Author: Chauncey Riddle

  • Pride

    Pride is one of the most enormous of sins. This is because it is a denial of God and His work. Let us see how this is so.

    Our God, Jesus Christ, is our creator. In Him we live, move and have our being. Every breath we draw, every muscle we move, every idea we entertain, every decision we make we do by His power and by His leave. It is true that we have agency, but it is a gift from Him. Those who are strong, beautiful, intelligent, wealthy, or healthy are so by the gift and power of God. Man has the power to expend and destroy these gifts, but no man can gain any of them on his own, without the help of God.

    Pride is the affliction wherein one takes credit to himself for his possessions, attainments or accomplishments. Perhaps he has labored long and hard for his wealth and feels he is fully justified in taking a little glory. But what he fails to realize is that though he might have supplied the ten percent, the Lord has given the ninety percent to fill his purse. Many there be who labor even longer and harder, and perhaps with more careful thought, whom the Lord does not choose to reward with money. To be proud in our own labors and self-sufficiency is selfishness; this is the seed of inability to share one’s substance with others, as becometh saints.

    Perhaps the worst pride is to be self-wise. This would be to pretend that we can of ourselves know what is best or right to do. But the beginning of true wisdom is to know of the true God and how to come unto Him to gain light and truth.

    The message of the Gospel of Jesus Christ is to come down into the depths of humility, recognizing our own nothingness and submitting our whole selves unto the Savior: our heart, might, mind and strength. Then in Him we can do what is right, and our pride and glorying will be to bear humble witness of Him before all men.

    The guidelines:

    1. Never pat yourself on the back.
    2. Always give the credit to the Lord.
    3. Thank the Lord in all things.
  • Spiritual Freedom

    Freedom is the opportunity and ability to do something. It is always specific. Because I am free to do one thing, say fly a kite, does not mean that I am free to do another thing, such as walk on water. Should one ask, “Are you free?” I must answer, “Free to do what?”

    The greatest, most fundamental freedom is spiritual freedom. A person who is spiritually free is able to grow in intelligence, to overcome his natural habits and limitations, to become like our Savior. This is freedom indeed! No one has this naturally, for it is a gift from God. The natural man is in spiritual bondage, and will be forever unless he accepts the divine gift. Having received it, he must treasure the gift and keep it:

    “Abide in the liberty wherewith ye are made free; entangle not yourselves in sin, but let your hands be clean, until the Lord comes.” (D&C 88:86)

    The knowledge as to how to obtain this freedom is the Good News of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

    An explanation as to how we may become spiritually free begins with the story of the Fall of Adam. Herein we learn of the nature of our human being and of the bondage that came upon us. Only as we understand our captivity can we appreciate the opportunity to be set free.

    We must define what it means to be a agent. There must first be an intelligent being, one who can make choices. Secondly, that intelligent being must have knowledge of alternatives, of choices to make. Thirdly, such a one must have power to carry out the choices made. These three then make one free: ability to choose, choices to make, power to do what is chosen.

    If a person has the ability to choose, his agency is limited by his knowledge and his power. If he has little knowledge of the choices open to him, he is in just as much bondage as if he were bound hand and foot, unable to do what he might choose. Since knowledge and power are had by different persons in various degrees, even so they have agency in varying degrees.

    Our Lord and Master, the Savior, has all knowledge and power. He then is fully an agent. We mortals have but a smattering of His knowledge, and but a beginning of His power. We then have but a beginning of agency. That agency is sufficient, if used wisely, to bring us to greater agency, even to full agency as we obey our Lord and Master.

    When Adam was placed in the Garden of Eden, he was given his agency by the Father and the Son. We do not know just how much power he had, but we do know that the only meaningful choice he had was whether or not to partake of the forbidden fruit. Adam was an agent because he could choose. But he had only one important choice to make, plus the power to do whichever he chose. Thus he had but the bare beginning of agency. To grow in agency he would have to know many choices of good and evil, then to be able to carry out his choice in each case.

    With the help of Satan, Adam used his agency to choose and do evil. By partaking of the forbidden fruit he transgressed the commandment of God. His reward was as promised: he suffered spiritual death, became subject to the temptations of Satan, and eventually suffered mortal death. In this transgression, Adam fulfilled the Father’s plan, for now Adam could know many evil things to do, being subject to the adversary, Satan.

    But knowing evil does not of itself set man free. The knowledge of evil is part of the bondage from which man must be set free. Thus it was that the Father sent angels to tell Adam the good things he could do, how he could put his trust in the Savior and do all things at the Savior’s direction and in His name. Knowing both many evil things to do and many good things to do, Adam was beginning to have great opportunity to choose. Now he must gain more power to act to become more free.

    As a fallen man, Adam had the physical power we know to be common to mankind. This gave him ability to do many things in obedience to the instructions which the angels brought him. But to obey God in all things, as he wished to do, called for emotional, intellectual, and spiritual abilities he did not have. So he made a covenant in baptism to take upon himself the name of Christ, to remember Him always and to obey all of the commandments which the Savior would give him. The Savior accepted that promise and bestowed upon Adam the gift of the Holy Ghost and then the Holy Priesthood. Those two great gifts then enabled Adam to have the power to do any and every good thing the Savior commanded him to do.

    We see from this that knowledge of good and power to do good are interrelated, for Adam and for all mankind, his posterity and heirs. If we receive instruction from God and do with our human power all we can to carry out that instruction, then God gives us more instruction and more power. Each builds on the other, line upon line, faith upon faith, power upon power. For obedience leads to greater power, which leads to greater instruction, which makes possible further obedience, going on and on until one may receive a fullness of all that the Savior himself has received.

    A fully empowered agent is then one who knows all the evil things that could be done, but chooses to do only that which is good, having power to do anything that could be done, but doing only that which blesses all others as much as is possible. What limitations are there upon such a being? Only the bounds of existence itself. For His love reaches to the outermost place of heaven, to the loneliest abyss of hell. There is no hurt or suffering which is unknown to one fully free. Whatever can be done and should be done to help those hurts and to assuage that suffering is done by the full agent:

    He that is ordained of God and sent forth, the same is appointed to be the greatest, notwithstanding he is the least and the servant of all.

    Wherefore, he is possessor of all things; for all things are subject unto him, both in heaven and on the earth, the life and the light, the Spirit and the power, sent forth by the will of the Father through Jesus Christ, his Son.

    But no man is possessor of all things except he be purified and cleansed from all sin.

    And 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. (D&C 50:26–29)

    But what about people who do not desire to do what is right? It is obvious that they have some knowledge and some power. In fact, they sometimes overpower and destroy those who serve God. How can this be if faithfulness leads to all power?

    The answer is two-fold. First, when the people of God are sufficiently righteous, their enemies do not overpower them. The Church of Jesus Christ has suffered and has been hurt by persecutors in many dispensations, but in every case, it was because of lack of faith on the part of some. The Church as a whole was not sufficiently faithful to avoid being driven from New York, from Independence, from Kirtland, from Far West, and from Nauvoo, even though there were some with great faith among them. When the people of Christ are one with Christ and with each other, then the blessings of Enoch obtain:

    And so great was the faith of Enoch, that he led the people of God, and their enemies came to battle against them; and he spake the word of the Lord, and the earth trembled, and the mountains fled, even according to his command; and the rivers of water were turned out of their course, and the roar of the lions was heard out of the wilderness; and all nations feared greatly, so powerful was the word of Enoch, and so great was the power of the language which God had given him. (Moses 7:13)

    The second part of the answer is that persons who choose to do evil sometimes are given great power from Satan. Cain obtained the promise that he would “rule over Satan,” that Satan’s powers would be at his disposal. Evil persons have similarly bargained away their souls for such power ever since. Thus human beings have a real spiritual freedom: they can be powerful in Christ, or powerful in Satan.

    But there is a difference. To choose Christ is to gain the greater power, and an eternal power, the power to bless into all eternity and to overcome all evil. The power which Satan can give is inferior to that of the Savior. It is strictly a short term phenomenon of this life only and perhaps only for part of it. Some choose it because it gives them wealth and power over men. They revel in self-exaltation. But their glory is hollow, and their fate is sure, as we see in the story of King Noah of the Book of Mormon. Moroni shows us the alternative and bears his warning:

    And again I would exhort you that ye would come unto Christ, and lay hold upon every good gift, and touch not the evil gift, nor the unclean thing. (Moroni 10:30)

    The sum of the matter is then that only the righteous can have and enjoy true spiritual freedom. The righteous are able to pursue and fulfill their desires both in time and in eternity. They know that the power of evil cannot destroy them, and if they do suffer, it is only to enhance the cause of the Savior and to prepare themselves personally for greater blessings. They enjoy that great hope of eternal opportunity to serve and bless others forever in the company of like-minded persons. Full of knowledge and power, they serve in love, without fear.

    Those who choose the evil gift, on the other hand, must be companions of fear constantly. They cannot trust their fellows in evil, for they know any one of them might cut them low and take their place if given a chance. They must live ruthlessly from moment to moment, sopping up all the pleasure and false grandeur they can, knowing that death or deposition may destroy them and their glory at any time. What they know is not freedom but the madness of unrighteous dominion. Their glory is as one who burns his own house down to get warm, and then must shiver through the eternal night, exposed, friendless, and forlorn.

    There is another aspect of spiritual freedom which relates to our bodies, the physical tabernacle with which God has blessed each person on earth. In the Fall, Satan gained power over Adam and all of his posterity, to tempt and try us through our own flesh. This does not mean that flesh itself is evil or that having a body is bad. It only means that we must not let our flesh control what we do. This life might be likened to a battle between our flesh and our spirit to see who is boss. Satan strives to get us to yield to the lusts of the flesh. The Holy Spirit strives with some persons to entice them to do the will of God, which is to do the work of righteousness. Life becomes a struggle between selfishness and sacrifice, between worldly glory and goodness, between receiving and giving.

    Spiritual freedom is then to be free from the domination of the body which we have. If we yield to the Holy Spirit, then the false teachings we have learned, the bad habits we have acquired, the powers of the flesh and desires for unrighteous pleasure to which we have succumbed can be overcome. The leopard can change his spots. Though our past be one of evil, so that our garments are scarlet with the blood of sin, yet our garments may become white as wool. This great blessing comes only in and through the Savior, as father Lehi explained:

    And the Messiah cometh in the fulness of time, that he may redeem the children of men from the fall. And because that they are redeemed from the fall they have become free forever, knowing good from evil; to act upon, save it be by the punishment of the law at the great and last day, according to the commandments which God hath given.

    Wherefore, men are free according to the flesh; and all things are given them which are expedient unto man. And they are free to choose liberty and eternal life, through the great mediation of all men, or to choose captivity and death, according to the captivity and power of the devil; for he seeketh that all men might be miserable like unto himself.

    And now, my sons, I would that ye should look to the great Mediator, and hearken unto his great commandments; and be faithful unto his words, and choose eternal life, according to the will of his Holy Spirit;

    And not choose eternal death, according to the will of the flesh and the evil which is therein, which giveth the spirit of the devil power to captivate, to bring you down to hell, that he may reign over you in his own kingdom. (2 Nephi 2:26–29)

    The real point of this discussion of spiritual freedom is not merely to delineate the theological niceties of the Gospel, great and powerful though they are. The fruit of all this is that each of us might use the understanding of freedom which we have to assess, correctly, our own present state of being. A good measuring rod will show us how much we have grown in spiritual stature, and what we yet must do to fulfill our own potential. We might then ask the following questions:

    1.   Am I in full control of my appetites and passions?

    Do I eat because of hunger or for nourishment? Am I able to get to bed on time and get up on time? Do I avoid foods I know are not good for me? Do I seek pleasure for its own sake, or do I properly regard the boundaries the Lord has set? Have I learned to enjoy physical labor?

