition, the passage leaves the impression that our Lord is answering a question which
was never asked.
Matt. 11:25-26; Luke 10:21. Paul wrote at length, contrasting the lack of saving virtue in worldly
knowledge with the redeeming power of revealed truths as these are made known to the penitent
saints. (1 Cor. 1:17-31; 2; 3:18-20.) Jacob wrote similarly, explaining that "the wise, and the learned,
and they that are rich, who are puffed up because of their learning, and their wisdom, and their
riches," are despised of the Lord, and that "save they shall cast these things away, and consider
themselves fools before God, and come down in the depths of humility," they cannot attain salvation.
(2 Ne. 9:41-43.)
Matt. 11:27. Two principles are here taught: (1) Without revelation from the Father by means of the
Holy Ghost no man can know the Son; and (2) No man can know the Father unless the Son reveals
him. This latter truth is inherent in the general law of intercession which provides that since the fall
of Adam all the dealings of God with man have been through the Son rather than coming directly
from the Father.
I. V. Luke 10:28. They shall see the Father also] See John 14:23.
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I. V. Luke 10:23. 'The Son is the Father, and the Father is the Son] Not two personages, but one; not
two beings in the express image of each other, but one being only who is both the Father and the
Son. That is, Christ himself is the Father. "Behold, the mystery of godliness, how great is it!" (D. &
C. 19:10.)
This doctrine that Christ is the Father, though seldom so well stated in the Bible, is abundantly and
expressly taught in latter-day revelation. Many of the explanatory passages setting forth the doctrine
are quoted or cited in the now famous document entitled, "The Father and The Son: A Doctrinal
Exposition by The First Presidency and the Twelve," published in full, among other places, on pages
465 to 473 of the Articles of Faith by Elder James E. Talmage.
In the usual manner of speaking, the Father and the Son are two separate personages who are united
as one in purpose and plan and in character and attributes. Christ is the Firstborn spirit offspring of
the Father in pre-existence, the Only Begotten in the flesh. But there are three specific scriptural
senses in which Christ is spoken of and known as the Father:
(1) He is the Father in the sense of being the Creator and is thus referred to as "the Father of the
heavens and of the earth, and all things that in them are." (Ether 4:7.)
(2) He is the Father of those who abide in his gospel. Faithful saints who receive him have power
given them to become his sons. (D. & C. 39:4.) Those who are "spiritually begotten... are born of
him"; they become "the children of Christ, his sons, and his daughters." (Mosiah 5:7.)
(3) He is the Father by divine investiture of authority. That is, the Father places his own name,
power, authority, and Godship on the Son, and empowers him to act and speak in the first person as
though he were the Father so that his words and acts become and are those of the Father. All things
are truly delivered to him by his Father.
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As to the mode of expression chosen: It is one that in its nature affirms the divine status and Sonship
of Jesus. He did not say, "Come unto Christ, and be perfected in him" (Moro. 10:32), as Moroni did;
nor did he follow Isaiah's pattern: "Seek ye the Lord, . . . return unto the Lord, . . . and to our God,
for he will abundantly pardon." (Isa. 55:6-7.) His language was not that of a prophet speaking for
Deity; rather, as Diety, he was speaking for himself. He did not say, 'Come unto God and find
salvation,' but instead, 'Come unto me and find salvation, for I am God, the very Messiah in whom
salvation centers.'
Matt. 11:28. Though men labor to gain spiritual blessings, they remain laden with sin and never find
rest of soul until they come unto Christ and accept him as their Savior.
29. Rest unto your souls] Faithful members of the Church find perfect peace and rest to their souls;
they enter into what is called the rest of the Lord. (Moro. 7:3; Heb. 3:7-19; 4:1-11; D. & C. 84:1725.) Attainment of this status includes the gaining of a perfect knowledge of the divinity of the
Lord's earthly kingdom. "It means entering into the knowledge and love of God," President Joseph F.
Smith said, "having faith in his purpose and in his plan, to such an extent that we know we are right,
and that we are not hunting for something else; we are not disturbed by every wind of doctrine, or by
the cunning and craftiness of men who lie in wait to deceive." It is rest "from the cry that is going
forth, here and therelo, here is Christ; lo, there is Christ." (Gospel Doctrine, 5th ed., pp. 58, 125126.)
30. To those who love God, "his commandments are not grievous." (1 John 5:3.)
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'He excepts all Gentiles when he saith His neighbour.' 'An Israelite killing a stranger-inhabitant doth
not die for it by the Sanhedrin, because it is said, If any one lifts up himself against his neighbour.'
'We are not to contrive the death of the Gentiles, but if they are in any danger of death we are not
bound to deliver them, e.g. if any of them fall into the sea you need not take him out, for such a one
is not thy neighbour.'" (Dummelow, p. 751.)
But Jesus in this parable drew from one trained in the spiritkilling letter of the Jewish law the
instinct-born gospel truth that all of our Father's children with whom we have contact are our
neighbors. The parable presupposes that God "hath made of one blood all nations of men" (Acts
17:26); it teaches the lesson that each member of this great brotherhood of man should exhibit an
active benevolence toward every other one of his Father's children.
From the standpoint of weaving a plausible account of common happenings into a story that teaches
a great spiritual truth, this is a perfect parable. The Jews esteemed themselves as a chosen race,
superior to the religiously degenerate Samaritans whom they hated, whom they classified as
foreigners, and whom they expressly refused to accept as neighbors. Between Jerusalem and Jericho
lay a thief-infested highway that was often bathed in blood. Jericho itself was a city of priests and
Levites. Wine, to cleanse wounds, and oil, as a salve to assuage their smarting, were the common
remedies of the day. The two pence equaled two days' wages for a laborer and would have kept the
injured man for several days. Indeed, so realistic is the story that it well may be a recitation of an
actual happening well known to Jesus' hearers.
Luke 10:25. Eternal life] See John 17:3.
27. See Matt. 22:34-40.
31. A priest] A literal descendant of Aaron who held the office of priest in the Aaronic Priesthood
and served as a minister among the people.
32. A Levite] One of the tribe of Levi who was ordained to office in the Aaronic Priesthood and was
called to be a minister and light to the people.
33. Samaritan] See John 4:9.
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Martha, in particular, so testifying when he raised their brother Lazarus from the dead. (John 11.) It
appears that these sisters were on friendly, even intimate, terms with Jesus, that he visited them in
Bethany from time to time, and that it was the privilege of Martha, at least to offer him the
hospitality of her home.
Here we see Jesus dining in Martha's home. According to the social amenities of the day, Mary
should have been assisting her sister in the serving and other details of the meal; instead, she sat at
Jesus' feet feasting herself on the spiritual food which fell from his lips. From Martha's housewifely
complaint and Jesus' mild reproof, we learn the principle that, though temporal food is essential to
life, once a reasonable amount has been acquired, then spiritual matters should take precedence.
Bread is essential to life, but man is not to live by bread alone. Food, clothing, and shelter are
essential to mortal existence, but once these have been gained in reasonable degree, there is only
"one thing" needfuland that is to partake of the spiritual food spread on the gospel table.
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20. Thou fool] God himself here says that a man who sets his heart on wealth and the worldly ease
that accompanies it is a fool and shall lose his soul.
21. Rich toward God] Rich in the currency negotiable in the courts above; rich in eternal things;
rich in the knowledge of the truth, in the possession of intelligence, in obedience to gospel law, in the
possession of the characteristics and attributes of Deity, in all of the things which will continue to be
enjoyed in eternity.
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unless they repent. In effect the lord said the same thing in latter-day revelation when he announced
that "every man must repent or suffer," and that only those who did repent would escape the same
excruciating pain and anguish which he himself suffered in Gethsemane. (D. & C. 19.) Two
alternatives face all menrepent or perish.
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of salvation as such was known to and understood by them. They had, for instance, no more occasion
to prove the ante-mortal existence of spirits than they did to prove God was a personal Being. Both
truths were assumed; concepts to the contrary were heresies which gained prevalence in later ages.
Jesus' disciplesprobably as a direct result of his teachingsknew and believed that men were the
spirit children of God in pre-existence and that in such prior estate they were subject to law and
endowed with agency. Otherwise they never would have asked nor would there have been any sense
or reason to a question which is predicated upon the assumption that men can sin before they are
born into mortality.
3. Men are not born with physical deformities as a punishment for sins committed in pre-existence.
Parents may bequeath physical ills to their offspring as a result of sins committed during mortality,
as when children are born blind because of venereal disease suffered by the mother. Or physical
deformities may result from conditions wholly beyond the control of any individual, as when
children are born with imperfections due to atomic radiation. Or yet again, the handicap may be one
allowed, as here, to fulfil the Lord's own peculiar purposes.
4. Jesus, the great Exemplar, came: (1) Because his Father sent him; (2) To do exactly what his
Father directed; and (3) To perform these labors on the divine schedule and at the appointed hour.
The night cometh, when no man can work] There is a time appointed for the performance of every
righteous work. Time lost can never be recaptured; it is gone forever. Perhaps the most awesome
illustration of this principle is the doctrine which denies men a second chance to gain celestial
salvation. Of those who have opportunity to believe and obey the gospel in this life and who neglect
or refuse to do so, Amulek said: "After this day of life, which is given us to prepare for eternity,
behold, if we do not improve our time while in this life, then cometh the night of darkness wherein
there can be no labor performed." (Alma 34:33.)
5. Light of the world] See John 8:12-20. Before opening the eyes of the blind, physically, Jesus
reminded his hearers of his previous pronouncement, "I am the light of the world," as though to
teach: 'Whenever you remember that I opened the blind eyes, physically, remember also that I came
to bring light to eyes, spiritually.'
6-7. See Matt. 9:27-31.
14. The sabbath day] See John 5:1-16.
22. Put out of the synagogue] Excommunicated.
29-33. From age to age disbelieving persons fall back on the same shaky notions to justify
themselves for rejecting light and truth. In modern times they say, in effect, 'We know that God
spake unto Jesus, and unto Peter, James and John; but as for this Joseph Smith, we know not from
whence he is.' To which one whose eyes have been opened spiritually might aptly reply: 'Why herein
is a marvelous thing, that ye know not whether Joseph Smith was sent of God, and yet he hath
communed with God, received revelation upon revelation, translated the Book of Mormon,
performed many miracles, set up again the kingdom of God on earth, and organized a Church which
is fast becoming a world power and to which hundreds of thousands of the elect are gathering from
all parts of the earth. Now we know that God heareth not sinners: but if any be a worshiper of God,
and doeth his will, him he heareth. Since the world began was it not heard that any man could do the
mighty works performed in this dispensation unless God was with him. If Joseph Smith were not of
God, his fraudulent claims would have been uncovered long ago and his work come to naught.'
34. Born in sins] Here the Jews themselves seem to indicate a knowledge of the doctrine of preexistence.
35-38. Both the logic and the testimony here presented by Jesus are perfect. He has just performed,
openly and boldly, a miracle which all but the most spiritually darkened viewers must acknowledge
could be done only by the power of God. (3 Ne. 8:1.) Then having shown himself to be the agent of
Deity through the use of divine power, he says plainly: 'I am the Son of God.' Accordingly, his
hearers are faced with this problem: Either he is the Son of God, as he says, or lie is a blasphemous
sinner worthy of death. If he is a blasphemer, how could he work a miracle that requires the approval
and power of God?
39. 'I am come into the world to sit in judgment upon all men, to divide them into two camps by their
acceptance or rejection of my word. Those who are spiritually blind have their eyes opened through
obedience to my gospel and shall see the things of the Spirit. Those who think they can see in the
spiritual realm, but who do not accept me and my gospel shall remain in darkness and be made blind
to the true spiritual realities.'
40-41. "He who sins against the greater light shall receive the greater condemnation." (D. & C. 82:3.)
"Where there is no law. . . there is no condemnation." (2 Ne. 9:25.) Modern sectarians, to whom the
message of the restoration is presented, are in this same state of blindness and sin. They have the
scriptures before them; they study the gospel doctrines contained in them; they are concerned about
religion in general; and then they hear the latter-day elders, speaking as those having authority,
present the message of salvationand yet they choose to remain in the churches of the day rather
than accept the fulness of revealed truth. If they were blind, knowing none of these things, they
would be under no condemnation for rejecting the light; but when the truth is offered to them and
they reject it, claiming to have the light already, they are under condemnation, for their sin remaineth.
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John 10:9-11. These verses are Messianic pronouncements. Jesus is saying that salvation comes by
him; that he came into the world to work out the infinite and eternal atonement by which immortality
and eternal life come; and that he is the very Messiah who shall voluntarily give his life for the sheep.
10. Life itself is immortality; the abundant life is eternal life. Immortality is a free gift to all through
the atonement; eternal life is that high state of exaltation reserved for those who live the fulness of
gospel laws. Certainly life is more abundant for those who inherit all things, who enjoy the fulness of
the glory of the Father, and who are rewarded with a "continuation of the seeds forever and
ever." (D. & C. 76:54-60; 93:16-28; 131; 132:19-24.)
11. I am the good shepherd] 'I am the Messiah, the Redeemer, the Son of God.' All Israel knew
their Messiah would be the great Shepherd, the Teacher, who as the Lord God incarnate, would make
his sheep to lie down in green pastures, would lead them beside the still waters, would restore their
souls and lead them in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake, and who in the end would
cause them to dwell in the house of the Lord forever. (Ps. 23.)
All Israel knew also that Isaiah had prophesied: "Behold, the Lord God will come with strong hand,
and his arm shall rule for him: behold, his reward is with him, and his work before him. He shall feed
his flock like a shepherd: he shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom, and
shall gently lead those that are with young." (Isa. 40:10-11.)
And now One ministered among them who said: 'I am he!'
The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep] See John 10: 15b, 17-21.
14-15a. 'I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and mine own know me, even as the Father
knoweth me and I know the Father.'
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According to his own eternal purposes, the Father created man as his spirit child; gave him laws and
agency; organized this earth as a place for his mortal abode; and ordained a system whereunder man
would be redeemed, temporally and spiritually, through an atonement. Having announced and
presented his plan to his spirit children, the Father then asked, in effect: 'Whom shall I send to be my
Son, to be the Messiah, Redeemer, an Savior, to work out the infinite and eternal atoning sacrifice?'
Christ, the Firstborn, replied in effect: 'Behold, here am I, send me, I will be thy Son. And Father, thy
will be done, and the glory be thine forever.' (Moses 4:1-4; Abra. 3:22-28.) Then it was that Christ
was chosen and foreordained to be "the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world." (Rev. 13:8; 1
Pet. 1:19-20.)
To play his part in this eternal plan of the Father, the chosen sacrificial Lamb needed a dual
inheritancean inheritance of the power of mortality and the power of immortality. The power
universally present in all cases of mortality is the power to die, to separate body and spirit in what is
called the natural death; the power of immortality in all cases is the power to live, to keep body and
spirit from separating, or, having allowed death to take place, the power to reunite body and spirit
inseparably in enduring immortality.
Mary, a mortal woman, was our Lord's mother, and God, an Immortal Man, was his Father. Thus he
inherited from Mary the power and ability to die and from God the power and ability to live. As the
Only Begotten of the Father, he was the only person ever born into the world who could make a
personal choice as to whether he should live or die, and having voluntarily elected to die, the only
one who could voluntarily choose to live again as a resurrected being. Lehi expressed this gospel
principle by saying that the Messiah "layeth down his life according to the flesh, and taketh it again
by the power of the Spirit, that he may bring to pass the resurrection of the dead, being the first that
should rise." (2 Ne. 2:8.)
Our Lord's atoning sacrifice is the most basic and important doctrine of the gospel; it is the most
transcendent event that has ever occurred in the world. Immortality for all men and eternal life for
the obedient come because of it. And the atonement itself is based upon and made possible because
of the divine Sonship of Jesus.
This doctrine of the atonement cannot be understood unless it is known that God is a personal being
in whose image man is created. If religionists suppose that Deity is a spirit essence which fills the
immensity of space and is everywhere and nowhere in particular present, they cannot believe that he
is an Immortal Man who sired a Son and that he bequeathed to that Son the power of immortality
which is the power over death. Hence, their false concepts about God preclude a true belief in the
divine Sonship and in the atoning sacrifice which grows out of it.
19-21. Jesus' miracles, which could have been performed only by the power of God, stands as a
witness that his claim to divine Sonship is true.
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25. But Jesus had told them, over and over again, plainly, figuratively, and by necessary implication
that he was the Christ. He knew this, and they knew it; and his spoken testimony they had rejected.
Now he challenged them to explain away his mighty works which none but one having divine power
could perform.
27. My sheep hear my voice] Why do some persons believe in Christ and his saving truths while
others do not? Why is it easier for some to believe all of the gospel truths than for others? There is
only one rational explanation why selected sheep hearken more readily to the Master's voice; it is the
fact that men developed different talents in pre-existence. Spirits sent to inhabit some mortal bodies
developed talents for spirituality, for recognizing the truth, for believing spiritual realities while yet
in pre-existence; others did not. Many of the offspring of Deity, having excelled in spiritual
attainments in pre-existence, are born as members of the house of Israel in this life. (Deut. 32:7-9.)
28-30. Those who believe in Christ and obey his laws are his sheep; they shall inherit eternal life,
and no power can prevent it. "You are of them that my Father hath given me," the Lord said to the
Church in this day, "And none of them that my Father hath given me shall be lost. And the Father
and I are one. I am in the Father and the Father in me; and inasmuch as ye have received me, ye are
in me and I in you." (D. & C. 50:41-43.)
29. My Father . . . is greater than all] The Father is greater than the Son.
30. See John 17:20-26.
31-33. "Blasphemy consists in either or both of the following: 1. Speaking irreverently, evilly,
abusively, or scurrilously against God or sacred things; or 2. Speaking profanely or falsely about
Deity." (Mormon Doctrine, p. 85.) In its most criminal and corrupt form it consists in claiming
falsely to be God or the Son of God. Thus Jesus would have been guilty of the most terrible of all
blasphemous crimes if his claim to divine Sonship had been false. Death by stoning was the penalty
of blasphemy in ancient Israel. (Lev. 24:16.)
34-36. Though "there is none other God but one" for men on this earth to worship, yet "there be gods
many, and lords many" throughout the infinite expanse of eternity. (1 Cor. 8:4-7.) That is, there are
many exalted, perfected, glorified personages who reign as gods over their own dominions. John saw
144,000 of them standing with Christ upon Mount Zion, all "having his Father's name written in their
foreheads" (Rev. 14- 1), which is to say that they were gods and were so identified by wearing
crowns so stating. Indeed, to each person who overcomes and gains exaltation, Christ has promised:
"I will write upon him the name of my God," and he shall "sit with me in my throne, even as I also
overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne." (Rev. 3:12, 21.)
Joseph Smith said: "Every man who reigns in celestial glory is a god to his dominions." (Teachings,
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p. 374.) All exalted persons "are gods, even the sons of God." (D. & C. 76:58.) Through obedience to
the whole gospel law, including celestial marriage, they attain the "fulness of the glory of the
Father" (D. & C. 93:6-28) and "a continuation of the seeds forever and ever. Then shall they be gods,
because they have no end; therefore shall they be from everlasting to everlasting, because they
continue; then shall they be above all, because all things are subject unto them. Then shall they be
gods, because they have all power, and the angels are subject unto them." (D. & C. 132:19-20.)
But to us there is but one God, who is Elohim, and one Lord, who is the Lord Jehovah; the Holy
Ghost acts as their minister; and these three are one Godhead, or as it is more graphically expressed,
one God. Thus we find the Psalmist, whom Jesus quoted, saying: "God standeth in the congregation
of the mighty; he judgeth among the gods. . . . I have said, Ye are gods; and all of you are children of
the most High." (Ps. 82:1, 6.)
This, then, in effect, is our Lord's argument: 'Why accuse me of blasphemy for testifying that I was
sanctified and sent into the world by the Father? Does it offend you to hear me say that I am the Son
of God? Do you not know that every righteous person to whom the word of God comes, and who
then obeys the fulness of that law, shall become like the Father and be a god himself?'
36. I am the Son of God] Could any statement be plainer? How, as so many modernists affirm, could
Jesus be a great moral teacher only and not the Son of God? Is a man a great moral teacher who
builds his life on a lie and centers all his teachings around something that is false?
37-38. This is the same sort of logic that Nephi uses to establish the truth of the Book of Mormon.
"Believe in Christ," he says to those who read that book, "and if ye believe not in these words believe
in Christ. And if ye shall believe in Christ ye will believe in these words, for they are the words of
Christ, and he hath given them unto me; and they teach all men that they should do good." (2 Ne.
33:10.)
Similarly, and in effect, Jesus said: 'Ye say ye do not believe in me; very well, then believe in the
works which I do, for ye cannot deny they have come by divine power; and if ye accept the works,
then ye shall believe in me also, for I could not do the works alone; they came by the power of the
Father.'
38. The Father is in me, and I in him] See John 17:20-26.
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This particular healing is recorded in detail, not because of its miraculous nature, for many others
equalled or surpassed it in this respect, but because it took place on the Sabbath day. See John 5:116. Out of the occurrences surrounding it we learn:
(1) For 18 years the woman had been bound by Satan with "a spirit of infirmity," presumably
meaning that some mental or spiritual affliction attended her physical illness. Though Satan may
rejoice in the afflictionswhether physical, mental, or spiritualwhich befall mortal men, it is not
to be assumed that he has power to impose them, except in isolated instances where people have
complied with laws which permit such an imposition; otherwise, Satan would shackle all men with
ills so drastic as to destroy them.
(2) Jesus appears to have sought out this woman and performed the miracle on his own initiate on the
Sabbath to teach the principle that it is lawful to do good and work righteousness on that holy day.
(3) Though it was not always his habit so to do, in this instance he performed the healing by the
laying on of hands, a physical performance which helps faith increase in the hearts of afflicted
persons.
(4) Fake beliefsas those relative to sabbath observance lead to bigotry and place their adherents in
a position where they deny and reject the pure mercies of God and become hypocrites.
(5) Every soul is honorable and deserving of dignified respect in the eyes of Deity. This woman,
though decrepit and infirm, though shackled with atrophied muscles and seemingly afflicted
mentally and spiritually as well, was hailed by Jesus as a daughter of Abraham, a soul worthy of the
blessings and mercies of Abraham's God.
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25. Ye know not from whence ye are] It is not the Lord of the kingdom who is in darkness, unable to
discern from whence those seeking entrance to his kingdom have come, as the King James Version
has it, but it is the people with whom the Spirit has ceased to strive who are without the light.
28. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob "have entered into their exaltation, according to the promises, and sit
upon thrones, and are not angels but are gods," they having attained such glory and perfection in and
through the new and everlasting covenant of marriage. (D. & C. 132:29-37.)
29. The ransomed of the Lord shall come from "all nations, and kindreds, and people, and
tongues." (Rev. 7:9.)
30. 'There are those Gentiles in all nations to whom the gospel is offered last who shall be saved
ahead of you Jews to whom the word of God came first, and there are those among you who first had
opportunity to hear the truth who shall be last as to honor, preference, and salvation hereafter.' (1 Ne.
13:42.)
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shall lead thee by the hand, and give thee answer to thy prayers." (D. & C. 112:10.)
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all earthly things. It was through this sacrifice, and this only, that God has ordained that men should
enjoy eternal life; and it is through the medium of the sacrifice of all earthly things that men do
actually know that they are doing the things that are well pleasing in the sight of God. When a man
has offered in sacrifice all that he has for the truth's sake, not even withholding his life, and believing
before God that he has been called to make this sacrifice because he seeks to do his will, he does
know, most assuredly, that God does and will accept his sacrifice and offering, and that he has not, or
will not seek his face in vain. Under these circumstances, then, he can obtain the faith necessary for
him to lay hold on eternal life.
"It is vain for persons to fancy to themselves that they are heirs with those, or can be heirs with them,
who have offered their all in sacrifice, and by this means obtained faith in God and favor with him so
as to obtain eternal life, unless they, in like manner, offer unto him the same sacrifice, and through
that offering obtain the knowledge that they are accepted of him. .
"From the days of righteous Abel to the present time, the knowledge that men have that they are
accepted in the sight of God is obtained by offering sacrifice. .
"Those, then, who make the sacrifice, will have the testimony that their course is pleasing in the sight
of God; and those who have this testimony will have faith to lay hold on eternal life; and will be
enabled, through faith, to endure unto the end, and receive the crown that is laid up for them that love
the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ. But those who do not make the sacrifice cannot enjoy this
faith, because men are dependent upon this sacrifice in order to obtain this faith: therefore, they
cannot lay hold upon eternal life, because the revelations of God do not guarantee unto them the
authority so to do, and without this guarantee faith could not exist." (Lectures on Faith, pp. 58-60.)
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response to the murmurings of the Pharisees and scribes that Jesus ate with sinners. This time the
Master Teacher places the emphasis on finding that which is lost; he shows the length the Shepherd
will go to find the sheep and the rejoicing that takes place when the lost is found. This time, in
applying the parable, the complaining religious leaders, who considered themselves as just men
needing no repentance, become the shepherds who should have been doing what the Chief Shepherd
was doingseeking to find and save that which was lost.
In further interpretation of Luke's account, the Prophet said: "The hundred sheep represent one
hundred Sadducees and Pharisees, as though Jesus had said, 'If you Sadducees and Pharisees, are in
the sheepfold, I have no mission for you; I am sent to look up sheep that are lost; and when I have
found them, I will back them up and make joy in heaven.' This represents hunting after a few
individuals, or one poor publican, which the Pharisees and Sadducees despised." (Teachings, p. 277.)
I. V. Matt. 18:11. See Matt. 19:13-15.
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repent.
In the Parable of the Prodigal Son, the Father is God who endows all his children with talents,
capacities, powers, and agencyall according to their needs and situations, all subject to the divine
decree that they shall keep his commandments and use their inheritances wisely.
One son is faithful and true to every covenant, obligation, and trust put upon him. He keeps the
commandments, labors diligently in his Father's field, and lays up a rich spiritual harvest for himself
and his Father. The other offspring is overcome by the world, squanders his inheritance in gratifying
the lusts of the flesh, and soon finds himself in a state of degenerate despondency. Finally, humbled
by adversity, remembering that even his Father's hired servants fare better than he, the wayward son
manifests penitence, turns to God, and seeks such surcease from suffering and sorrow as a just and
merciful Father can bestow.
That the faithful son, being yet mortal and not knowing all the designs and purposes of God, should
feel impulsive jealousy and anger at the seeming inequity of the honor heaped on the prodigal, is not
difficult to understand. But then comes the explanation: 'Thy brother has returned to serve me in such
capacity as he is able. Be glad that he is no longer wholly lost. But as for thee: Thou art my heir.
Thou hast been faithful over a few things and I will make thee ruler over many. Thou hast overcome
an shall "sit with me in my throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his
throne." (Rev. 3:21.) "Ye shall be even as I am, and I am even as the Father; and the Father and I are
one." (3 Ne. 28:10.) "Thou are ever with me, and all that I have is thine."' (D. & C. 84:38.)
We may suppose that the elder son, accustomed as he was to obeying the will of his father, then went
in to the feast, welcomed his wayward brother in a compassionate manner, and rejoiced along with
the father because the spiritually dead was born again, because he who was lost to the kingdom had
been reclaimed.
But we need not suppose that the two sons were thereafter equal in power, honor, or dominion. The
inheritance of one was already wasted. As President Joseph Fielding Smith has written, "There is
rejoicing in heaven over every sinner who repents; but those who are faithful and transgress not any
of the commandments, shall inherit 'all that the father hath,' while those who might be sons, but
through thee 'riotous living' waste their inheritance, may come back through repentance to salvation
to be servants, not to inherit exaltation as sons." (Joseph Fielding Smith, The Way to Perfection, pp.
21-22.)
As to the immediate application of the parable, we may suppose that the Pharisees and scribes saw
themselves as the elder son, laboriously attending to the affairs of the kingdom and refusing to
fellowship a repentant publican or a returned sinner. Actually, of course, the murmuring religionists
were far from that course of good works entitling them to the high status of sons in the Father's
eternal household.
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foresight, as pertaining to temporal things) than the children of light (those who have received the
gospel, as pertaining to spiritual things).
9. In the Revised Version this verse reads: "And I say unto you, Make to yourself friends by means
of the mammon of unrighteousness, that, when it shall fail, they may receive you into the eternal
tabernacles." The sense and meaning is: 'Ye saints of God, be as wise and prudent in spiritual things
as the unjust steward was in worldly things. Use the things of this worldwhich are God's and with
reference to which you are stewardsto feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and heal the sick, always
remembering that when ye do any of these things unto the least of one of these my brethren, ye do it
unto me. By such a course, when your money is gone and your life is past, your friends in heaven
will welcome you into eternal mansions of bliss.'
Mammon of unrighteousness] Mammon is an Aramaic word for riches; as here used the
connotation indicates deceitful wealth, wealth that is fleeting and will not of itself endure in the
eternal worlds.
10-11. 'If you earthly stewards are not faithful in handling the wealth of the world which the Lord
has entrusted to you, using it for the furtherance of his purposes, why do you think he will commit to
you kingdoms and thrones and eternal riches hereafter. For he that is faithful over an earthly
stewardship will be faithful over kingdoms and dominions in the world to come, but he that is unjust
and does not use his wealth aright here, would be unjust in administering eternal riches.'
12. "If you do not spend your money rightly, you will not inherit the kingdom of heaven. Money is
here called that which is another's, because Christians are to regard it not as their own, but as a trust
for which they must one day give account. That which is your own is the joy of heaven, 'the kingdom
prepared for you from the foundation of the world.'" (Dummelow, p. 760.) To illustrate: If the earthly
stewards, having covenanted to do so in the waters of baptism, do not return to their Lord as tithing
onetenth of their interest annually, how can they expect to be found worthy to handle the true
riches of a celestial inheritance?
13. See Matt. 6:24. In the properly adjusted life, wealth is a servant, not a master.
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has been made known unto me by an angel, that the spirits of all men, as soon as they are departed
from this mortal body, yea, the spirits of all men, whether they be good or evil, are taken home to
that God who gave them life." When men die, they do not go immediately into the presence of Deity,
but are taken home to God in a figurative sense, meaning that they step into the unseen realm of
spiritual things and are no longer living as mortal beings.
"And then shall it come to pass," Alma continues, "that the spirits of those who are righteous are
received into a state of happiness, which is called paradise, a state of rest, a state of peace, where
they shall rest from all their troubles and from all care, and sorrow.
"And then shall it come to pass, that the spirits of the wicked, yea, who are evilfor behold, they
have no part nor portion of the Spirit of the Lord; for behold, they chose evil works rather than good;
therefore the spirit of the devil did enter into them, and take possession of their houseand these
shall be cast out into outer darkness; there shall be weeping, and wailing, and gnashing of teeth, and
this because of their own iniquity, being led captive by the will of the devil.
"Now this is the state of the souls of the wicked, yea, in darkness, and a state of awful, fearful
looking for the fiery indignation of the wrath of God upon them; thus they remain in this state, as
well as the righteous in paradise, until the time of their resurrection." (Alma 40:11-14.)
Luke 16:22. Abraham's bosom] Paradise, the temporary abode of righteous Abraham as he awaited
the day of his resurrection; all righteous disembodied spirits are received into this spirit realm where
they rest from the turmoils and physical toils of mortality, but continue their labors as intelligent,
sentient souls as they await their resurrections.
23. Hell] Hades (Greek), sheol (Hebrew), spirit prison, outer darkness, the temporary abode of
wicked disembodied spirits, as they await their ultimate destiny in the resurrection of the unjust.
When death and hell deliver up the dead which are in them, these spirits will receive an inheritance
in the telestial kingdom or will be cast out into that eternal hell reserved for the devil and his angels,
who are sons of perdition. (Rev. 20:13-15; D. &. C. 76:105-106; 88:31-32.) Thus, except for the sons
of perdition, hell is a temporary abiding place and shall have an end. Passages in which the word hell
is a translation of gehenna (Hebrew) have reference to the anguish, torment, and remorse of
conscience suffered by those in hell, gehenna being the name of the valley near Jerusalem where
eternal fires burned the garbage and refuse of the city.
23-24. Paradise and helleach a division in that world of spirits where the souls of men await their
resurrectionare both upon this earth. (Brigham Young, Discourses, new ed., pp. 376-381.) Joseph
Smith said: "The spirits of the just . . . are not far from us." (Teachings, p. 326.)
26. There was no intermingling by the spirits in paradise and hell until after Christ bridged the "great
gulf" between these two spirit abodes. (Alma 40:11-14.) This he did while his body by in the tomb of
Joseph of Arimathea and his own disembodied spirit continued to minister to men in their spirit
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prison. (1 Pet. 3:18-21; 4:6; Joseph F. Smith, Gospel Doctrine, 5th ed., pp. 472-476.) "Until that day"
the prisoners remained bound and the gospel was not preached to them. (Moses 7:37-39.) The hope
of salvation for the dead was yet future.
But now, since our Lord has proclaimed "liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to
them that are bound" (Isa. 61:1), the gospel is preached in all parts of the spirit world, repentance is
granted to those who seek it, vicarious ordinances are administered in earthly temples, and there is a
hope of salvation for the spirits of those men who would have received the gospel with all their
hearts in this life had the opportunity come to them. (Teachings, p. 107.) At this time, as Joseph
Smith explained it, "Hades, sheol, paradise, spirits in prison, are all one: it is a world of
spirits." (Teachings, p. 310.)
27-31. Two great and eternal truths are here taught:
(1) Deity chooses and sends his own agents and witnesses to mortal men to cry repentance and
preach the gospel of salvation; unless men heed their message they are damned; and
(2) Those who refuse to hear the living oracles sent to them in their day, and to believe the recorded
teachings of the ancient prophets, would not be converted by a display of miracles that even included
the raising of the dead.
Lazarus rose from the dead at Jesus' command and mingled again among men as a mortal being.
Instead of being converted, many of the rebellious Jews sought to put him to death to prevent
receptive persons from believing in Jesus and his divine power. (John 11:1-52; 12:10-11.) Our Lord
himself rose from the dead in glorious immortality, appeared to many, and sent witnesses into all the
world to testify of his resurrection, and yet men did not believe.
In modern times many resurrected persons have ministered to mortal men; sober testimony to their
visitations is borne, and yet disbelief continues. Joseph Smith was told by revelation that "this
unbelieving and stiffnecked generation" would not believe his word even if he showed them the gold
plates, the Urim and Thummim, and all things divinely committed to him. Instead, the Lord decreed:
"This generation shall have my word through you." (D. & C. 5:7-10.) Such is the Lord's system for
sending forth his saving truths.
'If they hear not Joseph Smith, the living oracles, and the Book of Mormon, all sent to proclaim the
gospel in this day, neither will they be persuaded though Moroni, risen from the dead, come and
minister personally unto them.'
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all power, or that there are new truths for him to learn, that person cannot attain perfect faith. Or, as
the Prophet expressed it: "If it were not for the idea existing in the minds of men that God had all
knowledge it would be impossible for them to exercise faith in him." (Lectures on Faith, p. 44.)
Finally, in obtaining or increasing faith, the great governing principle is personal righteousness. A
man's faith cannot exceed his righteousness and obedience. The greater the adherence to the truth,
the greater is the faith of an individual. "An actual knowledge to any person, that the course of life
which he pursues is according to the will of God, is essentially necessary to enable him to have that
confidence in God without which no person can obtain eternal life." (Lectures on Faith, p. 57.)
Such then is the course by which the apostles of old, or the saints in any age, have power to gain
faith, to increase such faith as they may have, and to gain favor with the Lord. And since faith is a
principle of power, when men do gain it, they have power to perform miracles, heal the sick, raise
the dead, move mountains, or command a sycamore tree to be plucked up and planted in the sea.
Signs, miracles, and gilts are the effects which flow from faith; where these are, there is faith; where
these are not, there is no faith.
"When faith comes," the Prophet said, "it brings its train of attendants with itapostles, prophets,
evangelists, pastors, teachers, gifts, wisdom, knowledge, miracles, healings, tongues, interpretation
of tongues, etc. All these appear when faith appears on the earth, and disappear when it disappears
from the earth; for these are the effects of faith, and always have, and always will, attend it. For
where faith is, there will the knowledge of God be also, with all things which pertain thereto
revelations, visions, and dreams, as well as every necessary thing, in order that the possessors of faith
may be perfected, and obtain salvation." (Lectures on Faith, pp. 70-71; Mormon Doctrine, pp. 242248.)
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Alma taught that if men "can do no more than desire to believe," and can accept only "a portion" of
the truth, yet such a course, diligently pursued, will lead first to faith and then to perfect knowledge.
He compares the word of God to a seed planted in the heart from which the tree of faith will grow.
But the tree will not grow unless it receives proper care. "Behold, as the tree beginneth to grow, ye
will say: Let us nourish it with great care, that it may get root, that it may grow up, and bring forth
fruit unto us. And now behold, if ye nourish it with much care it will get root, and grow up, and bring
forth fruit. But if ye neglect the tree, and take no thought for its nourishment, behold it will not get
any root; and when the heat of the sun cometh and scorcheth it, because it hath no root it withers
away, and ye pluck it up and cast it out." (Alma 32:21-43.)
This parable also teaches that Deity has a claim upon the services of his saints, and that even though
they serve him with all their hearts, mights, mind, and strength, yet they are unprofitable servants.
King Benjamin summarized this doctrine to the saints in his day in these words: "If ye should serve
him who has created you from the beginning, and is preserving you from day to day, by lending you
breath, that ye may live and move and do according to your own will, and even supporting you from
one moment to anotherI say, if ye should serve him with all your whole souls yet ye would be
unprofitable servants.
"And behold, all that he requires of you is to keep his commandments; and he has promised you that
if ye would keep his commandments ye should prosper in the land; and he never doth vary from
which he hath said; therefore, if ye do keep his commandments he doth bless you and prosper you.
"And now, in the first place, he hath created you, and granted unto you your lives, for which ye are
indebted unto him. And secondly, he doth require that ye should do as he hath commanded you; for
which if ye do, he doth immediately bless you; and therefore he hath paid you. And ye are still
indebted unto him, and are, and will be, forever and ever; therefore, of what have ye to
boast?" (Mosiah 2:21-24.)
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of Jairus' daughter he had even enjoined secrecy on the part of those who witnessed the miracle.
But with "our friend Lazarus" it was different. Jesus with full knowledge of Lazarus' sickness, did
nothing to prevent his death; allowed his body to be prepared for burial; waited until the funeral was
over and the entombment accomplished; permitted four days to pass so that the processes of
decomposition would be well under way; tested the faith of Mary and Martha to the utmost; came to
the rock-barred tomb under circumstances which attracted many sceptics and unbelievers; conducted
himself in every respect as though he were courting publicity; and thenusing the prerogative of
Deity to give life or death according to his own willcommanded: "Lazarus, come forth."
Why this studied buildup, this centering of attention upon one of the mightiest miracles of his
ministry? Two reasons in particular stand out. (1) As our Lord neared the climax of his mortal
ministry, he was again bearing testimony, in a way that could not be refuted, of his Messiahship, of
his divine Sonship, of the fact that he was in very deed the literal Son of God; and (2) He was setting
the stage, so as to dramatize for all time, one of his greatest teachings: That he was the resurrection
and the life, that immortality and eternal life came by him, and that those who believed and obeyed
his words should never die spiritually.
John 11:2. See Matt. 26:6-13.
4. That the Son of God might be glorified] Again Jesus bears blunt record of his divine Sonship.
'Lazarus shall die, but only for a short time. Then at my command he shall return to mortality to
stand as a witness to all generations that I am the Son of God and have power over life and death.'
6. Jesus and his intimate disciples were in Perea, at least twenty-five miles from Bethany. During the
two days, before starting for Bethany, it appears that the Master performed a sabbath healing (Luke
14:1-6), discoursed on sacrifice (Luke 14:25-33), taught that the law and the prophets bore record of
him (Luke 16:14-18), talked of faith (Luke 17:5-6), and gave a series of parablesthe Parable of the
Wedding Guests (Luke 14:7-11), of the Great Supper (Luke 14:12-24), of the Lost Sheep (Luke 15:37), of the Lost Coin (Luke 15:8-10), of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11-32), of the Unjust Steward
(Luke 16:1-13), of Lazarus and the Rich Man (Luke 16:19-31), and of the Unprofitable Servant
(Luke 17:1-10).
9-10. Certainly Jesus would go to Judea in spite of the threats of death that faced him there. 'Though
it be the eleventh hour of my life, yet there are twelve hours in the day, and during that designated
period, I shall do the work appointed me without stumbling or faltering. This is the time given me to
do my work. I cannot wait for the night when perchance the opposition will die down. He that shirks
his responsibilities and puts off his labors until the night shall stumble in the darkness and fail in his
work.'
16. Thomas is so often remembered as the apostle who would not believe that Jesus had been
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resurrected until he saw and felt the wound marks in our Lord's risen body. (John 20:24-29.) This
picture of one of the ancient Twelve should certainly be tempered by the fact that his faith and
devotion, as here exhibited, made him willing to die with his Lord.
18-19. Less than two miles separated Bethany and Jerusalem, thus making it convenient for many to
come from the large city to mourn with Mary and Martha.
22, 32. Miracles are the fruit of faith. Both Martha and Mary knew that Jesus had and could raise the
dead; and their faith was not to go unrewarded.
24. The resurrection] See John 5:26-30.
25-26. "Behold, this is my work and my glory," saith the Father, "to bring to pass the immortality
and eternal life of man." (Moses 1:39.) To accomplish this work the Father gave his Only Begotten
Son and empowered him to work out the infinite and eternal atonement so that men "might be raised
in immortality unto eternal life, even as many as would believe." (D. & C. 29:43.) As a consequence,
Christ "hath abolished death, and hath brought life and immortality to light through the gospel." (2
Tim. 1:10.)
To be resurrected is to gain immortality, and to have eternal life is to be exalted in the celestial
kingdom. Spiritual life is to live in the presence of God in the sense that, while here in mortality, one
has the companionship of the Holy Ghost and is thereby in the presence of God; eternal life is to live
in the personal presence of God in a state of glory and dominion in the world to come.
Thus Jesus, in effect, is saying to Martha: 'I am he through whom immortality and eternal life come.
He that believes in me and obeys my gospel, though he die the natural death, yet through me he shall
gain both immortality and eternal life. And whosoever is spiritually alive, having been born again so
as to have the companionship of the Holy Ghost, and who thereafter endures in righteousness to the
end, shall never die; that is, he shall have spiritual life in this world and eternal life in the world to
come.'
27. Women as well as men have testimonies, receive revelation from the Spirit, and know of
themselves of the Lord's divinity. Martha's testimony of Christ's divine Sonship is as plain, positive
and sure as was the same testimony born by Peter. (Matt. 16:13-20.)
33. He groaned in the spirit] 38. Again groaning in himself] These phrases as given in the revised
version say that he "was moved with indignation in the spirit" and "being moved with indignation in
himself." Apparently Jesus was expressing sorrowful indignation, in the first instance because of the
shallow and ritualistic weeping of the Jews and in the second case at the baseless criticism poured
upon him for failure to come and heal Lazarus prior to his death.
35. Jesus wept] What a scene this isthe Son of God in tears! And yet God and man are of the same
race, endowed in greater or lesser degree with the same characteristics and attributes; why then
should not even Deity weep? (Moses 7:28-37.) Moreover, the man Jesus, Mary's Son, the great
Exemplar, while he dwelt in the flesh, was subject to every normal mortal feeling and desire. He
suffered temptations, pain, hunger, thirst, and fatigue. (Mosiah 3:7.) He rejoiced with his friends,
wept with the mourners, loved those who kept his commandments, satisfied his hunger with food,
and in all things set a proper example for his fellow beings to follow.
37-38. 'We know this man gets credit for giving sight to a man born blind, but that miracle must have
some other explanation. At least his purported power is limited and of uncertain or capricious
operation, for now he has failed to heal one he loved from an ordinary sickness.' Is it any wonder that
their attitude caused Jesus to groan within himself?
39-46. In the divine economy, the Lord never does for men that which they can do for themselves.
Here we see him call the dead back to life (a miracle almost without parallel), but not roll the stone
from the cave's entrance, or remove the napkin from the face, or unwind the burial wrappings from
the reanimated Lazarus.
39. By this time he stinketh: for he hath been dead four days] Decomposition was well under way;
death had long since been established as an absolute certainty; the spirit had already enjoyed an
appreciable period of rejoicing and reunion with righteous friends and relatives in paradise. To the
Jews the term of four days had special significance; it was the popular belief among them that by the
fourth day the spirit had finally and irrevocably departed from the vicinity of the corpse so that
decomposition could go on apace.
41-42. Four days before while in Perea, Jesus had prayed that Lazarus might be raised. Now, for the
benefit of those present at the tomb, he is thanking his Father for hearing that prayer.
43. Lazarus, come forth] Not to resurrected immortality, for Jesus himself was yet to be the first
fruits of the resurrection, but come forth as a mortal person, one who yet again shall die and have his
body put back in the cave.
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The miracles proved Jesus' claim to divine Sonship. Either they must cease or this Galilean must be
accepted as the Messiah. To these sin-saturated souls who comprised the Sanhedrin, there was but
one solution: Stop the miracles by slaying him who performed them. Such a course, they
rationalized, was proper and justified, for it would avoid that tumult among the people which would
bring on them further Roman restrictions.
49-52. Under these circumstances Caiaphas began to speak, apparently intending to advocate the
death of Jesus as a means of avoiding the supposed ruin that would come upon their nation through
his teachings. The high priest's reasoning seemingly was, "It is better that one man should perish" (1
Ne. 4:13) than that the Jewish nation with all its philosophies and beliefs should be restricted further
by Rome through further tumultuous conditions.
But Deity decreed that Caiaphas affirm his Son's divinity. Departing from his almost in varying
practice of using only righteous persons to give his word to men, God sent the spirit of prophecy to
Caiaphas, who was thereby led to say: 'Ye are ignorant of the divine will where this man is
concerned. He has come to work out the infinite and eternal atonement, to be sacrificed for the sins
of the world. He shall die for us and for all the people of our nation, and not only for us and our
nation, but for all men everywhere. Because of his death and by the preaching of his gospel, he shall
gather together into one fold all the obedient among the children of God in all nations, for salvation
is by and in and of and through him.'
49. Caiaphas] See Matt. 26:3. High priest that same year] Seemingly a slur at the repeated
changing of the high priests by Roman interference. Caiaphas in fact served eleven years in the
office.
53. Heedless of the high priest's prophetic utterance setting forth the divine call resting upon him
who had called Lazarus forth, members of the Sanhedrin sought from that time forth to put him to
death.
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the work wrought. Here, as with Naaman the Syrian who was required by Elisha to bathe seven times
in the Jordan before losing his leprosy (2 Kings 5), these ten lepers were not healed immediately, but
were told to go and show themselves to the priests. Their faith being thus tested, they were all healed
enroute. They were, of course, required to gain priestly approval that they were clean before
beginning again to mingle with people generally.
17. This is an illustration of the gift of seership. The other nine had not been cleansed in the presence
of the Master, yet he was fully aware of what occurred at some other place.
18. This stranger] Prayers of thanksgiving are as important as prayer petitioning divine favor. It is
here worthy of note that the cleansed Jewish lepers went on their way and that only a lone Samaritan
returned to Pour out his gratitude to the Master Healer. Perhaps this exhibition of gratitude by a
Samaritan was another evidence to the apostles that all men are acceptable to the Lord and that the
Jewish claim to exclusive superiority as a chosen race was soon to be replaced with a command to
take the gospel of peace to all races.
19. Thy faith hath made thee whole] There are greater blessings than to be healed physically. And
after a person has exercised the faith to gain physical well-being, if he is to continue in grace, he
must manifest the added faith to receive spiritual blessings. Here all of the ten were cleansed of their
physical affliction, but it is evident that the one grateful recipient of our Lord's favor was blessed in a
special manner, perhaps being made whole spiritually also.
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"'Where there is no kingdom of God there is no salvation. What constitutes the kingdom of God?
Where there is a prophet, a priest, or a righteous man unto whom God gives his oracles, there is the
kingdom of God; and where the oracles of God are not, there the kingdom of God is not. .
"'Whenever men can find out the will of God and find an administrator legally authorized from God,
there is the kingdom of God; but where these are not, the kingdom of God is not. All the ordinances,
systems, and administrations on the earth are of no use to the children of men, unless they are
ordained and authorized of God; for nothing will save a man but a legal administrator; for none
others will be acknowledged either by God or angels.' (Teachings, pp. 271-274.)
"The Church (or kingdom) is not a democracylegislation is not enacted by the body of people
composing the organization; they do not make the laws governing themselves. The Church is a
kingdom. The Lord Jesus Christ is the Eternal King, and the President of the Church, the mouthpiece
of God on earth, is the earthly king. All things come to the Church from the King of the kingdom in
heaven, through the king of the kingdom on earth. There is, of course, the democratic principle of
common consent whereunder the people may accept or reject what the Lord offers to them.
Acceptance brings salvation; rejection leads to damnation.
"2. During the millennium the kingdom of God will continue on earth, but in that day it will be both
an ecclesiastical and a political kingdom. That is, the Church (which is the kingdom) will have the
rule and government of the world given to it. When inspired teachers speak of the future setting up
of the' kingdom of God on earth, they have reference to the millennial day when 'The kingdoms of
this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and
ever.' (Rev. 11:15.) Daniel also saw the day when 'the saints of the most High shall take the
kingdom, and possess the kingdom for ever, even for ever and ever.' (Dan. 7:18, 22, 27.) The Prophet
prayed that the present ecclesiastical kingdom of God on earth might roll forth that the future
political and millennial kingdom of God on earth might come. (D. & C. 65; Doctrines of Salvation,
vol 1, pp. 229-246.)
"3. In the eternal worlds, the celestial kingdom is the kingdom of God, and that kingdom does not
reach down to include either a terrestrial kingdom or a telestial kingdom. (D. & C. 20:29; Moses
6:57; 2 Ne. 9:18, 23; Luke 13:28-29; John 3:3-5.) The gospel is designed to prepare men for an
inheritance in the celestial kingdom of God; persons can gain admittance to the lower kingdoms
without obedience to the law of Christ. (D. & C. 88:16-29.)" (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 380-381.)
Luke 17:20. Prophecies foretelling the events incident to the first and second comings of the Messiah
were confused in the minds of the Jews. They falsely assumed that at his first coming he would come
with an outward display of power which would overthrow and destroy all earthly kingdoms.
Accordingly, basing their inquiry on a false premise, and with some apparent sarcasm, they demand
an answer to this mocking question: 'If thou art the promised Messiah, as you have repeatedly
claimed to be, when will thy power be manifest, when will the Roman yoke be broken, when will the
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only when offered in faith. The mere recitation of words in prayers means little unless such are
uttered with real intent and are accompanied by an honest, heartfelt, sincere desire and hope that the
blessings sought shall be granted. (Moro. 7:6-9.) And faith itselfthe power which brings answers
to prayersis increased through the spiritual communion that attends true prayer.
To gain blessings from the Lord, man is commanded: "Ask, and it shall be given you." (Matt. 7:7.)
But the command also is: "Let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a
wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any
thing of the Lord." (Jas. 1:6-7.)
Accordingly, in this parable we find Jesus teaching the saints that when their cause is just, the Lord
expects them to continue in importunate, determined, and persevering prayerday after day, year
after year, as long as they live. By such a course they strengthen their own faith and so attain the
desired blessings.
Luke 18:4-7. In comparing Deity to an unjust judge the purpose is to contrast the perfection of God's
judgment with that of a wicked and unjust earthly jurist. The thought is: 'If an unjust earthly judge
will finally dispense justice because of the repeated importunities of the widow, how much more
shall the God of all the earth, who is the embodiment of perfect justice and impartiality, grant the just
petitions of his faithful saints.'
I. V. Luke 18:8. "'Yet ere the Son of Man comes to redress the wrongs of his Church, so low will the
hope of relief sink, through the length of the delay, that one will be fain to ask, Will he find any faith
of a coming avenger left on the earth?' From this we learn: (1) That the primary and historical
reference to this parable is to the Church in its widowed, desolate, oppressed, defenseless condition
during the present absence of her Lord in the heavens; (2) That in these circumstances importunate,
persevering prayer for deliverance is the Church's fitting exercise; (3) That notwithstanding every
encouragement to this, so long will the answer be delayed, while the need of relief continues the
same, and all hope of deliverance will have nearly died out, and 'faith' of Christ's coming scarcely be
found." (Jamieson, p. 118.)
D. & C. 101:81-92. In modern times the Lord again applied the principles taught in the parable to
"the Church in its widowed, desolate, oppressed, defenseless condition." In petitioning for redress of
their just grievances the "children of Zion" importuned at the feet of the judge, governor, and
president, only to be rebuffed with the politically expedient statement that their cause was just but
these officials could do nothing for them. As a consequence, the promised judgments have and will
attend.
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I. V. Matt. 19:2. Faith came first, healings second. Miracles were just routine occurrences; they grew
out of the faith of the people.
Matt. 19:3. Legal justification for divorce today varies from almost the mere whim of the parties on
the one hand to adultery on the other, depending upon the laws of the state or nation involved. This
same divergence of opinion existed among the Jews, and Jesus was being asked to decide one of the
burning issues of the day.
"Among the questions of the day fiercely debated between the great rival schools of Hillel and
Shammai, no one was more so than that of divorce. The school of Hillel contended that a man had a
right to divorce his wife for any cause he might assign, if it were no more than his having ceased to
love her, or his having seen one he liked better, or her having cooked a dinner badly. The school of
Schammai, on the contrary, held that divorce could be issued only for the crime of adultery, and
offences against chastity. If it were possible to get Jesus to pronounce in favor of either school, the
hostility of the other would be roused, and, hence, it seemed a favorable chance for compromising
him." (Geikie, vol. 2, pp. 347-348, cited, Talmage, p. 484.)
4-6. As he so often did in answering their questions, Jesus simply went back to basic principles. He
referred them to the marriage of Adam and Eve which occurred before death entered the world and
while the first man and the first woman were still in the Garden of Eden. He cited the divine decree
itself, thus making this first marriage a pattern for all others and said that God himself had joined the
parties together, and that man, therefore, did not have power to tear them asunder. In other words,
Jesus is here preaching a sermon on celestial or eternal marriage, marriage that is to last forever, in
this life and in the next, marriage that does not countenance divorce, except, as he then amplified,
when sex sin occurs.
Matt. 19:9-11; Mark 10:10-12. This strict law governing divorce was not given to the Pharisees, nor
to the world in general, but to the disciples only, "in the house," at a later time as Mark explains.
Further, Jesus expressly limited its application. All men could not live such a high standard; it
applied only to those "to whom it is given."
Earlier in his ministry the Master had given it to some of his Jewish disciples (Matt. 5:31-32), and
after his resurrection he would yet give it to the Nephites. (3 Ne. 12:31-32.) Presumably it prevailed
among them during the near two-hundred-year period following his ministry on the American
continent. We can suppose it prevailed in the City of Enoch and that it will be the law during the
millennium. It may have been in force at various times and among various people, but the Church is
not bound by it today. At this time divorces are permitted in the Church for a number of reasons
other than sex immorality, and divorced persons are permitted to marry again and enjoy all of the
blessings of the gospel. If every divorced person who remarried were guilty of adultery, the Church
would be obligated to expel such from membership and to deny them the blessings of the gospel and
the temple.
12. Some added background and additional information is needed to understand fully what is meant
by this teaching about eunuchs. In the true Church and among normal people, there is no place for
the practice of celibacy. "Apparently those who made themselves eunuchs were men who in false
pagan worship had deliberately mutilated themselves in the apostate notion that such would further
their salvation. It is clear that such was not a true gospel requirement of any sort. There is no such
thing in the gospel as wilful emasculation; such a notion violates every true principle of procreation
and celestial marriage." (Mormon Doctrine, p. 223.)
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Mark 10:15; Luke 18:17. "Behold I say unto you that this thing shall ye teachrepentance and
baptism unto those who are accountable and capable of committing sin; yea, teach parents that they
must repent and be baptized, and humble themselves as their little children, and they shall all be
saved with their little children. And their little children need no repentance, neither baptism." (Moro.
8:10-11.)
Mark 10:16. It appears that Jesus is here setting the pattern for the blessing and naming of children as
such procedure is found in the regular church program today.
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perfect brightness of hope, and a love of God and of all men. Wherefore, if ye shall press forward,
feasting upon the word of Christ, and endure to the end, behold, thus saith the Father: Ye shall have
eternal life." (2 Ne. 31:19-20.)
Whether the rich young ruler who came to Jesus was already a faithful member of the Church does
not appear from the record. If he was, there remained, in Jesus' language, but one thing to do: "Keep
the commandments." If he was not a baptized convert, the course was the same, for men are
commanded to repent and be baptized and then to endure to the end.
It would appear that the inquiring rich man had lived in strict conformity to the laws known to him,
that he saw in Jesus a teacher who could direct him to the fulness of reward in the mansions on high,
and that he erroneously supposed he would receive direction to conform to some ritualistic
requirement of the law. He had not learned that the Lord requires the whole soul and that those who
gain salvation must love and serve God with an eye single to his glory. Rather, good as he was, his
heart was still set on the things of this world in preference to the riches of eternity.
Matt. 19:16. Eternal life] See John 17:3.
17. Here we have an example of a statement which if read by itself, without reference to other related
passages, could easily give a wrong impression. Jesus was sinless, perfect, and good. (John 8:46;
10:30; 14:30; 2 Cor. 5:21; Heb. 4:15; 1 Pet. 2:22; 1 John 3:5.) True, he was in process of working out
his own salvation by going from grace to grace, and he would attain ultimate and eternal perfection,
of the sort enjoyed by his Father, only after his own resurrection, when all power would be given him
in heaven and on earth. (D. & C. 93:6-17.) But the fact remains that he was "good" while yet in
mortality, and there was no fault to be found with him.
Why then did our Lord reject the young man's description of him as "good"? "According to some he
refused it, because in the sense in which it was offered, it was unequal to his merits and his claims.
The young man, they think, called him good, in the sense in which he would have called any eminent
Rabbi good, whereupon our Lord pointedly remarked that only God is good, meaning, 'If you call me
good in the same sense in which God is good, I am willing to accept it, but if you call me good in a
merely human sense I reject it as insufficient.'" (Dummelow, p. 730.)
It should be noted that Jesus does not say that he is not good. He merely asks why he is being so
designated when it is Deity that is known to be good. Perhaps the meaning is this: 'Why callest thou
me good without accepting me as the Son of God, for none is good but God; and if I am good, as
thou sayest, then I am God and should be accepted as such.'
Keep the commandments] "Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep his
commandments: for this is the whole duty of man." (Eccles. 12:13.)
21. There is no blanket instruction which applies to all men that they should sell their property and
use the money for the poor. This was a specific instruction needed by a particular person who was
covetous by nature. His personal inclinations and desires were such that he needed the spiritual
testing that such a course would require.
If thou wilt be perfect] "Perfection is of two kindsfinite or mortal, and infinite or eternal. Finite
perfection may be gained by the righteous saints in this life. It consists in living a god-fearing life of
devotion to the truth, of walking in complete submission to the will of the Lord, and of putting first
in one's life the things of the kingdom of God. Infinite perfection is reserved for those who overcome
all things and inherit the fulness of the Father in the mansions hereafter. It consists in gaining eternal
life, the kind of life which God has in the highest heaven within the celestial world." (Mormon
Doctrine, p. 512.)
24. A number of explanations have been made of this verse. Probably Jesus was simply using
common proverbial language to teach that it is difficult but not impossible for a rich man to be saved.
Some think that the "needle's eye" was a small door alongside the great gates in the city walls and
that in order for a camel to pass through such an opening, all its load of goods would have to be
removed. Others suggest that the change of one letter in one word would alter the passage to read
that it is a rope and not a camel that must go through the eye of a needle. In any event it is clear that
riches add to the difficulty of gaining salvation.
I. V. Matt. 19:26; I. V. Mark 10:26; I. V. Luke 18:27. Rich men who are otherwise worthy can be
saved provided: (1) They forsake or are willing to forsake their riches in the cause of Christ; and (2)
Their love of wealth does not cause them to trust in riches.
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Because the Prophet Joseph Smith laid his all on the altar, the Lord by revelation said of him: "I will
bless him and multiply him and give unto him an hundred-fold in this world, of fathers and mothers,
brothers and sisters, houses and lands, wives and children, and crowns of eternal lives in the eternal
worlds." (D. & C. 132:55.)
I. V. Mark 10:30-31a. The saints should not boast of their sacrifices for the gospel. Though Peter had
forsaken all and was assured of rewards beyond measure as a consequence, yet Jesus rebuked him
for putting himself forth as an example of one who had made sacrifices for the building up of the
kingdom.
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return to its pristine state of beauty and glory, the state that existed before the fall." (Mormon
Doctrine, pp. 718-719.)
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34. Obviously the apostles knew what the words spoken meant, but with their as yet limited
knowledge of the full purposes of Deity, they could not bring themselves to believe their accepted
King would be crucified by sinful men. This inability to catch the vision of the atoning sacrifice until
after the resurrection of Jesus stands out in pointed contrast to the fervent testimonies later born, a
contrast which adds strength to the witness they were then to carry to the world.
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40. Not mine to give] Certainly it is Christ's to give, for he has all power (Matt. 28:18) and all
judgment is committed to the Son. (John 5:22.) Rather: 'It is not mine to give as a matter of
favoritism; it can be given only in accordance with justice. To sit on my right hand or on my left is
not mine to give, except to them for whom it is prepared according to the Father's will, and the
Father and I are one.'
45. To give his life a ransom for many] Through his atoning sacrifice, Christ exercised his
ransoming power in two ways: (1) All men are ransomed from the natural death in that they are
resurrected and become immortal; and (2) "Many" are ransomed from spiritual death and are
returned to the presence of God because they believe and obey the gospel law. (D. & C. 29:42-45.)
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Ever and always our Lord sought to bring sinners to repentance, to save the lost, to bring the
sanctifying power of his gospel to those bound by the chains of sin. Were they despised publicans
whose extortions at the customs gate made them odious in the public eye? No matter; through
repentance salvation was available to all. Such is the message of his visit in the house of Zaccheus
the wealthy Jewish-publican.
Luke 19:5. I must abide at thy house] No waiting for an invitation here; the Royal Visitor invited
himself. 'Come and care for my needs, for the laborer is worthy of his hire.'
8. Restitution for sin is part of true repentance. Zaccheus vowed to right the wrongs of the past and
make due amends for all his transgressions. "By this ye may know if a man repenteth of his sins
behold, he will confess them and forsake them." (D. & C. 58: 43.)
9. Salvation come to this house] The gospel message has been received and repentance has taken
place. Now by making the covenant of salvation in the waters of baptism, and by continuing in the
avowed course of righteousness, the new convert shall gain eternal salvation.
A son of Abraham] Literally, by birth; spiritually, by virtue of conversion and doing some at least
of the works of Abraham.
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I. V. Luke 19:14. Sent a messenger after him] "'A nobleman going into a far country to receive a
kingdom' would be utterly unintelligible, had we not fortunately known that this was done both by
Archelaus and by Antipas. And in the case of Archelaus the Jews had actually sent to Augustus a
deputation of fifty, to recount his cruelties and oppose his claims, which, though it failed at the time,
was subsequently successful. Philipus defended the property of Archelaus, during his absence, from
the encroachments of the Proconsul Sabinus. The magnificent palace which Archelaus had built at
Jericho would naturally recall these circumstances to the mind of Jesus, and the parable is another
striking example of the manner in which he utilized the most ordinary circumstances around him,
and made them the bases of his highest teachings. It is also another unsuspected indication of the
authenticity and truthfulness of the Gospels." (Farrar, p. 493, note, cited by Talmage, p. 522.)
We will not have this man to reign over us] How literally this prophetic part of the parable was
fulfilled! But a few days hence and the Jews would be proclaiming, "We have no king but Caesar,"
and "Write not, The King of the Jews; but that he said, I am King of the Jews." (John 19:15, 21.)
Then after the Nobleman's ascension to heaven these same "citizens" would continue to exhibit
violent hostility against his infant Church.
Luke 19:15-24. When the nobleman returns to judge the world, he will reward his servants in
accordance with their works. All shall not receive the same status in the mansions which are
prepared; there are degrees of glory. Some will rule ten cities, others five, and those who were
slothful shall be disinherited entirely.
26. Unused faculties are lost; rightly used abilities can be increased until perfection is attained. 'Unto
every servant who is diligent shall be given great reward; and from him who is slothful shall be taken
away even the light, abilities, and faculties which he had.'
27. Those who reject the Nobleman, who refuse to have him reign over them, who find no place in
their hearts for his gospel, will, at his return, be cast into outer darkness where there is weeping, and
wailing, and gnashing of teeth.