    If I am in good spiritual health I will not be on the defensive. Instead of trying to ward off the temptations of sight and sound, smell and touch that come to me from the world, rather will I strive to discern spiritually the will of the Lord. The Holy Spirit tastes good. I will let its companionship be my pleasure and satisfaction. If it leads me in paths that are pleasurable as well as righteous, I will thank the Lord for His bounties unto me. If I am led through pain, I will endure it gladly, being willing to submit to the Father in all things.

    2.   Do I envy anyone?

    If I envy, not only is my nose out of joint, but my eye is cockeyed. Should I envy the warmth and light of my neighbor who is burning down his own home? Should I curse my stars that I was not born to ease and opulence? Shall I complain that the shifting sands of public opinion have not put me at the top of the dune?

    Rather will I know that righteousness is better forged in pain than in pleasure; that service comes in creation, not in consumption. I will see truly that it is not where we serve but how and why we serve that counts. I will know that all things work together for good for those that love the Lord.

    3.   Does my tongue run free?

    Not all words edify, and we shall be held accountable for every idle word. But if I wait upon the Lord, and the Holy Spirit gives me utterance, then I can measure that portion of truth to every man as seemeth good to my Master. A ship without a rudder may fare better than one with a malicious helmsman. Better to be a faithful Moses with impediment of speech than a flattering Korihor who is content to please the carnal mind.

    4.   Are my thoughts garnished with virtue?

    Knowing that what I am becoming is determined by that with which I fill my mind, what guardianship do I exercise over my future? Do I seek the scriptures, the words of the living prophets, the temple? Do I seek the company of the best people I know? Do I strive to see how blessing might come to all around me?

    In a world where romantic unrealities trap many who would do well, do I hold firmly to the iron rod? Daydreaming must not consume me, nor should I give wish or worry precious time. My task, the task at hand, will receive my careful and undivided attention so that I make real the ideal planted in my heart by the Lord. My constant though will be: How should I help?

    5.   Do I school my feelings?

    Have I come to realize that the essence of spirituality is emotion and not intellect? Do I see that purity of heart is the key to every other good thing? Do I exercise the agency which my creator has given me to turn the face of love to all in forgiveness, compassion, sympathy and succor?

    If I realize that neither hate nor anger serve the purposes of God, I am beginning to be free. When I make real in my life the pure love for Christ, then I am free.

    To become free, to gain full agency is to repent. It is to replace everything small and selfish in my mind and heart with that which is good and grand. Idea by idea, word by word, deed by deed, feeling by feeling, we all may become like our Savior.

    Sometimes we wonder if we could not the more easily repent were not those around us so human and sinful. Such a desire is not a wish to become as Christ, to choose and gain righteousness as an agent. It is rather to wait until circumstances force us to be good, even as in the plan of Satan. We prove our hunger and thirst after righteousness only by challenging the teeth of the storm. If we wait to be good until all others repent, we surely will not be free.

    Repentance thus takes a strong mind. We must turn our face to the living God and do His will, no matter what the sacrifice. No faint heart ever became as Christ. The Savior has let down to us the bridge of faith. We cannot see it. But we can feel it. If we trust in Him and climb His bridge, his love will see us across the chasm. We can leave our natural selves behind and become new creatures in Christ. Then do we have spiritual freedom.

    The sum of the matter is that to be spiritually free is to be spiritually alive in Him who is the Way, the Truth and the Life.

  • The Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ and Clues for Enduring to the End

    The Gospel of Jesus Christ is the “good news” of how to be saved. It is simple to understand. But living it is not simple and many souls are frustrated and fail to live it because they do not know the techniques of living it, which are numerous and not so simple.

    The Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ

    First we must know who we humans are. We are the literal children of a good Heavenly Father, born as spirit children to Him long ago. Our Father in Heaven sent one of His sons to organize the earth, this earth, for His children to live on and enjoy. Our Father and His special Son, Jesus Christ, put plants, animals, and people on this earth, but they also put evil spirits on this earth. These evil spirits tempted the first people on earth, Adam and Eve, to disobey our Father, and thus fall and become mortal. Because we humans are now mortal, we do wrong things and we will die. Father sent His special Son, Jesus Christ, to become a mortal also. Jesus Christ lived a perfect life, doing no wrong, and was able to suffer the pains of justice for all the wrongs (sins) the rest of us have done or will do, and to die for us that He might have the power to resurrect each of us from the grave. Another of Father’s children is a messenger, called the Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost, sent to earth to tell mortals about Father and how to be saved by Jesus Christ from doing wrong things. To be saved is to become like Christ and not sin.

    To become like Christ and be forgiven by Father of our sins, we must do five things:

    1. do faith in His Son, Jesus Christ.
    2. repent of all the wrongs we have done.
    3. be baptized by immersion to declare that we will live a life of faith in Jesus Christ.
    4. receive the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands of those who have power to give it.
    5. endure to the end, our goal, which is to become like Christ.

    To do faith in Jesus Christ is to trust Him so much that we firmly believe in Him and to do all He asks us to do. We can believe in Him because the Holy Ghost assures us that Christ is real, is alive, and wants to save us from doing wrong things. But just believing is not faith in Christ. Faith is also learning what Christ wants us to do, and doing those things. He is able to help us stop doing wrong things and do only good things for others through the pure love that He gives to all who really believe in Him.

    To repent of all the wrongs we have done is to study our own lives and actions and to compare what we do with what Christ would have us do. Where we find differences, we repent by changing what we do to match the pattern of all Christ would have us do, which is to begin to act just as He did as a mortal. The goal of repentance is two-fold: to repair damage done to others and to gain a new character, remade in the image of Christ. Repentance is the first-fruit of true faith in Christ.

    To be baptized by immersion by one having true authority from Christ is to publicly make the promise that we will take upon us the name of Jesus Christ, will always remember Him, and will obey all the commandments He give to us.

    To receive the Holy Ghost we must have the laying on of hands by one who has authority, then pray and seek earnestly to have the Holy Spirit be our constant companion and guide. The Holy Ghost is willing to be our constant companion and guide if we do and say and feel the things He tells us to do and say and feel. To receive the Holy Ghost is the baptism of the spirit.

    To endure to the end is to obey the Holy Spirit until we become a new person, remade in the image of Christ Himself, no longer sinning, then to maintain that faithfulness until we die.

    The most difficult step of the five parts of the Gospel of Jesus Christ is to endure to the end. To do so takes all of our attention until we deliver all of our heart, might, mind and strength unto Christ to do only His will and to bless all those around us through the pure love that comes only from Him. When people fail to keep their covenant of baptism and fail to endure to the end, it is often because they do not know how to do it. The following are clues gleaned from the scriptures (the Holy Bible, the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants, and the Pearl of Great Price) as to how to endure to the end.

    Clues for Living and Doing the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ

    Clue one: Be humble. Our Savior said emphatically: “And again I say unto you, ye must repent, and become as a little child, and be baptized in my name, or ye can in nowise receive these things. And again I say unto you, ye must repent, and be baptized in my name, and become as a little child, or ye can in nowise inherit the kingdom of God.” (3 Nephi 11:37–38) The opposite of being as a little child and humble is to be proud. The proud think they have things figured out and they don’t need to be saved. But those who are humble know they need all the help they can get, and are willing to receive the Holy Ghost and to learn to be obedient to Christ through the whisperings of the Holy Ghost.

    Clue two: Let your heart guide you rather than your mind. We need to use our minds, but our hearts, not our minds, should be the controlling factor in our decisions. The most important thing we can ever gain in mortality is a pure heart. This pure heart is attained as a gift from God. A pure heart is one that has learned to be selfless, thinking only of others and how to further their welfare. God has sent confusion and seeming conflicts to distract those who depend first on their minds. He does this because God is most interested in helping His children to love each other. Love is not a rationally achieved thing. It is the gift of God to all who learn to love God and to obey Him in the works of righteousness with all of their hearts. The works of righteousness are doing good deeds for our neighbors under God’s direction. In sum: One cannot learn rationally how to keep the first two great commandments to love God and neighbor. Such success comes only by purifying our desires, our hearts, then obeying God in all the works of righteousness. Laman and Lemuel could not serve God because they were trying to do it rationally. Nephi said to them: “Ye are swift to do iniquity but slow to remember the Lord your God. Ye have seen an angel, and he spake unto you; yea, ye have heard his voice from time to time; and he hath spoken unto you in a still small voice, but ye were past feeling, that ye could not feel his words; wherefore, he has spoken unto you like unto the voice of thunder, which did cause the earth to shake as if it were to divide asunder.” (1 Nephi 17:45) We feel with our hearts, not with our minds.

    Clue three: Always pray first. Nephi tells us: “But behold, I say unto you that ye must pray always, and not faint; that ye must not perform any thing unto the Lord save in the first place ye shall pray unto the Father in the name of Christ, that he will consecrate thy performance unto thee, that thy performance may be for the welfare of thy soul.” (2 Nephi 32:9) It is so easy not to begin each task with prayer because we think we know already what to do. That is a form of pride. We need to remember that we are nothing without Christ. (John 15:5) Praying first is one measure of our humility.

    Are there others? Of course. The scriptures are full of them. That is what many General Conference talks are about. That is what the better Sacrament Meeting talks bring to us. And that is what the Holy Spirit does, to bring those “others” to us in our time of need. When we learn to listen to the Holy Spirit and do all that He tells us to do, we will then become whole, holy, truly saints (sanctified ones). And then we will not only be forgiven, (sanctified), but we will have learned to keep the whole law of God, and thus be just persons (justified).

  • Can Religion Be Objective?, n.d.

    Brothers and Sisters, it’s a privilege to be with you this evening to discuss that most wonderful of all topics, the Gospel of Jesus Christ. I would like to take as my theme, “Can Religion Be Objective?” I suppose there’s no other question that moves larger in the university atmosphere about religion than its objectivity. I think it bears some very careful discussion. So let’s talk a little about this and see if religion can be objective.

    Let’s first of all begin as every intelligent discussion should begin, it’s going to get down to details with a definition. There are different ways we can define objectivity. The common sense definition that we sort of offhandedly take when we talk about it, is that objectivity is according to our thoughts and our ideas with that which is absolutely so, with the truth. Now that’s fine if we have a means of knowing the truth. But so far as most people are concerned, they discover that what they think is true is only relatively so. And therefore, this definition does not serve in any precise use, simply because there are very few things we can be sure about in this life. There are many things we might believe, and believe on good evidence, but to be sure, to know that we are objective in the sense that we can somehow compare our ideas with the absolute truth and know that we are right, is a thing we seldom come by.

    At the other end of the spectrum, another definition is to believe that objectivity is simply that upon which some group people agree. Now as a matter of fact, this is the way the word is frequently used. You are objective when you agree with your judges. They say you are being objective when you, as it were, mirror their image. Now this of course is a rather cynical definition, but unfortunately it’s one that pertains far and wide in academic circles. When you become an objective scientist in such and such a field, it’s because you have come to the standard of those who say they are objective scientists in that field. Unfortunately it’s a personal thing, and this changes from generation to generation. There are fads in various areas. But I think we would have to reject this one.

    I’d like to then substitute or suggest a third definition of what it means to be objective. And this would be that to be objective means to do the very best thinking that you can on the basis of the evidence you have as an individual. So far as I can see, so help us, that is all we really can do. We must make decisions about many items. And if we always do the very best that we know, with the evidence that we have, I think we can live with ourselves, and we can then face our God.