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had great hold on many hearts: hatred, persecution, and the desire to shed innocent blood were seen
on every hand. In the face of all this, would Jesus dare show himself openly at the feast? And this
Lazarussurely he must be put to death, lest more people believe on Jesus because of him!
John 11:55. Passover] See Matt. 26:17-20. Purify themselves] Ceremonial cleansings preceded the
celebration of the Passover. (2 Chron. 30:15-20.)
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I. V. Matt. 21:2. A colt tied; loose it] There were not two animals brought to our Lord, but one. This
Inspired Version correction of Matthew's account brings it in harmony with the accounts of Mark,
Luke, and John.
Luke 19:33. The owners] Since the owners, learning that Jesus had need of their colt, readily
permitted the two brethren to take him, it is assumed they also were disciples.
Matt. 21:8. Spread their garments] Only kings and conquerors received such an extraordinary token
of respect as this. (2 Kings 9:13.) In every part of this triumphal entry to Jerusalem, Jesus seems not
only to permit but to court the adulation and homage normally reserved for kings and great rulers.
John 12:13. Branches of palm trees] Amid shouts of praise and pleas for salvation and deliverance,
we see the disciples strewing our Lord's course with palm branches in token of victory and triumph.
This whole dramatic scene prefigures that yet future assembly when "a great multitude," which no
man can number, "of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues," shall stand "before the
throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands," crying with a loud
voice, "Salvation to our God which sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb." (Rev. 7:9-10.)
Matt. 21:9; Mark 11:9-10; Luke 19:37-38; John 12:13. No other man ever lived to whom such
inspired acclamations of adulation, reverence, and worship have been or could properly be made.
Here we see great multitudes bearing testimony of our Lord's divine Sonship. In plain language they
are hailing Jesus as the Son of David, the Deliverer of Israel, their Savior and Redeemer, the
promised Messiah, the Son of God. And they are doing it wit tingly, deliberately using the sacred
expression, Hosanna, and quoting from the Messianic prophecy which ascribes salvation and triumph
to the promised Son of David.
Hosanna means literally, save now, or save we pray, or save we beseech thee, and is taken from the
Messianic prophecy which foretold that such would be the entreaty of Israel to their Messiah in the
day of his coming. For more than a thousand years the Jewish people had studied and considered the
inspired utterance that the promised Lord of Israel would be "the stone which the builders refused,"
that he would "become the head stone of the corner," and that the cries of the people to him would
include the expressions, "Save now, I beseech thee, O Lord: O Lord, I beseech thee, send now
prosperity. Blessed be he that cometh in the name of the Lord." (Psalm 118:22-26.) What more could
the people have said to testify of their belief that Jesus was the Christ than to go back to this famous
Messianic utterance and announce that it was fulfilled in him!
I. V. Mark 11:13. Blessed the disciples] Only Luke preserves for us the account of Jesus weeping
over doomed Jerusalem. (Luke 19:41-44.) Mark says simply that he "looked round about upon all
things." But then Mark says, as we learn from this more perfect account in the Inspired Version, that
Jesus blessed the disciples. And what an enlightening addition this is to the scriptural account.
Though Jerusalem, as a whole, was to be desolated and scourged as few cities have ever been, yet the
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What of authority in the ministry? Can a man assume the prerogative to preach the gospel? Or must
he be called of God to carry Deity's message of salvation to the world?
Jesus "taught the people in the temple, and preached the gospel." A delegation from the Sanhedrin,
apparently having consulted during the night as to how they might ensnare the Master in a violation
of their laws and traditions, demanded: 'By what authority do you preach and teach since you have
not been trained and appointed as a rabbi?' Even these spiritually darkened scribes and priests knew
that a man must be called of God to preach the gospel and administer in its ordinances.
It is noteworthy that his Jewish antagonists did not ask for a sign to prove that Jesus had authority.
Such is the course they had followed when he cleansed the temple near the beginning of his ministry.
(John 2:13-18.) Since then his whole ministry was a witness that he did have authority, and even the
day before, having again cleansed the temple, he had caused the lame to walk and the blind to see.
(Matt. 21:12-14.) The present inquiry was not to determine if Jesus had authority, for none could
longer dispute that; rather, it was to show that he had not received a rabbinical commission as such,
thus giving the Jews an excuse to accuse him of violating their laws and standards.
But Jesuswhose teachings and works, without more, bore record that his authority came from Him
whom he repeatedly claimed as his personal Fatherdeftly avoided their trap and left them
powerless to lay against him a false charge of preaching by assumed authority.
Matt. 21:23. By what authority?] There is no substitute for divine authority. Either a professing
minister has authority or he does not. If he has been called of God, his preaching and performances
are binding on earth and in heaven; if he has assumed ministerial prerogatives without prior divine
approval, his ministrations have no saving virtue. "A man must be called of God, by prophecy, and
by the laying on of hands, by those who are in authority to preach the Gospel and administer in the
ordinances thereof." (Fifth Article of Faith.) Every person exercising ministerial powers would do
well to ask himself: 'By what authority do I do these things?' Unless God's hand is in the
performances, it will be a matter of the blind leading the blind.
These things] Luke says, 'Teaching and preaching the gospel,' though it would appear from the
entire context that the inquiring Sanhedrinists also had in mind the cleansing of the temple and the
subsequent performing of miracles therein.
25. The baptism of John] Not just the ordinance of baptism itself, but the whole mission and
ministry of the Baptist which was symbolized in the public mind by that ordinance. Why did ye not
then believe him?] 'If John was a prophet, why did ye not believe him when he testified of me,
saying, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." (John 1:29.) If John was
a prophet, I am the Messiah, for he testified of me.'
Luke 20:1. Preached the gospel] How often the gospel authors remind us that Jesus was not just
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teaching ethical principles such as love, honesty, and charity. Rather, he preached the gospel, which
means that he commanded men to accept God as their Father, believe in Christ as the Son, manifest
faith in the atoning sacrifice of the Son, repent of their sins, be baptized by immersion for the
remission of sins, receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, and then (after all this!) endure to the end by
keeping all the commandments, including the practice of love, honesty, charity, and every true
ethical principle.
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men what they must do to gain salvation, one who pointed out the path or way of righteousness
which leads to the kingdom of God.'
I. V. Matt. 21:32-34a. Christ and his prophets cannot be separated from each other. Men cannot
believe in one and not the other. John was a true prophet who bore record that Jesus was the
Messiah. Accordingly no one could accept John as a prophet without believing in Christ; and
conversely, no one could believe in the divine Sonship of Jesus without accepting the Baptist as his
forerunner and witness.
Similarly, Joseph Smith is the prophet through whom the divinity of Christ is revealed to the modern
world. Accordingly, for this day, a belief in the divine mission of either presupposes an acceptance
of the legality and divinity of the ministry of the other.
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leaving his earthly affairs in the hands of husbandmen appointed to till and farm the vineyard.
34-36. Throughout her whole history, Israel's prophets were tortured, mocked, scourged, imprisoned,
stoned, sawn asunder, and slain. (Heb. 11:35-38.) For instance: Jeremiah was beaten and imprisoned
(Jer. 37:15-21; 38:6); Zechariah the son of Jehoiada was stoned (2 Chron. 24:18-22); Urijah the son
of Shemaiah was slain (Jer. 26:20-24), as were other prophets (Neh. 9:26); and according to
tradition, Isaiah was sawn asunder.
36. Other servants] Prophet after prophet came, all raising the same warning voice. (2 Kings 17:13; 2
Chron. 36:15-16.)
39. Here again Jesus predicts his own death.
41. In 70 A. D. Jerusalem and her wicked inhabitants were destroyed under circumstances so ruinous
as to be scripturally designated "the abomination of desolation." (Matt. 24:15.)
42-44. By quoting, in the way here done, the Messianic prophecy about the stone which the builders
rejected becoming the head of the corner (Ps. 118:22-23), Jesus was announcing himself as the
promised Messiah.
43. In the meridian of time, the gospel, the Church, and the earthly kingdom were offered to the Jews
first. When they, as a people, rejected their King and spurned his teachings, the message of salvation
was taken to the Gentiles.
I. V. Matt. 21:51. I am the stone] 'I am the Messiah.'
52. I am the head of the corner] 'I am the most important part in the whole scheme of salvation.
The Church and kingdom rest on me. I am the cornerstone on which the whole structure of spiritual
things rest. If it were not for me and my atoning sacrifice the whole plan of salvation would be void
and of no worth.' (Isa. 28:16; Acts 4:11-12.)
The Church and kingdom "are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ
himself being the chief corner stone." (Eph. 2:20.)
These Jews shall fall upon me, and shall be broken] 'As the promised Messiah, I am "a stone of
stumbling and . . . a rock of offence. . . . And many among them shall stumble, and fall, and be
broken, and be snared, and be taken." (Isa. 8:14-15.) Those who stumble and fall because of me and
my words shall be broken spiritually and shall not inherit the kingdom of my Father.' (Rom. 9:32-33;
1 Pet. 2:6-8.)
54. Those who stumble and fall because of Christ may rise again by repentance, but those who
remain disobedient to the end shall lose their souls and figuratively be ground to powder.
55-56. After the kingdom has been taken from the Jews and given to the Gentiles, they too shall lose
it through apostasy and shall also be destroyed for their disobedience. Then "in the last days" the
gospel shall be restored "unto other husbandmen" preparatory to the day "when the Lord shall
descend out of heaven to reign in his vineyard."
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3. His servants] 4. Other servants] Legal administrators sent forth with power from on high to preach
the gospel and administer its saving ordinances. Such were Moses and the prophets of old; such was
John the Baptist, who had been sent to those very Jews; such were the apostles of Jesus' day; and
such are those today whotracing their priestly commissions in a few steps to modern heavenly
visitantsare continuing to invite all to the feast of righteousness found in the restored gospel.
5-6. All who reject the gospel are not damned to the same degree. Those who simply turn to their
farms and merchandise, thereby putting temporal things ahead of spiritual, are denied the filling
satisfaction of the feast, while those who persecute and murder the King's servants are by him
condemned to an awful destruction.
7. How literally was this promise fulfilled! In the lives of most of those then living, Jerusalem"the
city of the great King" (Ps. 48:2)was to be destroyed with brutality and vengeance by the armies of
hated Rome. See Luke 19:41-44.
9. 'Leave the cities of the Jews. Take the highways into the country. Get out among the Gentiles. "Go
ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature."' (Mark 16:15.)
10. Gathered . . . both good and bad] See Matt. 13:47-53.
11. Had not on a wedding garment] He had accepted the invitation (the gospel); joined with the
true worshipers (come into the true Church); but had not put on the robes of righteousness (that is,
had not worked out his salvation after baptism).
In using this figure Jesus was harking back to what Zephaniah had said about the Second Coming:
"Hold thy peace at the presence of the Lord God: for the day of the Lord is at hand: for the Lord hath
prepared a sacrifice, he hath bid his guests. And it shall come to pass in the day of the Lord's
sacrifice, that I will punish the princes, and the king's children, and all such as are clothed with
strange apparel." (Zeph. 1:7-8.)
Similar imagery was used by the angelic ministrant who, speaking in the Lord's name, told the
Revelator, John, of these same events: "Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honour to him: for the
marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself ready. And to her was granted that she
should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white: for the fine linen is the righteousness of saints. And
he saith unto me, Write, Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the
Lamb." (Rev. 19:7-9.)
13. Outer darkness] See Luke 16:19-31.
I. V. Matt. 22:14. 'Many are called to the marriage supper of the Lamb, to the Church and kingdom
of God on earth, but few are chosen for salvation in the kingdom of God in heaven, because they do
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"We believe that religion is instituted of God; and that men are amenable to him, and to him only, for
the exercise of it, unless their religious opinions prompt them to infringe upon the rights and liberties
of others; but we do not believe that human law has a right to interfere in prescribing rules of
worship to bind the consciences of men, nor dictate forms for public or private devotion; that the
civil magistrate should restrain crime, but never control conscience; should punish guilt, but never
suppress the freedom of the soul.
"We believe that all men are bound to sustain and uphold the respective governments in which they
reside, while protected in their inherent and inalienable rights by the laws of such governments. .
"We do not believe it just to mingle religious influence with civil government, whereby one religious
society is fostered and another proscribed in its spiritual privileges, and the individual rights of its
members, as citizens, denied." (D. & C. 134.)
Matt. 22:21. And unto God the things that are God's] "Every human soul is stamped with the image
and superscription of God, however blurred and indistinct the lines may have become through the
corrosion or attrition of sin; and as unto Caesar should be rendered the coins upon which his effigy
appeared, so unto God should be given the souls that bear his image. Render unto the world the
stamped pieces that are made legally current by the insignia of worldly powers, and give unto God
and his service, yourselves the divine mintage of his eternal realm." (Talmage, pp. 546-547.)
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marriage in heaven. They are using this commonly accepted concept to ridicule and belittle the fact
of the resurrection itself. They are saying: 'How absurd to believe in a resurrection (and therefore in
the fact that there is marriage in heaven) when everybody knows that a woman who has had seven
husbands could not have them all at once in the life to come.'
A most instructive passage showing that the Jews believed there should be marriage in heaven is
found in Dummelow. "There was some division of opinion among the rabbis as to whether
resurrection would be to a natural or to a supernatural (spiritual) life," he says. "A few took the
spiritual view, e.g. Rabbi Raf is reported to have often said, 'In the world to come they shall neither
eat, nor drink, nor beget children, nor trade. There is neither envy nor strife, but the just shall sit with
crowns on their heads, and shall enjoy the splendor of the Divine Majesty.' But the majority inclined
to a materialistic view of the resurrection. The pre-Christian book of Enoch says that the righteous
after the resurrection shall live so long that they shall beget thousands. The received doctrine is laid
down by Rabbi Saadia, who says, 'As the son of the widow of Sarepton, and the son of the
Shunamite, ate and drank, and doubtless married wives, so shall it be in the resurrection'; and by
Maimonides, who says, 'Men after the resurrection will use meat and drink, and will beget children,
because since the Wise Architect makes nothing in vain, it follows of necessity that the members of
the body are not useless, but fulfill their functions.' The point raised by the Sadducees was often
debated by the Jewish doctors, who decided that 'a woman who married two husbands in this world
is restored to the first in the next.'" (Dummelow, p. 698.)
How much nearer the truth were these Jews, on this point, than are the modern professors of religion
who suppose that family love, felicity, and unity cease simply because the spirit steps out of the body
in what men call death!
What then is the Master Teacher affirming by saying, "in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are
given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven"?
He is not denying but limiting the prevailing concept that there will be marrying and giving in
marriage in heaven. He is saying that as far as "they" (the Sadducees) are concerned, that as far as
"they" ("the children of this world") are concerned, the family unit does not and will not continue in
the resurrection. Because he does not choose to cast his pearls before swine, and because the point at
issue is not marriage but resurrection anyway, Jesus does not here amplify his teaching to explain
that there is marrying and giving of marriage in heaven only for those who live the fulness of gospel
lawa requirement which excludes worldly people.
In his reply Jesus is approaching the problem much as he did in revealing the same eternal principles
to Joseph Smith in modern times. He first told the Prophet that all blessings come to men as a result
of obedience; that all eternal covenants, marriage included, must be performed with his authority and
approved by his Spirit; and that only those things continue "after the resurrection" which conform to
his law.
"Therefore," that is, in the light of these principles, he said, "if a man marry him a wife in the world,
and he marry her not by me nor by my word, and he covenant with her so long as he is in the world
and she with him, their covenant and marriage are not of force when they are dead, and when they
are out of the world; therefore, they are not bound by any law when they are out of the world."
What is this but marriage until death do us part? And who are the participating parties but the
Sadducees, "the children of this world," the people who do not overcome the world by accepting and
living the gospel?
"Therefore, when they [those who will not, do not, or cannot live the law of eternal marriage] are out
of the world they neither marry nor or given in marriage."
That is, there is neither marrying nor giving in marriage in heaven for those to whom Jesus was
speaking; for those who do not even believe in a resurrection, let alone all the other saving truths; for
those who are unrighteous and ungodly; for those who live after the manner of the world; for the
great masses of unrepentant mankind. All of these will fall short of gaining the fulness of reward
hereafter.
What then is their state? They will not be "gods" and thus have exaltation; their inheritance will be in
a lesser degree of glory. As Jesus said to the Sadducees, they "are as the angels of God in heaven,"
"for they are equal unto the angels." As he said, in more detail and with greater plainness to Joseph
Smith, they "are appointed angels in heaven; which angels are ministering servants, to minister for
those who are worthy of a far more, and an exceeding, and an eternal weight of glory. For these
angels did not abide my law; therefore, they cannot be enlarged, but remain separately and singly,
without exaltation, in their saved condition, to all eternity; and from henceforth are not gods, but are
angels of God forever and ever." (D. & C. 132:5-17.)
Thus, in the resurrection, the unmarried remain everlastingly as angels or servants, but the married
gain exaltation and godhood. This latter group consists of those who enter into that "order of the
priesthood" named "the new and everlasting covenant of marriage," and who then keep the terms and
conditions of that eternal covenant. (D. & C. 131:1-4.) It consists also of those who lived on earth
under circumstances which prevented them from making the covenant for themselves personally, but
who would have done so had the opportunity been afforded. For all such, on the just and equitable
principles of salvation and exaltation for the dead, the ordinances will be performed vicariously in
the temples of God, so that no blessing will ever be denied to any worthy person. And for that matter,
there is no revelation, either ancient or modern, which says there is neither marrying nor giving in
marriage in heaven itself for righteous people. All that the revelations set forth is that such is denied
to the Sadducees and other worldly and ungodly people.
Matt. 22:23. Sadducees] See Matt. 3:7.
24. In ancient Israel a man was obliged to marry his brother's widow if she was childless. The
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"firstborn" then succeeded "in the name of his brother which is dead, that his name be not put out of
Israel." Such a law could operate only in a period when plural marriage was authorized by Deity.
Provision was made in the law for someone else to marry the widow in certain circumstances. (Deut.
5:4-10.) Interestingly, it was this law of marriage that enabled Boaz and Ruth, progenitors of our
Lord, to become man and wife. (Ruth 4.)
29. "They did not understand the principle of sealing for time and for all eternity; that what God hath
joined together neither man nor death can put asunder. (Matt. 19:6.) They had wandered from that
principle. It had fallen into disuse among them; they had ceased to understand it; and consequently
they did not comprehend the truth; but Christ did. She could only be the wife in eternity of the man
to whom she was united by the power of God for eternity, as well as for time; and Christ understood
the principle, but he did not cast his pearls before the swine that tempted him." (Joseph F. Smith,
Gospel Doctrine, 5th ed., p. 280.)
31-32. 'You say Jehovah is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and at the same time claim there
is no resurrection. But you know that God is not the God of the dead but of the living, and therefore
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob live and will rise in the resurrection; hence, your doctrine that life ceases
with death is false.' Or: 'You believe there is a God; you deny there is a resurrection. Is God the God
only of the dead? Is he a failure? Is there no purpose in creation? Or could it be that you have erred
and that there is in reality a resurrection?'
I. V. Mark 12:32. For he raiseth them up out of their graves] Luke 20:38. For all live unto him]
How can there be a God unless there is a resurrection? Why would God create men and then let them
vanish into nothingness? To be God he must be the God of something, and the dead are nothing;
hence, there are no dead, "for all live unto him," "for he raiseth them up out of their graves."
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Jehovah had said to that same people. (Lev. 19:18.) The genius of his generalization lay in the insight
with which he picked out from among all the revelations the two requirements which exceed in
importance all others.
Perhaps the best recorded rendition we now have of "the first and great commandment," and of the
second which is "like unto it," is the one revealed to Joseph Smith: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart, with all thy might, mind, and strength; and in the name of Jesus Christ thou
shalt serve him. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." (D. & C. 59:5-6.)
Love of God and of one's fellowmen is measured in terms of service and devotion, and the love of
the one cannot be separated from the like feeling for the other. "If thou lovest me thou shalt serve me
and keep all my commandments." (D. & C. 42:29; John 14:15.) "If a man say, I love God, and hateth
his brother, he is a liar: for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God
whom he hath not seen? And this commandment have we from him, That he who loveth God love
his brother also." (1 John 4:20-21; Mormon Doctrine, pp. 419-420.)
Matt. 22:35. Tempting him] Testing, not entraping, as indicated by his subsequent reasonable
response to Jesus' answer.
37. Thou shalt love] It is the law; it is required; it is mandatory; we are bound to do itif we are to
gain full salvation.
The Lord thy God] The Lord Jehovah or Elohim his Father, as the case may be. The sense and
meaning in either instance is the same. To love and serve one is to do likewise for the other, for they
are "one" in character, perfections, attributes, purpose, and plan.
All thy heart] With perfect sincerity and uprightness, not dividing one's devotion, but having it
centered totally in Deity.
All thy soul] With utmost fervor. Also: The soul is the spirit, the living, sentient, intelligent part of
the human personality. Thus love is to come from the whole being, from the inner man as well as the
temporal being.
All thy mind] With intelligence and sense as distinguished from blind and unthinking devotion; with
enlightened reason as distinguished from mystical and incomprehensible worship.
39. Thy neighbour] See Luke 10:25-37.
Mark 12:30. All thy strength] With might, power, and intensity; with all the energy of one's being.
34. Thou art not far from the kingdom of God] 'Thou art approaching conversion. Thou art near to
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16-22. Jesus had already abolished the law of oaths. See Matt. 5:31-37. Here he is denouncing the
wickedness of those who, out of the abundance of their evil hearts, had created a system of swearing
by oaths which invited and encouraged dishonesty, the bearing of false witness, and premeditated
lying. Their system offered ways of avoiding the most solemn sworn attestations. By using specially
prescribed language in one oath, it could be annulled, while another which did not conform to their
morally corrupt code remained binding.
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exacts from language itself the utmost extreme in the use of deserved invective. A facade of outward
cleanliness covered their inward corruption. Outward piety served as a shield to hide inward
wickedness. What greater hypocrisy is there than this?
Matt. 23:25. "Cups and platters though cleansed to perfection were filthy before the Lord if their
contents had been bought by the gold of extortion, or were to be used in pandering to gluttony,
drunkenness or other excess." (Talmage, p. 558.)
27. How spiritually diseased is the soul whose depraved and degenerate state compares to the stink
and stench, to the filth and decay, of rotting corpses.
Luke 11:37-41. Being invited to dine in the home of a Pharisee, Jesus chose to ignore the usual
ritualistic washing of hands so as to dramatize his teachings about inward and outward cleanliness.
His objectiveto show that inner cleanness comes by obedience to his teachings.
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involve the very purpose of life and creation. And there is nothing more important in the lives of
mortals than to determine whether those claiming to represent Deity do in fact hold divine authority
and have a legal commission to speak for him.
What pure, unadulterated hypocrisy it is for those who reject the living prophets to say: 'If we had
lived in former days, we would have accepted the prophets whom others rejected.' Prophets are
prophets, truth is truth, and rebellion is rebellion. The spirit which leads men to fight God in one age
is the same that operates in every age. Those who reject the Lord's anointed today would have done
so anciently. Compare Luke 16:27-31.
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Thus the gospel light was offered to these Jews with greater clarity and brilliance than had been the
case with many of their ancestors. Had they accepted it these Jews would have saved their own souls
and also been able to perform vicariously the ordinances of salvation for their worthy ancestors. By
their rebellion they were, thus, doubly damned.
Matt. 23:34. I send unto you prophets] 'I Jesus do it.' In Luke it is, 'I the wisdom of God do it.' That
is, 'I Jesus who am God send prophets and apostles among you.' It is not, 'The Lord does it,' but, 'I do
it, for I am the Lord God of Israel dwelling in mortal flesh.'
35. Zacharias son of Barachias] Commentators generally feel that the person here named was
Zechariah son of Jehoiada who was martyred in the temple in the days of Joash the king. (2 Chron.
24:15-24.) Jesus' language, however, seems to indicate that the named person was slain by those of
his day, which would make it an event of which we have no other knowledge.
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penury, unknown to their fellowmen, but because their hearts are right, sometimes give unheralded
"mites" to like worthy causes.
Surely the rich who give part of their surplus are not rewarded along with the widows who give even
that which is needed for their sustenance. Gift giving, whether to the Lord and his work, to worthy
civic or other causes, or to individualsas far as blessings to donors are concernedmust be
measured in terms of capacity to give. The widow who cast in less than a half cent in American
coinage, proportionately gave more than all the rich whose surpluses crammed the coffers in the
temple court. See Luke 14:25-33.
This episode in Jewish lifeand Jesus deliberately took occasion to call attention to it that it's lesson
might be preservedteaches that the giver is greater than the gift; that sacrifice of all, though such
be small in amount, is greater than the largess of kings who neither miss nor need that which they
give away; and that it is the intent of the heart, not the value of the gift, which counts on the eternal
ledgers. "For if there be first a willing mind, it is accepted according to that a man hath, and not
according to that he hath not." (2 Cor. 8:12.)
King David dramatized the high standard expected of those who contribute to the Lord's Cause when
he offered sacrifice to stay a plague in Israel. Out of respect to David's kingship, Araunah offered his
own threshingfloor as a place for an altar, his harvesting equipment to use as wood for the fire, and
his oxen for the sacrifice. But David, seeking the blessing of giving, said: "I will surely buy it of thee
at a price: neither will I offer burnt offerings unto the Lord my God of that which doth cost me
nothing." (2 Sam. 24:15-25.)
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overcame all things and ascended into heaven to sit on the throne of his Father. (Rev. 3:21.) Those
who are to be with Christ must of necessity inherit the same glory and kingdom and indeed become
"like him." (1 John 3:2.) "Ye shall sit down in the kingdom of my Father; and ye shall be even as I
am, and I am even as the Father; and the Father and I are one." (3 Ne. 28:10.) What greater honor
could the Father bestow upon anyone than this?
My Father] Againas was his repeated wontJesus teaches the doctrine of his divine Sonship. It is
not 'Our Father,' or 'Your Father,' but 'My Father.'
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hands of wicked men, to be lifted up, according to the words of Zenock, and to be crucified,
according to the words of Neum, and to be buried in a sepulchre, according to the words of
Zenos." (1 Ne. 19:10.)
34. Of course the scriptures said Christ and his kingdom should abide forever (Isa. 9:7; Ezek. 37:25;
and Dan. 7:14, among many others); and so shall it be commencing in the millennial day when "the
kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign
for ever and ever." (Rev. 11:15.)
But the scriptures also said that King-Messiah "was wounded for our transgressions, . . . bruised for
our iniquities," "brought as a lamb to the slaughter," and "cut off out of the land of the living." They
said, "he made his grave with the wicked, and with the rich in his death" (Isa. 53); that he, "the Lord
Jehovah" would "swallow up death in victory," and bring to pass the resurrection of all men. Indeed,
it was the great Jehovah himself who had said to their fathers: "Thy dead men shall live, together
with my dead body shall they arise." (Isa. 25:8; 26:4, 19.)
There was no occasion for Jesus' captious critics either to have or to feign ignorance of the true
mortal ministry of their Messiah.
35-36. See John 8:12-20.
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things which will enable him to gain faith, but it is not the miracle as such which begets the faith; it
is obedience to that law upon which its receipt is predicated. Thus Moroni writes: "Ye receive no
witness until after the trial of your faith. . . . For if there be no faith among the children of men God
can do no miracle among them; wherefore he showed not himself until after their faith.... And neither
at any time hath any wrought miracles until after their faith; wherefore they first believed in the Son
of God." (Ether 12:6-18.)
38. Who hath believed our report?] Truly it is ever thus. Notwithstanding the teachings, testimony,
and miraclesall of which bore such powerful witness of Jesus' Messiahshiphow few believed!
How few saw the "arm of the Lord" in his message and ministry. (Isa. 53:1.) And so today, in nearly
all the nations of the earth, how few believe the message of restoration and salvation sent by the
same Lord through his servant Joseph Smith.
40-41. John's use of this Messianic prophecy is an announcement that Jesus is "the King, the Lord of
hosts," the great Jehovah seen by Isaiah in vision. (Isa. 6.) Doctrinally, the inspired utterance teaches
that all men are not prepared spiritually to receive the exalting truths of pure religion. Before the
light of heaven can infuse a soul, a man must open his eyes, soften his heart, and desire to be
converted.
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dispensation, the end of a kingdom, the end of the Lord's people as a distinct nation.
With the passing of the temple the Jews, as a distinct nation, also ceased. Without the symbol of all
that was sacred to them, without the holy of holies where God was found, there was no longer a
rallying point for them as a nation. They were ready for and in fact were scattered among all nations.
This correlation between the presence of the temple and the preservation of the people, between the
destruction of the temple and the scattering of the Jewish people, is shown particularly in the
modernly revealed account of the conversations which took place upon the Mount of Olives. (D. &
C. 45.)
And so it is that the Jews shall remain scattered, as far as becoming a nation again in the full and
ancient sense, until the house of the Lord is again established in the mountains of the Lord in
Jerusalem. (D. & C. 133:13; Ezek. 37:21-28.)
Matt. 24:2. How aptly Jesus chooses his illustrations. To those who saw the stones, to say that not
one should be left upon another, symbolized the destruction of a once stable and securely built
nation. Some single stones were about 67 1/2 feet long, 7 1/2 feet high, and 9 feet broad; the pillars
supporting the porches, all one stone, were some 37 1/2 feet tall. It is said that when the Romans
destroyed and ploughed Jerusalem, six days battering of the walls failed to dislodge these mighty
stones. The temple was, of course, finally leveled to the ground, and as the stones were rooted out
and scattered elsewhere so was a once secure and great nation.
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the wicked.' (Jos. Smith 1:4.) When our world ends and the millennial era begins, there will be a new
heaven and a new earth. (Isa. 65:17-25; D. & C. 101:23-24.) Lust, carnality, and sensuousness of
every sort will cease, for it will be the end of the world." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 767-768.)
4-5. All Jewish-Israel was looking for the promised Messiah. Jesus' own miracles and ministry had
fanned the flames of hope and expectancy until the cry on every lip was: 'Who is he and when shall
he come.' What is more natural, then, than to find Satan sending false Christs among the Jews; the
chance to delude and damn by such a strategy had never been greater; and so historians speak of
false Christs coming among the Jews of that daySimon Magus, Menander, Dositheus, and others.
9-10. If ever there was a dispensation of persecution, it was the apostolic era of old. Volumes tell of
the hate and venom, of the scourgings and slayings, of the betrayals and court trials, of the murders
and martyrdom, that began in Jerusalem and continued in the gladitorial arenas of Rome, until pure
Christianity was no longer found among men.
11. False prophets] See Matt. 7:15-20. With so many apostolic and prophetic witnesses of the truth
testifying among the people, what was more natural, at this time of all times, than to expect the
Adversary and Destroyer to send false teachers and prophets to beguile and deceive.
12. Jesus is here speaking to and of the saints. Because of sin their love of God (which is shown by
service in his Cause) will fade away; there will be apostasy from the Church.
13. Saved] Saved temporally and saved spiritually; saved when destruction shall slay and scatter all
the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and saved spiritually in the kingdom of heaven.
Mark 13:11. See Matt. 10:19.
Luke 21:18. Fulfillment of this promise is reserved for eternity. The disciples were to be tormented
and slain in this life, but raised to peace and glorious immortality in the next. The literal nature of the
promise is confirmed by Alma who expressed the same assurance in these words: "The soul shall be
restored to the body, and the body to the soul; yea, and every limb and joint shall be restored to its
body; yea, even a hair of the head shall not be lost." (Alma 40:23.)
19. "And seek the face of the Lord always, that in patience ye may possess your souls, and ye shall
have eternal life." (D. & C. 101:38.)
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Jerusalem
Inexorably and with dreadful finality the wickedness of man is punished, and those who devise
devilish deeds pay the penalty for their sins. Jerusalem had waged, against truth and light, the
greatest war of all the ages. Loving darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil, a nation
had crucified their God. (2 Ne. 10:2.) Their Maker and Creator, he by whose hand all things are, had
been slain by sinful men who cried: "His blood be on us, and on our children." (Matt. 27:25.)
And now the ax was laid at the root of the rotted tree. Jerusalem was to pay the price. Daniel had
foretold this hour when desolation, born of abomination and wickedness, would sweep the city.
(Dan. 9:27; 11:31; 12:11.) Moses had said the siege would be so severe women would eat their own
children. (Deut. 28.) Jesus specified the destruction would come in the days of the disciples.
And come it did, in vengeance, without restraint. Hunger exceeded human endurance; blood flowed
in the streets; destruction made desolate the temple; 1,100,000 Jews were slaughtered; Jerusalem was
ploughed as a field; and a remnant of a once mighty nation was scattered to the ends of the earth. The
Jewish nation died, impaled on Roman spears, at the hands of Gentile overlords.
But what of the saints who dwelt in Jerusalem in that gloomy day? They heeded Jesus' warning and
fled in haste. Guided by revelation, as true saints always are, they fled to Pella in Perea and were
spared.
Matt. 24:16-20. Speedy flight is enjoined. 'Flee to the mountains. Let him who is on the housetop
take the outside staircase, or go over the roofs of the houses. Let him who is in the field go in his
work clothes. Abandon your property. Pray that your flight will not be impeded by the cold of winter
or the shut gates and travel restrictions of the Sabbath.'
I. V. Matt. 24:18. Tribulation . . . sent upon Israel, of God] God does it; the merciful Lord is also a
God of justice. The penalty for sin must be paid. Similarly, it was the loving Christ who himself sent
death and destruction to the Nephite cities to cleanse them before he came to minister personally to
the ancient inhabitants of America. (3 Ne. 9.)
Luke 17:32. 'Look not back to Sodom and the wealth and luxury you are leaving. Stay not in the
burning house, in the hope of salvaging your treasures, lest the flame destroy you; but flee, flee to the
mountains.'
33. 'Seek temporal things and lose eternal life; sacrifice the things of this life and gain eternal life.'
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world, and of it many prophets have borne record. Peter said Jesus "must" remain in "heaven" until
the great era of restorationan age in which God would reveal anew "all things spoken by the mouth
of all his holy prophets since the world began." (Acts 3:19-21.) Paul said that in this final
"dispensation" God would "gather together in one all things in Christ." (Eph. 1:10.) John recorded
that the restoration would come to pass through angelic ministration; that "the everlasting gospel" so
restored would be preached to all the inhabitants of the earth; and that all this would transpire just
before the Second Coming. (Rev. 14:6-8.)
The promised restoration began in the Spring of 1820 with the appearance of the Father and the Son
to Joseph Smith. Thereafter the Book of Mormon was revealed (which contains the fulness of the
everlasting gospel); the priesthood was restored; and a command was given to organize again on earth
with apostles and prophets at the headthe same kingdom had by the primitive saints.
By the simple expedient of comparing and contrasting the primitive Church, the various churches of
sectarian Christendom, and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, it becomes evident to the
spiritual truth seeker that the restored gospel is the same as the one had by Jesus and his associates.
For instance:
The New Testament Church possessed the power and authority of God, meaning the Aaronic and
Melchizedek Priesthoodswhere are these today?
Apostles and prophets headed the primitive Church; in it were found seventies, evangelists, elders
and so forthwhere is this same organization now?
In the Church of Jesus and Paul, baptism was performed by immersion for the remission of sins;
hands were laid on the heads of new converts and they were given the gift of the Holy Ghost; saints
were baptized for their dead ancestors; elders were called in to administer to and heal the sick; the
true worshipers partook of the sacrament "in remembrance" of the spilled blood and broken flesh of
the Lordwhere are these ordinances performed in modern times?
And what of the doctrines accepted by the saints of old? Who believes today in a personal God in
whose image man is created? In an atoning sacrifice which assures immortality for all men and offers
eternal life to those who believe and obey the gospel law? In a plan of salvation that requires men to
have faith, repent, accept baptism under the hands of a legal administrator, receive the laying on of
hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost, and then endure in good works to the end? Who believes that
Israel is to be gathered in a day subsequent to New Testament times? That there was to be a complete
falling away from the truth after the day of the ancient apostles? Who knows about the doctrine of
salvation for the dead? Of degrees of glory in the eternal worlds? Of modern revelation, and so on?
Where are the doctrines of the primitive Church?
And the gifts of the Spirit, what of them? Did not Jesus himself say that miracles and signs "shall
follow them that believe" (Mark 16:17), thus assuring that where his gospel was found there would
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be healings, visions, revelations, tongues, and wonderous works without end? Where are these signs
which identify the true Church?
I. V. Matt. 24:32. The end ... the destruction of the wicked] See Matt. 24:3.
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climaxing in the destruction of all the wicked when the Son of Man himself returns.
Matt. 24:8. How sobering it is to realize that the wars and desolations which precede our Lord's
return are but "the beginning of sorrows." World wars, with their attendant evils; communistic
conspiracy, reminiscent of Gadianton and his band; earthquakes and pestilences which desolate
whole regionsall these are but "the beginning." The sorrows incident to Jesus' actual return in "the
day of vengeance" (D. & C. 133:51) shall surpass them all.
I. V. Matt. 24:29. I speak unto you for mine elect's sake] Only the saints, the elect of God, those who
warn in light and truth, can read the signs of the times; it is to them, not the world, that Jesus speaks
when telling the events which shall precede his return. Worldly people will suppose that the wars and
desolations of the last days are simply the normal and continuing course of history. They will fail to
see in them the promised but destructive prelude to that millennial peace which will be possible only
through the personal reign of the Prince of Peace.
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In December, 1917, General Allenby of Great Britain captured Jerusalem almost without opposition,
and for the first time in 1900 years that city came out from under infidel or Gentile domination and
was made available for the return of the Jews." (Mormon Doctrine, p. 651.)
Luke 21:25-28; I. V. Luke 21:25. Visible signs in the heavens, and physical upheavals and
transformations on earth, shall precede the return of the Son of Manall to occur "in the generation
in which the times of the Gentiles shall be fulfilled."
Luke 21:25. Distress of nations, with perplexity] Could more apt language be chosen to describe the
world todaya world of war and wickedness, of conspiracy and confusion? Truly the dealings of
nations with each other stand as a sobering sign of the soon-to-be Second Coming.
D. & C. 45:22-35. Section 45 of the Doctrine and Covenants contains a revealed account of many
things said by Jesus to his disciples as they sat together on the Mount of Olives nearly two thousand
years ago.
22. The heavens and the earth shall pass away] This planet and the atmospheric heavens which
surround it shall cease to exist in their present state. "The earth will be renewed and receive its
paradisiacal glory." (Tenth Article of Faith.) The Lord will "create new heavens and a new
earth." (Isa. 65:17.) The very "element shall melt with fervent heat; and all things shall become
new." (D. & C. 101:25.) Such is the millennial destiny of this globe, a status which will commence
when Jesus the King comes again to dwell among men.
24-25. Paul wrote "that blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be
come in." (Rom. 11:25.) In this era of restoration, however, scattered Israel is beginning to gather to
the gospel standard and receive spiritual sight again. In one of the great latter-day hymns"The
Morning Breaks; the Shadows Flee," by Elder Parley P. Prattwe sing of this glorious restoration as
it affects the scattered remnant of Judah in these words:
"The morning breaks; the shadows flee;
Lo, Zion's standard is unfurled!
The dawning of a brighter day,
Majestic rises on the world. ...
"The Gentile fulness now comes in,
And Israel's blessings are at hand.
Lo, Judah's remnant, cleansed from sin,
Shall in their promised Canaan stand."
A remnant . . . shall remain until] Only in isolated instances were the Jews to believe in their
Messiah during the times of the Gentiles. As that era draws to a close, however, the promise is that
they shall "begin to believe in Christ" (2 Ne. 30:7), with their mass conversion to come after he
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returns.
26-27, 31-33. See Matt. 24:6-8.
28-30. The latter-day restoration of the gospel was destined to take place during the era of time
named, "the times of the Gentiles"; the Gentiles, in general, would then reject the gospel light; and in
"that generation," that is, in the age both of restoration and of rejection, the Gentile era itself would
come to an end, or in other words, "the times of the Gentiles" would "be fulfilled."
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I. V. Matt. 24:39. Not read, not study, not search, but treasure up the Lord's word. Possess it, own it,
make it yours by both believing it and living it. For instance: the voice of the Lord says that if men
have faith, repent, and are baptized, they shall receive the Holy Ghost. It is not sufficient merely to
know what the scripture says. One must treasure it up, meaning take it into his possession so
affirmatively that it becomes a part of his very being; as a consequence, in the illustration given, one
actually receives the companionship of the Spirit. Obviously such persons will not be deceived
where the signs of the times and the Second Coming of the Messiah are concerned.
40 Gather . . . remainder of his elect] Today the gathering is directed by fallible mortals; some who
should come into the kingdom and assemble with the saints are overlooked. Hence, when he comes
whose judgment and insight is perfect, he shall send his angels to assemble the remainder of his
elect. No worthy person will ever fail to gain the deserved blessing, when the final accounting is
made.
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Matt. 24:36. Question: Does or will anyone know when the Lord will come? Answer: As to the day
and hour, No; as to the generation, Yes.
Question: Who shall know the generation? Answer: The saints, the children of light, those who can
read the signs of the times, those who treasure up the Lord's word so they will not be deceived.
Paul told the Thessalonians that "the coming of the Lord" would be "as travail upon a woman with
child"; that where people of the world are concerned Jesus would come "as a thief in the night," that
is unexpectedly and without warning; but that where "the children of light" are concerned, the Lord
would not come as "a thief in the night," for they are aware of the "times and seasons" connected
with his return. (1 Thess. 4:13-18; 5:1-7.) Thus, though the saints do not know the day, they are
aware of the season. As a woman in travail feels the pains of the approaching birth, so the saints read
the signs of the times; neither knows the exact moment of the anticipated happening, but both know
the approximate time.
"'I was once praying very earnestly to know the time of the coming of the Son of Man,' the Prophet
Joseph Smith recorded on April 2, 1843, 'when I heard a voice repeat the following: Joseph, my son,
if thou livest until thou art eighty-five years old, thou shalt see the face of the Son of Man; therefore
let this suffice, and trouble me no more on this matter.
"'I was left thus, without being able to decide whether this coming referred to the beginning of the
millennium or to some previous appearing, or whether I should die and thus see his face. I believe
the coming of the Son of Man will not be any sooner than that time.' (D. & C. 130:14-17.)
"Four days later, April 6, 1843, at the General Conference of the Church, while the Spirit rested upon
him, the Prophet said: 'Were I going to prophesy, I would say the end would not come in 1844, 5, or
6, or in forty years. There are those of the rising generation who shall not taste death till Christ
comes.
"The rising generation is the one that has just begun. Thus, technically, children born on April 6,
1843, would be the first members of the rising generation, and all children born, however many years
later, to the same parents would still be members of that same rising generation. It is not
unreasonable to suppose that many young men had babies at the time of this prophecy and also had
other children as much as 50 or 75 years later, assuming for instance that they were married again to
younger women. This very probable assumption would bring the date up to, say, the 2nd decade in
the 20th centuryand the children so born would be members of that same rising generation of
which the Prophet spoke. Now if these children lived to the normal age of men generally, they would
be alive well past the year 2000 A. D.
"This reasoning takes on added significance when considered in connection with the revelation
which states categorically that Christ will come 'in the beginning of the seventh thousand years' of
the earth's temporal continuance. (D. & C. 77:6, 12.) We, of course, do not know exactly how many
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years elapsed between Adam and the birth of Christ, but suppose it to have been 4004; nor can we be
certain, from historical sources, how many years have passed since. But reading these inspired
statements in connection with the signs of the times which we can interpret, it is plain that the day of
the coming of the Son of Man is not far distant." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 623-624.)
Mark 13:32. Neither the Son] These words are deleted from the Inspired Version; Jesus, of course,
since he knows all things, knows the exact time of his return.
Matt. 24:37-39; Luke 17:26-28. The coming of the flood of Noah, and with it the "end of the world"
for the carnal civilization of that day, is a perfect type of the coming of the Lord, and the end of the
world for the wicked of the latter-days. In both days all the normal activities of life continue until
Deity intervenes to stay the mounting mass of iniquity.
Luke 17:28-30. By using "the days of Lot" to typify his return, Jesus teaches the dreadful and
destructive nature of that awful hour. It will be with the wicked as with those in Sodom. See Matt.
24:40-41.
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Thus those who shall abide the day, who shall remain on the earth when it is transfigured (D. & C.
63:20-21), are those who are honest and upright and who are living at least that law which would
take them to a terrestrial kingdom of glory in the resurrection. Anyone living by telestial standards
can no longer remain on earth and so cannot abide the day.
Hence we find Malachi listing among those who shall not abide the day the following: sorcerers;
adulterers; false swearers; those who oppress the hireling, the widow, and the fatherless in their
wages; those who lead men away from the truth; those who do not fear God; members of the true
Church who do not pay an honest tithing; they that work wickedness; and the proud. All these, he
says, shall be as stubble when the day comes that shall burn as an oven. (Mal. 3; 4; D. & C. 64:2325.)
Paul preached similarly by saying: "When the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his
mighty angels, In flaming fire," then he will take "vengeance on them that know not God, and that
obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction
from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power." (2 Thess. 1:7-9.)
And in modern times the Lord said: "And every corruptible thing, both of man, or of the beasts of the
field, or of the fowls of the heavens, or of the fish of the sea, that dwells upon all the face of the
earth, shall be consumed; And also that of element shall melt with fervent heat; and all things shall
become new, that my knowledge and glory may dwell upon all the earth." (D. & C. 101:24-25.)
Also: "The day soon cometh that ye shall see me, and know that I am; for the veil of darkness shall
soon be rent, and he that is not purified shall not abide the day." (D. & C. 38:8.)
I. V. Luke 21:36-40. In the day when every corruptible thing shall be consumed, so "there shall be no
unclean thing" remaining, then the remainder of the elect shall be gathered with the saints. In this
sense, the one who is taken, of the two laboring side by side, is the righteous one, the one to be
gathered with the saints. He is taken to the body of the Church. But in the broader sense, he is the
one who shall remain on earth, for he shall abide the day; and the wicked shall be taken, in the
eternal sense, for he is not able to abide the day.
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accompany his return to earth; and still others recite the good and ill which shall befall the living and
the dead at that time. All this is preserved in holy writ so that men will be led to prepare themselves
for the day of the Lord, the day when he shall take vengeance upon the ungodly and pour forth
blessings upon those who love his appearing. (D. & C. 133:50-52; 2 Thess. 1:7-10.)
Deliberately and advisedly the actual time of his coming has been left uncertain and unspecified, so
that men of each succeeding age shall be led to prepare for it as though it would be in their mortal
lives. And for those who pass on before the promised day, none of their preparation will be wasted,
for both the living and the dead, speaking in the eternal sense, must prepare to abide the day.
Matt. 24:42-44. See Matt. 24:36-39.
Matt. 24:45-51. Jesus speaks here of his ministers, his servants, the holders of his holy priesthood.
They are the ones whom he has made rulers in the household of God to teach and perfect his saints.
Theirs is the responsibility to be so engaged when the Master returns. If they are so serving when the
Lord comes, he will give them exaltation. But if the rulers in the Lord's house think the Second
Coming is far distant, if they forget their charge, contend with their fellow ministers, and begin to
live after the manner of the world, then the vengeance of their rejected Lord shall, in justice, fall
upon them when he comes again.
I. V. Matt. 24:56. See Matt. 24:40-41.
Mark 13:33. Watch and pray] Luke 21:36. Pray always] Be awake and alert in the cause of
righteousness, awaiting the day with prayerful anticipation. Be on guard against evil, praying for
power to abide the day and for the privilege to greet the Lord at his coming.
Mark 13:36. Sleeping] Inactive in the Church; not attending to one's duties; sluggish spiritually.
Luke 21:34. Surfeiting] Intemperate indulgence in food and drink, symbolical of setting one's heart
and interests on carnal rather than spiritual things. Cares of this life] Temporal pursuits, business
dealings, civil and political positions, educational attainmentsanything that detracts from putting
first in one's life the things of God's kingdom.
Luke 12:35-36. "A little parable peculiar to Luke, warning the apostles to be ready for Christ's
Second Coming, which will be sudden. The apostles are compared to slaves left to watch the house
(the Church) while the master (Christ) goes to a wedding feast (i.e. ascends into heaven). Their loins
are girded because they have housework to do (preaching the gospel and ruling the Church), and they
have lighted lamps, because their task is to enlighten a dark and sinful world by their shining
example. Christ's return from the marriage feast is his Second Advent, or it may mean his judgment
of each individual soul at death. The 'marriage feast' here is not the final joy of the blessed, as in the
parable of the Ten Virgins, but Christ's session at the right hand of God between the Ascension and
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Second Advent."
37-38. "These verses continue the parable. Those whom Christ shall find watching at his Second
Coming, he will invite to share in the final feast (the joy of heaven); when he himself will serve
them, supplying them with all blessedness, and wiping away all tears from their eyes." (Dummelow,
pp. 754-755.)
I. V. Luke 12:41-45. Inserted in the Inspired Version by revelation, these sayings of Jesus give a new
and added concept to the teaching that men should watch, pray, and be ready for the Second Coming;
they outline a concept which is not elsewhere set forth with the clarity and plainness here recorded.
Interestingly, Dummelow came close to the very truth Jesus is here teaching when he speculated, as
above quoted, that "Christ's return from the marriage feast . . . may mean his judgment of each
individual soul at death."
All of the Lord's ministers, all of the members of his Church, and for that matter all men everywhere
('What I say unto one, I say unto all'), are counseled to await with righteous readiness the coming of
the Lord. However, most men will die before he comes, and only those then living will rejoice or
tremble, as the case may be, at his personal presence. But all who did prepare will be rewarded as
though they had lived when he came, while the wicked will be "cut asunder" and appointed their
"portion with the hypocrites" as surely as though they lived in the very day of dread and vengeance.
Thus, in effect, the Lord comes in every watch of the night, on every occasion when men are called
to face death and judgment. The phrase, "He hath already come, as it is written of him," pointedly
inserted in verse 42, is a witness that even then he ministered among mortal men and that they were
judged by their acceptance or rejection of him.
48-49. Strictly speaking the parable itself is given to those in positions of leadership in the Church.
54. How true it is that the disobedient servants are the ones who criticize the Church and find fault
with the Lord's program!
56-57. Men are judged according to the light and knowledge they have, according to the
opportunities they have to hear, believe, and obey the gospel law. "For of him unto whom much is
given much is required; and he who sins against the greater light shall receive the greater
condemnation." (D. & C. 82:3.)
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Coming
These statements found in latter-day revelation continue Jesus' great discourse delivered on the
mount of Olives.
39. The Second Coming is not a doctrine to be treated lightly, nor an eventuality to be viewed
without concern. Deity well knows that his earthly children need both promised rewards to
encourage the works of righteousness and promised penalties to create a dread of doing evil. What
doctrine better dramatizes the rewards and penalties awaiting the righteous and the wicked than the
doctrine of the Second Coming of the Son of Man? In effect the Lord's saints can be identified by the
fact that they are looking forward with understanding "for the great day of the Lord to come."
40-41. To understand the nature of the signs and wonders here promised, it is helpful to try and put
one's self in the position of the ancient apostles to whom the words were originally spoken. They
lived under what we would consider to be comparatively primitive conditions. Travel was at donkeyspeed; wars were fought with swords and spears; and the speediest communication was pigeon-slow.
From their standpoint surely railroads and airplanes, radio and television, and satellites orbiting the
earth, were signs and wonders on earth and in heaven. Vapors of smoke remind one of atomic
explosions; blood and fire mean war and desolation, all on a scale beyond the imagination of people
two thousand years ago. Seemingly, also, the earth itself, and both the atmospheric and sidereal
heavens which surround it, are now giving forth more unusual displays of wonderous things than was
the case anciently.
42. From the Inspired Version we learn that the signs promised in Matt. 24:29 are to occur after the
abomination of desolation sweeps Jerusalem for the second time. They will thus come almost at the
very hour of the Second Coming. From other scriptural accounts of these same signs we learn that
"the earth shall tremble and reel to and fro as a drunken man" (D. & C. 88:87), and "shall remove out
of her place" (Isa. 13:10-13); that "the islands shall become one land" (D. & C. 133:23); and that "the
stars shall be hurled from their places." (D. & C. 133:49.) Thus it would seem, when the Lord makes
his appearance and the earth is restored to its paradisiacal state, that there will be great physical
changes. When the continents become one land and the earth reels to and fro, with all that then
occurs, it will surely appear unto men as though the very stars of heaven were being hurled from
their places, and so they will be as far as their relationship to the earth is concerned. That there may
be other heavenly bodies, having the appearance of stars, that shall fall on the earth may also well be.
Truly the scriptures testify of many signs and wonders in the heavens above. (D. & C. 29:14; Joel
2:31; Rev. 6:12-17.)
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Coming, the Jews in generalincluding even those who can abide the day and who remain to face
their returning Messiahwill not accept him as their King and Lawgiver until after his return.
53. Speaking of the day when the Jews as a nation would be converted, the Lord said through
Zechariah: "I will pour upon the house of David, and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem, the spirit of
grace and of supplications: and they shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and they shall
mourn for him, as one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in bitterness for him, as one that is in
bitterness for his firstborn. In that day shall there be a great mourning in Jerusalem, as the mourning
of Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddon. And the land shall mourn, every family apart." (Zech.
12:10-14.) This mourning, of the Jews as a nation, will be because their fathers rejected and crucified
their King, thus sealing their own spiritual doom.
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question: What portion of the Church shall be saved? Surely this parable is not intended to divide
half the saints into one group and half into another. But it does teach, pointedly and plainly, that
there are foolish saints who shall fail to gain the promised rewards.
5. The bridegroom tarried] He delayed his coming; it was more distant than the early saints
supposed; from evening to midnight there was no direct word from the bridal party.
6. At midnight, the most unlikely of all hours for a joyous celebration to begin, the cry goes forth to a
sleeping world: 'Awake and arise; he cometh!'
10. They that were ready] "For they that are wise and have received the truth, and have taken the
Holy Spirit for their guide, and have not been deceivedverily I say unto you, they shall not be
hewn down and cast into the fire, but shall abide the day. And the earth shall be given unto them for
an inheritance; and they shall multiply and wax strong, and their children shall grow up without sin
unto salvation. For the Lord shall be in their midst, and his glory shall be upon them, and he will be
their king and their lawgiver." (D. & C. 45:57-59.)
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21-23. Glories promised the faithful saints hereafter are described in terms of kingdoms and thrones,
of principalities and powers, of being rulers in God's house, of ascending the throne of eternal power
all such heights being beyond even the comprehension of finite men. In this mortal sphere those
called to the Lord's ministry labor in limited spheres onlyas quorum presidents, as bishops, as
apostles (for it was they to whom this parable was more particularly directed), or in other capacities.
How gratifying it is to learn, therefore, the eternal principle that those servants who are faithful over
a few things shall be made rulers over many in the realms to be. (D. & C. 52:13; 117:10; 124:113.)
24. "The unfaithful servant prefaced his report with a grumbling excuse, which involved the
imputation of unrighteousness in the Master. The honest, diligent, faithful servants saw and
reverenced in their Lord the perfection of the good qualities which they possessed in measured
degree; the lazy and unprofitable serf, afflicted by distorted vision, professed to see in the Master his
own base defects. The story in this particular, as in the other features relating to human acts and
tendencies, is psychologically true; in a peculiar sense men are prone to conceive of the attributes of
God as comprising in augmented degree the dominant traits of their own nature." (Talmage, p. 582.)
26. 'Since you claim to believe that I am an hard man who reaps where I have not sowed, and who
gathers where I have not scattered, it is all the more reason why you should have used your one talent
wisely.'
27. Every man must use such talents as he may have or they will be lost. If a man cannot compose
music, perhaps he can sing in the choir; if he cannot write books, at least he can read them; if he
cannot paint pictures, he can learn to appreciate the artistry of others; if he cannot achieve
preeminence in one specific field, so be it, he still can succeed in his own field; for each man has
some talent, and he will be judged on the basis of how he uses what he has.
29. It is an eternal law of life that men either progress or retrogress; they either increase their talents
and abilities, or those they have wither and die. No one stands still; there is no such thing as pure
neutrality.
30. Outer darkness] Hell.
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under covenant to divide their substance with the poor, to visit the sick and afflicted, and "to bear
one another's burdens, that they may light." He is telling how the members of his earthly kingdom
will be treated when he comes again, for they are the ones who have promised in the waters of
baptism "to mourn with those that mourn," and to "comfort those that stand in need of
comfort." (Mosiah 18:8-9.)
All men, Christian and pagan alike, by instinct, are expected to be charitable, benevolent, and
cooperative toward their fellowmen; and all will be judged according to their works. But the saints,
with the light of the gospel to guide them, have an added and especial obligation to manifest
Christian virtues. "Let thy bowels also be full of charity towards all men, and to the household of
faith," is the revealed counsel to members of the Lord's Church. (D. & C. 121:45.)
That the words here spoken by Jesus are directed to the Church and not to all men is implicit in the
whole conversation. Those in the account, who are being judged by the King, are people who
believed in Christ, who professed to know him and his laws, and who therefore were expected to
recognize him whether he appeared in person or manifest himself through his lowly and suffering
mortal brethren. The reward of eternal life, meted out to the charitable ones, is a reward which comes
only to those who are first baptized and who thereafter do the works of righteousness. (2 Ne. 31:1721.) The latter-day revelations which deal with the same subject all speak in terms of members of the
Church and not of the world in general. In this connection it is also interesting to note that the
Inspired Version account says "the twelve apostles" will be with Jesus in rendering judgment at the
day indicated. In latter-day revelation the Lord tells us that when the Twelve sit in judgment with
him at the last day they will "judge the whole house of Israel, even as many as have loved me and
kept my commandments, and none else." (D. & C. 29:12.) There can, thus, be no question as to who
is being judged in this dramatic account; it is the saints, the members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Many revelations direct members of the Lord's earthly kingdom to feed the hungry, clothe the naked,
house the homeless, care for the destitute, visit the sick, heal the wounded, and do good to all men.
To the Nephite saints Jacob gave this counsel: "Think of your brethren like unto yourselves, and be
familiar with all and free with your substance, that they may be rich like unto you. But before ye
seek for riches, seek ye for the kingdom of God. And after ye have obtained a hope in Christ ye shall
obtain riches, if ye seek them; and ye will seek them for the intent to do good to clothe the naked,
and to feed the hungry, and to liberate the captive, and administer relief to the sick and the
afflicted." (Jacob 2:17-19.)
King Benjamin expressed similar views in these words: "And ye will not suffer your children that
they go hungry, or naked; ... And also, ye yourselves will succor those that stand in need of your
succor; ye will administer of your substance unto him that standeth in need; and ye will not suffer
that the beggar putteth up his petition to you in vain, and turn him out to perish. Perhaps thou shalt
say: The man has brought upon himself his misery; therefore I will stay my hand, and will not give
unto him of my food, nor impart unto him of my substance that he may not suffer, for his
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punishments are justBut I say unto you, O man, whosoever doeth this the same hath great cause to
repent; and except he repenteth of that which he hath done he perisheth forever, and hath no interest
in the kingdom of God. For behold, are we not all beggars? Do we not all depend upon the same
Being, even God, for all the substance which we have, for both food and raiment, and for gold, and
for silver, and for all the riches which we have of every kind?... And now, for the sake of these things
which I have spoken unto youthat is, for the sake of retaining a remission of your sins from day to
day, that ye may walk guiltless before GodI would that ye should impart of your substance to the
poor, every man according to that which he hath, such as feeding the hungry, clothing the naked,
visiting the sick and administering to their relief, both spiritually and temporally, according to their
wants." (Mosiah 4:14-19, 26.)
Through Joseph Smith the Lord gave this direction: "Behold, thus saith the Lord unto my people...
Wo unto you rich men, that will not give your substance to the poor, for your riches will canker your
souls; and this shall be your lamentation in the day of visitation, and of judgment, and of indignation:
The harvest is past, the summer is ended, and my soul is not saved!" (D. & C. 56:14, 16.)
Also: "It is wisdom in me; therefore, a commandment I give unto you, that ye shall organize
yourselves and appoint every man his stewardship; That every man may give an account unto me of
the stewardship which is appointed unto him. For it is expedient that I, the Lord, should make every
man accountable, as a steward over earthly blessings, which I have made and prepared for my
creatures. I, the Lord, stretched out the heavens, and built the earth, my very handiwork; and all
things therein are mine. And it is my purpose to provide for my saints, for all things are mine. But it
must needs be done in mine own way; and behold this is the way that I, the Lord, have decreed to
provide for my saints, that the poor shall be exalted, in that the rich are made low. For the earth is
full, and there is enough and to spare; yea, I prepared all things, and have given unto the children of
men to be agents unto themselves. Therefore, if any man shall take of the abundance which I have
made, and impart not his portion, according to the law of my gospel, unto the poor and the needy, he
shall, with the wicked, lift up his eyes in hell, being in torment." (D. & C. 104:11-18.)
Paul, also directing his words to the saints, gave this direction: "If any provide not for his own, and
especially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel." (1 Tim.
5:8.)
Compliance with the counsel contained in these revelations is so important that it is made a test of
true discipleship. "And remember in all things the poor and the needy, the sick and the afflicted," the
Lord says, "for he that doeth not these things, the same is not my disciple." (D. & C. 52:40.) In this
dispensation these commands to care for the temporal and physical well-being of our fellowmen are
discharged in large measure through the Welfare Plan. Thus the Welfare Plan becomes and is one of
the great evidences of the divinity of the Lord's latter-day work, for how can a church be the Lord's
kingdom unless it makes provision to do the charitable works required of the Lord's people?
Probably no one in this dispensation has more perfectly manifest in his life the charitable works of
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pure Christianity than did the Prophet Joseph Smith. In Carthage Jail, awaiting a martyr's death, and
as though it were to be a benediction on his life, the Prophet requested an associate to sing the hymn,
"A Poor Wayfaring Man of Grief," which memorializes in song the message Jesus gave to his Jewish
brethren in their dispensation. These are the words:
"A poor wayfaring Man of grief
Hath often crossed me on my way,
Who sued so humbly for relief
That I could never answer, Nay.
I had not power to ask his name,
Whereto he went, or whence he came;
Yet there was something in his eye
That won my love; I knew not why.
"Once, when my scanty meal was spread,
He entered, not a word he spake;
Just perishing for want of bread,
I gave him all; he blessed it, brake,
And ate, but gave me part again;
Mine was an angel's portion then,
For while I fed with eager haste,
The crust was manna to my taste.
"I spied him where a fountain burst
Clear from the rock; his strength was gone;
The heedless water mocked his thirst;
He heard it, saw it, hurrying on.
I ran and raised the sufferer up;
Thrice from the stream he drained my cup,
Dipped and returned it running o'er;
I drank and never thirsted more.
"'Twas night; the floods were out;
It blew a winter hurricane aloof;
I heard his voice abroad and flew
To bid him welcome to my roof.
I warmed and clothed and cheered my guest
And laid him on my couch to rest,
Then made the earth my bed, and seemed
In Eden's garden while I dreamed.
"Stript, wounded, beaten nigh to death,
the very ones who should have been teaching them to follow their God-sent Messiah, who now, with
murder in their hearts, plotted and conspired to slay him. And how often it is thus, that those arrayed
in priestly robes, lest their iniquities be uncovered and their doctrines debased, plan the persecutions
and then incite the mobs which slay the saints.
Caiaphas] Rule in God's earthly kingdom is by legal administrators appointed by the Lord. Church
officers are chosen by other church officers as the Holy Spirit directs. One of the many sure signs of
total apostasy is the appointment of religious leaders by civil authorities, as often has been and now
is the case among branches and sects of Christendom. This, also, was the fallen spiritual state into
which the once divinely approved Jewish religion had slipped. Accordingly, Joseph Caiaphas, son-inlaw of Annas, appointed high priest by the Roman procurator Valerius Gratus (Pilate's predecessor),
found himself in the priestly office at this dread time in history when the Creator of men was to be
taken by sinful men and hung on the cross. Under the Jewish law the presiding priest in the Aaronic
Priesthood was called the high priest; it was, to them, a position of administration and spiritual
supremacy.
5. How often the people stand higher than their leaders in spiritual Might. Among the 2,000,000
people crowded into Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover, many sympathized with Jesus; some
believed his doctrines and espoused his cause; others from Galilee, with provincial pride, would have
taken his side should a demonstration or outbreak occur. All this restrained Caiaphas and his
conspirators.
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upon another, that is: "Thou anointest my head with oil"? (Ps. 23:5.)
"To anoint the head of a guest with ordinary oil was to do him honor; to anoint his feet also was to
show unusual and signal regard; but the anointing of head and feet with spikenard, and in such
abundance, was an act of reverential homage rarely rendered even to kings. Mary's act was an
expression of adoration; it was the fragrant outwelling of a heart overflowing with worship and
affection." (Talmage, p. 512.)