    Let’s go into the history of objectivity. Originally, objectivity was simply to believe what you were told by those who were supposed to know the truth. The traditional religions of mankind have functioned on this kind of basis. Originally the true religion was upon the earth but then mankind apostatized from this, and false teachers destroyed the truth. And then we had a time when men were supposed to believe these false and adulterated notions. And the false teachers insisted that everyone should believe the weight of their authority. Now plainly this had serious limitations, because the authorities themselves didn’t always agree with each other.

    Now any thinking man could say you couldn’t be objective if you believed two different things that were contradictory. In the midst of all this, this religious confusion, we have the beginning of what is called philosophy. In history, philosophy was born as an attempt to do better than the false priests and teachers of the peoples’ religions were doing in ancient Greece. It was an attempt to find that objectivity that was better than simply believing the priest. And men invented the use of reason. They thought that, since reason shows us that these men are not consistent with themselves or with each other, if we can just find a system of ideas that is thoroughly and completely consistent, then we will have the truth. Now this gave rise to what we call rationalism, which is a very strong and important trend in the history of thought. Rationalism was the bases of ancient Greek science. Science was born as a child of philosophy, in the attempt of people to discover the truth about the world. Philosophy has as its main objective, knowing how to live and to be happy. In other words, to find the course of wisdom. But to know how to live and be happy, you have to react to the universe. And to react to the universe properly, you have to know what it is. And so science was born as that specialized discipline wherein men sought to know the world and to understand it so that they could react properly to it. The standard objectivity, then, was to be reasonable. If you were consistently yourself, then, indeed, you would be found to be in accord with the truth.

    Now it was soon discovered that this was not enough. Just to be reasonable was not a sufficient canon. And so there developed in the history of philosophy, (I’m going to condense the whole history, in the earliest beginnings down to now, in a few short statements here) and simply go to the canons of philosophy that have been developed with the canons of science, which have provided for science the most sure, the most firm basis for thinking that men have been able to devise. Science is taken in the world today to be the objective standard. And it is the thing which the world looks to for answers. Since they can’t find sure answers anywhere else, they look to science. So let’s look to the standards or canons which science has invented and developed, and see just what they are, and we’ll compare the possibility of having objectivity in religion on a similar basis.

    First: First of all the idea of reason; that’s the first canon. We discover by hard experience that when we are consistent with ourselves that we do better than when we aren’t.

    Second: Going on to the second canon. We discover that if we are going to do any real, consistent thinking about the nature of this world, we must have some kind of uniformity. The only way that the mind of man can cope with the universe is if there are some regularities about the universe. If everything in your world were different from minute to minute, could you do any thinking? You might react, but you could never react intelligently. The only way that we could act intelligently relative to the universe, is if there are certain things that happen over and over again and we can learn what to do next time when that same thing comes along again. And there are some similarities in our world, thank goodness. And so we learn to react to these. The sun comes up every morning, and we learn to react to this. It goes down every evening, and we learn to react to this: to the seasons, to the way people act, to the plants and animals around us, to the opportunities for happiness and for unhappiness around us. And so it is that we have to defend our uniformity, because if there were no uniformity we could not think as successfully about this world as we do. And so a second canon of scientific objectivity is to depend on this idea of uniformity. We say, as it were, that the universe at other times and places must be like it is here and now. We insist on this so that we can think about it. So when we see a certain process going on here, say we were measuring the sediments in a lake bed, we observe that in a period of so many years so many sediments build up resulting in such and such a thickness: so many different bars of layers or something like that. Then we extrapolate backwards and we say on the basis of uniformity, if it took this long for this many layers to accumulate, and we find out how many layers were in the lake, then we say the lake is so and so old. Now we have to do this thinking about just about everything in our physical environment. If we do not use the principle of uniformity, we are not being, strictly speaking, scientific. And so we are not being objective by that standard.

    Third: To think scientifically, we must relate things in the world. We must see that there are chains of cause and effect. We might pose the principle of causality or sometimes called the principle of sufficient reason. There has to be a reason for something happening. Things don’t just happen individually. They don’t happen for no reason at all out of the blue. Again you see this is simply an application of the principle of uniformity as it were. If we want to know how to turn lights on, we’ve got to figure out something other than just supposing that it happens. If we can come to see that there is a sufficient reason mainly that when we have flipped the certain switch the lights would go on, we begin to get an understanding of what makes what work in the world. And as we have this understanding, then we can know how to accomplish certain things. Until we can begin to build up an understanding of what makes what work in the world, we don’t think we’re being very objective in our thinking. And so, the standard of causality has become a very important bulwark of scientific objectivity.

    Fourth: There is a postulate of naturalism, and when science began, especially coming out of medieval times, science was afflicted with all kinds of false notions about spirits, angels, and devils that were doing this and that sort of thing. Not that it is necessarily false that the spirits and angels and devils do things, but the kind of things that they were said to do just didn’t make very good understanding in the universe. Like the idea op the ancient Greek idea that Apollos used to get in his chariot every day and drive the sun across the sky. Well, this as interesting Greek mythology, but it didn’t do very much for your understanding of astronomy. And especially in medieval times before science could escape and become objective, it had to rid itself of every such notion of an animistic sort. And therefore today, we have what is called the postulate of naturalism in science. If you are going to think of things scientifically and be objective in modern science, you cannot evoke any reference to any kind of supernatural being. No gods, no spirits, no intelligences, no devils, no gremlins, gnomes, fairies, or any sort of things like that. These things had to be strictly cast aside, in favor of what is called scientific objectivity. Now this gave a tremendous power to science. In enabled scientists to think in ways that they could get an understanding of the universe that gave them actual power. If they thought of their chemistry, or their physics in terms of spirituality they found this didn’t lead them to much predictive power. It didn’t lead them to be able to control their experiments, but when they began to see that certain chemicals reacted with certain other chemicals in a certain quantitative and qualitative way, and they began to develop understanding and theories as to why things happened. And using these theories they were able to control other experiments, and so forth. This became a very powerful tool, and thus became part of the standard of objectivity.

    Fifth: Finally, we have the canon of publicity. This is to say that if you are going to be scientific, the evidence that you adduce, the evidence that you propose to be the basis for your understanding in the world has to be something that’s public. Now by public, we mean that it has to be something that you can see and also any other qualified observer can see and report on, and you can agree on the report. Now there is no insistence in science that you need to agree on the interpretation, but at least you must agree on the report. If this particular object is one yard long, you have to be able to come to some kind of an agreement on it. Now it’s notorious that the finer your measurements get, the less agreement you will get. But within the limitations of our ordinary measuring devices, we are able to get some standard agreements as to what the nature of the data of the world is. And on the basis of this physical data, which we can agree upon, the whole edifice of science is built. Well there now we have as it were a profile of what makes scientific objectivity.

    Supposing you have a theory that you want to test and see if it is scientifically objective. Supposing you’ve got some kind of notion as to what makes UFO’s, flying saucers, and you want to say clearly people from other planets that are coming. Well, so far as we are aware, there’s nothing unreasonable that we know about the fact that there could be people from other planets. That would fit in quite well. About uniformity…Well it doesn’t fare too well here; we have no knowledge of any persons from any other planets, and so until we can build up a rather great body of experience where we can test the thing again and again to develop a uniformity within the data itself, this one would tend to say, “Maybe this isn’t a very good scientific explanation of these things.”

    About the law of cause and effect. In the law of cause and effect we insist that there should be some kind of reasonable and regular cause for these things. We would have to study many cases of the supposed cause and the effect to see if there was some kind of definite correlation. Just because somebody has the idea that this is somebody from another planet doesn’t mean that it is. Just because somebody sees a flying object, doesn’t mean there’s really anything there. There has to be more tangible evidence as it were, more people have to see it. We have to invoke this idea of publicity. Many people have to see this and agree upon the report before we can even have the effect. That is to what the cause of this is or what we might correlate it with, this is something else.

    Well, the idea of naturalism comes in the attempt to make of this being from another planet any kind of supernatural creature of course would be limited. This could not be scientific if we applied the canon at this point. We could conceive of these creatures scientifically as being beings like ourselves, human beings or something like ourselves, which another world might produce, this would be within the pale of scientific thinking. But to suppose that this is some kind of supernatural being would be strictly impossible according to the scientific canon.

    And finally we’ve mentioned the publicity. To make a long story short, such an idea would have a very difficult time getting established. But the fact that it’s difficult is the safeguard of scientific objectivity. It was not intended that ideas should be easily accepted. but that idea has been pretty passe for a long time among people who really understand how to think. It’s unfortunate, however, to know how many people in the world still believe in this as their methodology. There are strongholds of rationalism all over the world. But be unto people who are getting out and accomplishing things. These are the people in the ivory tower who sit back and theorize on the world. Mathematicians, of course, make great rationalists because they don’t need to deal with anything in the real world. There are very few other people who can be rationalists and get away with it. But we can agree that it’s good to be rational. We ought to use the very best thinking we can possibly muster. We ought to search through our ideas and see if they are self-consistent. Just because they are self-consistent doesn’t mean a thing as far as the truth goes; but if they are inconsistent, then you know you are wrong.

    So this test of rationalism becomes a very important test of falsehood. It’s not a test of truth but it’s a test of falsehood. You can tell when your ideas are wrong at some other time by this test. Now if you could tell when they were wrong all of the time by this test, then it would also be a test of truth. But since you can’t, it’s only a test of certain kinds of falsehoods. So, I think in religion we must insist on being reasonable, on being consistent. And we must search through our understanding of the Gospel, of our theology, whatever we are considering in a religious way and see that it is consistent. Now this thing is an end product. In the beginning we may not see that it’s consistent. But whatever we do know and understand must be consistent. Sometimes the Lord might tell us to do something particularly we don’t particularly see the consistency of at the moment. The Lord told Abraham to take Isaac out and kill him; he didn’t see the consistency at the moment. But he knew that the Lord was consistent, and therefore he trusted in the Lord and the consistency was plain to him when the experience was over, it was perfectly consistent. But that’s afterward. As I say, when we have the knowledge, it must be consistent. Until afterward he didn’t have knowledge or in other words understanding of the situation.

    Well secondly, as in science when we think religiously, we too must depend upon uniformity. If there isn’t some regularity in this universe, our case is hopeless. In fact, this is one of the things He testifies to us about Himself is that he is uniform. He says it this way: my course is one eternal round; I am without variableness or shadow of turning. Now what does that mean in a practical sense to you and me? It means this: When you trust the Lord, you can depend on Him. It doesn’t matter what time of day or night or country you’re in, what problem you’re facing, what your situation is, the Lord is uniform. He is there. He’s there to support you, to instruct you, to guide you, to chastise you if you need to be. Whatever you need to be blessed, to become a more righteous person, the Lord is uniform. The Lord is without variableness or shadow of turning. He will be there for you just like He was for Abraham. Now that’s a great thing to know. If we can’t use this part of uniformity, if there isn’t uniformity in the universe, we’re just as hopeless as science is. To be living, intellectual, productive human beings, there has to be a uniformity in the world. Now it’s wonderful as we note that the uniformity in the spiritual universe is far greater than the uniformity in the physical universe. One of the reasons we have to be quite cautious about science is that we know not how far and how long this uniformity is going to go on. We can’t always predict with accuracy that certain experiments will take place. And so we always have to be tentative and cautious. And if we are truly moved with the true spirit of science, we’ll never be caught being dogmatic or authoritarian in making any scientific statements. We’ll say, on the basis of the evidence, it appears to be such and such. And some mighty good thinking can be done in a tentative way.

    But you see, when it comes to religion, we must of necessity begin to be quite sure of ourselves. And if all we can say is that this is a tentative thing like we must in science, that’s not very good. It’s pretty hard to put your faith in something that will let you down one out of ten times. Now this it the remarkable and wonderful thing about the Lord, if you have tried the Lord, and it’s actually Him you have been trying, He will not have let you down. When you get uniformity that’s there 100% of the time, that increases the likelihood of your being on the right track, doesn’t it? You will find almost nothing in the physical world you can depend on that way. But if you try the spiritual experiment, it’s there.

    Thirdly, there are laws of cause and effect that pervade the spiritual universe, and we must think in these terms to be religiously objective just as we must in the scientific realm. If we suppose that righteousness just comes, or happiness just comes by accident, that evil is just a matter of what happens, that wickedness and unhappiness don’t necessarily go together, then we’re not being very objective. We haven’t got our minds straightened out as to what really goes on in the universe. There are laws, definite laws of cause and effect that pervade. And if we’re going to think carefully and objectively in religion, we’ve got to straighten out what causes what. We have to become very astute observers. Now the observation field for this is within our own souls, within our own breast, our own mind, or whatever figure you want to use; it’s within us anyway. That’s where we have to look to observe these regularities. Now if you want to know what makes a certain chemical solution turn blue in your laboratory, you’ve got to watch what you’ve done to it. And if you just go around mixing things without paying any attention, or keeping any records of it, are you ever going to know what happens? Of course not. But by the same token, we can never straighten out the spiritual laws of cause and effect until we pay attention to what we do and what the result is. The Lord wants us to keep records. That’s what our scriptures are essentially, they are records of spiritual experiments that have been made by individuals, some turning out disastrously, some turning out very happily. We can to back to the record of those experiments and read the account of every one of them for ourselves. There’s not one that isn’t reproducible. We can try it, we can see if we get the same result. If we don’t, we can say that either I didn’t understand the report or the report was wrong. But at least that brings us to an understanding of the relationships of cause and effect. This brings us to a knowledge for us about what works and what doesn’t work in the world. So we try doing what we know is wrong. If we are honest, we’ll know whether we are happy or not with the result. If we aren’t honest of course, there’s not much that we can do. But we can begin to find the relationships of cause and effect that do pertain in our personal realms, which is to say in the spiritual universe, the two being essentially the same.

    Fourthly, now we must part company with the scientific canons and there are two different ones we must have to think objectively and religiously. Rather than having fostered of naturalism now, religion, I think we must have the postulate of honesty. To be honest means that when something happens, we’re willing to admit what happens. The people who are honest in heart in this world are the ones who are willing to admit that they are not fully happy, that they are not satisfied: Well, let’s not say it that way, that when they have done that which they have known to be wrong they have not reaped happiness from it. Now the place a person has to go and do his religious thinking and experiment is within himself. And if he can’t be honest, there’s no hope. Now you don’t worry about the honesty of a scientist; that’s not too much of a problem—why not? Because in science, because all the evidence must be public, another scientist is going to come along behind him and check his work. And if he hasn’t been honest, what happens to him as a scientist? Well, he’s out of the scientific community. And people are not careful, or if they are dishonest, somebody is going to find them out and trip them up. And so this isn’t a problem to the scientist. But you see, the phenomena that you have to deal with, the area of religious experimentation is within us, and there is nobody who can tell us whether we are right or wrong. We have to be able to admit and recognize and state the truth of what goes on within us without any help of anyone else. And if we can’t do that, if we’re not honest, there is no point in even talking about the experiments. There must be this principle of honesty within our own breast. That’s why the missionaries go out to find the honest in heart.

    Then fifthly, to be religiously objective we must add to honesty, courage. Why courage? Because other people are going to be putting pressure on us. Other people are going to be wanting us to agree with them. They are going to be wanting us to take the fruit of their experiments and take their word for it, and apply in our own lives what they think is best. But one of the fundamentals of the Gospel is the fact that every man must stand by his own light. Every man has to make up his own mind and stand on his own two feet, spiritually speaking. But unless we have the courage of our own convictions, we could never do this. A person who doesn’t have the courage to stand up to every other human being in this world can never live the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Because he will never be able to be true to that which we know and have experienced, what can we be true to? To nothing. This is the only thing that we really have in us. Our own experiences are all we know. And if we can’t profit from it, there’s no hope for us. There’s no possibility of our being an individual person. To be an individual, to be an agent means to both be honest in what happens to us, and then to have the courage to stand up for it, and to speak the very best we know, to bear our testimonies, and not to let other people influence us into simply taking their ideas on the subject.

    You know that in Section 1 of the Doctrine and Covenants, this is what the Lord says about why He restored the Gospel. He restored the Gospel so that no man would counsel his fellow man, that every man might speak in the name of the Lord. It was never intended in this Church that we should be authoritarian, that we should do what any other human being says. To accept the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to live it, means to become independent of flesh. It means to rely upon the arm of the Lord as we receive it through the Spirit. But unless we can follow canons like these, how will we ever know when we are being religiously objective?

    Okay now, let’s try religious problems. Supposing that you’ve got a problem—you’ve been influenced, you’ve had a feeling and you wonder if this is the voice of the Lord that’s speaking to you. How can you use these canons? Well, try the canon of reason. The Lord is consistent. He will not tell you to do something that’s inconsistent with something He has told you to do as a general principle. Well, He may say go here today and there tomorrow, but that’s not inconsistency. Why not? Because this was for yesterday and this is for tomorrow. Time makes a difference: what is right now is not always right later. If you try to live by the Spirit of the Lord, this is one of the very hard facts that you will soon learn. Thinking over what the Lord says for a week or two and then doing it is disastrous. When the Lord gives us a commandment, it’s for then. It’s not for some time later. And very frequently when we put it over and wait until we are sure it is absolutely right and then do it, it doesn’t work because it isn’t right for that new time.

    Well, the thing will be reasonable; it will be consistent. Consistent with what? Well, it will be consistent with what the scriptures tell us. And if we wonder if this is the voice of the Lord, we can go see if there is anything like it written in the scriptures. It will be consistent with what the presiding authorities over us say. And our of this consistency, we can find whether we are on the right track or not. There is the rational criteria. Or we can see if there is a uniformity here. Is this now the kind of thing? Well, until we have experienced the Lord many times, we don’t have that uniformity. Again, it’s like these people from outer space. Knowing, having heard the voice of the Lord once, we don’t really know whether that’s the voice of the Lord, we just have to kind of guess. There’s no possibility of being objective with something we’ve experienced just once. But if we’ve experienced this same voice many times, and it’s the same voice that has led us to good results in the past, then by applying the principle of uniformity, we can know and be assured as a matter of faith then that this is the voice of the Lord.

    About the principles of sufficient reason—We can look into our lives, and we can begin to see now, as we act on this thing the Lord tells us to do, it leads to happiness. What Satan tells them to do may lead to pleasure. People have to have very clear in their minds the difference between happiness and pleasure. Then if we can be honest, if this is in all honesty the fear of my experience, this thing that I am saying, and if I can have the courage to stand up in the face of all kinds of social pressure, then I can be objective in my religious thinking.

    I suggest to you that religious thinking is every bit as difficult and demanding, nay more so than scientific thinking. Every person who hopes to be exalted has to become at least as good a thinker as the greatest scientist in the world. Why? Because the problems of knowing what is true in the Gospel are like that. Some people get the idea that revelation is just a matter of receiving it, and doing what it says and that’s all there is to it. And that’s the mistake that Oliver Cowdery made. He thought he could just ask the Lord for the translation and how it would come and that was all there was to it. But the Lord assured him that isn’t the way it works. You have to work for it. You have to bring to bear all the power of your intelligence on the problem when you’ve got to bear all you have the Lord will make up the difference. And that’s why we have to have some system of thinking these things our in our minds. Whether you realize or not, you already have some kind of canons or standards of religious thinking. The question is, are they good enough? Are they precise enough? If it was demanded of you to perform a scientific experiment and come out with a certain result, you’d soon find out whether your scientific canons were good enough or not. But by the same token, if you’re performing religious experiments and getting good results, you know that you must have a pretty good system. You must have pretty good canons in operation. So it’s important to think these things through and become conscious about them, self-conscious so that we do not allow ourselves to be misled. It’s one thing to have revelation, but all of Satan’s servants have revelation too. He directs them and he guides them. The important thing is to be able to find the revelation from the Lord. That which is true, that which is good, that which brings happiness. And to do this we have to employ the very best thinking we can possibly muster.

    Well, let’s get back to the original question now. The question was, can religion be objective? Now let me answer the question, perhaps a little differently than you might think that I have been heading. Let me say, no; frankly religion can’t be objective. But by the same token, science cannot be objective. And the reason for that’s very simple. And that’s simply because neither science nor religion exists. There’s no such thing as science in this world. If you think there is, show it to me, where is it? What is it? This is a mythological entity that we have created in our minds as a short-end way of referring to something that does exist. Now what does exist is human beings who are acting scientifically at certain times. Now that’s a reality. But there’s an awful temptation to generalize and talk about science as if it were something individually existing and talk about science as if it were something individually existing apart from people acting scientifically at various times. Do you see what I’m driving at? Philosophically speaking, this is what we call the difference between realism and nominalism. Maybe I could illustrate this by another example: Supposing that every human being in the United States all of a sudden decided not to believe that the United States government existed. So you and I and everybody else just said, Okay, the government doesn’t exist. Would the government exist then? No, it wouldn’t exist because it is only a figment of our imaginations. The government, as a separate institution, is just a myth. Now what exists actually is people who exercise power over other people, and the other people let them do it. And that’s government. That’s the reality of the situation. But there’s no such thing as “the government.” There’s only this individual who exercises this power over these people. That’s the specific reality that exists. So, when we talk about religion, well, religion isn’t a thing—it doesn’t exist. What exists is human beings who act religiously. Now my point is this: Can I as an individual think objectively in science? Certainly, if I follow the standards. Objectivity is like having a measuring stick out here. If it measures up, it’s objective. But the measure for objectivity has changed radically in the last 1500 years in science. It’s much better frankly than it was. If you were to use the canons of scientific objectivity that Galileo used, you’d be laughed out of court today. We’ve progressed a great length from Galileo. Now Galileo was a very good scientist. He happened to guess right, fortunately for him, or he would be one of those bad examples we use. He didn’t know he was right, he just guessed right in a lot of what he did. But because he guessed right, we honor him today. Now, that’s not quite good enough. And we recognize that today, so we have better canons or scientific objectivity. But the question comes down to it now, how about religion? Are you being objective in your religious thinking? Are you doing the very best thinking you can? Are you honestly evaluating and searching for the evidence that’s available? To make a long story short, a person can be just as objective in his religious thinking as he can in his scientific thinking. But all that thinking goes on within himself. He’s got to be at least as astute in his religion as he is in his science if he’s going to produce the kind of results that bring salvation to him.

    So in conclusion let me say, the great need you and I have is to do the very best thinking we can do. If we will apply ourselves to religion, we will find that there is such a thing as a reality of the spiritual existence. We know of some spiritual existence, we know our own spirit exists. We experience it. And if we come to be able to differentiate, to understand to experience other spirits, to get these things all straightened out in our minds on the basis of cause and effect, and uniformity and reason, in accordance to what the scriptures say and the prophets say, we can come to a sure knowledge of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

    I bear you my testimony that I know that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is true. And I know that my evidence for that is every bit as good as for anything that I know in this world. If anybody wishes to examine the evidence, I can tell them what it is. They can’t see the evidence themselves. But then for that matter, you know nobody can see the evidence for anybody else in science either. This canon of publicity is really kind of a mythological thing, because all evidence is private. Physical or spiritual evidence, it’s all within our heads. There’s no such thing as public evidence. What we call public evidence is simply that about which we make the same noises. In other words, if I say that that wall is blue and you say it’s blue, we think that we’re being public because we both make the same noises with our vocal chords. But the blueness of that wall isn’t a thing that I can check out in your mind. All I can ever check is what you say about it. Well, the point is, it all drives back to you and to me. We are the ones that have to have the courage and the honesty to take the stand to know that we might be objective. It’s my hope and prayer that every one of us can rise to this wonderful opportunity that we have to know the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and to be objective and constructive, and powerful in our thinking. The point of the Gospel is to do great and might works of righteousness in this world for the salvation of souls and for the building of the Kingdom of God after we have found out that it’s true.