Matt. 26:8. To what purpose is this waste?] Was it waste? True, the costly oil was used and gone.
But the bounties of nature are created for more purposes than to fill the bellies of the hungry and to
cover the bare backs of the naked. "The fulness of the earth is yours," the Lord says to his children.
And to what use shall earth's bounties be put? "All things which come of the earth, in the season
thereof, are made for the benefit and the use of man, both to please the eye and to gladden the heart;
Yea, for food and for raiment, for taste and for smell, to strengthen the body and to enliven the
soul." (D. & C. 59:16-19.)
Mark 14:7. Ye have the poor with you always] "For the poor shall never cease out of the
land." (Deut. 15:11.) And whensoever ye will ye may do them good] A cutting rebuke to Judas, who,
as a thief, never intended to give alms to the poor; a mild rebuke to those other disciples who were
led astray by the unsound contention of him who soon would betray his Lord.
Matt. 26:12. She did it for my burial] Again Jesus announces that the Lord Jehovah shall die (Isa.
53:9), and in doing so lets us know that Mary, at least, foreknew and realized what her beloved Lord
would soon face.
Matt. 26:13. Who but the Lord who knows all things could announce, with surety of fulfillment, that
Mary's reverent act of worship would be memorialized forever after among those who have his
gospel?
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But if the body of Judas was not possessed literally by Satan, still this traitorous member of the
Twelve was totally submissive to the will of the devil. "Before Judas sold Christ to the Jews, he had
sold himself to the devil; he had become Satan's serf, and did his master's bidding." (Talmage, p.
592.)
All things are governed by law. Through obedience and righteousness men are able to receive
revelation from the Holy Spirit; through disobedience and wickedness (which course constitutes
conformity to the laws which govern in this field) men are able to receive impressions, guidance, and
even revelation from the Evil Spirit. Judas was in this latter category; he had descended to that depth
of spiritual depravity where he consorted with and was subject to the will of evil spirits. There is no
curtailment of agency in either of these courses; both are pursued by deliberate choice.
Matt. 26:14-15. Judas took the initiative. He sought out the chief priests; he chose to betray his Lord;
he asked for the money. It was a wilful, deliberate, premeditated act; and it is useless to speculate (as
so many commentators do) as to why he did it. Such speculation usually seeks to excuse Judas for an
act which the scriptural account in no way mitigates. The revealed record lays the onus for the deed
on Judas and stops there.
Chief priests] These are they who incited the people against Jesus. Their teachings, their religious
interpretations, their prejudices, their hatred, caused the spiritually illiterate multitudes to reject their
King. What dire fate must await religious leaders who keep others from coming to a knowledge of
the truth!
What will ye give me?] They could have said one piece of silver or a thousand. Judas had not come
to haggle but to betray. What amount, then, should they set? With devilish cunning they chose that
sum which in their law was the fixed price of a slave. "Thirty shekels of silver" would recompense
an owner for the death of "a manservant or a maidservant." (Ex. 21:28-32.)
Thirty pieces of silver! Such would they pay for the life of their Godno more and no less. And by
so doing all men ever after would know that they esteemed him as the basest of men. And thus, also,
even their attempts to debase and insult would fulfil, in literal detail, the Messianic prophecy of
Zechariah which had foretold their evil conspiracy. "If ye think good, give me my price; and if not,
forbear," the Lord says of the sum for which he will be sold. "So they weighed for my price thirty
pieces of silver." (Zech. 11:12.)
16. The betrayal must be secret, away from sympathetic groups; to avoid Roman vengeance there
must be no "uproar among the people." (Matt. 26:5.)
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"As part of the restoration of all things, the ordinance of washing of feet has been restored in the
dispensation of the fulness of times. In keeping with the standard pattern of revealing principles and
practices line upon line and precept upon precept, the Lord revealed his will concerning the washing
of feet little by little until the full knowledge of the endowment and all temple ordinances had been
given.
"December 27, 1832, this command was given to 'the first laborers in this last kingdom': 'Sanctify
yourselves; yea, purify your hearts, and cleanse your hands and your feet before me, that I may make
you clean; That I may testify unto your Father, and your God, and my God, that you are clean from
the blood of this wicked generation.' (D. & C. 88:74-75.) On that same occasion the command came
to organize the school of the prophets, with the express stipulation that 'ye shall not receive any
among you into this school save he is clean from the blood of this generation; And he shall be
received by the ordinance of the washing of feet, for unto this end was the ordinance of the washing
of feet instituted.' (D. & C. 88:127-141.)
"In the case of this school the ordinance is to be performed by the President of the Church. In
compliance with this revelation the Prophet on January 23, 1833, washed the feet of the members of
the school of the prophets. 'By the power of the Holy Ghost I pronounced them all clean from the
blood of this generation,' he recorded. (History of the Church, vol. 1, pp. 322-324; vol. 2, p. 287.)
"Later apostles were called and ordained, and on November 12, 1835, the Prophet addressed them, as
pertaining to the washing of feet where they were concerned: 'The item to which I wish the more
particularly to call your attention tonight is the ordinance of washing of feet. This we [meaning the
Twelve] have not done as yet, but it is necessary now, as much as it was in the days of the Savior;
and we must have a place prepared, that we may attend to this ordinance aside from the world.
"'We have not desired as much from the hand of the Lord through faith and obedience, as we ought
to have done, yet we have enjoyed great blessings, and we are not so sensible of this as we should
be. . . . We must have all things prepared, and call our solemn assembly as the Lord has commanded
us, that we may be able to accomplish his great work, and it must be done in God's own way. The
house of the Lord must be prepared, and the solemn assembly called and organized in it, according to
the order of the house of God; and in it we must attend to the ordinance of washing of feet. It was
never intended for any but official members. It is calculated to unite our hearts, that we may be one
in feeling and sentiment, and that our faith may be strong, so that Satan cannot overthrow us, nor
have any power over us here.
"'The endowment you are so anxious about, you cannot comprehend now, nor could Gabriel explain
it to the understanding of your dark minds; but strive to be prepared in your hearts, be faithful in all
things, that when we meet in the solemn assembly, that is, when such as God shall name out of all
the official members shall meet, we must be clean every whit. ... The order of the house of God has
been, and ever will be, the same, even after Christ comes; and after the termination of the thousand
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years it will be the same; and we shall finally enter into the celestial kingdom of God, and enjoy it
forever.' (History of the Church, vol. 2, pp. 308-309.)
"On Sunday, March 27, 1836, as part of the dedicatory services of the Kirtland Temple, the
congregation sang that glorious hymn, 'The Spirit of God Like a Fire is Burning!' One verse, as then
sung, was:
"'We'll wash and be washed, and with
oil be anointed,
Withal not omitting the washing of feet;
For he that receiveth his penny appointed
Must surely be clean at the harvest of wheat.'
On March 29 and 30, 1836, the leading brethren, including the First Presidency, Council of the
Twelve, bishoprics, and presidents of quorums, participated in the ordinance of washing of feet.
(History of the Church, vol. 2, pp. 426, 430-431.)
"It should be remembered that the endowment given in the Kirtland Temple was only a partial
endowment, and that the full endowment was not performed until the saints had established
themselves in Nauvoo. (Doctrines of Salvation, vol. 2, pp. 241-242.) The full endowmentreferred
to in the revelation dated January 19, 1841 (D. & C. 124: 36-41)including washings and
anointings, except under unusual circumstances, is designed to be administered in the temples of the
Lord.
"Thus the knowledge relative to the washing of feet has been revealed step by step in this day until a
full knowledge is now incorporated in the revealed ordinances of the Lord's house. Obviously the
apostate peoples of the world, being without revelation to guide them, cannot comply with our Lord's
command given on the occasion of the last supper." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 751-753.)
John 13:1. Our Lord walked in the light of revelation; he knew who he was, why he had come to
earth, and the imminent trials and cruel death that awaited him. And amid it all, he was thinking, not
of himself, but of his disciples whom he loved "unto the end."
2. See Matt. 26:14-16.
3. Jesus was God and he knew it. God was his Father and he knew it. And the Fatherspeaking of
things to come as though they were already herhad given him all power, all knowledge, all
judgment, all things.
16. See Luke 6:40.
20. See Matt. 10:38-42.
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outpouring of the Spirit, by which the witness came to the eleven, and their minds were opened to
see and know the truth, and they were able to testify of him, then what constituted the unpardonable
sin of this poor, erring creature, who rose no higher in the scale of intelligence, honor or ambition
than to betray the Lord of glory for thirty pieces of silver?
"But not knowing that Judas did commit the unpardonable sin; nor that he was a 'son of perdition
without hope' who will die the second death, nor what knowledge he possessed by which he was able
to commit so great a sin, I prefer, until I know better, to take the merciful view that he may be
numbered among those for whom the blessed Master prayed, 'Father, forgive them; for they know
not what they do.'" (Joseph F. Smith, Gospel Doctrine, 5th ed., pp. 433-435.)
It had been good for that man if he had not been born] This statement, which should be taken
literally, can be understood only in the light of pre-existence. All men earned the right to pass by
birth from a pre-existent first estate into this life, to come from the personal presence of God into a
life where trials and tests await. Those who fail the tests of mortality go eventually to a telestial
sphere of which the revealed word says: "Where God and Christ dwell they cannot come, worlds
without end." (D. & C. 76:112.)
Thus, in the sense here spoken, they would have been better off never to have been born, never to
have left their pre-existent home, the home where the Eternal Father presides in glorious immortality.
The Book of Mormon presentation of this doctrine is in these words: "And wo be unto him that will
not hearken unto the words of Jesus, and also to them whom he hath chosen and sent among them;
for whoso receiveth not the words of Jesus and the words of those whom he hath sent receiveth not
him; and therefore he will not receive them at the last day; And it would be better for them if they
had not been born. For do ye suppose that ye can get rid of the justice of an offended God, who hath
been trampled under feet of men, that thereby salvation might be?" (3 Ne. 28:34-35.)
John 13:18. I know whom I have chosen] Judas was a spiritual pygmy from the beginning; as an
unrepentant thief, he did not at any time possess apostolic stature. Yet he had his agency; he was free
to choose his own course. "All mankind," and there are no exceptions, "may be saved, by obedience
to the laws and ordinances of the Gospel." (Third Article of Faith.) Judas was no different in this
respect than any other man. He could have chosen the course of righteousness; he had sufficient
spiritual capacity to work out his salvation with fear and trembling before the Lord. And Jesus knew
both the spiritual nothingness of Judas and the elections which that poor soul would make where his
own salvation was concerned.
A comparable case is Cain. That son of Adam, though a friend of Lucifer in pre-existence, did
manage to gain mortal birth. He could have hearkened to his Father Adam and walked in the strait
and narrow path. But instead he chose to follow a course which he had already charted, in a very real
sense, in his first estate, an estate where he had been known as Perdition. Coming from this
background, Cain elected to use his agency to fight the truth in this life, and in his case he became a
son of perdition. (Moses 5:16-59.)
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He that eateth bread with me hath lifted up his heel against me] King David, whose throne the Son of
David inherited, while engaged in civil war in Israel, wrote the Forty-first Psalm. In it he declaimed
his betrayal by the traitor Ahithopel in these words: "Mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted,
which did eat of my bread, hath lifted up his heel against me." (Ps. 41:9.) Interestingly, when
Absalom failed to follow Ahithopel's counsel, that traitor, as though his name were Judas, went and
hanged himself. (2 Sam. 15:10-12; 17.)
Now we find Jesus quoting David's words and ascribing to them Messianic import, a meaning which
was of course intended from the beginning. These words thus become a classical illustration of how
Messianic prophecies were often given and of why they can be interpreted only by the power of the
Holy Ghost.
19. 'I tell you now that Judas, mine own familiar friend, shall betray me as David foretold, so that
when it comes to pass you will know that I am the Christ of whom David in his great Messianic
prophecy spoke.'
23. One of his disciples, whom Jesus loved] John the Beloved, who, as author of the account, out of
modesty did not name himself.
26. Jesus must have spoken these words in a whisper, for the rest of the Twelve did not know at that
time that Judas was being singled out as the traitor, a conclusion born out by the following verses.
The dipping of the sop was a common practice and would have attracted no unusual attention.
27. Satan entered into him] See Matt. 26:14-16.
30. And it was night] Both naturally and spiritually it was night. Out into the night, his soul
darkened by sin, Judas went, bent on putting out the Light that for a brief ministry had shown forth
among men. Truly at this hour, it was night!
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One of the first great spiritual experiences received by Adam after he became mortal was associated
with the law of sacrifice. Of our first parents the scriptural account says that the Lord "gave unto
them commandments, that they should worship the Lord their God, and should offer the firstlings of
their flocks, for an offering unto the Lord. And Adam was obedient unto the commandments of the
Lord. And after many days an angel of the Lord appeared unto Adam, saying: Why dost thou offer
sacrifices unto the Lord? And Adam said unto him: I know not, save the Lord commanded me. And
then the angel spake, saying: This thing is a similitude of the sacrifice of the Only Begotten of the
Father, which is full of grace and truth. Wherefore, thou shalt do all that thou doest in the name of
the Son, and thou shalt repent and call upon God in the name of the Son forevermore." (Moses 5:5-8.)
And now as Jesus and his apostles celebrated the Feast of the Passover, which itself was part of the
ancient sacrificial system, a new ordinance was in the making. The paschal lambs were testifying for
the last time that the Lamb of God should be sacrificed for the sins of the world. The hour had come
for the great and last sacrifice, and once the Son of God had been lifted upon the altar of the cross
there would be no further need for an ordinance looking forward to that day.
Amulek expounded the principles here involved in this way: "Behold, I say unto you, that I do know
that Christ shall come among the children of men, to take upon him the transgressions of his people,
and that he shall atone for the sins of the world; for the Lord God hath spoken it. For it is expedient
that an atonement should be made; for according to the great plan of the Eternal God there must be
an atonement made, or eke all mankind must unavoidably perish; yea, all are hardened; yea, all are
fallen and are lost, and must perish expect it be through the atonement which it is expedient should
be made. For it is expedient that there should be a great and last sacrifice; yea, not a sacrifice of man,
neither of beast, neither of any manner of fowl; for it shall not be a human sacrifice; but it must be an
infinite and eternal sacrifice. Now there is not any man that can sacrifice his own blood which will
atone for the sins of another. Now, if a man murdereth, behold will our law, which is just, take the
life of his brother? I say unto you, Nay. But the law requireth the life of him who hath murdered;
therefore there can be nothing which is short of an infinite atonement which will suffice for the sins
of the world. Therefore, it is expedient that there should be a great and last sacrifice; and then shall
there be, or it is expedient there should be, a stop to the shedding of blood; then shall the law of
Moses be fulfilled; yea, it shall be all fulfilled, every jot and tittle, and none shall have passed away.
And behold, this is the whole meaning of the law, every whit pointing to that great and last sacrifice;
and that great and last sacrifice will be the Son of God, yea, infinite and eternal." (Alma 34:8-14.)
That the offering of animal sacrifices was done away after the great and last sacrifice of the Eternal
One was taught in plainness by the resurrected Lord to the Nephites. "Behold, by me redemption
cometh, and in me is the law of Moses fulfilled," he said. "And ye shall offer up unto me no more the
shedding of blood; yea, your sacrifices and your burnt offerings shall be done away, for I will accept
none of your sacrifices and your burnt offerings. And ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken
heart and a contrite spirit. And whoso cometh unto me with a broken heart and a contrite spirit, him
will I baptize with fire and with the Holy Ghost." (3 Ne. 9:17, 19-20.)
As sacrifice was thus to cease with the occurrence of the great event toward which it pointed, there
must needs be a new ordinance to replace it, an ordinance which also would center the attention of
the saints on the infinite and eternal atonement. And so Jesus, celebrating the Feast of the Passover,
thus dignifying and fulfilling the law to the full, initiated the sacrament of the Lord's Supper.
Sacrifice stopped and sacrament started. It was the end of the old era, the beginning of the new.
Sacrifice looked forward to the shed blood and bruised flesh of the Lamb of God. The sacrament was
to be in remembrance of his spilt blood and broken flesh, the emblems, bread and wine, typifying
such as completely as had the shedding of the blood of animals in their days.
Thus Jesus, as he and his apostolic witnesses ate the paschal lamb, took bread, brake and blessed it,
and blessed also the cup of wine, passing each of them in turn to his disciples.
Rituals and performances followed in celebrating the Passover were a perfect setting for the
introduction of the new gospel ordinance of the sacrament. The Passover formalities, omitting a few
details, are summarized by Dummelow as follows:
"(1) The first cup was blessed and drunk. (2) The hands were washed while a blessing was said. (3)
Bitter herbs, emblematic of the sojourn in Egypt, were partaken of, dipped in sour broth made of
vinegar and bruised fruit. (4) The son of the house asked his father to explain the origin of the
observance. (5) The lamb and the flesh of the thank offerings (chagigah) were placed on the table,
and the first part of the Hallel sung (Psalms 113, 114). (6) The second cup was blessed and drunk. (7)
Unleavened bread was blessed and broken, a fragment of it was eaten, then a fragment of the thank
offerings, then a fragment of the lamb. (8) Preliminaries being thus ended, the feast proceeded at
leisure till all was consumed. (9) The lamb being quite finished, the third cup, the cup of blessing,
was blessed and drunk. (10) The fourth cup was drunk, and meanwhile the second part of the Hallel
(1'salms 115-118) was sung.
"Those who partook of the Passover were required to be ceremonially clean, and to have been fasting
from the time of the evening sacrifice, which on this day was offered early, about 1:30 p.m. All male
Israelites above the age of fourteen were required to partake of it."
Each of the synoptists records that as they were eating the Passover meal, Jesus took bread and brake
and blessed it. Of this Dummelow says: "This may correspond with No. 7, but it seems more
probable that both the bread and the wine were consecrated together at the close of the meal, the
bread when it was almost, and the cup when it was quite, finished.
"The Jewish ritual of breaking the Passover bread was as follows: 'Then washing his hands, and
taking two loaves, he breaks one, and lays the broken loaf upon the whole one, saying '"Blessed be
he who causeth bread to grow out of the earth."' Then, putting a piece of bread and some bitter herbs
together, he dips them in the sour broth, saying this blessing: '"Blessed be Thou, O Lord God, our
eternal King, he who hath sanctified us by his precepts, and commanded us to eat."' Then he eats the
unleavened bread and bitter herbs together.' But it is unlikely that Jesus, who was founding a new
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this, Jesus said unto them: Blessed are ye for this thing which ye have done, for this is fulfilling my
commandments, and this doth witness unto the Father that ye are willing to do that which I have
commanded you. And this shall ye always do to those who repent and are baptized in my name; and
ye shall do it in remembrance of my blood, which I have shed for you, that ye may witness unto the
Father that ye do always remember me. And if ye do always remember me ye shall have my Spirit to
be with you." (3 Ne. 18:3-11.)
In the Passover proceedings blessings were said over the broken bread and again over the cup of
wine, blessings which perhaps foreshadowed the highly spiritual ones destined to be offered in
administering the sacrament of the Lord's Supper. These blessings are not recorded in the New
Testament, nor for that matter in that part of the Nephite record where the new ordinance is being
introduced. They were, however, given to the Nephites and were inserted in the Book of Mormon
account centuries later by Moroni. (Moro. 4 and 5.) Obviously they were given also to the disciples
in Jerusalem and to the old world saints. These blessingsmore commonly called prayers by usas
revealed in modern times are as follows:
"O God, the Eternal Father, we ask thee in the name of thy Son, Jesus Christ, to bless and sanctify
this bread to the souls of all those who partake of it, that they may eat in remembrance of the body of
thy Son, and witness unto thee, O God, the Eternal Father, that they are willing to take upon them the
name of thy Son, and always remember him and keep his commandments which he has given them;
that they may always have his Spirit to be with them. Amen." (D. & C. 20:77.)
"O God, the Eternal Father, we ask thee in the name of thy Son, Jesus Christ, to bless and sanctify
this wine to the souls of all those who drink of it, that they may do it in remembrance of the blood of
thy Son, which was shed for them; that they may witness unto thee, O God, the Eternal Father, that
they do always remember him, that they may have his Spirit to be with them. Amen." (D. & C.
20:79.)
"By partaking of the sacrament, worthy saints renew the covenant previously made by them in the
waters of baptism (Mosiah 18:7-10); unbaptized children, being without sin, are entitled and
expected to partake of the sacrament to prefigure the covenant they will take upon themselves when
they arrive at the years of accountability. Worthy partakers of the sacrament put themselves in
perfect harmony with the Lord. (3 Ne. 18.) As indicated by our Lord's statement they gain 'the
remission of their sins.' (Inspired Version, Matt. 26:24.)
"Those who partake of the sacrament worthily thereby put themselves under covenant with the Lord:
1. To always remember the broken body and spilled blood of Him who was crucified for the sins of
the world; 2. To take upon themselves the name of Christ and always remember him; and 3. To keep
the commandments of God, that is, to 'live by every word that proceedeth forth from the mouth of
God.' (D. & C. 84:44.)
"As his part of the contract, the Lord covenants: 1. That such worthy saints shall have his Spirit to be
with them; and 2. That in due course they shall inherit eternal life. (D. & C. 20:75-79; Moro. 4; 5.)
'Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last
day.' (John 6:54.) In the light of these covenants, promises, and blessings, is it any wonder that the
Lord commanded: 'It is expedient that the church meet together often to partake of bread and wine in
the remembrance of the Lord Jesus.' (D. & C. 20:75; Doctrines of Salvation, vol. 2, pp. 338-350.)
" (Mormon Doctrine, p. 594.)
Gross perversion and distortion of the true sacramental ordinance is found among the sects of
Christendom. Some have gone so far as to suppose that each time they partake of the blessed
emblems they literally are eating the body and drinking the blood of Christ. (Mormon Doctrine, pp.
730-731.) Scriptural mistranslations and deliberate misrendering of gospel texts encourage this false
conclusion. After setting forth the pure and perfect system of sacramental administration, Jesus said
to the Nephites:
"And I give unto you a commandment that ye shall do these things. And if ye shall always do these
things blessed are ye, for ye are built upon my rock. But whoso among you shall do more or less than
these are not built upon my rock, but are built upon a sandy foundation; and when the rain descends,
and the floods come, and the winds blow, and beat upon them, they shall fall, and the gates of hell
are ready open to receive them." (3 Ne. 18:12-13.)
Matt. 26:28. Jesus continues to bear personal testimony of his divine Sonship. His is the blood of the
new testament (the new covenant) which shall make remission of sins available to all men on
conditions of repentance. He is the Savior and Redeemerand he says it plainly.
29. Jesus promises, at his Second Coming, to again partake of the sacrament with the Twelve, or
rather the eleven, for without doubt Judas had already fled into the darkness of the night. This same
promise was expanded by modern revelation to include Joseph Smith and the worthy modern day
saints, as also Moroni, Elias, John the Baptist, Elijah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph who was sold
into Egypt, Adam and by necessary implication the righteous of all ages. (D. & C. 27:1-12.)
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God is glorified in him] Jesus adds to the glory of the Father! True the Father already has all glory
in the sense of possessing the fulness of power and might, but even he receives added glory as new
kingdoms and dominions become part of his eternal domains. Joseph Smith said: "What did Jesus
do? Why; I do the things I saw my Father do when worlds came rolling into existence. My Father
worked out his kingdom with fear and trembling, and I must do the same; and when I get my
kingdom, I shall present it to my Father, so that he may obtain kingdom upon kingdom, and it will
exalt him in glory. He will then take a higher exaltation, and I will take his place, and thereby
become exalted myself. So that Jesus treads in the tracks of his Father, and inherits what God did
before; and God is thus glorified and exalted in the salvation and exaltation of all his
children." (Teachings, pp. 347-348.)
This same eternal truth was also revealed to the Prophet in connection with the new and everlasting
covenant of marriage. After telling how Abraham had entered into his exaltation and become a
possessor of eternal increase, the Lord said: "This promise is yours also, because ye are of Abraham,
and the promise was made unto Abraham; and by this law is the continuation of the works of my
Father, wherein he glorifieth himself." (D. & C. 132:29-31.)
32. 'If the Father is glorified and exalted to a higher station because of the works and triumphs of the
Son, then the Father will further reward the Son with the Fatherand the hour for all this is at hand;
it shall straightway take place.'
33. 'My loved ones, I will only be with you a few more hours and then I go to my Father. Ye shall
seek me, but ye cannot now come to me; your work here is not yet finished.'
34. A new commandment] Yes, and an old commandment too; a commandment both old and new,
a commandment that commences now and yet is everlasting; a commandment that is new each time
it is revealed, but is old because it has always been in force. John, who here preserves this saying of
our Savior, amplified and explained it in his own writings. Speaking of "the love of God," he said:
"Brethren, I write no new commandment unto you, but an old commandment, which ye had from the
beginning." And then speaking also of the same thing he says: "Again, a new commandment I write
unto you." (1 John 2:1-8.)
This gospel manner of naming the same thing as being both new and old is nowhere better illustrated
than in the designation, "the new and everlasting covenant." The gospel is the everlasting covenant,
the covenant of salvation which God always has and always will make with men, but it is a new
covenant each time it is revealed. The gospel we have today is new to the world for this era; it is old
because it was had anciently; it is everlasting because it is the same from age to age and from
eternity to eternity.
35. They already were his disciples; they became such in the waters of baptism. Loving one another
would not turn them into disciples unless they also accepted his gospel. But through the gospel they
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would have power to increase their love for each other; and that manifestation of love would be a
visible sign to all men that they were in fact his disciples. This statement, tying love and discipleship
together, is an ideal illustration of the fact that the gospel changes men's lives. When people join the
Church and begin to live the gospel, they become new creatures; changes of character of such
magnitude occur in their lives that these differences are visible to all men.
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The terrestrial and telestial kingdoms and there are as many varying mansions or degrees within the
telestial as there are stars in the firmamentshall house all the rest of the saved beings of the earth.
(D. & C. 76.) Truly there are many mansions.
If it were not so, I would have told you] Since the whole gospel system teaches that men will be
judged according to their works, it follows that there are degrees of glory hereafter. "From sundry
revelations which had been received," Joseph Smith said, "it was apparent that many important
points touching the salvation of man had been taken from the Bible, or lost before it was compiled. It
appeared self-evident from what truths were left, that if God rewarded every one according to the
deeds done in the body, the term heaven, as intended for the saints' eternal home, must include more
kingdoms than one." (Teachings, pp. 9-11.)
Strange indeed is the sectarian concept of a heaven for the righteous and a hell for the wicked, two
extremes into which men of differing works and varying degrees of righteousness shall be placed. "I
do not believe the Methodist doctrine of sending honest men and noble-minded men to hell, along
with the murderer and the adulterer," the Prophet said. "I have an order of things to save the poor
fellows.... There are mansions for those who obey a celestial law, and there are other mansions for
those who come short of the law, every man in his own order." (Teachings, p. 366.) Indeed, some
things are so obvious that right thinking people should accept and believe them by instinct. Among
such is the doctrine of degrees of glory in the eternal worlds.
I go to prepare a place for you] 'I go to prepare a place of exaltation for you, a place with me in the
highest heaven of the celestial world (D. & C. 131:1-4), for "the disciple" shall "be as his master, and
the servant as his lord." (Matt. 10:25.) "Ye shall be even as I am, and I am even as the Father."' (3
Ne. 28:10.)
4-5. 'I go to the Father, and the way for you to go to the Father is to follow me.'
6. I am the way] Christ is the way. He charts the course. Through him salvation comes. To gain the
presence of the Father men must come to him and walk in his paths. He is the Redeemer and
Exemplar whose cry to all men is: '"Follow thou me" (2 Ne. 31:10), for I am the way.'
I am . . . the truth] He is the embodiment and the personification of truth. His word is truth. (John
17:17.) He knows all things and has all truth. (D. & C. 93:26.) All his acts conform to the truththe
truth that makes men free, the truth by which progression comes, the truth that saves, the truth that
leads to the Father. Christ is the truth.
I am ... the life] "In him was life; and the life was the light of men." (John 1:4.) He is the Creator and
life exists because of him. He is the Redeemer and men are saved from temporal and spiritual death
because of him. All men gain immortal life and the saints inherit eternal life through him. He is truly
the life.
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No man cometh unto the Father but by me] No man who has ever livedneither Jew nor Gentile,
pagan nor Christian, saint nor sinnercan come unto the Father (and thereby be saved) until he
accepts Christ, believes and obeys his laws, and walks in the way he has appointed. He is the Savior
of all men; unto him every knee shall bow and every tongue confess; his is the only name whereby
salvation comes; and his laws apply to all, both in and out of the Christian community. "I am the
Lord thy God; and I give unto you this commandmentthat no man shall come unto the Father but
by me or by my word, which is my law, saith the Lord." (D. & C. 132:12.)
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"Now what is this other Comforter. It is no more nor less than the Lord Jesus Christ himself; and this
is the sum and substance of the whole matter; that when any man obtains this last Comforter, he will
have the personage of Jesus Christ to attend him, or appear unto him from time to time, and even he
will manifest the Father unto him, and they will take up their abode with him, and the visions of the
heavens will be opened unto him, and the Lord will teach him face to face, and he may have a perfect
knowledge of the mysteries of the kingdom of God; and this is the state and place the ancient saints
arrived at when they had such glorious visions Isaiah, Ezekiel, John upon the Isle of Patmos, St. Paul
in the three heavens, and all the saints who held communion with the general assembly and Church
of the First Born." (Teachings, pp. 149-151.)
15. "The highest manifestation of love on man's part is seen in his devotion to God (Deut. 6:4-9); the
next, in his attitude toward his fellow men. (Matt. 22:34-40.) But love of God is found only among
those who love their fellow men. 'If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar: for he
that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen? And
this commandment have we from him, That he who loveth God love his brother also.' (1 John 4:2021.)
"Love is always associated with and manifest through service. 'Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart, with all thy might, mind, and strength; and in the name of Jesus Christ thou shalt
serve him. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.' (D. & C. 59:5-6.) 'If thou lovest me thou shalt
serve me and keep my commandments.' (D. & C. 42:29; John 14:15.)" (Mormon Doctrine, p. 419.)
Love of God is thus measured in terms of service and obedience. Jesus says: "Now this is the
commandment: Repent, all ye ends of the earth, and come unto me and be baptized in my name, that
ye may be sanctified by the reception of the Holy Ghost, that ye may stand spotless before me at the
last day." (3 Ne. 27:20.) Consider in this connection those who cry, Lord, Lord, professing their love
for him with their lips, while remaining outside his Churchdo such really love him?
He commands his saints to pay their tithes and offerings, to seek the attributes of godliness, to keep
themselves morally clean, to serve in the kingdom and testify of the divinity of his great latter-day
work. How great is the love of those who fail or who fall short?
16. Up to this time Jesus has been with them. He has been their Comforter. But his earthly ministry
must needs end; he is leaving soon to be with his Father. Accordingly, he will ask the Father to send
them "another Comforter," even the Holy Ghost, to abide with them forever.
17. Spirit of truth] Both Christ and the Holy Ghost bear this title. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 681-682.)
In this case the Holy Ghost is the one designated.
Whom the world cannot receive] The world cannot receive the Holy Ghost, meaning the gift of the
Holy Ghost, possession of which gift enables that member of the Godhead, as Jesus here says, to
dwell with and be in a person. This companionship is reserved for the saints. People in the world
who are seeking to know where true religion is foundas illustrated by their search to know if the
Book of Mormon is truecan receive a flash of revelation from the Holy Ghost, giving them the
desired knowledge. (Moro. 10:4-5.) But to gain the companionship of that member of the Godhead
they must forsake the world, come into the Church, and receive the bestowal of the Holy Ghost by
the laying on of hands.
And shall be in you] "The Holy Ghost has not a body of flesh and bones, but is a personage of Spirit.
Were it not so, the Holy Ghost could not dwell in us. A man may receive the Holy Ghost, and it may
descend upon him and not tarry with him." (D. & C. 130:22-23.) The Holy Ghost as a personage
does not inhabit the bodies of mortal men, but that member of the Godhead dwells in a man in the
sense that his promptings, the whisperings of the Spirit, find lodgment in the human soul. When the
Holy Spirit speaks to the spirit in man, the Holy Ghost is thereby dwelling in man, for the truths that
man then gives forth are those which have come from the Holy Ghost. "Therefore it is given to abide
in you; the record of heaven; the Comforter; the peaceable things of immortal glory; the truth of all
things; that which quickeneth all things, which maketh alive all things; that which knoweth all
things, and hath all power according to wisdom, mercy, truth, justice, and judgment." (Moses 6:61.)