    But many are stumbling at the gate. They do not know where to find the Lord God. They are afraid they might not be objective if they start thinking religiously. But the only reason they think that is because of the finger of scorn that has been pointed at them by people of the world who don’t want to think that religion is objective. I’m simply trying to demonstrate tonight that those who say that religious thinking is not objective are not being very objective; they don’t have much of a case to stand on. I offer this hope, and I say it in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

    ANSWERS TO TWO QUESTIONS:

    One. The first time you see something, you don’t know what it is. You have experienced it, but that doesn’t mean you know it. Until you begin to recognize the voice of the Lord, you don’t know that it is the voice of the Lord. What I’m saying is this: The purpose of the Gospel is to bring people to the point not where they have had a revelation, but where they live by revelation from hour to hour and minute to minute, day to day. Now a person who has had ten thousand revelations from the Lord and has tried Him and tested Him, he doesn’t wonder if that’s the voice of the Lord on the ten thousand and first revelation—he knows. But for the first few hundred he might have been very confused about which was which. This is the same with anything. Supposing you’re talking with somebody on the telephone who you’ve never met; you do business with him. The first few times you talk to him you might not be sure whether it’s the right person or not until you get certain facts established, make certain tests. But after you’ve talked to him a thousand times, you can just tell from the vocabulary he uses, the inflection he has, and the tone of voice; it’s very difficult to be fooled. So I say no, I don’t see a conflict here, because it’s only after long experience that we come to knowledge, until we can get enough experience to establish that uniformity that I was talking about. What I am saying is what you are testing is probably the Spirit. There isn’t just one Spirit that speaks to man; there are many lying spirits that speak to all men. And the question is, how do you tell the Holy one, the true one, the one that never tells you a falsehood? Now the word holy is a derivative of the word whole. The Holy Ghost is completely accurate in what He tells you, and the thing we’ve got to do in our mind is straighten our which one of the voices that speaks to us is always right. Now that’s a pretty big task. Frankly, not many people have done it.

    Or, your point’s well taken. One of the great diseases in the Church is rationalism which is to set ourselves up as a judge of God and pre-judge the thing by saying, “If I can’t understand it, it must not be right.” Now we must search until we find and know and identify the voice of the Lord. Then when the Lord says, “Take your son out and kill him,” we don’t deny the rationality of it; we don’t deny this to be consistent necessarily with everything the Lord has told us hitherto, and He explained Himself before he would do it. But now I agree with that point 100%. But the fact is we will by then have established the fact as to who the Lord is. You see, Abraham had talked face to face with the Lord before that happened. He knew the Lord as you and I stand face to face to each other and talk to each other, and therefore, this wasn’t a thing where he was just going out on his belief that the voice had spoken to him which he took to be the voice of God. He knows this was the voice of God and he knew in whom he trusted, therefore he was willing to do it. This list of the scientific canons is a thing you will find various lists when you read different books on the philosophy of science. This happens to be my own collection as it were, and I don’t know anybody that would agree with me on all these points; but on the other hand you will find everybody would agree with me on some of the points.

    The point is that, well, like Einstein said, “Don’t pay attention to what scientists say, watch what they do,” because frequently good scientists are not self-conscious about their own method and thought, and therefore as you read their works and see what they’re doing, sometimes you can get a better insight into what they’re doing than from what they tell you as to what they’re doing. So, this again, one of the points that I think is very important is to not be authoritarian. If you want to know what the canons of science are, go look at science and figure it our for yourself. That’s what I have tried to do, and that’s what I commend to you. Don’t take my list…If you want to be objective about religion, the hallmark of your objectivity is are you successful in accomplishing your religious objectives. And if you are, I’ll buy your canons, at least for you. Let me point out first of all that the very point I was making in all of this is that everything is subjective, there is no such thing as public objectivity either in science or in religion. It all comes back to what you as an individual has to decide for yourself. Now if you take somebody else’s word for it you’re not being scientific—that’s authoritarianism. So I would say, why worry about subjectivity? Everybody is subjective in everything that they do. This is what’s called in philosophy, the ego-centric predicament. If you know what that means, it means simply that we are trapped as individuals; there is no way that we can get outside to see what the world really is. We have to depend on our ideas of the world. So when you say this really a form of subjectivity, I’d be guilty. But on the other hand, I think you can be objective in your subjectivity if you have a measuring stick and if you faithfully use the measuring stick. Now I think this is a new definition of objectivity, but I don’t pretend that’s bad, I say this is good! Let us advance beyond the old shibboleths and not be frightened of this word subjectivity. We have to admit that we stand alone for what is true and right in the religious sense, but if we could just get everybody to admit that they do that in science goo, it would clear the air considerably because it is also true in science, isn’t it? No one can know what goes on in anybody else’s head to date, and therefore everything we think is private.

    Now, let’s come to the second point of your question: “How do you know you aren’t just kidding yourself?” Well, if you’re going to talk that way, you see, then we have to ask the question, “How do you know that you’re not kidding yourself that you’re here?” Maybe you’ve just psychologised yourself into thinking that you’re at Berkeley; and until you are that sure of your religion, you’d better doubt it. Now that’s my point. If you think you’re psychologising yourself, then you’d better watch out; you might just be. The reason you know you’re here is because you can check it and re-check it by all kinds of evidences, like these canons I’ve been talking about. And until you have your religion in that same shape, you’d better watch out, because you may be wrong. It’s very easy to be misled. Most of the people in this world are misled religiously. Most of them are “insane,” spiritually speaking. Now it isn’t very difficult to tell when a person’s insane physically, you might try to go through the window over here and pretend that it’s a door or something. And if you kept insisting on that, refuse to be amenable to the fact that the door is over here, we’d probably lock him up for his own safety. Now you see, people do this spiritually all the time. They say, “This is the way to happiness,” when it’s actually over there. But until a person has found happiness, and found it again and again and again, and he knows he’s doing the right thing, he’d better wonder if he’s just psychologising himself. Yes indeed, the foundation of the Gospel of Jesus Christ is to come to know that God lives; that is eternal life, and any person who doesn’t get some eternal life in this life hasn’t been living the Gospel very much. So I would say, “Amen to your point.” But you see, I’m carrying it far beyond what you would usually anticipate. Because the point is, you have to be just as sure. The only reason we’re sure we are here is because we have had this kind of an experience over and over and over again. It’s a well tested, well substantiated hypothesis. And until your knowledge of the Lord becomes that same well substantiated, well tested hypothesis, you may just be whistling in the dark. So, that’s what the prophets commend to us. They commend to us to seize upon that iron rod, and if we don’t believe the iron rod to test it, and to try it and to test it and to try it, getting the fruits, getting more and more happiness. It gets pretty wonderful after a while. You have to ask yourself the same question whenever you eat: “Am I really nourished?” Am I really full? Is it just gas that’s distending my stomach and making me think I’m full?” Well, if you haven’t lived long enough to tell the difference, you’re not very mature, and similarly, the purpose of the Gospel is to bring us to religious maturity our of thousands of experiences so that question will never have to be asked.

    There are people in the Church who are converted to the Church. They depend upon those in authority; their method of operation is essentially authoritarianism. But they are not servants of the Lord Jesus Christ until they become converted to Him—that is to say, until they get beyond the point where they rely upon the arm of flesh, they are not servants of Jesus Christ. It’s only when through their own prayers, fasting, meditation; through their own personal spirituality having tested the Lord and tried Him and found Him and knowing Him, only then are they true servants of Christ. The role of the Church then is what? It’s to bring people to have that personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ. The Church doesn’t save anybody, anytime, anywhere. It merely provides a gateway to a path and encourages them and instructs them when they come to the day of judgment, and the bar of judgment, it’s Him that they will find at the gate of the Celestial Kingdom. There won’t be any church there, there won’t be multitudes there, there will be just one person, Jesus Christ. And if they have been His servant, and they know Him, and if they have qualified to be one of His sheep, then He will open the door to them. But it doesn’t matter how faithful you might say we have been as an organization man in the Church, that doesn’t save anybody. This is the part of the seventh chapter of Matthew I take it; so the Church is here as an indispensable means for the salvation of mankind. But that indispensable means is to introduce people to the Lord so that they no longer are authoritarian, in that worldly sense. Does that answer your question?

    Two. The essence of religion is not just what is the truth of the universe, but what is my relationship to the universe which includes the reality of me as well as the reality of everything else. And so I have to be, that’s why I try to push these two points of honesty and courage. You have to want something to do anything. Desire is the motive power for all action. If persons are not anxious to find righteousness, they will never find it. The Lord has so constructed the world so that they can blithely go off in all kinds of directions and not find it; and that’s the agency of man. If it were not so, we’d all be forced into His Church. But He doesn’t want it that way. This earth is designed so that only those who genuinely and truly love righteousness will ever discover it. And then it will be plain that it’s no accident that they discover it. And then it will be sure that when they are given exaltation, they really deserved it and nobody else did. So I agree, the Gospel of Jesus Christ isn’t just truth, it is a way of happiness.

    One of the tremendous concerns I have about the intellectual community in the world in which I find myself a part of, whether you were talking about me just a minute ago or not. I must confess, if this sounds hard right about what I’ve been talking to you about tonight, all I’m saying is that, if you have a testimony of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and you love to do the works of righteousness, both, more power to you because you’re on the right track. Pay no attention to the rest of us if that bothers you, because all the rest of that is just the trappings by which you might say this to somebody who was over-impressed by the language of the world. But, a man said to me this morning, “You know, the intellectuals in the Church have made a great sacrifice to train themselves, and they bring themselves to the Church ready to do anything the Church would want them to do. But the Church almost turns it’s back on them, and doesn’t want them, is suspicious of them.” And I think there’s something to that. A great many of them get that feeling; I think that’s a good thing to analyze. Why is it that they get that feeling? I think that there are two fundamental reasons: In the first place, if they are intellectual, and they have conquered some field and have become masters, there are almost none of them who can avoid the temptation to start monkeying with things and trying to correct them. And that’s why they are destressive. But secondly, there’s a much greater point, and I think it’s this: Who is the greatest intellect around anyway? Who is the person who knows the most physics and chemistry, and music and architecture, philosophy, and anything else you’d care to mention? Well, it’s the Lord Jesus Christ. But he doesn’t brag about this. The thing that’s great about Him, the thing that’s His claim to fame is not just that. The thing that made Him our Savior and God is the fact that knowing this, He then went and did that which was right.

    Now I submit to you the important thing about the Gospel is not knowing it; it’s living it, it’s doing. Now the disease of the intellectual community is to suppose with Plato that knowledge is virtue. If you have the truth, that’s sufficient; everything else follows. But that just isn’t so. The thing that’s important in the Gospel and in the Church of Jesus Christ is to be a doer of the word. Now if the intellectuals were interested in promoting the work of the Kingdom, they wouldn’t be sitting around wanting to intellectualize about it. They’d want to be out there using their intellect to get the job done, to be a better Elder’s Quorum President, to be a better manager of a welfare farm if that’s their assignment. They wouldn’t be available for intellectual consultation. That’s what they would expect, apparently. They would be available for hard-core work in solving the problems of the Kingdom. And if that’s what their intent was, they’d find they’d be snapped up in a minute. They would never feel left out in the cold forlorn, because the Church has great need of anybody who will serve with a willing heart and capable mind. The Church needs people of intellectual power greatly, but it needs their intellectual power to solve the particular problems of day to day application of the Gospel, not to correct the doctrine, not to straighten out Church organization which is where they usually want to apply their labors.