18. The Lord Jesus Christ himself, the Second Comforter, will appear personally to the faithful.
Mortal men have power while in this life to see God. "Verily, thus saith the Lord: It shall come to
pass that every soul who forsaketh his sins and cometh unto me, and calleth on my name, and
obeyeth my voice, and keepeth my commandments, shall see my face and know that I am." (D. & C.
93:1.) The Brother of Jared, among others, is one who complied with this law and thereby saw the
Lord. "Because of the knowledge of this man," the record says, "he could not be kept from beholding
within the veil; and he saw the finger of Jesus, which, when he saw, he fell with fear; for he knew,
that it was the finger of the Lord; and he had faith no longer, for he knew, nothing doubting.
Wherefore, having this perfect knowledge of God, he could not be kept from within the veil;
therefore he saw Jesus; and he did minister unto him." (Ether 3:19-20.)
19. But ye see me] Jesus will appear to the disciples after his resurrection; and, also, all future
disciples shall have power to see him if faithful in all things.
Because I live, ye shall live also] 'My resurrection bringeth to pass the resurrection of all men; my
attainment of eternal life makes possible the same high status for you; because I live, temporally and
spiritually, ye shall be heirs of these same types of life.'
20. See John 17:20-26.
21. God and Christ reciprocate man's love, and because those who love Christ are the ones who keep
his commandments, they thereby become the ones who shall receive the Second Comforter.
22. The questioner, and for that matter all of the disciples, did not comprehend the teachings Jesus
was giving, nor would they until after his ascent into heaven and the promised descent of the Holy
Ghost, whose mission would be to guide them into all all truth. (John 16:13.)
23. Jesus here announces the supreme earthly reward for personal righteousnessa personal
visitation to man of the Father and the Son. "John 14:23The appearing of the Father and the Son,
in that verse, is a personal appearance; and the idea that the Father and the Son dwell in a man's heart
is an old sectarian notion, and is false." (D. & C. 130:3.)
24. People in the world do not love the Lord, for they do not keep his sayings. Jesus said, 'Repent
and be baptized.' He said, 'Believe and accept the teachings of my servants the prophets.' He said,
'Come follow me and do the things I do.' Until men do these things they do not love him.
The word which ye hear is not mine] 'It did not originate with me; it is the word of the Father, and
has become mine only by adoption.'
26. The Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost] "1. The Holy Ghost is the third member of the
Godhead. He is a Personage of Spirit, a Spirit Person, a Spirit Man, a Spirit Entity. He can be in only
one place at one time, and he does not and cannot transform himself into any other form or image
than that of the Man whom he is, though his power and influence can be manifest at one and the
same time through all immensity. (D. & C. 130:22-23; Teachings, p. 190, 275-276; Gospel Doctrine,
5th ed., pp. 59-62.)
"He is the Comforter, Testator, Revelator, Sanctifier, Holy Spirit, Holy Spirit of Promise, Spirit of
Truth, Spirit of the Lord, and Messenger of the Father and the Son, and his companionship is the
greatest gift that mortal man can enjoy. His mission is to perform all of the functions appertaining to
the various name-titles which he bears. Because he is a Spirit Personage, he has poweraccording to
the eternal laws ordained by the Fatherto perform essential and unique functions for men. In this
dispensation, at least, nothing has been revealed as to his origin or destiny; expressions on these
matters are both speculative and fruitless.
"2. Sometimes the designation Holy Ghost is used to mean, not the Individual or Person who is a
member of the Godhead, but the power or gift of that Personage. After Philip had baptized some
converts in Samaria, Peter and John were sent unto them, 'Who, when they were come down, prayed
for them, that they might receive the Holy Ghost: (For as yet he was fallen upon none of them: only
they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.) Then laid they their hands on them, and they
received the Holy Ghost.' (Acts 8:12-17.) Similarly Paul found some converts in Ephesus who
supposed they had been baptized by a legal administrator. To them Paul said, 'Have ye received the
Holy Ghost since ye believed?' Finding they were misinformed as to their church status, Paul
arranged for a proper baptism. Then 'when Paul had laid his hands upon them, the Holy Ghost came
on them; and they spake with tongues, and prophesied.' (Acts 19:1-7.) In both of these instances the
scriptures speak of receiving the Holy Ghost, meaning the receipt and enjoyment following baptism
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of the gift and power of the Holy Ghost. Nephi spoke similarly when he said that the Holy Ghost 'is
the gift of God unto all those who diligently seek him, as well in times of old as in the time that he
should manifest himself unto the children of men.' (1 Ne. 10:17.)" (Mormon Doctrine, p. 329.)
Whom the Father will send in my name] The Holy Ghost acts in the place and stead of Christ,
saying what the Son would say, revealing what he would reveal, strengthening whom he would
strengthen, enlightening whom he would enlighten. His words are the words of Christ, and when
men or angels speak by the power of the Holy Ghost, they speak the words of Christ. (2 Ne. 32:2-3.)
Indeed, so completely and wholly does this Spirit member of the Godhead represent Christ that he
can with propriety speak in the first person as though he were the Son. "And in that day the Holy
Ghost fell upon Adam, which beareth record of the Father and the Son, saying: I am the Only
Begotten of the Father from the be ginning, henceforth and forever, that as thou hast fallen thou
mayest be redeemed, and all mankind, even as many as will." (Moses 5:9.)
He shall teach you all things] All things? Yes, all things; and all things means all things. "And by
the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know the truth of all things." (Moro. 10:5.) The revealed word
says God knows all things and has all truth, which means there is nothing he does not know and no
truth he does not possess. Consequently, now or hereafter, in time or eternity, the Holy Ghost shall
teach all things to deserving and eligible students.
And bring all things to your remembrance] By this means came the gospel accounts of Jesus'
ministry. No man, of himself can remember and record, with accuracy and perfection, conversations
had or sermons heard in former days or years. But where Jesus and his ministry are concerned, these
things were brought back to the remembrance of the authoring disciples, which means in effect they
were receiving revelation at the time the gospels were recorded by them.
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Jews; not merely the absence of war; not an enforced or voluntary armistice between armed
belligerents; not worldly peace. Rather, an inner peace born of the sure conviction of the divinity of
the Lord's earthly kingdom; a peace which carries an assurance of a better world to come; a peace
that dwells in the souls of men though they may be in the midst of war and turmoil.
Let not your heart be troubled] See John 14:1.
28. Ye would rejoice] Jesus and his intimate friends are to part company for a time. In the very
nature of things dear friends sorrow at separation. When our loved ones die we weep. And yet
because Jesus goes back to the Father, he will be crowned with glory and exaltation. In connection
with his death, resurrection, and return to his eternal throne, he will do the things which will bring
blessings and rewards to all men. Surely the disciples, from the eternal perspective, should have
rejoiced at this; and in a similar sense we too should rejoice when righteous loved ones go on to their
abodes in the realms of glory.
My Father is greater than I Are they not one? Do they not both possess all power, all wisdom, all
knowledge, all truth? Have they not both gained all godly attributes in their fulness and perfection?
Verily, yes, for the revelations so announce and the Prophet so taught. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 492493.) And yet our Lord's Father is greater than he, greater in kingdoms and dominions, greater in
principalities and exaltations. One does and shall rule over the other everlastingly. Though Jesus is
himself God, he is also the Son of God, and as such the Father is his God as he is ours. "I ascend
unto my Father, and your Father; and to my God, and your God" (John 20:17), he is soon to say.
Joseph Smith, with inspired insight, tells how Jesus is God's heir; how he receives and possesses all
that the Father hath, and is therefore (as Paul said) "equal with God" (Philip. 2:6), and yet at the same
time is subject to and less than the Father. These are his words: "What did Jesus do? Why; I do the
things I saw my Father do when worlds came rolling into existence. My Father worked out his
kingdom with fear and trembling, and I must do the same; and when I get my kingdom, I shall
present it to my Father, so that he may obtain kingdom upon kingdom, and it will exalt him in glory.
He will then take a higher exaltation, and I will take his place, and thereby become exalted myself.
So that Jesus treads in the tracks of his Father, and inherits what God did before; and God is thus
glorified and exalted in the salvation and exaltation of all his children." (Teachings, pp. 347-348.)
29. 'And now I have told you in advance that I shall die and be resurrected; that I shall then return to
my Father; that later I shall come againall to strengthen your faith in me when these things do take
place.'
30. Prince of this world] Lucifer, "the prince of darkness, who is of this world." (I. V. verse 30.)
I. V. John 14:30. Hath no power over me, but he hath power over you] 'I have overcome the world,
so that the prince of darkness, who is of this world, has no power over me, but he still has power over
you because you have not as yet overcome the world.'
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31. I love the Father] Why? Because he kept the Father's commandments; because he did all things
as directed by his Holy Parent.
Matt. 26:30. Sung an hymn] This was part of the prescribed Passover procedure and would have
been Psalms 115- 118, which accompanied the fourth Passover cup. See Matt. 26:26-29.
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tree, whose fruit was desirable to make one happy. And it came to pass that I did go forth and partake
of the fruit thereof; and I beheld that it was most sweet, above all that I ever before tasted. Yea, and I
beheld that the fruit thereof was white, to exceed all the whiteness that I had ever seen. And as I
partook of the fruit thereof it filled my soul with exceeding great joy." (1 Ne. 8:10-12.)
3-6. "In superb allegory the Lord thus proceeded to illustrate the vital relationship between the
apostles and himself, and between himself and the Father, by the figure of a vinegrower, a vine,
and its branches. . . . A grander analogy is not to be found in the world's literature. Those ordained
servants of the Lord were as helpless and useless without him as is a bough severed from the tree. As
the branch is made fruitful only by virtue of the nourishing sap it receives from the rooted trunk, and
if cut away or broken off withers, dries, and becomes utterly worthless except as fuel for the burning,
so those men, though ordained to the Holy Apostleship, would find themselves strong and fruitful in
good works, only as they remained in steadfast communion with the Lord. Without Christ what were
they, but unschooled Galileans, some of them fishermen, one a publican, the rest of undistinguished
attainments, and all of them weak mortals? As branches of the Vine they were at that hour clean and
healthful, through the instructions and authoritative ordinances with which they had been blessed,
and by the reverent obedience they had manifested." (Talmage, pp. 604-606.)
7. See Matt. 18:19-20; Luke 17:5-6; John 14:12-14.
8. See John 13:31-35.
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This promise, in principle, is available to all saints, for "Men are, that they might have joy" (2 Ne.
2:25), and that God who is no respecter of persons desires to reward all his children with the choicest
blessings of time and eternity. "Obtaining exaltation consists in gaining a fulness of joy; it is to enter
into the joy of the Lord. (D. & C. 51:19.) The saints are to 'reap eternal joy' for all their sufferings
(D. & C. 109:76), though their joy is not to be full in this life. (D. & C. 101:36.) A fulness of joy is
found only among resurrected, exalted beings. (D. & C. 93:33.) 'Those who have died in Jesus Christ
may expect to enter into all that fruition of joy when they come forth, which they possessed or
anticipated here.' (Teachings, p. 295.) Christ himself endured all things, including the cross, 'for the
joy that was set before him' (Heb. 12:2), and he has obtained a fulness of joy. (3 Ne. 17:20;
28:10.)" (Mormon Doctrine, p. 364.)
12-13. As with all goodly graces and godly attributes, love comes in varying degrees and amounts;
and also, as with all these, love was perfected in the person and life of the great Exemplar.
14-15. Friends of the Lord, what a salutation this is! Our Lord's friends are those who, having
overcome all things, having kept his commandments to the full, having made their callings and
elections sure, are the ones he will call to dwell and associate with him in glorious exaltation.
This same gladsome salutation has been given to men in this dispensation also. To selected elders of
his latter-day kingdom came these words from his mouth: "As I said unto mine apostles, even so I
say unto you, for you are mine apostles, even God's high priests; ye are they whom my Father hath
given me; ye are my friends, . . . for from henceforth I shall call you friends." (D. & C. 84:63, 77.)
Also: "Verily, I say unto my servant Joseph Smith, Jun., or in other words, I will call you friends, for
you are my friends, and ye shall have an inheritance with meI called you servants for the world's
sake, and ye are their servants for my sake." (D. & C. 93:45-46.)
15. All things that I have heard of my Father I have made known to you] This statement,
undoubtedly part of a digested and summarized account of Jesus' statements to his friends, must be
interpreted and understood along with the statement he was shortly to make about saying many
additional things to them. (John 16:12-15.) The meaning is: 'I have told you and will tell you all
things I have heard from my Father which you are able to bear at this time. When you receive the
enlightening power of the Holy Ghost, then, through him as my revealer and witness, I shall have
many more things to teach you.'
16. Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you] Christ chooses his own ministers. Men can no
more choose to serve as apostles, prophets, elders, or ministers of spiritual concerns, than they can
appoint themselves kings, presidents, rulers or magistrates in civil affairs. True ministers of revealed
religion become such, not because of some feeling (falsely considered to be a "call") that comes into
their hearts, but because the Almighty by revelation selects them for his service, by his own voice,
through the ministering of angels, or by the power of the Holy Ghost operating upon prophets
previously called.
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Ordained you] God's ministers are ordained. They have the holy priesthood conferred upon them
and are ordained by the laying on of hands to officiate in specific offices and callings. Priesthood is
the power and authority of God delegated to man on earth to actin all things for the salvation of men;
it is divided into two ordersAaronic and Melchizedek. These apostles had been chosen by
revelation and ordained by Jesus to their high and holy ministry in the Melchizedek Order. And as it
is with them, so it is with all true representatives of the Lord, for Paul said: "No man taketh this
honour unto himself, but he that is called of God, as was Aaron." (Heb. 5:4.) Unless the Lord's
ministers actually have this authority from the Lord they cannot cast out devils, heal the sick, confer
the Holy Ghost, perform a baptism that will be recognized in heaven, or do any of the host of things
reserved for performance by legal administrators in the Lord's earthly kingdom. See Luke 9:1-6.
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man, become new creatures of the Holy Ghost, and gain the rebirth of the Spirit. Alma taught that
since the fall of Adam all mankind has 'become carnal, sensual, and devilish, by nature.' (Alma
42:10.)
"The angelic ministrant to King Benjamin said: 'The natural man is an enemy to God, and has been
from the fail of Adam, and will be, forever and ever, unless he yields to the enticings of the Holy
Spirit, and putteth off the natural man and becometh a saint through the atonement of Christ the
Lord.' (Mosiah 3:19.)
"Members of the Church have the goal of overcoming the world. 'Love not the world,' John said,
'neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in
him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is
not of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that
doeth the will of God abideth for ever.' (1 John 2:15-17.)
"James wrote: 'Ye adulterers and adulteresses, know ye not that the friendship of the world is emnity
with God? whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God.' (Jas. 4:4.)
"The end of the world is the end of unrighteousness or of worldliness as we know it, and this will be
brought about by 'the destruction of the wicked.' (Jos. Smith 1:4.) When our world ends and the
millennial era begins, there will be a new heaven and a new earth. (Isa. 65:17-25; D. & C. 101:2324.) Lust, carnality, and sensuousness of every sort will cease, for it will be the end of the
world." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 767-768.)
20-21. As with the Master, so with the servant: persecution is always the heritage of the faithful. The
Lord's ministers in all dispensations have suffered for his name's sake. For instance, speaking to
Joseph Smith of his sufferings and persecutions the Lord said: "If thou art called to pass through
tribulation; if thou art in perils among false brethren; if thou art in perils among robbers; if thou art in
perils by land or by sea; If thou art accused with all manner of false accusations; if thine enemies fall
upon thee; if they tear thee from the society of thy father and mother and brethren and sisters; and if
with a drawn sword thine enemies tear thee from the bosom of thy wife, and of thine offspring, and
thine elder son, although but six years of age, shall cling to thy garments, and shall say, My father,
my father, why can't you stay with us? O, my father, what are the men going to do with you? and if
then he shall be thrust from thee by the sword, and thou be dragged to prison, and thine enemies
prowl around thee like wolves for the blood of the lamb; And if thou shouldst be cast into the pit, or
into the hands of murderers, and the sentence of death passed upon thee; if thou be cast into the deep;
if the billowing surge conspire against thee; if fierce winds become thine enemy; if the heavens
gather blackness, and all the elements combine to hedge up the way; and above all, if the very jaws
of hell shall gape open the mouth wide after thee, know thou, my son, that all these things shall give
thee experience, and shall be for thy good. The Son of Man hath descended below them all. Art thou
greater than he?" (D. & C. 122:5-8.)
22-25. See John 9:40-41. Men "become transgressors" when they reject added light and truth. (D. &
C. 82:3-4.) If Jesus had not taught and ministered among the Jews, they would not have been
condemned for rejecting him. As it was they now were convicted of hating the Father because they
hated the Son.
25. They hated me without a cause] In the original, David seemingly said it of himself (Ps. 69:4),
but Jesus here gives it a Messianic meaning by applying it to himself, thus illustrating again how
Messianic prophecies are to be interpreted. See John 13:18.
26. See John 16:5-15. 27. See Luke 24:48.
John 16:2. Whosoever killeth you will thing that he doeth God service] Sincerity has almost nothing
to do with gaining salvation. Men who slay the saints can be just as sincere as those who thus
become martyrs. Men can believe so devoutly in falsehood that they will even lay down their own
lives for it. What does it matter that those who killed the prophets, either ancient or modern, thought
they did God service? The thing that counts is truth, pure God-given truth.
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I will send him unto you] Earlier Jesus had said he would ask the Father to send the Holy Ghost.
(John 14:16, 26.) Now he says he will do it himself. Both statements are descriptive of the fact. The
Holy Ghost is the third member of the Godhead and as such does the bidding of both the Father and
the Son.
8. Reprove] The Greek word means to prove a person in the wrong, hence to convict.
9-11. These are difficult verses which have come to us in such a condensed and abridged form as to
make interpretation difficult. The seeming meaning is: 'When you receive the companionship of the
Spirit, so that you speak forth what he reveals to you, then your teachings will convict the world of
sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment. The world will be convicted of sin for rejecting me, for
not believing your Spirit-inspired testimony that I am the Son of God through whom salvation
comes. They will be convicted for rejecting your testimony of my righteousnessfor supposing I am
a blasphemer, a deceiver, and an imposterwhen in fact I have gone to my Father, a thing I could
not do unless my works were true and righteous altogether. They will be convicted of false judgment
for rejecting your testimony against the religions of the day, and for choosing instead to follow
Satan, the prince of this world, who himself, with all his religious philosophies, will be judged and
found wanting.'
12. Ye cannot bear them now] The things of God can only be understood by the power of the
Spirit. (1 Cor. 2:11-16.) Until the disciples received that Spirit, they would not be able to "bear" or
understand all the mysteries of the kingdom.
13. The Spirit of truth] See John 14:17.
He will guide you into all truth] This promise is made to the saints, not to the world. Jesus had just
told them that the world could not receive the Holy Ghost, meaning the gift or the companionship of
that member of the Godhead. (John 14:17.) Now our Lord is saying that the saints can have that
companionship, and through it can come to a knowledge of all things. People outside the Church can
and do receive revelation from the Holy Ghost telling them of the divinity of the Lord's work. It is in
this way that sincere investigators get to know that the Book of Mormon is true, for instance. And if
they, then, come into the Church and receive the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands,
they have made available to them the constant companionship of the Holy Spirit. Then the promise
of Moroni can be fulfilled: "And by the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know the truth of all
things." (Moro. 10:4-5.)
Joseph Smith said: "No man can receive the Holy Ghost without receiving revelations. The Holy
Ghost is a revelator." (Teachings, p. 328.) Also: "A person may profit by noticing the first intimation
of the spirit of revelation; for instance, when you feel pure intelligence flowing into you, it may give
you sudden strokes of ideas, so that by noticing it, you may find it fulfilled the same day or soon;
that is, those things that were presented unto your minds by the Spirit of God, will come to pass; and
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thus by learning [to recognize] the Spirit of God and understanding it, you may grow into the
principle of revelation, until you become perfect in Christ Jesus." (Teachings, p. 151.)
"I will tell you in your mind and in your heart, by the Holy Ghost, which shall come upon you and
which shall dwell in your heart. Now, behold, this is the spirit of revelation." (D. & C. 8:2-3.)
He shall not speak of himself] The Father knows all things, the Son also. Jesus "received a fulness
of truth, yea, even of all truth," and was "glorified in truth" and knew "all things." (D. & C. 93:2628.) As their minister, the Holy Ghost speaks for the Father and the Son, revealing what they know,
which is "all things," and "all truth."
He will shew you things to come] "And to them will I reveal all mysteries, yea, all the hidden
mysteries of my kingdom from days of old, and for ages to come, will I make known unto them the
good pleasure of my will concerning all things pertaining to my kingdom. Yea, even the wonders of
eternity shall they know, and things to come will I show them, even the things of many generations.
And their wisdom shall be great, and their understanding reach to heaven; and before them the
wisdom of the wise shall perish, and the understanding of the prudent shall come to naught. For by
my Spirit will I enlighten them, and by my power will I make known unto them the secrets of my will
yea, even those things which eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor yet entered into the heart of
man." (D. & C. 76:7-10.)
He shall testify of me (John 14:26)] Salvation centers in Christ. The Holy Ghost is Christ's revelator
to bear witness of his divine Sonship and of the saving truths of his gospel. "The Holy Ghost," Nephi
said, "witnesses of the Father and the Son." (2 Ne. 31:18.) In Abraham's record this third member of
the Godhead was called "God the third, the witness or Testator." (Teachings, p. 190.) As a Spirit
personage, the Holy Spirit, by laws which are ordained, has power to speak to the spirit within man
and to convey truth with absolute certainty. This revealed knowledge becomes a personal testimony
to the recipient. By definition a testimony of the gospel is to know by personal revelation from the
Holy Ghost that Jesus is the Christ through whom salvation comes; that Joseph Smith is the prophet
who revealed anew to the world the saving truths of the gospel; and that the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints is the kingdom of God on earth.
14. He shall glorify me] The Father and the Son, through their ministries, as Jesus has just
announced, glorify each other. (John 13:31-32; 14:13.) Now Jesus says the Holy Ghost shall glorify
the Sona thing which comes to pass because men believe the testimony of the Holy Ghost, so live
as to gain exaltation, and thereby add dominions and kingdoms to the endless domains of the Father
and the Son. See John 13:31-35.
15. All things that the Father hath are mine] This is true of Christ and of all exalted beings; it is
the doctrine of joint-heirship. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 361-362.) Each person who magnifies his
calling in the Melchizedek Priesthood receives this promise: "All that my Father hath shall be given
more should they pray to the Father and not to so-called saints who are then expected to intercede
with the Lord for them.
28. From the Father . . . to the Father] It offends all sense and reason, and is an irrational wrenching
of the plain meaning of words, to suppose that these repeated references to the Father and the Son as
distinct individuals can be harmonized with the trinitarian creeds of modern churches. How the
Father and the Son can be two manifestations of the same thing when they travel back and forth to
each other is more than common logic can conceive.
30. Needest not that any man should ask thee] Jesus had read their thoughts and answered their
unspoken questions, thus strengthening their faith in him.
32. See Matt. 26:31-35. 33. In me ye might have peace] See John 14:27. Be of good cheer] A
perfect Christian salutation! The gospel banishes doubt and gloom. Hope and joy fill the hearts of
those who follow Him who overcame the world.
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Father in all things. Glorify thy Son] Jesus prays for himself. He asks for exaltation in the Father's
kingdom, thus setting a pattern for prayer which all men should follow.
2. Power over all flesh] All things are subject to Jesus. He
is the Creator and Redeemer. He judges all men. (John 5:22.) He is "the Lord Omnipotent who
reigneth, who was, and is from all eternity to all eternity." (Mosiah 3:5.) He should give eternal life]
Christ rewards men; the Father has placed all things in his hands. Salvation comes because of the
Son. "There is no flesh that can dwell in the presence of God, save it be through the merits, and
mercy, and grace of the Holy Messiah." (2 Ne. 2:8.)
3. Life eternal] Also called everlasting life. "As used in the scriptures, eternal life is the name given
to the kind of life that our Eternal Father lives. The word eternal, as used in the name eternal life, is a
noun and not an adjective. It is one of the formal names of Deity (Moses 1:3; 7:35; D. & C. 19:11)
and has been chosen by him as the particular name to identify the kind of life that he lives. He being
God, the life he lives is God's life; and his name (in the noun sense) being Eternal, the kind of life he
lives is eternal life. Thus: God's life is eternal life; eternal life is God's lifethe expressions are
synonymous.
"Accordingly, eternal life is not a name that has reference only to the unending duration of a future
life; immortality is to live forever in the resurrected state, and by the grace of God all men will gain
this unending continuance of life. But only those who obey the fulness of the gospel law will inherit
eternal life. (D. & C. 29:43-44.) It is 'the greatest of all the gifts of God' (D. & C. 14:7), for it is the
kind, status, type, and quality of life that God himself enjoys. Thus those who gain eternal life
receive exaltation; they are sons of God, joint-heirs with Christ, members of the Church of the
Firstborn; they overcome all things, have all power, and receive the fulness of the Father. They are
gods." (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 219-220.)
Included within eternal life is eternal lives meaning "a continuation of the seeds," or a "continuation
of the lives" forever. (D. & C. 132:19, 22.) In speaking of having spirit progeny forever, which is a
natural outgrowth of the doctrine of eternal marriage, the Lord taught the truth involved by
paraphrasing the language of his Intercessory Prayer in this way: "This is eternal livesto know the
only wise and true God, and Jesus Christ, whom he hath sent." (D. & C. 132:24.)
Know thee the only true God] It is one thing to know about God and another to know him. We know
about him when we learn that he is a personal being in whose image man is created; when we learn
that the Son is in the express image of his Father's person; when we learn that both the Father and the
Son possess certain specified attributes and powers. But we know them, in the sense of gaining
eternal life, when we enjoy and experience the same things they do. To know God is to think what he
thinks, to feel what he feels, to have the power he possesses, to comprehend the truths he
understands, and to do what he does. Those who know God become like him, and have his kind of
life, which is eternal life.
4-5. Jesus "was like unto God" (Abra. 3:24) before the world was; he had glory and dominion then;
and he then became, under the direction of the Father, the Creator of this earth and of worlds without
number. (Moses 1:31-33.) At the appointed time he came to this particular earth to work out both his
own salvation and the atonement which would make salvation available to all men.
In this prayer, speaking as though the atoning sacrifice had already been made, Jesus is certifying to
the Father that the Son has done the appointed work, and asks that as a consequence he be given
again the state of dignity and honor he once held. That he was required to work out his own
salvation, and did in fact do so, is set forth by John in these words: "And he bore record, saying: I
saw his glory, that he was in the beginning, before the world was; . . . And I, John, bear record that I
beheld his glory, as the glory of the Only Begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth, even the
Spirit of truth, which came and dwelt in the flesh, and dwelt among us. And I, John, saw that he
received not of the fulness at the first, but received grace for grace; And he received not of the
fulness at first, but continued from grace to grace, until he received a fulness; And thus he was called
the Son of God, because he received not of the fulness at the first. ... And I, John, bear record that he
received a fulness of the glory of the Father; And he received all power, both in heaven and on earth,
and the glory of the Father was with him, for he dwelt in him." (D. & C. 93:7, 11-14, 16-17.)
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believe in me; and thou seest that they believe in me because thou hearest them, and they pray unto
me; and they pray unto me because I am with them." (3 Ne. 19:20-22.)
9-10. "Father, I thank thee that thou hast purified those whom I have chosen, because of their faith,
and I pray for them, and also for them who shall believe on their words, that they may be purified in
me, through faith on their words, even as they are purified in me. Father, I pray not for the world, but
for those whom thou hast given me out of the world, because of their faith, that they may be purified
in me, that I may be in them as thou, Father, art in me, that we may be one, that I may be glorified in
them." (3 Ne. 19:28-29.)
9. I pray not for the world] Though some prayers may be offered for the world, Jesus' intercessory
pleadings are reserved for those who believe in him and who keep his commandments; they are not
for the world. (D. & C. 45:5.) Man is reconciled to God on conditions of faith and repentance. Jesus
petitions the Father to give eternal life to those who believe in him. If those in the world repent, then
they are blessed because of Christ's entreaties for them. He makes intercession for all men in the
sense that it is available if men believe and obey his law.
11. That they may be one, as we are] See John 17:20-26. 12. The son of perdition] Judas, who was
probably not a son of perdition in the sense of one who is damned forever, but in the sense that he
was a son or follower of Satan in this life. See Matt. 26:21-25.
14. Thy word] The gospel; the plan of salvation; the announcement that salvation comes because of
the Son; the message that men must have faith in Christ, repent of their sins, be baptized, receive the
gift of the Holy Ghost, and endure in righteousness to the end, if they are to be saved in his kingdom.
The world] See John 15:18.
15. To take the saints out of the world before they have passed the assigned tests of mortality would
defeat the purposes of earth life. Men are here to be tried and tested, to gain experience, to overcome
the world. It is by resisting evil and living by a higher standard than the world has that men fill the
full measure of their mortal creation.
17. Thy word is truth] See John 18:38.
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Lord's purposes on earth and gain their own exaltation in the life to come.
'Be one!' To keep this command ever before his people the Lord thunders it into their ears by using
himself and the eternal Godhead as the illustration of what unity is and how it operates. 'Be one, even
as I and my Father are one; unite together as the Gods of heaven unite. Do not go your separate
ways; rally round one standard. Believe the same doctrines; teach the same truths; testify of the same
God; walk in the same paths; live the same laws; hold the same priesthood; marry in the same
celestial order; become one with me. Be one!'
Is it any wonder then that the revelations say: "The Lord our God is one Lord." (Deut. 6:4.) "This
is . . . the only and true doctrine of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, which is one
God, without end." (2 Ne. 31:21.) "And the honor be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy
Ghost, which is one God." (Testimony of the Three Witnesses.) "I and my Father are one." (John
10:30.)
Using himself as the perfect example, Deity is teaching unity to his people. Three mortal high priests
comprise the First Presidency of the Church. Their goal is to be one as the three separate members of
the eternal Godhead are one. Millions of weak and struggling mortals belong to the Church; Deity
expects them all to be one as the Gods of heaven are one.
Since those who are one think and believe and act alike, they thus possess the same characteristics
and attributes, or in other words the same spirit dwells in them. Hence, in a figurative sense they are
in each other, or they dwell in each other, even as God and Christ dwell in each other for the same
reason.
To pretend to believe that the Father and the Son are one in some mysterious and incomprehensible
way so that the two designations are simply different manifestations of the same thing, is to wrest the
scriptures, mangle the plain language they contain, and do away with some of the best symbolism
and most perfect teaching known to man. Three Gods are one as endless millions of men should be
oneand in no other sense.
Those who live the perfect law of unity "become the sons of God, even one in me as I am one in the
Father, as the Father is one in me, that we may be one." (D. & C. 35:2.) To Adam the Lord said:
"Behold, thou art one in me, a son of God; and thus may all become my sons."(Moses 6:68.)
20-21. "And now Father, I pray unto thee for them, and also for all those who shall believe on their
words, that they may believe in me, that I may be in them as thou, Father, art in me, that we may be
one." (3 Ne. 19:23.)
21, 23. That the world may believe (know) that thou hast sent me] Unity among the saints stands
as a witness of the divinity of the Church and therefore of the divine Sonship of him whose Church it
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is.
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32. When thou art converted] "Conversion is morefar morethan merely changing one's belief
from that which is false to that which is true; it is more than the acceptance of the verity of gospel
truths, than the acquirement of a testimony. To convert is to change from one status to another, and
gospel conversion consists in the transformation of man from his fallen and carnal state to a state of
saintliness.
"A convert is one who has put off the natural man, yielded to the enticings of the Holy Spirit, and
become 'a saint through the atonement of Christ the Lord.' Such a person has become 'as a child,
submissive, meek, humble, patient, full of love, willing to submit to all things which the Lord seeth
fit to inflict upon him, even as a child doth submit to his father.' (Mosiah 3:19.) He has become a
new creature of the Holy Ghost: the old creature has been converted or changed into a new one. He
has been born again: where once he was spiritually dead, he has been regenerated to a state of
spiritual life. (Mosiah 27:24-29.) In real conversion, which is essential to salvation (Matt. 18:3), the
convert not only changes his beliefs, casting off the false traditions of the past and accepting the
beauties of revealed religion, but he changes his whole way of life, and the nature and structure of his
very being is quickened and changed by the power of the Holy Ghost.
"Peter is the classic example of how the power of conversion works on receptive souls. During our
Lord's mortal ministry, Peter had a testimony, born of the Spirit, of the divinity of Christ and of the
great plan of salvation which was in Christ. 'Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God,' he said,
as the Holy Ghost gave him utterance. (Matt. 16:13-19.) When others fell away, Peter stood forth
with the apostolic assurance, 'We believe and are sure that thou art that Christ, the Son of the living
God.' (John 6:69.) Peter knew, and his knowledge came by revelation.
"But Peter was not converted, because he had not become a new creature of the Holy Ghost. Rather,
long after Peter had gained a testimony, and on the very night Jesus was arrested, he said to Peter:
'When thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.' (Luke 22:32.) Immediately thereafter, and
regardless of his testimony, Peter denied that he knew Christ. (Luke 22:54-62.) After the crucifixion,
Peter went fishing, only to be called back to the ministry by the risen Lord. (John 21:1-17.) Finally
on the day of Pentecost the promised spiritual endowment was received; Peter and all the faithful
disciples became new creatures of the Holy Ghost; they were truly converted; and their subsequent
achievements manifest the fixity of their conversions. (Acts 3; 4.)" (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 150-151.)
Matt. 26:34. Thou shalt deny me] See Matt. 26:69-75.
Luke 22:35-36. See Matt. 10:9-10. Jesus here revokes the command previously given to go forth
without purse or scrip. Conditions have changed; what was once required is no longer expedient all
of which shows the need of continuing revelation so the Lord's people will always know how to act
in the circumstances confronting them at any given moment.
When faced with persecution, do the Lord's ministers turn the other cheek or raise the sword in their
own defense? Do they go forth supplying their own needs or do they rely for their daily wants upon
the generosity of those among whom they minister? Who but God can answer such questions, for the
answers depend on a full knowledge both of present conditions and of the future. Jesus counseled
one course at one time and the opposite at another. There is, thus, no sure guide for the Lord's people
except present day revelation.
37. Isaiah prophecied that when the Messiah should 'pour out his soul unto death,' he would then be
"numbered with the transgressors" (Isa. 53:12), referring to the two thieves who would be crucified
with him. With the end at hand, Jesus again announces his coming death and identifies himself as the
Messiah of Isaiah's prophecy.
38. Jesus had authorized the disciples to defend themselves in the days of turmoil ahead. Not fully
understanding they here offer two swords to defend him. He, however, has made the election to die
and so dismisses their offer with an, 'Enough-of-this-kind-of-talk' statement.
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globe, Gethsemane was thus chosen as the one for the atoning ordeal in which the Lord "suffered the
pain of all men, that all men might repent and come unto him." (D. & C. 18:11.)
I. V. Mark 14:36-38. Even at this late hour, because they had not yet received the gift of the Holy
Ghost, the disciples wondered if Jesus was really the Messiah. Flashes of revelation had come in
times past so certifying, but as yet they could not have available the constant companionship of that
Holy Ghost whose mission it is to bear record of the Son. How important it is that men receive and
enjoy the gift of the Holy Ghost!
Mark 14:34. Sorrowful unto death] "A man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: . . . Surely he hath
borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows." (Isa. 53:3-4.) And here, at this moment, while he prayed
in this garden, was to be centered in him the agony and sorrow of the whole world. Sorrow is the
child of sin, and as he took upon himself the sins of the world, he thereby bore the weight of the
world's sorrows.
Luke 22:42. Not my will, but thine, be done] The Beloved Son charted his course in pre-existence;
"Father, thy will be done, and the glory be thine forever," were his words in that council when he
was chosen to be the Redeemer. (Moses 4:1-4.) Now at the climax of his mortal ministry he
continues to walk in the path of his primeval choice. Soon, as a resurrected being, he will look back
on this hour and be able to say: "I have drunk out of that bitter cup which the Father hath given me,
and have glorified the Father in taking upon me the sins of the world, in the which I have suffered
the will of the Father in all things from the beginning." (3 Ne. 11:11.)
44. He prayed more earnestly] How perfect the example is! Though he were the Son of God, yet
even he, having been strengthened by an angelic ministrant, prays with increased faith; even he
grows in grace and ascends to higher heights of spiritual unity with the Father. How well Paul wrote
of this hour: "In the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong
crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard in that he feared;
Though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered; And being made
perfect, he became the author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him." (Heb. 5:7-9.)
His sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground] What agony is
involved in this no mortal man can know. An angel had foretold it to King Benjamin a century and
more before: "He shall suffer temptations, and pain of body, hunger, thirst, and fatigue, even more
than man can suffer, except it be unto death; for behold, blood cometh from every pore, so great shall
be his anguish for the wickedness and the abominations of his people." (Mosiah 3:7.)
"Christ's agony in the garden is unfathomable by the finite mind, both as to intensity and cause. ... He
struggled and groaned under a burden such as no other being who has lived on earth might even
conceive as possible. It was not physical pain, nor mental anguish alone, that caused him to suffer
such torture as to produce an extrusion of blood from every pore; but a spiritual agony of soul such
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as only God was capable of experiencing. No other man, however great his powers of physical or
mental endurance, could have suffered so; for his human organism would have succumbed, and
syncope would have produced unconsciousness and welcome oblivion. .
"In some manner, actual and terribly real though to man incomprehensible, the Savior took upon
himself the burden of the sins of mankind from Adam to the end of the world. Modern revelation
assists us to a partial understanding of the awful experience. In March 1830, the glorified Lord, Jesus
Christ, thus spake: 'For behold, I, God, have suffered these things for all, that they might not suffer if
they would repent, but if they would not repent, they must suffer even as I, which suffering caused
myself, even God, the greatest of all, to tremble because of pain, and to bleed at every pore, and to
suffer both body and spirit: and would that I might not drink the bitter cup and shrinknevertheless,
glory be to the Father, and I partook and finished my preparations unto the children of men.'
"From the terrible conflict in Gethsemane, Christ emerged a victor. Though in the dark tribulation of
that fearful hour he had pleaded that the bitter cup be removed from his lips, the request, however oft
repeated, was always conditional; the accomplishment of the Father's will was never lost sight of as
the object of the Son's supreme desire. The further tragedy of the night, and the cruel inflictions that
awaited him on the morrow, to culminate in the frightful tortures of the cross, could not exceed the
bitter anguish through which he had successfully passed." (Talmage, pp. 613-614.)
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After the traitor's kiss, Jesus said, according to Matthew, "Friend, wherefore art thou come?" Mark is
silent as to any response, and Luke quotes the Lord as saying, "Judas, betrayest thou the Son of man
with a kiss?" Following the betrayal, John alone has Jesus step forth and ask, "Whom seek ye?" and
then admit freely that he was Jesus of Nazareth whom they sought. John, also, is the sole recorder of
the fact that the multitude went backward and fell to the ground, apparently unable to exercise power
over Jesus unless permitted to do so. Thereupon, as John alone recounts, Jesus again asked, "Whom
seek ye?" He was again told and again identified himself. He then invited the soldiers to take him,
asking them to let his disciples go, that, as John alone editorializes, "The saying might be fulfilled,
which he spake, Of them which thou gavest me have I lost none."
At this point Matthew and Mark tell of the actual arrest, and Luke alone records that the apostles
asked, "Lord, shall we smite with the sword?" Matthew and Mark note that one of the disciples drew
the sword and smote off the ear of the servant of the high priest. From Luke and John we learn it was
the right ear, while John only names the impulsive defender as Peter and the servant as Malchus.
Matthew then records Jesus statement: "Put up again thy sword into his place: for all they that take
the sword shall perish with the sword," but makes no mention (nor does Mark) of any healing of the
wounded servant. Matthew is the sole preserver of Jesus' declaration: "Thinkest thou that I cannot
now pray to my Father, and he shall presently give me more than twelve legions of angels? But how
then shall the scriptures be fulfilled, that thus it must be?" John, however, preserves a different part
of Jesus' response to Peter, "Put up thy sword into the sheath: the cup which my Father hath given
me, shall I not drink it?" and Luke only tells of the restoration of the severed ear.
At this point John's account ceases, but Mark and Luke record, as seemingly occurring at this point,
Jesus' objection to the illegality of his arrest. They preserve his taunting statement to the arresting
officers for not taking him when he taught openly in the temple. Mark has Jesus explain that his
arrest was arranged to fulfill the scriptures, while Luke records his somewhat ironical conclusion,
"This is your hour, and the power of darkness." Matthew, however, seems to place Jesus' comments
about his arrest somewhat later, "In that same hour," apparently after the multitude increased; and he
too preserves the comment about fulfilling the scriptures. Matthew and Mark then recite that the
disciples forsook Jesus and fled, and Mark alone adds an illustration showing the necessity of such
flight. An unnamed young man (perhaps Mark himself) escaped arrest by leaving the linen cloth that
covered him and fleeing naked into the night.
John 18:3. Judas guided a small army well supplied with weapons. A band consisted of some six
hundred Roman soldiers with a tribune at their head. The Roman overlords were taking no chance on
an uproar during the week of the Passover. Accompanying the soldiers was a "great multitude,"
perhaps thousands in number. This was no secret arrest, no private kidnapping; all Jerusalem would
be aware of the taking into custody of the city's most noted inhabitant. Probably Judas would have
led the entire "army" to the site of the Upper Room and not finding Jesus and the disciples would
have guided them on to Gethsemane, for "Judas knew the place: for Jesus ofttimes resorted thither
with his disciples." (John 18:2.)
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Luke 22:48. Betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss?] A more traitorous token could not have
been chosen. Among the prophets of old, among the saints of that day, and even among the Jews, a
kiss was a symbol of that love and fellowship which existed where pure religion was or should have
been found. When the Lord sent Aaron to meet Moses, he found him "in the mount of God, and
kissed him." (Ex. 4:27.) When Simon the Pharisee invited Jesus to a banquet but withheld the
courtesy and respect due his guest, our Lord condemned him by saying, "Thou gavest me no
kiss." (Luke 7:45.) Paul's counsel to the early brethren was, "Salute one another with an holy
kiss." (Rom. 16:16.) Judas, thus, could have chosen no baser means of identifying Jesus than to plant
on his face a traitor's kiss. Such act not only singled out his intended victim, but by the means
chosen, desecrated every principle of true fellowship and brotherhood.
Matt. 26:52. They that take the sword shall perish with the sword] Not every person who wages war
is killed; war has its victors as well as its vanquished. Rather, 'They who foment and cause war have
decreed their own spiritual death; they shall perish everlastingly because they loosed the sword of
evil among their fellows.'
I. V. Mark 14:53. Healed the servant of the high priest] Facing a frenzied mob, in the presence of a
Roman band, and without reference to the faith of Malchus, Jesus restores to that servant his ear.
Jesus was being arrested for "falsely" claiming to possess the power of God. Here, as in the past,
however, he manifests that very power before them. One wonders what outpouring of divine power it
would take to impress their sin-saturated souls with his divine status.
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the interrogation rather than before. (Dummelow, p. 805; Jamieson, p. 91.) (2) Edersheim's argument
is: "For as, according to the three synoptic Gospels, the palace of the high priest Caiaphas was the
scene of Peter's denial, the account of it in the fourth Gospel must refer to the same locality, and not
to the palace of Annas." (Edersheim, cited, Talmage, pp. 643-644.) Both Dummelow and Jamieson
answer this by explaining that Annas and Caiaphas lived in different parts of the same building and
that the same court served them both. (Jamieson, p. 162; Dummelow, p. 805.) Thus the great
probability is that Jesus was in fact examined and smitten in the presence of Annas before he was
taken to Caiaphas. There would seem to be no other reason for John to make special mention that
Jesus was taken before Annas unless something there occurred which was important to his narrative.
12. This was a formal, organized arrest, one where ample force was available to overcome any
uprising among the people.
13. Annas] "No figure is better known in contemporary Jewish history than that of Annas; no person
deemed more fortunate or successful, but also none more generally execrated than the late high
priest. He had held the pontificate for only six or seven years; but it was filled by not fewer than five
of his sons, by his son-in-law Caiaphas, and by a grandson. And in those days it was, at least for one
of Annas' disposition, much better to have been than to be high priest. He enjoyed all the dignity of
the office, and all its influence also, since he was able to promote to it those most closely connected
with him. And while they acted publicly, he really directed affairs, without either the responsibility
or the restraints which the office imposed. His influence with the Romans he owed to the religious
views which he professed, to his open partisanship of the foreigner, and to his enormous wealth. .. .
We have seen what immense revenues the family of Annas must have derived from the Temple
booths, and how nefarious and unpopular was the traffic. The names of those bold, licentious,
unscrupulous, degenerate sons of Aaron were spoken with whispered curses. Without referring to
Christ's interference with that Temple-traffic, which, if his authority had prevailed, would of course
have been fatal to it, we can understand how antithetic in every respect a Messiah, and such a
Messiah as Jesus, must have been to Annas." (Edersheim, Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah, vol.
2, pp. 547-548, cited, Talmage, p. 643.)
14. See John 11:47-54. 19-21. Annas knew the conspirators were seeking excuses to put Jesus to
death. (Matt. 26:59.) This line of questioning was a search for self-incriminating testimony. Further:
this "preliminary inquiry was utterly unlawful; for the Hebrew code provided that the accusing
witnesses in any cause before the court should define their charge against the accused, and that the
latter should be protected from any effort to make him testify against himself." (Talmage, p. 622.)
20. In secret have I said nothing] 'I have never said anything in secret which is different in nature
from my public utterances. In public and in private my doctrine is the same.'
22-23. "That Jesus maintained his equanimity and submissiveness even under the provocation of a
blow dealt by a brutish underling in the presence of the high priest, is confirmatory of our Lord's
affirmation that he had 'overcome the world' (John 16:33). One cannot read the passage without
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comparing, perhaps involuntarily, the divine submissiveness of Jesus on this occasion, with the
wholly natural and human indignation of Paul under somewhat similar conditions at a later time
(Acts 23:1-5). The high priest Ananias, displeased at Paul's remarks, ordered someone who stood by
to smite him on the mouth. Paul broke forth in angry protest: 'God shall smite thee, thou whited wall:
for sittest thou to judge me after the law, and commandest me to be smitten contrary to the law?'
Afterward he apologized, saying that he knew not that it was the high priest who had given the
command that he be smitten." (Talmage, p. 644.)
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principle of our jurisprudence that no one can bring an accusation against himself. Should a man
make confession of guilt before a legally constituted tribunal, such confession is not to be used
against him unless properly attested by two other witnesses.'Maimonides, 4:2. 'Not only is selfcondemnation never extorted from the defendant by means of torture, but no attempt is ever made to
lead him on to self-incrimination. Moreover, a voluntary confession on his part is not admitted in
evidence, and therefore not competent to convict him, unless a legal number of witnesses minutely
corroborate his self-accusation.'Mendelsohn, p. 133.
"Point 9: The condemnation of Jesus was illegal because the verdict of the Sanhedrin was
unanimous. 'A simultaneous and unanimous verdict of guilt rendered on the day of the trial has the
effect of an acquittal.'Mendelsohn, p. 141. 'If none of the judges defend the culprit, i. e., all
pronounce him guilty, having no defender in the court, the verdict of guilty was invalid and the
sentence of death could not be executed.'Rabbi Wise, 'Martyrdom of Jesus,' p. 74.
"Point 10: The proceedings against Jesus were illegal in that: (1) The sentence of
condemnation was pronounced in a place forbidden by law; (2) The high priest rent his
clothes; (3) The balloting was irregular. 'After leaving the hall Gazith no sentence of death can be
passed upon any one soever.'Talmud, Bab. 'Of Idolatry' 1:8. 'A sentence of death can be
pronounced only so long as the Sanhedrin holds its sessions in the appointed place.'Maimonides,
14. See further Levit. 21:10; compare 10:6. 'Let the judges each in his turn absolve or condemn.'
Mishna, San. 15:5. 'The members of the Sanhedrin were seated in the form of a semicircle, at the
extremity of which a secretary was placed, whose business it was to record the votes. One of these
secretaries recorded the votes in favor of the accused, the other those against him.'Mishna, San.
4:3. 'In ordinary cases the judges voted according to seniority, the oldest commencing; in a capital
case the reverse order was followed.'Benny, p. 73.
"Point 11: The members of the Great Sanhedrin were legally disqualified to try Jesus. 'Nor
must there be on the judicial bench either a relation or a particular friend, or an enemy of either the
accused or of the accuser.'Mendelsohn, p. 108. 'Nor under any circumstances was a man known to
be at enmity with the accused person permitted to occupy a position among the judges.'Benny, p.
37.
"Point 12: The condemnation of Jesus was illegal because the merits of the defense were not
considered. 'Then shalt thou enquire, and make search, and ask diligently.' Deut. 13:14. 'The judges
shall weigh the matter in the sincerity of their conscience.'Mishna, San. 4:5. 'The primary object of
the Hebrew judicial system was to render the conviction of an innocent person impossible. All the
ingenuity of the Jewish legists was directed to the attainment of this end.'Benny, p. 56." (Walter
M. Chandler, The Trial of Jesus from a Lawyer's Standpoint, Vol. 1, The Hebrew Trial, quoted,
Talmage, pp. 645-648.)
Mark 14:54. Palace of the high priest] A central court or quadrangle around which the house was
built and in which, on this night, a fire was burning, perhaps in a brazier.
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Matt. 26:59. All the council] Either all who were available or enough to form a quorum, as
Nicodemus, for one, probably was absent. The Sanhedrin was composed of seventy-two men, with
twenty-three forming a quorum.
Sought for false witnesses] What kind of impartial justice might a prisoner expect if the Supreme
Court left its chambers, joined an armed mob in the dark of night, and sought openly and frankly for
false witnesses who would accept bribes and commit perjury?
59-61. The nearest even false witnesses could come to testifying against Jesus was to hark back some
three and a half years to his statement: 'Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it
up." (John 2:19.) That the chief priests and scribes knew be meant the temple of his body and not
"the temple of God," as the false witnesses testified, is evident from their own subsequent statement
to Pilate about Jesus rising again the third day. (Matt. 27:62-66.) Thus, despite all their search for at
least two liars and perjurers who would agree on some one point, they found none; their verdict of
guilty was to be left without even a false witness to support it.
62. Answerest thou nothing] They had failed to produce testimony against him; now they sought to
wrench from him some statement they could interpret as being incriminating.
63. I adjure thee by the living God] Only when the high priest used the voice of adjuration did Jesus
deign to answer; such a formal demand was understood to require response. (Lev. 5:1.)
64. Thou hast said] 'I am the Christ, the Son of God.'
65. He hath spoken blasphemy] Sedition had been the charge; now it was blasphemy. See Luke
22:66-71.
John 18:24. See John 18:12-14, 19-23.
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leave a scar of sin on his soul; nor is it an excuse for others who fail to stand valiantly in defense of
truth and righteousness.
Peter failed on this occasion to testify as becometh one who is a special witness of the Lord, but so in
effect had all the disciples, for they all forsook him and fled. But Peter was not yet the man he was to
be, for about fifty days hence, at Pentecost, he and all the saints were to receive the gift of the Holy
Ghost. Perhaps, then, the great lesson to be learned from this experience of the chief apostle is this: if
men are to resist and overcome the world; if they are to stand valiantly in the Cause of Christ; if they
are to be faithful and true in all thingsthey must have the gift of the Holy Ghost.
After Peter received this gift he was arrested by those who thirsted for his blood as they had for the
blood of his Master. No longer did he react with an, "I do not know the man," but rather he accused
the murders of Jesus, to their face, of crucifying the God of Israel, and testified to them that Christ's
was the only name given under heaven whereby salvation came. (Acts 2; 3; 4.)
Matt. 26:72. I do not know the man] Peter had a testimony and knew that Jesus was the Son of God
(Matt. 16:13-17; John 6:66-69), but he was not yet converted in the full sense, (Luke 22:32), and he
was yet to receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. (Luke 24:49; Acts 2.) Hence, his statement of not
knowing Christ has no reference whatever to the matter of denying Christ in the sense of being
damned. (Heb. 6:1-8; D. & C. 76:30-49.)
74. To curse] Not profanity, not vulgar words, but to "anathematize, or wish himself accursed if what
he was now to say was not true."
To swear] 'To take a solemn oath.' (Jamieson, p. 93.)
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was required. In front of them stood the two clerks of the court, of whom the one on the right hand
recorded the votes for acquittal, and the one on the left hand the votes for condemnation. The
'disciples of the wise' (pupils of the scribes) occupied three additional rows in front. It was required
to hear the reasons for acquittal first (a regulation violated in the case of Jesus) and afterwards the
reasons for condemnation. The 'disciples of the wise' could speak, but only in favor of the prisoner.
Acquittal could be pronounced on the day of the trial, but condemnation not till the following day
(this regulation also was violated, though some suppose that there were two meetings, one on
Thursday night, the other on Friday morning to render the proceedings technically legal). Each
member stood to give his vote, and voting began with the youngest member. For acquittal a simple
majority sufficed; for condemnation a majority of two was necessary." (Dummelow, p. 713.)
Luke 22:67. If I tell you, ye will not believe] How sad and how true! Gospel truth is taught by
testimony: the spiritually alive, believe; the spiritually sick, question; the spiritually dead, deny and
reject. And here stands the Lord Omnipotent, the being by whose hands all things are, the being
through whom salvation comes, ready to testify again of his divine Sonship with full knowledge that
his testimony will avail his hearers nothing.
70. Ye say that I am] 'I am the Son of God.'
71. "Jehovah was convicted of blasphemy against Jehovah. The only mortal Being to whom the
awful crime of blasphemy, claiming divine attributes and powers, was impossible, stood before the
judges of Israel condemned as a blasphemer." (Talmage, p. 629.)
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Matt. 27:5-10. Blood money stains both hands and soul. However desirable the thirty pieces of silver
seemed before the deed, their ill-gotten weight became a crushing burden on the soul now. In his
frenzy Judas discards them so as to fulfill in literal detail the remainder of Zechariah's Messianic
utterance about them: "And the Lord said unto me, Cast it unto the potter: a goodly price that I was
prised at of them. And I took the thirty pieces of silver, and cast them to the potter in the house of the
Lord." (Zech. 11:13-14.)
9. Jeremy] Jeremiah. But why not Zechariah in whose writings the prophecy is found? Perhaps it
was once found also in Jeremiah; perhaps some early transcriber, thinking of Jeremiah 18:2 merely
erred in copying the name; perhaps it was an oral or traditional utterance ascribed to Jeremiah.
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execution, one that could not be questioned by the people. The effect of their plan would be, as John
says, to fulfill Jesus' saying that he would be crucified. The Jews stoned their victims to death; Rome
crucified hers; and both Divine Providence and Satan's mortal helpers were now combining to assure
the decreed type of death.
Knowing now that they have failed to gain a Roman crucifixion for the Jewish capital offense of
blasphemy, they immediately change their charge to high treason, with three counts in their
indictment: He is guilty of sedition by stirring up the whole nation; of forbidding to give tribute to
Caesar; and of assuming the royal title.
John 18:33-38. With divine dignity Jesus made no answer to the Jews, though they accused him of
"many things." So majestic was the Man that even Pilate "marvelled greatly." But when Pilate spoke
alone with him, Jesus responded freely. Pilate asks, 'Art thou the king of the Jews?' Jesus replies with
a question, 'Are you asking if I am a religious or a political king?'
It would be nothing to Pilate that Jesus claimed religious overlordship; such a political claim,
however, might be considered high treason. Pilate responds, 'I do not meddle in Jewish affairs, and
since the charges of your countrymen are garbled, you tell me what you have done to cause your
arrest.' To this Jesus does not reply, but speaks further of the spiritual nature of his kingdom, causing
Pilate to ask again, 'Art thou a king then?' Now the answer comes; having made it clear that no
political or earthly kingdom is involved, Jesus says plainly, 'I am a King,' adding that he had come
into the world to bear witness of the truth.
37. Every one that is of the truth heareth my voice] Powerful doctrine this: 'My sheep hear my voice.'
Some people have the native and instinctive ability to recognize and accept truth; others are less
gifted. See John 10:27.
38. What is truth?] The issue is not so much what-is-truth in the sense of separating truth from error,
and thereby being able to know with finality that any specific doctrine or principle is an eternal
reality. Hence we find the revealed definition of truth saying: "And truth is knowledge of things as
they are, and as they were, and as they are to come." (D. & C. 93:24.)
Truth, thus, in a purely abstract sense is the thing which actually is. But truth, in the sense of
separating it from error or untruth, is the knowledge which men have of what actually is. To
illustrate, the fact that there is a God is a truth in the abstract sense because it is a verity that actually
is. But the knowledge that God is a personal being in whose image man is created, and not a
congeries of laws operating throughout the universe, is the ultimate and specific answer to the
question what-is-truth where Deity is concerned. (Mormon Doctrine, pp. 733-735.)
I find in him no fault at all] Up to this point in the judicial travesty destined to take our Lord to the
cross, Pilate is maintaining admirable impartiality and is seeking to dispense justice with a fair hand.
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According to custom, Pilate could release at Passover time a convicted criminal. If, he reasoned,
Jesus could be chosen as the culprit to free, such an act would have the effect of approving the
conviction and death sentence imposed by the Sanhedrin, but of superseding it with an official
pardon. Hence, Pilate asks, 'Shall I pardon Jesus who has done nothing worthy of death anyway, or
shall I release this insurrectionist Barabbas, who is also a robber and a murderer?'
Mingling with the mob-multitude are those friendly to the Master's Cause; they see the practical
wisdom of Pilate's suggestions and so call for Jesus' release. But the chief priests spue forth their
poisonous venom and persuade the multitude to ask for the life of Barabbas and the death of Jesus.
The chorus chanted by the multitude becomes one of, 'Crucify him. Crucify him.'
And so it was to beChrist crucified, Barabbas freed; and how often is the scene repeated wherever
mob rule is found. Justice is crucified on a cross of hate; evil is freed to canker the souls of hatefilled persons.
Matt. 27:19. His wife] "In tradition her name is given as Procla, or Claudia Procula, and she is said to
have been inclined to Judaism, or even to have been a proselyte, and afterwards to have become a
Christian. In the Greek Church she is canonized." (Dummelow, p. 716.)
Matt. 27:19. In a dream. I. V. Matt. 27:20. In a vision] She must have seen something signifying
Jesus' innocence and showing the fate of those who had part in his death.
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"These outrages on national feeling, and many minor acts of violence, extortion and cruelty, the Jews
held against the procurator. He realized that his tenure was insecure, and he dreaded exposure. Such
wrongs had he wrought that when he would have done good, he was deterred through cowardly fear
of the accusing past." (Talmage, pp. 648-649.)
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to which the feet were nailed. The protracted agony of crucifixion sometimes lasted for days, death
being caused by pain, hunger, and thirst." (Dummelow, pp. 716-717.)
Crucifixion "was unanimously considered the most horrible form of death. Among the Romans the
degradation was also a part of the infliction, and the punishment if applied to freemen was only used
in the case of the vilest criminals. The one to be crucified was stripped naked of all his clothes, and
then followed the most awful moment of all. He was laid down upon the implement of torture. His
arms were stretched along the cross-beams, and at the center of the open palms the point of a huge
iron nail was placed, which, by the blow of a mallet, was driven home into the wood. Then through
either foot separately, or possibly through both together, as they were placed one over the other,
another huge nail tore its way through the quivering flesh. Whether the sufferer was also bound to
the cross we do not know; but, to prevent the hands and feet being torn away by the weight of the
body, which could not 'rest upon nothing but four great wounds,' there was, about the center of the
cross, a wooden projection strong enough to support, at least in part, a human body, which soon
became a weight of agony. Then the 'accursed tree' with its living human burden was slowly heaved
up and the end fixed firmly in a hole in the ground. The feet were but a little raised above the earth.
The victim was in full reach of every hand that might choose to strike.
"A death by crucifixion seems to include all that pain and death can have of the horrible and ghastly
dizziness, cramp, thirst, starvation, sleeplessness, traumatic fever, tetanus, publicity of shame, long
continuance of torment, horror of anticipation, mortification of untended wounds, all intensified just
up to the point at which they can be endured at all, but all stopping just short of the point which
would give to the sufferer the relief of unconsciousness. The unnatural position made every
movement painful; the lacerated veins and crushed tendons throbbed with incessant anguish; the
wounds, inflamed by exposure, gradually gangrened; the arteries, especially of the head and
stomach, became swollen and oppressed with surcharged blood; and, while each variety of misery
went on gradually increasing, there was added to them the intolerable pang of a burning and raging
thirst. Such was the death to which Christ was doomed.Farrar's 'Life of Christ.'
"The crucified was watched, according to custom, by a party of four soldiers (John 19:23), with their
centurion (Matt. 27:54), whose express office was to prevent the stealing of the body. This was
necessary from the lingering character of the death, which sometimes did not supervene even for
three days, and was at last the result of gradual benumbing and starvation. But for this guard, the
persons might have been taken down and recovered, as was actually done in the case of a friend of
Josephus. Fracture of the legs was especially adopted by the Jews to hasten death. (John 19:31.) In
most cases the body was suffered to rot on the cross by the action of sun and rain, or to be devoured
by birds and beasts. Sepulture was generally therefore forbidden; but in consequence of Deut. 21:22,
23, an express national exception was made in favor of the Jews. (Matt. 27:58.) This accursed and
awful mode of punishment was happily abolished by Constantine." (Peloubet's Bible Dictionary, pp.
130-131.)
Luke 23:27-31. "The time would come, when the Old Testament curse of barrenness (Hosea 9:14)
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would be coveted as a blessing. To show the fulfilment of this prophetic lament of Jesus it is not
necessary to recall the harrowing details recorded by Josephus (Wars, vi, 3:4), when a frenzied
mother roasted her own child, and in the mockery of desperateness reserved the half of the horrible
meal for those murderers who daily broke in upon her to rob her of what scanty food had been left
her; nor yet other of those incidents, too revolting for needless repetition, which the historian of the
last siege of Jerusalem chronicles. But how often, these many centuries, must Israel's women have
felt that terrible longing for childlessness, and how often must the prayer of despair for the quick
death of falling mountains and burying hills rather than prolonged torture (Hosea 10:8), have risen to
the lips of Israel's sufferers! And yet, even so, these words were also prophetic of a still more terrible
future. (Rev. 6:10.) For, if Israel had put such flame to its 'green tree' how terribly would the divine
judgment burn among the dry wood of an apostate and rebellious people, that had so delivered up its
Divine King, and pronounced sentence upon itself by pronouncing it upon Him!" (Edersheim, vol. 2,
p. 588, cited, Talmage, pp. 666-667.)
31. A green tree] Christ himself was the Green Tree. "If Israel's oppressors could do what was then
in process of doing to the 'Green Tree,' who bore the leafage of freedom and truth and offered the
priceless fruit of life eternal, what would the powers of evil not do to the withered branches and dried
trunk of apostate Judaism?" (Talmage, p. 654.) The same inspired figure was used in announcing the
martyrdom of the Prophet and Patriarch of this dispensation: "If the fire can scathe a green tree for
the glory of God, how easy it will burn up the dry trees to purify the vineyard of corruption." (D. &
C. 135:6.)
Matt. 27:34. They gave him vinegar to drink mingled with gall] Apparently those women, "which
also bewailed and lamented him" (Luke 23:27), with the merciful intent of deadening his senses to
pain, offered him a drugged cup. Jesus tasted but did not drink; he chose to suffer and die with his
mind clear and his senses unimpaired. Their intended kindness fulfilled the Messianic utterance:
"They gave me also gall for my meat; and in my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink." (Psalm 69:21.)
John 19:19-22. In Hebrew, Greek, and Latinas though to symbolize the tact that here was a
message for all nations and tonguesPilate bore a written testimony of the divine Sonship of our
Lord, a testimony which he obdurately refused to change, a testimony which is true and so stands
everlastingly.
Mark 15:27-28. To degrade and debase, to prove as it were guilt by association, Rome chose to
crucify Christ between two thieves, thereby fulfilling Isaiah's Messianic prophecy: "And he was
numbered with the transgressors." (Isa. 53:12.)