    Well, the only unfortunate thing about such an opportunity as this is that I didn’t get to hear enough of from you. I know some of you probably recognize that I’m no authority on some of these things. If I have said anything good, don’t believe it because say it; if it has been good, the Lord will testify to it, to you, and then you can accept His word for it. I believe that we ought to sit at the feet of those who are authorities in the Church. So far as you’re concerned, I’m not. As far as I’m concerned, you’re not; we don’t preside over each other. We can explain our ideas to one another; we can be edified as brothers and sisters in the Gospel. We have such a wonderful work to do; we live in great times. They’re troubled times, but they’re great and wonderful times. It’s my hope and prayer that each of us can be true to ourselves. I like that scripture in Shakespeare, or I like to paraphrase it: This above all, to thine own self be true, he said. I like to say it this way: This above all, to thine own God be true. And then it follows to the night and day thou canst not be false to any man. If you and I can make it the study of our lives to find our God, and knowingly unite with Him in the purposes of righteousness, think how much good we can do in this world. Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness, and anything else you need will be added. I bear you my testimony that that is true, and I say it in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

  • The Fall of Adam and Eve

    I ask you to think with me about the Fall of Adam and Eve. When you think about that Fall, do you lament that event, or do you rejoice in the fact that it happened? If you do not already rejoice when you think about the Fall of Adam, I would like now to try to persuade you to do so. To begin that attempt, let us look at the big picture of our existence.

    Our Heavenly Father and Mother were once as we are, mortals on an earth somewhere. They were also fallen. But they proved themselves worthy by faithfully abiding the requirements to be able to stand the blessings of exaltation. They showed that no matter what the circumstances of their mortal lives, they would do the things that were right for them to do, to honor and to bless all of their fellow beings, no matter what their fellow beings did to them. Having demonstrated their firmness in their faithfulness, being unshakable, they were rewarded with the blessings of exaltation. Exaltation is a fulness of power, being able to do everything that can be done, a fulness of knowledge, to know all of the past, present and future of the whole universe, and a fulness of opportunity to bless other beings.

    Using all of those blessings and powers, our Heavenly Parents sought us out. They found us as intelligences already existing somewhere in the universe. They invited us to become their children, which would mean that they would prepare bodies for us of spirit material, begetting us into their family by the process of birth on the same model as we know birth as babies into this mortality. They begat millions and billions of us as spirit children. As their children, they taught us about the universe we live in and how to grow in ability to use this universe to achieve happiness through blessing others.

    Blessing others is the way our Heavenly Parents find happiness, and that is why they begat us as their spirit children, so that we could also receive the happiness they enjoy. Blessing others with what they need, to achieve as much happiness as they can stand, is called righteousness.

    Righteousness is not an arbitrary thing. It does not depend on the likes or dislikes of any person, but is built right in the nature of existence. It is the rules that intelligent beings of great knowledge and power must live by to as not to hurt or curse any other being, rather to bless and help every other being affected by them to become as happy and satisfied as possible. So the rules of righteousness include being honest, true, chaste, benevolent, thus doing good and blessing all other beings affected by them. Those who achieve righteous character can be trusted with exaltation. Exaltation is to be lifted up above every limitation, to enjoy all the power there is in the universe to bless others. Blessing others is what brings happiness. Exaltation is thus the opportunity for the greatest happiness.

    Being righteous persons, our Heavenly Parents found their happiness in sharing with their children, so that their children could receive the full happiness they have. So they prepared a plan by which each of their spirit children could choose and receive that full happiness. The plan was announced in a great council in heaven. The plan was that our Heavenly Parents would send their children into a new place with physical bodies like their own added to the spiritual bodies which we had already been given. In this new mortal life, we would not remember life with Heavenly Father and Mother, nor would we any longer be able to see and know the spiritual experiences which we had learned to enjoy as spirit children of Heavenly Father and Mother. The plan was to give each spiritual child the opportunity to see how much of righteousness each desired and could stand. Those who showed that they wanted righteousness more than anything else, including more than wanting mortal life itself, would thus show that they could be trusted with all of the power and knowledge of Heavenly Father and Mother. But we would each have to find how much righteousness we wanted to achieve using our hearts, not our minds. That is because our hearts are the real us. Our minds are a tool by which we attain the desires of our hearts. We were all taught that it is the heart that is the real us. So mortal life would be a situation where the real desires of each of us spirit children of Heavenly Father and Mother could be proved without error.

    But the prospect of not being able to beat the system, to have the desires of our hearts become plain for all to see made many of the children of Heavenly Father and Mother become afraid. They were afraid because they knew themselves, that their hearts were not pure in desiring righteousness. They knew they could not prove themselves worthy of an eternal opportunity to bless others, because what they really wanted was selfishness, to have more for themselves than their neighbors had. These spirit children of Heavenly Father and Mother rebelled and would not accept the plan, knowing they could not prove themselves worthy of the powers of righteousness. In their rebellion they were sent away out of heaven and from the presence of Heavenly Father and Mother and the spirit children who did want to prove themselves. They were led by one of our spirit brothers who had been a notable leader, whose name was Lucifer, meaning “light bearer.”

    So began the execution of Father’s plan to further bless His spirit children. The firstborn of Father’s children, He who was selected to be firstborn because of His love of righteousness, was given the opportunity to gather many of the rest of us to participate in the preparation of this earth to be the place where we could demonstrate our love of other persons in righteousness. The firstborn would be known as Jehovah, and also by the name Jesus Christ.

    Some of us joined Jehovah in taking the fragments of other planets and forming them into a place where the mortal spirit children of Heavenly Father and Mother could live and prove their love of righteousness. That proof would come only if that love for righteousness were freely chosen for itself and not for some promised reward. So some condition had to be achieved whereon each of the children of our Heavenly Parents could choose whatever degree of righteousness each desired. The plan of Heavenly Father provided that the children would come to this earth having no remembrance of the heaven where they had been residing and as they became mature as human beings they would be given the way of selfishness. The way of righteousness would be offered to each child of God through promptings of their hearts and would be called the light of Christ. The way of selfishness would be offered to each child of God as desires that would come through their fleshly bodies as evil desires were put into their hearts by Lucifer.

    But there was a problem. How could our Heavenly Father and Mother, being completely righteous, put their own children in jeopardy by giving them the temptation to be selfish and do evil? If Father thrust us out of His presence, then by the law of justice He would need to bring us back. This was solved in Father’s plan for the happiness of His children by allowing the first parents of human beings to choose for themselves to become fallen and subject to Lucifer. Then they would also need to choose for themselves to be redeemed back to the presence of our Heavenly Parents.

    And so it was that when our first parents were put into the Garden of Eden on this earth they were put into a paradise that was very much like the heaven where they were born and raised as spirit children of Heavenly Father and Mother. But they were different, because they were like little children, having very little knowledge and ability. They did know enough to tend the garden in which they found themselves. But they were not yet prepared to demonstrate the true desires of their hearts.

    To give them the opportunity to demonstrate those true desires of their hearts, Father gave Adam and Eve a commandment not to partake of the fruit of the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, lest they die. Then Father allowed Lucifer, who had been sent to this same earth with his followers, to tempt Adam and Eve to disobey Father by eating of the fruit of the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Adam would not partake, but Eve was deceived into thinking that they would not die, but would be as the gods by partaking. So she partook of the fruit and then persuaded Adam to partake. This was the Fall of Adam.

    Now to recount the changes that took place in the Fall of Adam and Eve.

    1. Whereas they had been spiritually alive, their spiritual senses being able to perceive the spiritual existences around them, they did die spiritually that very day in which they partook. They could no longer perceive the spirits of all things in their surroundings, but only the physical part of each being. They could no longer see either Heavenly Father or Lucifer.
    2. Whereas they had had spirit matter flowing in their veins before their disobedience, they now had red blood flowing through their veins. This blood also sustained life in their physical bodies, but only temporarily. Thus Adam and Eve not only died spiritually, but became destined to die physically as their physical bodies would eventually degenerate and no longer be able to function. Spiritual death would thus be followed by temporal death.
    3. Adam and Eve had been as children, knowing and understanding very little. But after the Fall, they were taught by angels how to be righteous through Jesus Christ, and were given consciences by which they would be prompted to do good, the work of righteousness. But also after the Fall, they gained the constant companionship of an evil spirit, either Lucifer or one of his followers who rebelled in heaven. Lucifer, or Satan as he is now called, would always entreat Adam and Eve to be selfish, to seek more for themselves at the expense of others, and to delight in the pleasures of the flesh over the joy of righteousness. Thus Adam and Eve became free to choose for themselves in every dimension of their lives, to choose between the righteousness of the gods and the selfishness of the devil and his angels.
    4. In their new freedom to choose between good and evil, Adam and Eve and their posterity now had a default setting in their spiritual lives. That default position was to favor their mortal flesh over their spirit being. This meant that the natural, easy thing to do was always to give in to the desires of the flesh. Most humans resort to the default position most of the time and thus serve evil and Satan. In that condition they are known as “natural man,” being carnal, sensual and devilish. To be carnal is to value the pleasures of the flesh over the pleasures of the spirit, thus to desire selfishness over righteousness. To be sensual is to pay more attention to and to delight in the senses of the physical body rather than to the feelings of one’s heart which enjoin righteousness. To be devilish is to choose the promptings of Satan over the whisperings of one’s conscience, which conscience is the light of Christ in their lives.

    Adam and Eve, now being fallen, were thus in a special, God-given situation of agency, freedom to choose for themselves a character. The true desires of their hearts would be made evident by their choices. Each day they would make many choices, most of which would involve choosing between the flesh over the spirit, thus choosing to follow Satan or Christ, those choices would begin to fix habits in them. Those habits would become their character. Unless they made a special effort to follow Christ and righteousness, they would default into being carnal, sensual, devilish, natural men. This mortal character would become the basis upon which Father would reward them with an eternal trajectory of action for eternity, each child of god having chosen his or her own character and thus his or her own future. Those who gained character which produced righteousness could be trusted with great power. Those who fostered the character of the natural man, being selfish, could not thus be trusted because they would use power to wound others to feather their own nest. Hurting others to feather one’s own nest is abhorrent to every righteous being and especially to God, who is a being of pure righteousness. God will not, nay, cannot, reward selfishness with power, for then he would cease to be a god. So when each human receives his or her final judgment, God rewards each with that power they learned to use in righteousness, and are stopped from exercising every power they used in their probation for selfishness. That limitation of power is called “damnation.”

    So what can we human beings do to avoid damnation? The answer is no secret. It is called the strait and narrow path of righteousness. It is the covenant path to acquire the same habits, character and power enjoyed by our leader in righteousness, Jesus Christ. The goal is to learn to love our Heavenly Father and Mother for their righteousness with all of our heart, might, mind and strength, even as Christ does. All of our heart, might, mind and strength is all that we have.

    The covenant path begins by learning of Christ and desiring to become like Him. We are invited to be baptized, reborn as His children, by making three promises: One: To be willing to take the name of Jesus Christ upon us, thus to be known among mankind as His servants. Two: To keep the commandments He has given us, which enable us to choose righteousness over selfishness in every circumstance. Three: Always to remember Him, thus to remember in every decision we make to choose as He would choose. If and when we make those promises in authorized baptism by water, Christ then gives the greatest gift we could receive as mortals, the gift of the Holy Ghost. That gift of companionship means that Christ will always be with us so that we will always be able to choose righteousness over selfishness and never need to serve Satan and our flesh ever again.