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and intemperate reviling and Gentile hatred, expressed the same general principle in these words: "I
feel in my heart to forgive all men in the broad sense that God requires of me to forgive all men, and
I desire to love my neighbor as myself; and to this extent I bear no malice toward any of the children
of my Father. But there are enemies to the work of the Lord, as there were enemies to the Son of
God. There are those who speak only evil of the Latter-day Saints. There are thoseand they abound
largely in our midstwho will shut their eyes to every virtue and to every good thing connected with
this latter-day work, and will pour out floods of falsehood and misrepresentation against the people
of God. I forgive them for this. I leave them in the hands of the just Judge. Let him deal with them as
seemeth him good, but they are not and cannot become my bosom companions. I cannot condescend
to that. While I would not harm a hair of their heads, while I would not throw a straw in their path, to
hinder them from turning from the error of their way to the light of truth; I would as soon think of
taking a centipede or a scorpion, or any poisonous reptile, and putting it into my bosom, as I would
think of becoming a companion or an associate of such men." (Joseph F. Smith, Gospel Doctrine, 5th
ed., p. 337.)
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With evil intent and purpose, as he hung in agony on the cross, Jesus was mocked and derided by the
spectator-multitude, whose members were pleased to see him die; by the chief priests, who caused
his death; by the Roman soldiers, to whom slaughter and death were common occurrences; and by
one of the thieves, who was crucified with him. (Luke 23:39-43.) And out of it all came added
testimony of his divine Sonship.
(1) The railings of the multitude fulfilled the Messianic prophecy: "All they that see me laugh me to
scorn: . . . They gaped upon me with their mouths, as a ravening and a roaring lion." (Psalm 22:7, 13.)
(2) Again the people are reminded of his promise to raise the temple of his body after three days.
(3) From the chief priests, scribes, and elders came the testimony that he saved others; that is, they
knew and are certifying that Jesus healed the sick and raised the dead.
(4) With their words of scorn these same chief priests, scribes, and elders also fulfil the Messianic
prophecy which foretold the very words of ridicule they would use as he hung before them: "He
trusted on the Lord that he would deliver him: let him deliver him, seeing he delighted in
him." (Psalm 22:8.)
(5) This very admission that Jesus trusted in God is itself a pronouncement that his enemies knew he
had lived a righteous life and had walked in a pious path.
(6) They also certify that they knew and understood his claim to divine Sonship, and that his express
teaching had been that he was the Son of God.
Matt. 27:40. If thou be the Son of God] Whose words are these? They fell from the lips of mocking
mortals, but their source was Satan. He had used them personally in tempting Jesus at the beginning
of Jesus' mortal ministry. (Luke 4:3, 9.) Their use here dramatizes the fact that mortal men can be
inspired from beneath so as to speak forth what the devil wants them to say.
42. We will believe him] This is pure Satanic sophistry. To the spiritually illiterate it may seem
logical to suppose that some great miracle will cause men to believe in Christ. But conversion does
not come in this way; rather, it is the result of spiritual impressions received by the power of the
Holy Ghost. Did the Jews believe when Jesus called Lazarus forth from the tomb? Is there any more
reason to suppose they would accept his divinity had he come down from the cross in power? "If
they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the
dead." (Luke 16:31.)
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will teach you all about it and answer your inquiries." (Teachings, p. 309.)
Luke 23:41. This man hath done nothing amiss] How universal the testimony is; from the living and
the dying, from the lips of honest men everywhere comes the same eternal verity'This man is
innocent!'
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occur on the American continent, prophesied of these things. "At the time that he shall yield up the
ghost there shall be thunderings and lightnings for the space of many hours, and the earth shall shake
and tremble; and the rocks which are upon the face of this earth, which are both above the earth and
beneath, which ye know at this time are solid, or the more part of it is one solid mass, shall be broken
up; Yea, they shall be rent in twain, and shall ever after be found in seams and in cracks, and in
broken fragments upon the face of the whole earth, yea, both above the earth and beneath. And
behold, there shall be great tempests, and there shall be many mountains laid low, like unto a valley,
and there shall be many places which are now called valleys which shall become mountains, whose
height is great." (Hela. 14:21-23.) Nephi and Zenos also foresaw these scenes. (1 Ne. 12:4; 19:12.)
As with all prophecies, the fulfillment came with total and unerring certainty. The Book of Mormon
account, for the year 34 A. D., recites: "Behold, the rocks were rent in twain; they were broken up
upon the face of the whole earth, insomuch that they were found in broken fragments, and in seams
and in cracks, upon all the face of the land. And it came to pass that when the thunderings and the
lightnings, and the storm, and the tempest, and the quakings of the earth did ceasefor behold, they
did last for about the space of three hours; and it was said by some that the time was greater;
nevertheless, all these great and terrible things were done in about the space of three hoursand then
behold, there was darkness upon the face of the land." (3 Ne. 8:18-19; 10:9.)
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Therefore, blessed are they who humble themselves without being compelled to be humble; or rather,
in other words, blessed is he that believeth in the word of God, and is baptized without stubbornness
of heart, yea, without being brought to know the word, or even compelled to know, before they will
believe." (Alma 32:12-16.)
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showing how one of the great doctrines of revealed religion, that of being born again, rests upon and
is efficacious because of the atonement. As the inspired record recites, men are "born into the world
by water, and blood, and the spirit" thereby becoming mortal souls. To gain salvation they must
thereafter "be born again into the kingdom of heaven, of water, and of the Spirit, and be cleansed by
blood," meaning the blood of Christ. (Moses 6:59.) Thus when men see birth into this world, they are
reminded of what is required for birth into the kingdom of heaven.
Since this spiritual rebirth and consequent salvation in the kingdom of heaven are available because
of the atonement, how fitting it is that the elements present in that infinite sacrifice are also water,
blood, and spirit. Accordingly, when men think of the crucifixion of Christ, they are reminded of
what they must do to be born again and gain that full salvation which comes because of his
atonement.
John, who was eye witness to the water and blood gushing from Jesus' side after his spirit had left his
body, later wrote of being "born of God" through the atonement in these words: "Whatsoever is born
of God overcometh the world. . . . Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that
Jesus is the Son of God? This is he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water
only, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth. . . .
And there are three that bear witness in earth, the spirit, and the water, and the blood." (1 John 5:1-8.)
36. A bone of him shall not be broken] For nearly fifteen hundred years Israel sacrificed paschal
lambs, taking care not to "break a bone thereof" (Ex. 12:46), all looking forward to this time, the
time when the Lamb of God would be sacrificed without a broken bone. "He keepeth all his bones:
not one of them is broken," the Psalmist wrote. (Ps. 34:20.)
37. They shall look on him whom they pierced] In speaking of his Second Coming, Christ said
through the mouth of Zechariah, "They shall look upon me whom they have pierced." (Zech. 12:10.)
This Messianic utterance shall find fulfillment in the appearance of the resurrected Lord to the
descendants of his ancient covenant people when he returns in glory. They will then say: "What are
these wounds in thine hands and in thy feet?" His reply: "These wounds are the wounds with which I
was wounded in the house of my friends. I am he who was lifted up. I am Jesus that was crucified. I
am the Son of God." (D. & C. 45:51-52; Zech. 13:6.)
That the spear wound was of major proportion, one that would have slain him had he not already
voluntarily given up his life, is evident from his statement made to the Nephites after his
resurrection, "Thrust your hands into my side." (3 Ne. 11:14.)
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In life and in death, Jesus fulfilled all that had aforetime been written of him. Isaiah's prophecy of the
death and burial of Jehovah specifies that he would be "with the rich in his death." (Isa. 53:9.) And
now cometh one Joseph of Arimathea, "a rich man," a man of power and influence, "who also
himself was Jesus' disciple," who owned a new and elaborate tomb, which then became the sepulchre
for the Son of God. And now cometh also Nicodemus, he too being a man of means and position,
who brought great quantities of costly ointments and spices to anoint and embalm as befitted a King
and as only the wealthy could do.
It is worthy of note that before Pilate would release the body, he was assured of the reality of death
(a fact which must precede the coming resurrection); that a "great stone" sealed the sepulchre (lest
the body be stolen); and that faithful women continued their vigil of sorrow and adoration to the last.
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day revelation, in which Deity speaks of "the Lord's day" as such and sets forth what should and
should not be done on that day. (D. & C. 59:9-17.)
2. They have taken away the Lord] The empty tomb! Glorious thing! Christ is risen! A reality soon
to burst with heartcheering reality upon this Mary of Magdala! See John 20:11-18.
3-10. What a picture John has left us of this unique moment in history. Fear fills the hearts of Peter
and John; wicked men must have stolen the body of their Lord. They race to the tomb. John, younger
and more fleet, arrives first, stoops down, looks in, but does not enter, hesitating as it were to
desecrate the sacred spot even by his presence. But Peter, impetuous, bold, a dynamic leader, an
apostle who wielded the sword against Malchus and stood as mouthpiece for them all in bearing
testimony, rushes in. John follows. Together they view the grave-clothes-linen strips that have not
been unwrapped, but through which a resurrected body has passed. And then, upon John, reflective
and mystic by nature, the reality dawns first. It is true! They had not known before; now they do. It is
the third day! Christ is risen! "Death is swallowed up in victory." (1 Cor. 15:54.)
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Jesus, the first fruits of the resurrection, who appeared first unto Mary Magdalene, is the great
Exemplar. As he came forth from the grave so shall all men. "As in Adam all die, even so in Christ
shall all be made alive." (1 Cor. 15:22.)
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Enoch and Samuel the Lamanite both spoke specifically of the resurrection that would take place
when Jesus took up his body again. (Moses 7:55-56; Hela. 14:25; 3 Ne. 23:7-13.) Isaiah recorded
these words spoken by the Lord Jehovah: "Thy dead men shall live, together with my dead body
shall they arise. . . And the earth shall cast out the dead." (Isa. 26:19.) Abinadi explained the doctrine
involved and told who would come forth in this resurrection, which is the one of which Matthew
wrote. "Behold, the bands of death shall be broken, and the Son reigneth, and hath power over the
dead; therefore, he bringeth to pass the resurrection of the dead. And there cometh a resurrection,
even a first resurrection; yea, even a resurrection of those that have been, and who are, and who shall
be, even until the resurrection of Christ for so shall he be called. And now, the resurrection of all the
prophets, and all those that have believed in their words, or all those that have kept the
commandments of God, shall come forth in the first resurrection; therefore, they are the first
resurrection. They are raised to dwell with God who has redeemed them; thus they have eternal life
through Christ, who has broken the bands of death. And these are those who have part in the first
resurrection; and these are they that have died before Christ came, in their ignorance, not having
salvation declared unto them. And thus the Lord bringeth about the restoration of these; and they
have a part in the first resurrection, or have eternal life, being redeemed by the Lord." (Mosiah 15:2024.)
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since it is he who records the account)? Was it to quote and interpret the Messianic prophecies
"beginning at Moses and all the prophets"? Such could have been done under more effective
circumstances, and for that matter, Luke does not even record the explanations given. Why did Jesus
keep his identity hidden? Why walk and talk, perhaps for hours, along the dusty lanes of Palestine?
Obviously it was to show what a resurrected being is like. He was teaching the gospel as only he
could, teaching a living sermon, a sermon that was to be climaxed shortly in an upper room in the
presence of his apostles. See Luke 24:36-44.
Jesus walked down a Judean lane, walked for hours and taught the truths of the gospel, exactly as he
had during three and a half years of his mortal ministry. So much did he seem like any other
wayfaring teacher, in demeanor, in dress, in speech, in physical appearance, in conversation, that
they did not recognize him as the Jesus whom they assumed was dead. 'Abide with us,' they said, as
they would have done to Peter or John. 'Come in and eat and sleep; you must be tired and hungry.'
They thought he was a mortal man. Could anyone devise a more perfect way to teach what a
resurrected being is like when his glory is retained within him? Men are men whether mortal or
immortal, and there need be no spiritualizing away of the reality of the resurrection, not after this
Emmaus road episode. See Mark 16:9-11.
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The apostles and other disciples thought he was "a spirit," a misconception which, however, reveals
what a spirit is. As Jesus stood before them he seemed in every respect to be a man. In other words a
spirit is a man, an entity, a personage, not an ineffable nothingness pervading immensity. A spirit is
what the Brother of Jared saw on the mountain when the yet unembodied Lord appeared and said:
"This body, which ye now behold, is the body of my spirit; . . . and even as I appear unto thee to be
in the spirit will I appear unto my people in the flesh." (Ether 3:16.)
Jesus then confirmed the disciples' belief that a spirit is a personage by showing how a resurrected
body differs from a spirit body. He announced that his body was made of "flesh and bones" and
invited all present to handle, feel, and learn of its corporeal nature. Then lest any feel later that their
senses had been deceived, he asked for food and ate it before them, not to satisfy hunger, but to
demonstrate that resurrected beings are tangible and can eat and digest food. See Luke 24:13-35.
When Paul adds to what is here revealed that the risen Lord is in "the express image of his" Father's
"person" (Heb. 1:3), we have perfect Biblical confirmation of the revealed truth that "The Father has
a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man's; the Son also." (D. & C. 130:22.)
John 20:21. As my Father hath sent me, even so send I you] These holy men had power to preach
and minister because they were called, ordained, and sent by the Lord Jesus Christ. Can any man
assume like prerogatives without a like call? There is no substitute for God's authority; with it a man
is a true minister; without it he is only a poor imitation whose ordinances and teachings will not be
binding on earth and sealed in heaven.
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modern disciples, in order to continue to enjoy the full guidance and endowment of the Spirit had to
receive, in due course, the gift of the Holy Ghost. To a degree every sincere investigator begins to
have his mind opened to the scriptures, as he seeks the truth even before baptism, but the great flood
of enlightenment comes after the receipt of the companionship of the Holy Ghost.
46-47. Because of the atonement of Christ, all men are raised in immortality and those who believe
and obey his laws gain also an inheritance of eternal life. (D. & C. 29:43.) "We believe that through
the Atonement of Christ, all mankind may be saved, by obedience to the laws and ordinances of the
Gospel." (Third Article of Faith.)
The Lord wants men to have faith in him, to repent of their sins, to be baptized under the hands of a
legal administrator, to receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, and then to endure in righteousness to the
end, so as to qualify for salvation in his kingdom. Here he tells his ancient disciples that these things
are available because of his atonement. In effect he is saying that because he suffered and died men
can repent and gain salvation through baptism. This same revealed truth was given anew on the day
the Church was organized in this dispensation. "The Almighty God gave his Only Begotten Son, as it
is written in those scriptures which have been given of him. He suffered temptations but gave no
heed unto them. He was crucified, died, and rose again the third day; And ascended into heaven, to
sit down on the right hand of the Father, to reign with almighty power according to the will of the
Father; That as many as would believe and be baptized in his holy name, and endure in faith to the
end, should be savedNot only those who believed after he came in the meridian of time, in the
flesh, but all those from the beginning, even as many as were before he came, who believed in the
words of the holy prophets, who spake as they were inspired by the gift of the Holy Ghost, who truly
testified of him in all things, should have eternal life, As well as those who should come after, who
should believe in the gifts and callings of God by the Holy Ghost, which beareth record of the Father
and of the Son." (D. & C. 20:21-27.)
48. Ye are witnesses] The apostles of old were sent out to teach, testify, and baptize. They were to
teach by the Spirit, testify of the truth, and baptize the repentant souls. They were witnesses. A
witness testifies; he has a testimony to bear; he tells what he knows. The gospel is not carried to the
world by the teaching process only. Any minister or professor of religion can teach; whether his
conclusions are true or false, he can present them and make them seem appealing to some. But only
one who knows by personal revelation that certain things are true can testify with converting power.
These apostles were to teach the truths of salvation and then testify that by personal revelation they
knew whereof they spoke. They were both teachers and witnesses. For instance, they were to teach
that the scriptures said Christ should come and die for the sins of the world; but then they were to
bear witness that this man Jesus was the Christ, that he had risen from the dead and that they, his
witnesses, had felt the nail marks in his hands and feet, had handled his resurrected body, had walked
with him on the Emmaus road, had seem him eat fish and an honeycomb, and that they knew by the
power of the Holy Ghost that he was the Son of God. They were witnesses.
This system of teaching and testifying is eternal in nature; it has operated in all dispensations. Alma
said, "I am commanded to stand and testify unto this people the things which have been spoken by
our fathers"; that is, he was going to quote the scriptures of old and tell the people what they meant;
he was going to teach the truths of the gospel. But, he continued, "this is not all. Do ye not suppose
that I know of these things myself? Behold, I testify unto you that I do know that these things
whereof I have spoken are true." That is, in addition to the teachings found in the scriptures, which
teachings were the testimony of those of old, Alma, as a living witness, was now bearing a personal
testimony. As to the gaining of such a personal testimony, by means of which he became a personal
witness, he said: "And how do ye suppose that I know of their surety? Behold, I say unto you they
are made known unto me by the Holy Spirit of God. Behold, I have fasted and prayed many days that
I might know these things of myself. And now I do know of myself that they are true; for the Lord
God hath made them manifest unto me by his Holy Spirit; and this is the spirit of revelation which is
in me." (Alma 5:44-46.)
To the missionaries of this final gospel dispensation the Lord has said: "I sent you out to testify and
warn the people." (D. & C. 88:81.) Everlastingly and always it is the same; the gospel is taught by
witnesses who bear testimony of what God has revealed to them. Nothing will touch the hearts of
honest truth seekers like a personal witness of the divinity of the Lord's work.
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In the case of the apostles the actual enjoyment of the gift was delayed until the day of Pentecost.
(Acts 2.) This actual enjoyment of the promised gift causes a person to receive revelation, guidance,
and instruction from the Spirit.
The saints in this day go through the ordinance of the laying on of hands which gives them the gift,
which by definition is the right to receive the companionship of the Spirit. If and when they are
worthy, they are then immersed in the Spirit, as it were, thus actually enjoying the gift. In practice
the Holy Ghost gives inspiration and guidance from time to time to those who have the gift and
whose right it thereby is to gain this direction. The goal toward which the faithful work is to have
this inspiration constantly, that is, actually to enjoy the constant companionship of the Spirit. (Joseph
F. Smith, Gospel Doctrine, 8th ed., pp. 60-62)
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voice and does not repent and be baptized, his sins are retained, and he does not become pure and
spotless so he can qualify to go where God and Christ are.
Forgiveness of sins committed after baptism comes also by following the established order of the
Church, which includes full repentance and the renewal through the sacramental ordinance of the
covenants made in the waters of baptism. See Matt. 10:32-33 and the related scriptures considered
under the heading, "How Forgiveness and Pardoning Grace Operate."
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Thomas apparently did not understand or believe that Jesus had come forth with a literal, tangible
body of flesh and bones, one that could be felt and handled, one that bore the nail marks and carried
the spear wound, one that ate food and outwardly was almost akin to a mortal body. Obviously he
had heard the testimony of Mary Magdalene and the other women, of Peter, and of all the apostles. It
is not to be supposed that he doubted the resurrection as such, but rather the literal and corporeal
nature of it. Hence his rash assertion about feeling the nail prints and thrusting his hand into the
Lord's side.
His skepticism is almost the perfect pattern for even the religiously inclined of modern Christendom,
people who profess belief in Christ's resurrection and yet suppose he has become some kind of a
spiritual person or essence who does not continue to live as a corporeal entity. The case of Thomas
shows why the Lord went to such great lengths on the Emmaus road and in the upper room to show
beyond peradventure of doubt exactly what his body was Like. And so rather than point the finger of
scorn at Thomas we might do well to look carefully at the modern disbelief in that holy being who
with his Father reigns as a Holy Man in the heavens above.
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hundred brethren at once" (1 Cor. 15:5-7); he has yet to spend the balance of the first forty days of
his resurrected life ministering to and teaching them (Acts 1:3); and finally in their presence he has
yet to ascend to eternal glory. And of course there may have been appearances without number of
which there is no New Testament record. He of course ministered among the Nephites on the
American continent and among the Lost Tribes of Israel in an unspecified land. (3 Ne.)
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throne of eternal power. Though he, as a God, exercised the fulness of his Father's creative powers in
pre-existence, yet with his attained body of flesh and bones his status now becomes as that of his
Father; and so he here announces that he has received, in this added sense, all power in heaven and
on earth.
John explained how Christ was God in pre-existence, exercising the fulness of his Father's creative
powers; how he then came to earth to undergo a mortal probation, in which he gained experience and
went from grace to grace; and how, after the resurrection, he received, as a consequence, all power in
heaven and on earth. These are his words: "I saw his glory, that he was in the beginning, before the
world was; Therefore, in the beginning the Word was, for he was the Word, even the messenger of
salvationThe light and the Redeemer of the world; the Spirit of truth, who came into the world,
because the world was made by him, and in him was the life of men and the light of men. The worlds
were made by him; men were made by him; all things were made by him, and through him, and of
him. And I, John, bear record that I beheld his glory, as the glory of the Only Begotten of the Father,
full of grace and truth, even the Spirit of truth, which came and dwelt in the flesh, and dwelt among
us. And I, John, saw that he received not of the fulness at the first, but received grace for grace; And
he received not of the fulness at first, but continued from grace to grace, until he received a fulness;
And thus he was called the Son of God, because he received not of the fulness at the first. And I,
John, bear record, and lo, the heavens were opened, and the Holy Ghost descended upon him in the
form of a dove, and sat upon him, and there came a voice out of heaven saying: This is my beloved
Son. And I, John, bear record that he received a fulness of the glory of the Father; And he received
all power, both in heaven and on earth, and the glory of the Father was with him, for he dwelt in
him." (D. & C. 93:7-17.)
Matt. 28:19. Teach all nations; Mark 16:15] This command was given to the apostles then standing
in the presence of the Lord, not to other people in other places, not to men who should live in other
ages. The apostles held the keys of the kingdom. It was part of their commission to evangelize the
world, and that they did the work appointed to them, none can deny. If any other people in any other
place or age are to perform a similar work, they must have the same priesthood, the same keys, and
the same commission. Without revelation no man or set of men can take unto themselves the honor
of building up God's kingdom.
In the true Church, the Church where revelation is found, the same authorizations had of old have
been given anew in these words: "Go ye into all the world; and unto whatsoever place ye cannot go
ye shall send, that the testimony may go from you into all the world unto every creature. And as I
said unto mine apostles, even so I say unto you, for you are mine apostles, even God's high priests;
ye are they whom my Father hath given me; ye are my friends; Therefore, as I said unto mine
apostles I say unto you again, that every soul who believeth on your words, and is baptized by water
for the remission of sins, shall receive the Holy Ghost." (D. & C. 84:62-64.)
In the meridian dispensation, by express decree, the apostles were first restricted in their teachings
and ministrations to the house of Israel. (Matt. 10:5-6.) But now the commission is expanded to
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include all nations; they are now to go into all the world; the gospel, in due course and according to
the prescribed priorities, is to be offered to every creature. That the apostles did not comprehend
fully the magnitude of the new commission is seen from the fact that the Lord later had to give Peter
an express command to go to the Gentiles. (Acts 10.)
Mark 16:16. Both belief and baptism are essential to salvation; one without the other does not
suffice. It is not enough to confess the Lord Jesus with the lips and stop there; nor does it suffice to
be baptized, unless also there is resident in one's heart that sure knowledge that Jesus is Lord of all.
The salvation here involved is an inheritance in the celestial kingdom. As Nephi taught, Christ
"commandeth all men that they must repent, and be baptized in his name, having perfect faith in the
Holy One of Israel, or they cannot be saved in the kingdom of God." (2 Ne. 9:23.) To be damned is
to be denied entrance to that glorious realm where God and Christ are. Baptism pertains to the
celestial kingdom and to no other. Joseph Smith said: "A man may be saved, after the judgment, in
the terrestrial kingdom, or in the telestial kingdom, but he can never see the celestial kingdom of
God, without being born of water and the Spirit." (Teachings, p. 12.)
These same eternal truths have been known to and taught by the Lord's people in all ages. For
instance, when Jesus ministered among the Nephites he said: "Whoso believeth in me, and is
baptized, the same shall be saved; and they are they who shall inherit the kingdom of God. And
whoso believeth not in me, and is not baptized, shall be damned." (3 Ne. 11:33-34.) And with special
reference to the condemnation of those who fail to believe and be baptized, the Lord has said by
revelation to the elders of his Church in this day: "Verily, verily, I say unto you, they who believe
not on your words, and are not baptized in water in my name, for the remission of their sins, that they
may receive the Holy Ghost, shall be damned, and shall not come into my Father's kingdom where
my Father and I am." (D. & C. 84:74.)
Matt. 28:19. All things pertaining to salvation in the kingdom of God are done in the name of Christ.
Two ordinances, howeverbaptism, the gate to salvation in the celestial kingdom, and celestial
marriage, the gate to exaltation in the highest heaven of that worldare performed, not in his name
alone, but "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost," thus signifying how
everlastingly important each of these ordinances is in the eternal scheme of things.
Observe all things] Is a man saved through belief and baptism alone? Does membership in the
Church, without more, guarantee a celestial inheritance? To suppose such is to build on a shaky
foundation. After baptism must come obedience and righteousness, the period of testing when the
new born babe in Christ must learn to observe and do all things which the gospel requires, the period
when he must "work out" his 'own salvation with fear and trembling." (Philip. 2:12.) Nephi taught
what is involved in these words: "For the gate by which ye should enter is repentance and baptism by
water; and then cometh a remission of your sins by fire and by the Holy Ghost. And then are ye in
this straight and narrow path which leads to eternal life; yea, ye have entered in by the gate. . . . And
now, my beloved brethren, after ye have gotten into this straight and narrow path, I would ask if all is
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done? Behold, I say unto you, Nay; for ye have not come thus far save it were by the word of Christ
with unshaken faith in him, relying wholly upon the merits of him who is mighty to save. Wherefore,
ye must press forward with a steadfastness in Christ, having a perfect brightness of hope, and a love
of God and of all men. Wherefore, if ye shall press forward, feasting upon the word of Christ, and
endure to the end, behold, thus saith the Father: Ye have eternal life." (2 Ne. 31:17-20.)
Mark 16:17. These signs shall follow then, that believe] This is an eternal, immutable, everlasting
decree: Signs shall follow them that believe. When men believe the same gospel taught by Jesus and
his apostles, signs and miracles follow; when they depart from this original, pure, and perfect
Christianity, to some other system of religion, the promised signs are no longer found. Thus the
presence or absence of signs becomes a means of identifying the true gospel, the same gospel had of
old.
Aware that signs are no longer shown forth in the religions of the world, this plain statement of Jesus
is explained away by such reasoning as this: "The gift of miracles was given in order to assist the
diffusion of the gospel at the very first. When Christianity was firmly planted, the gift of miracles
was withdrawn." (Dummelow, p. 733.)
The Prophet Mormon, foreseeing this modern day of unbelief, was led by the Spirit to bear this
testimony to the world: "Has the day of miracles ceased? Or have angels ceased to appear unto the
children of men? Or has he withheld the power of the Holy Ghost from them? Or will he, so long as
time shall last, or the earth shall stand, or there shall be one man upon the face thereof to be saved?
Behold I say unto you, Nay; for it is by faith that miracles are wrought; and it is by faith that angels
appear and minister unto men; wherefore, if these things have ceased wo be unto the children of
men, for it is because of unbelief, and all is vain. For no man can be saved, according to the words of
Christ, save they shall have faith in his name; wherefore, if these things have ceased, then has faith
ceased also; and awful is the state of man, for they are as though there had been no redemption
made." (Moro. 7:35-38.)
Matt. 28:20. Lo, I am with you alway] Jesus here promises to be with the apostles always, which he
thereafter was by the power of his Spirit. In principle this promise applies to all of the saints, and
hence it is a promise to the Church, that the Lord's protective care will be over it. Implicit in the
divine assurance here given is that the apostles, the saints, the Church itself, must be in harmony with
Christ. If any of the apostles had chosen to follow Judas, they could have done so, and Jesus no
longer would have been with them. Or, if the Church itself, as later was to be the case, should fall
away from the truth, the promise of divine protection and guidance would be withdrawn. "I, the
Lord, am bound when ye do what I say; but when ye do not what I say, ye have no promise." (D. &
C. 82:10.)
When Jesus gave to the Nephite Twelve the command to go into all the world and preach the gospel
to every creature, with the promise that signs would follow them that believed, he also gave this
promise of continued divine protection. But he used different language, language that is in effect an
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interpreting analysis of what he had said to his similarly empowered representatives in Palestine:
"And whosoever shall believe in my name, doubting nothing, unto him will I confirm all my words,
even unto the ends of the earth." (Morm. 9:25.)
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Those revealed records which teach with power and conviction the eternal truths which men must
believe to gain salvation in God's kingdom;
Those true histories of the life of Christ which lead men to love the Lord and to keep his
commandments;
Those sacred and solemn testimonies which open the door to the receipt of peace in this life and
eternal life in the world to come.
In this holy writ, in these gospel accounts, in these testimonies of the life of our Lord
We see Jesus the Almighty, the Creator of all things from the beginningreceiving a tabernacle of
clay in the womb of Mary.
We stand by an Infant in a manger and hear heavenly voices hail his birth.
We observe him teaching in the temple and confounding the worldly wise when but twelve years of
age.
We watch him in Jordan, immersed under the hands of John, while the heavens open and the
personage of the Holy Ghost descends like a dove; and we hear the voice of the Father speak
approving words.
We go with him into a wilderness place apart and behold the devil come, tempting, enticing, seeking
to lead him from Goddirected paths.
We view in wonder and amazement his miracles: He speaks and the blind see; at his touch the deaf
hear; he commands and the lame leap, paralytics rise from their beds, lepers are cleansed, and devils
desert their ill-gotten abodes.
We rejoice at the miracle of sin-crippled souls being made whole, of disciples who forsake all to
follow him, of saints who are born again.
We stand in awe as the elements obey his voice: He walks on the water; at his word storms cease; he
curses the fig tree and it withers; water becomes wine when he wills it; a few small fish and a little
bread feed thousands because of his word.
We sit with the Lord of life, as a man, in the intimacy of a family circle in Bethany; we weep with
him at Lazarus' tomb; we fast and pray at his side when he communes with his Father; we eat and
sleep and walk with him down the lanes and in the villages of Palestine; we see him hungry, thirsty,
weary, and marvel that a God should seek such mortal experiences.
We drink deeply of his teachings; we hear parables such as never man spake before; we learn what it
means to hear one with authority announce his Father's doctrine.
We see him:
In sorrowweeping for his friends, lamenting over doomed Jerusalem;
In compassion forgiving sins, caring for his mother, making men whole spiritually and physically;
In angercleansing his Father's house, blazing forth with righteous indignation at its desecration;
In triumphentering Jerusalem amid shouts of Hosanna to the Son of David, transfigured before his
disciples on the mount, standing in resurrected glory on a mountain in Galilee.
We recline with him in an upper room, apart from the world, and hear some of the greatest sermons
of all time as we partake of the emblems of his flesh and blood.
We pray with him in Gethsemane and tremble under the weight of the burden he bore as great drops
of blood come from every pore; we bow our heads in shame as Judas plants the traitor's kiss.
We stand at his side before Annas and again before Caiaphas; we go with him to Pilate and to Herod
and back to Pilate; we partake of the pain, feel the insults, shudder at the mocking, and are revolted
at the gross injustice and mass hysteria which hurl him inescapably toward the cross.
We sorrow with his mother and others at Golgotha as Roman soldiers drive nails into his hands and
feet; we shudder as the spear pierces his side, and live with him the moment when he voluntarily
gives up his life.
We are in the garden when the angels roll back the stone, when he comes forth in glorious
immortality; we walk with him on the Emmaus road; we kneel in the upper room, feel the nail marks
in his hands and feet and thrust our hands into his side; and with Thomas we exclaim: "My Lord and
my God!"
We walk to Bethany and there behold, as angels attend, his ascension to be with his Father; and our
joy is full for we have seen God with man.
We see God in himfor we know that God was in Christ manifesting himself to the world so that all
men could know those holy beings whom to know is eternal life.
And now what shall we say more of Christ? Whose Son is he? What works hath he wrought? Who
today can testify of these things?
Let it now be written once againand it is the testimony of all the prophets of all the agesthat he
is the Son of God, the Only Begotten of the Father, the promised Messiah, the Lord God of Israel,
our Redeemer and Savior; that he came into the world to manifest the Father, to reveal anew the
gospel, to be the great Exemplar, to work out the infinite and eternal atonement; and that not many
days hence he shall come again to reign personally upon the earth and to save and redeem those who
love and serve him.
And now let it also be written, both on earth and in heaven, that this disciple, who has prepared this
work, does himself also know of the truth of those things of which the prophets have testified. For
these things have been revealed unto him by the Holy Spirit of God, and he therefore testifies that
Jesus is Lord of all, the Son of God, through whose name salvation comes.
End of Volume One
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