    Unfortunately, we humans are not very strong of ourselves, and we all break the covenant of baptism. When we break that covenant, the forgiveness of sins we gained in baptism is taken away and the weight of all of our previous sins comes back upon us and the companionship of the Holy Ghost is taken away. But Christ has provided a remedy for that regression. He allows us to again make the promises of baptism by partaking of the sacrament. As we eat of the flesh of Christ and drink of His blood, we renew the promises we have made to Him. If we really are humble and sorrowful for having broken our promises, our Savior again forgives us and allows the Holy Spirit again to be our companion unto helping us become stronger and stronger in faith in Christ unto the gaining of the habits and character of righteousness.

    As we become more firm and steadfast in the path of righteousness, serving others, we are ready to receive the Holy Priesthood after the Order of the Son of God. Men who serve Christ are first given the priesthood of Aaron, which priesthood pertains to temporal order and the teaching and preaching of the way of Christ. If men are faithful in the opportunities of the Aaronic Priesthood, they are then given the Melchizedek Priesthood, which priesthood administers the spiritual gifts of God and is the power to preside in the Church of Jesus Christ. Men who are faithful in that priesthood are then invited to the Holy Temple to receive the full blessings of the Patriarchal Priesthood, which blessings they can only receive with their wife, which blessing is to be sealed in the temple to their chosen companions in eternal marriage, that they might have posterity in God’s way and build an eternal family kingdom of righteousness.

    Necessary to the ability to form an eternal family unto righteousness is the receiving of the temple endowment. That endowment is a gift from God, for the meaning of the word “endowment” is “gift.” The endowment consists in receiving all the gifts of God necessary to form an eternal family in righteousness. In that endowment the receiver of it makes five covenants with God which show the person how they can love God with all of their heart, might, mind and strength. The temple order of those covenants is mind, heart, strength and might, the order in which they must be built, as opposed to the order of importance given in the great commandment.

    The most fundamental requirement to be able to tread the narrow covenant path which enables a human being to attain the character of Christ is to be humble. Pride is the enemy of righteousness. But as a person comes to Christ as a little child, willing to obey and to suffer all things Christ would put upon him or her, the blessings of Christ come upon that person. They become meek before God, hungering and thirsting after righteousness until they attain the constant companionship of the Holy Ghost and then the firmness of the character of Christ Himself. In that humility and obedience, all that God is and has can be put upon them. They will never use any of it for selfishness but will use it only to bless others and to attempt to bring those others also to come unto Christ. To come unto Christ is to come unto righteousness and to a fulness of the blessings which Christ has to give: All that Father has.

    Thus, the blessing which Christ has to give to all mankind is Himself. He gives all mankind the opportunity to fully partake of His suffering of the Atonement unto the forgiveness of their sins and of His righteousness by coming into the stature of the fulness of His character. To receive this is truly living, the fulness of life and salvation, the greatest accomplishment any human can ever attain.

    As we contemplate the Fall, let us remember what would have happened had there been no Fall. Had Adam not fallen, he and Eve would still be in the Garden of Eden as little children and with no posterity. All things would have continued as they were, because there would have been no death as well as no progress. Had Adam not fallen, Father could not bless His children with exaltation through Jesus Christ.

    Now: Are we not all greatly blessed by the Fall of Adam? Rejoice!

  • The Faith of Our Fathers

    The Riddle Family is in Utah and the west because of the Gospel and the Church of Jesus Christ. What are they?

    The Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ is a simple message. It is:

    1. If you will put you whole trust in Jesus Christ
      repent of every sin
      covenant to obey Christ in baptism
      receive the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands, and
      endure to the end?
    2. Then you will be prospered in a richness of
      spiritual gifts
      power in the priesthood
      strength in the family, and
      success in subduing the earth,
    3. so much that you will be totally satisfied with your life
      and accomplishments.

    The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the Savior’s instrument for delivering the opportunity to know the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to partake of the ordinances of salvation to every person on the earth. It is the mission of the Church to:

    1. Perfect the Saints (encourage them until they live the Gospel).
    2. Preach the Gospel to every person on earth.
    3. Assist families to help their kindred dead.

    If you and I would turn to the Savior and love Him with all of our heart, might, mind and strength, then learn to love our neighbors as the Savior teaches us how to do so (He teaches us through our prophets and through our conscience, which is the Holy Ghost), there is no earthly problem we could not solve. The Savior’s way of righteousness is the way of happiness, of power, of salvation.

    May I encourage you to claim the blessings of the Restored Gospel through increasing your faith in and love for Jesus Christ. I bear my witness to you that the Savior’s love is the most wonderful, most satisfying, most encouraging thing on this earth, and that the only intelligent way to act for any of us is to return His love by faithfully keeping His commandments and supporting His kingdom.

  • Truth

    In the course of a religious discussion a lady was asked if she believed in infant baptism. “Believe it? I’ve seen it!” she exclaimed. This anecdote reflects a problem about truth for many people. Is truth what ought to be or what actually is the case? For Latter-day Saints, truth is what actually is.

    The Doctrine and Covenants gives us a plain statement as to what truth is: “And truth is knowledge of things as they are, and as they were, and as they are to come.” (D&C 93:24) We see that truth is knowledge of things. This knowledge is understanding, a mental comprehension of how the thing we want to know about relates to other things. We see a tree. To see it is not to understand it necessarily. To understand it we must grasp other correct ideas which relate it to other things. Those other ideas are represented by questions such as: Where did the tree grow? How old is it? What species is it? How was it propagated? Is it mature? Of what use is its wood? To have the answer to many such questions is to begin to understand the tree, to begin to know it as it really is.

    When we have learned everything important about our tree as it is, and as it was, and as it will be, then we comprehend the truth of it. Mere physical inspection of the tree will give us some information about it, but not a very large portion. To understand that tree we need help. That help is available through the Lord. Our Savior and the Holy Ghost are both known as the Spirit of Truth. If we want to know the real truth about anything important, we must gain the truth from them. Truth is a spiritual matter.

    Satan is in on the act as well. As the father of lies it is his business to substitute misinformation for correct understanding wherever possible. He propounds his lies directly, in personal revelation, and indirectly through people in their conversations and writing. He fills the world with lies to confuse and misdirect as many souls as possible. He fills the world with lies to confuse and misdirect as many souls as possible. He would have us believe that our tree grows by itself, without any spiritual influence. He would have us believe that its species was created by blind chance and that killing it has no moral involvements. Those lies are bad enough when applied to trees. But of course Satan says the same things about human beings, and many humans believe him.

    When we think about it, we begin to realize that everything in the universe is to some degree connected with everything else. Everything shares a common time and space framework, and many things affect others in cause and effect sequences. The result of these interconnections is that there is one giant truth about the universe at every moment. To understand anything completely, we must understand everything completely. Truth is one great whole. Only a being great enough to comprehend that whole knows the real truth. We humans are not that great, and therefore must settle for glimpsing the pieces of truth.

    As we glimpse those precious pieces of truth which come to us from our God, we must be careful to admit that we do not understand everything and that when we testify of the fragments revealed to us that is strictly our personal witness. No other person had better get his truth from us. We bear our witness so that our hearers will accept our words, but we entice our hearers to go to God Himself, to seek the Spirit of Truth, that they might be given their own personal glimpses of truth in their own personal revelation.

    In the world, of course, there is a good deal of noise about truth, some of which would be amusing were it not tragic. We see some men persecuting and killing others because the others will not accept their witness of the truth. We see some self-righteously pretending to have discovered the real truth about the universe or some part of it from some historical document, and think they can then belittle others who are doubtful. We see worldly fads in “truth” that are like waves on the seashore, dashing all who would think for themselves. We see people strain at a gnat, insisting that the whole world we know is some human mistake a man has made, while swallowing a camel by denying the hand of God in all things, and the while strutting as champions of truth.

    The real truth is spiritual and comes to individuals who can receive the Lord and reject Satan. It lingers and grows only with those who live by it, humbly struggling to repent of their sins and to make the world a better place by correcting their own stewardships. Every man’s witness will eventually come back to him. If he has testified truly, by the Spirit of truth, he will be justified. If he has received and believed the myths of the father of lies, they will haunt him to eternity. There is a truth about how things are and were and will be. The wise seek that truth humbly, bear witness gratefully, and above all live what they know to be the will of God.

  • Why It Can Be Said that The Gospel of Jesus Christ is the Best Kept Secret in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    After many years of teaching in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and at Brigham Young University I have sometimes lamented that the best kept secret in the Church is the Gospel of Jesus Christ. I say this with sorrow out of the many conversations with members of the Church focusing on two issues: 1. What is faith in Jesus Christ? 2. What is repentance?

    When I ask members what their concept of faith in Jesus Christ is, I often have them quote to me the scripture: “Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” (Hebrews 11:1) Then I say, “What does that mean?” and they usually admit that they do not know. And they usually do not recognize that that quotation from Paul is a description of faith, telling us something about it rather than being a definition of what faith is.

    Or I might turn to the dictionary found in our standard LDS edition Bibles. Under the heading of “Faith” is the following: “Faith is to hope for things which are not seen, but which are true (Heb. 11:1, Alma 32:21), and must be centered in Jesus Christ in order to produce salvation. To have faith is to have confidence in something or someone.” I submit that one can have full confidence in Christ until the day they die and still not have an ounce of faith in Christ. If I am wrong, please labor with me and set me straight.

    To me the burden of the Holy Scriptures is this: Faith in Jesus Christ is willing and immediate obedience to some message I have received from Jesus Christ. The message may come through another person, from the scriptures, from my conscience, as well as from our Savior Himself. What all these messages will have in common is that they will be given to me by the power of the Holy Ghost. I must obey, for faith is to do something, and that something almost always will involve doing some act which helps another person to fill some need they have. Faith without such works is dead. (James 2:17) It must be willing obedience, not as the devils who must obey. It must be immediate, the more immediate the better, for to delay is to try to find a substitute for faith in Christ. To have true faith in Christ one must have learned about our Savior from some source, like what he is learning, be instructed to do something, and respond with an action doing that something as directed by the Holy Spirit.

    I recognize that a person may exercise faith in Christ without being able to define what that faith is. But would it not be better to have a firm mental hold on what faith in Christ is and be fully conscious of exercising it? Faith in Christ is something one deliberately does, not something one sort of has.

    When I ask members of the Church to tell me what repentance is, they often will quote to me the four R’s: Recognition, Remorse, etc. What they do not recognize is that one can do the R’s without one ounce of faith in Jesus Christ. Doing the four R’s may be a good thing to do, but I think that is surely not what our Savior intended when He told us to repent.

    Again we may look to the dictionary entry for “Repentance” found in our standard LDS Bible. There we read: “The Greek word of which this is the translation denotes a change of mind, i.e., a fresh view about God, about oneself, and about the world. Since we are born into conditions of mortality, repentance comes to mean a turning of the heart and will to God, and a renunciation of sin to which we are naturally inclined.” I submit that one can change his or her mind and turn his or her heart to God and disapprove of sinning without performing a shred of repentance.

    To me, the burden of the Holy Scriptures on repentance is this: Replace every act of your life which is not an act of faith in Jesus Christ with an act of faith in Jesus Christ. To replace one act is to begin to repent. But one has not repented until one has replaced every act, or, in the Savior’s words, one has become completely faithful to Christ (3 Nephi 12:48, Moroni 10:32).

    I see people who have committed serious sins and then they receive a temple recommend. That may be a beginning of repentance, but is of itself not full repentance. I see people who try to keep the standards of the Church unto repentance, but I see almost no recognition of that if we have not repented of all our sins, we are not yet fully on the strait and narrow path.

    There surely is a lot of repenting going on among members of the Church. But I personally perceive very little understanding of what repentance is and the necessity of completing it. Would it not be better for members of the Church if they had a true and correct and full understanding of what repentance is supposed to be in the Gospel of Jesus Christ?

    Is it possible that the clear and precise concepts of faith in Christ and repentance in Christ are withheld because the way is so strait and so narrow, out of fear that members of the Church would become discouraged and fall away into lax ways and more sinning? I submit that regardless of what is taught, many members will find the way too strait and too narrow and will fall away.

    But the purpose of the Church as I understand it is to establish Zion. Zion cannot and will not be established with watered down definitions of faith and repentance. They are the crux of living the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

    I hope that my lament will be answered somehow with clearer understanding of what true faith in Jesus Christ and repentance in Jesus Christ are on the part of those who care about the cause of Christ in the earth.

  • The Anatomy of Human Learning

    The purpose of this essay is to set forth a special understanding of the nature and processes of human learning considered in and LDS frame of reference. We begin with a review of the theology essential to this topic.

    The Nature of Man.

    Man is a dual being. He has a spirit body into which he was begotten by our Heavenly Father and Heavenly Mother. He has a physical body into which he was begotten by his earthly father and earthly mother. He received these two bodies that he might have the opportunity to learn to be like our heavenly parents.

    The spirit body of man has two aspects important to note. One is the heart. The spiritual heart is the seat of the desires of a person, and from that heart come feelings and choices. The second aspect of the spiritual body is the mind. It is the business of the mind of man to perceive the world (to identify what is out there), to understand the world (to relate to things that are out there to each other), and to create options for action (different things the person can try in the attempt to fulfill the desires of the heart).

    The physical part of man also has two main aspects important to note here. The first is the strength of the body. It is the movement of the body to act according to the choices of the heart in the paths or options created by the mind as translated to the physical body through the brain and nervous system of the physical body. One special part of this strength of the physical body is the power to beget children. The other main aspect of the physical nature of man is his might. Might is what a person influences or controls in the world outside of his body using words and his physical strength.

    Man then has two natures, a spiritual one and a physical one. The essential aspects of these are his heart, his might, his mind, and his strength. The spiritual nature of man has a spiritual has a spiritual environment. In that environment, man’s spirit encounters the Spirit of the Lord, which entices him to do good; the spirit of Satan, which entices him to do evil; and the spiritual influence of other human spirits, which entice him to do good or evil, depending on whether the other human spirit has yielded to God or Satan. The physical nature of man has a physical environment. It contains other human physical bodies, plants, animals, the earth, and every other physical part of the universe which man can perceive.

    Every man has a mortal life and a probation. The mortal life is the dwelling of his spirit body in his physical body for a short time. This sojourn entitles man to a physical body in the resurrection which he will enjoy to all eternity. The probation is a proving of each man’s spirit to see if, after being born into mortality, he will obey God or Satan. The purpose of God in creating man spiritually and physically is that each might learn to become a god himself if he so desires.

    The Kinds of Learning.

    The learning which qualifies a man to become a god is to learn to love and serve his God with all of his heart, might, mind and strength. Only thus can any person learn the ways of godliness. As a person loves his God, the knowledge and power of God flow to him that he might learn and enjoy ever good (godly) thing.

    To be godly, the mind of man must learn to see the hand of God in all things. The mind must learn to separate truth from error and to use that truth in all thinking. The mind must learn to be creative and agile in perception, understanding and problem-solving. The tutelage for this learning is constant contact with another mind which is already godly, one’s God.

    To be godly the heart of man must learn to choose the way of godliness above all else. It must learn to love with that pure love of Christ. It must learn to forget self and to abhor selfishness in the quest of helping others to be as happy as they can be, even at the price of sacrifice of one’s own goods. The tutelage for this learning is to bask continually in the warmth of God’s love, returning that love in choosing complete obedience to God and godly love for every neighbor.

    To be godly, the strength of man must learn to be a servant, not master. The body must learn control, skill, and power in all of the ways of godliness. It must learn to enjoy the pleasures and blessings that a righteous man always encounters in the path of obeying his God, but never to seek those pleasures and benefits for their own sake. Through the purity of his heart and the power and clarity of his mind, the godly man will master every passion and skill, thus achieving a creative excellence in building, growing food, teaching and performing so that he completes successfully every mission, every task to which the Lord sets him. The tutelage for this learning is to enjoy the constant companionship of a god, the Holy Spirit, and to learn under God’s direction to do all things well in purity and righteousness.

    To be godly, the might of man must also learn to be godly. In the spiritual and temporal stewardships of every servant of God will be beings, persons, who also must learn the ways of God. Those beings which must be acted upon by the steward will be so ordered that his home, his possessions, all of his property will assume a divine and celestial order. The temporal mission of a godly man is always to try to create celestial order. The temporal mission of a godly man is always to try to create celestial order in this telestial environment. The tutelage for that learning again is to learn all things in the constant companionship of a god, the Holy Ghost.

    The sum of godly learning is to learn to love one’s God with all of one’s heart, might, mind and strength.

    The Modes of Learning.

    There are two principal modes of human learning. One we shall call the vertical mode. The other we shall call the horizontal mode.

    The center of each mode of human learning is the self, the heart, might, mind and strength of each individual. Vertical learning is that the self reaches up and down from itself. It reaches up to spiritual influence. In reaching up, the heart and mind learn from and are shaped by the spiritual influences that surround the spirit being of man. The self reaches down through the body, the strength, and through one’s might, to gain first-handed experience of the existences and natures of the things that surround him in the physical world. Vertical learning is direct, personal interaction of the person, the self, with the spiritual and non-social physical environments in which one finds oneself.

    Horizontal learning takes place when a person reaches out to other human beings and learns from the spiritual and physical influences which each other person has for him. We learn to feel, to think, to act, to speak, and to display our might rather readily from our fellow human beings. In fact it is usually easier to learn horizontally than it is vertically, because it usually takes less creativity (effort) of the self to do what others do than it does to learn from spiritual sources and from physical nature. Social rewards also influence this pattern. People who spend all their time in the presence of people usually are more responsive to social rewards and punishments which follow when we learn or do not learn to do as our human associates do. People who spend much time alone, struggling with spiritual forces and temporal problems, tend more to vertical learning and are less susceptible to social pressure.

    Each mode of human learning, vertical and horizontal, has also two aspects which we must differentiate.

    The two kinds of spirits, good and evil, make two different types of vertical learning. The influence of the Lord teaches man to know and love truth, excellence, righteousness, and love produces one kind of vertical learning. The influence of Satan teaches man to know and love lies, slovenliness, selfishness and hate, and produces a very different kind of vertical learning.

    Every human being who is accountable is well acquainted with both of these options for vertical learning, but only those who are oriented towards vertical learning tend to be conscious of the drastic difference between the two options. Nature, or the downward aspect of vertical learning, is seen here to be a representation of the spiritual influence of God. People who spend a great deal of time out in natural surroundings will find the peaceful, wholesome influence of God there rather than the selfish, confining, fearful feeling engendered by the adversary, unless they have been taught by other people to see nature otherwise.

    Horizontal learning is also a test of heart and mind. A person of a good heart and mind will gravitate to those persons who also teach and do what he has learned to be true from God and nature. A person of evil heart and mind will gravitate to those persons who teach the lies and wrong that aid and abet his selfish desires.

    This double duality of vertical and horizontal learning separates out four kinds of persons. Since everyone must and does learn both vertically and horizontally, the four groups are created by the options which each person chooses for learning. Those whose vertical orientation is towards God and nature and whose horizontal orientation is to learn from and to compare notes with godly men and women, are the children of God, heirs to the celestial kingdom. Those who have a vertical orientation to God and nature, but who choose evil men and women for their horizontal learning are the honorable men of the earth who are blinded by the craftiness of men, heirs to the terrestrial kingdom. Those who have a Satanic, non-nature vertical orientation and a horizontal orientation to evil men and women are those who remain natural, carnal, sensual, and devilish, and are heirs to the telestial kingdom. Those who are horizontally oriented to desire to associate with good men and women, who use their words and deeds, but who apply and interpret those goodly words and deeds by vertical orientation to Satan, are the hypocrites. They will have no glory.

  • Twenty and Five Ways Quorum Instruction can Help with Ministering

    Premises:

    1.   One of the most important things priesthood bearers do it to teach the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ in homes:

    • a.   To their own families.
    • b.   To the families to which they are assigned as ministers.

    2.   Quorum instruction should reflect a sense of the relative importance of the doctrines of the Restored Gospel.

    3.   The more important a doctrine, the more frequently the doctrine should be taught, clearly and carefully bringing all to a unity of the faith, as much as this is possible.

    Are these the twenty and five most important doctrines of the Restoration? If they are, they ought to be emphasized in Priesthood Quorum instruction.

    1.   Our God is an exalted man and woman, our literal Heavenly Father and Mother.

    2.   We humans are fallen children of Father and Mother.

    3.   Because we are fallen, we are spiritually dead (the senses of our spiritual body are deadened, and thus we are cut off from the presence of Father and Mother). And we must die temporally.

    4.   Father offers each of us release from that spiritual death.

    5.   That offer is extended to each of us through Jesus Christ, the Only Begotten Son of God and the Messenger of Salvation.

    6.   Jesus Christ came to earth and lived a sinless life, keeping every one of Father’s commandments.

    7.   Being sinless, Jesus Christ could and did atone for our sins, that we might not be damned forever because of our sins.

    8.   The release from spiritual death comes only through partaking fully of the New and Everlasting Covenant which was made possible by Jesus Christ.

    9.   To enter the New and Everlasting Covenant, we must first learn of Christ, and because of the spiritual witness we receive, we must be willing to put our trust and faith in him.

    10. We demonstrate our initial faith and trust in Jesus Christ by repenting of our sins and by making the covenant of baptism.

    11. In the covenant of baptism, we promise three things:

    • a.   That we are willing to take the name(s) of Christ upon us, now to become His child.
    • b.   That we will always remember Him.
    • c.   That we will keep every commandment He gives us.

    12. If we meaningfully make the covenant of baptism under the hands of an authorized earthly administrator, then hands are laid upon our heads to confer the gift of the constant companionship of the Holy Ghost.

    13. Having received the Holy Ghost, we may feast upon the words of Christ which He (the Holy Ghost) brings to us, so that we become faithful in all things.

    14. Faith is to believe in Christ, to receive his words of instruction, and to obey each of those instructions as it comes.

    15. Through our faith, we must press on, keeping every commandment, until we have become like our Savior and new father, Jesus Christ, in all things.

    16. Faithful keeping of the commandments gives us a right to hope for the special blessings which are the rewards of the faithful children of Christ.

    17. Faith and hope lead us to be able to receive a new heart from our Savior, a pure heart like His own. The name for this new heart is charity.

    18. Without this charity, we are nothing. It is the great prize and goal of mortality. Possessing it, we can do any good thing.

    19. With charity, we can receive and magnify the Holy Priesthood, the personal power of Jesus Christ to act in His stead, to accomplish the great priesthood works.

    20. Using the Aaronic Priesthood, we can set our temporal stewardships in celestial order.

    21. Using the Melchizedek Priesthood, we can set our spiritual stewardships into the celestial order in laboring to perfect the saints over whom we preside. (Especially our marriages and our families.)

    22. Using the Melchizedek Priesthood, we can fulfill the missionary labors assigned to us, that every soul on earth might hear the glad tidings of the Restored Gospel.

    23. Using the Melchizedek Priesthood we can fulfill our genealogy and temple work (that all might properly be sealed up, ready for eternity).

    24. If we thus gain a new heart and fulfill our priesthood opportunities, our Savior will come to us and say, “Well done, thou good and faithful servant.”

    25. Our Savior will then introduce us to the Father, and our spiritual death will have come to an end.