CHAPTER 1.
Ā Ā INTRODUCTION.
Ā Ā It is a matter of history that, at or near the
beginning of what has since come to be known as the Christian era,
the Man Jesus, surnamed the Christ, was born in Bethlehem of
Judea.1 The
principal data as to His birth, life, and death are so well
attested as to be reasonably indisputable; they are facts of
record, and are accepted as essentially authentic by the civilized
world at large. True, there are diversities of deduction based on
alleged discrepancies in the records of the past as to
circumstantial details; but such differences are of strictly minor
importance, for none of them nor all taken together cast a shadow
of rational doubt upon the historicity of the earthly existence of
the Man known in literature as Jesus of Nazareth.
Ā Ā As to who and what He was there are dissensions of
grave moment dividing the opinions of men; and this divergence of
conception and belief is most pronounced upon those matters to
which the greatest importance attaches. The solemn testimonies of
millions dead and of millions living unite in proclaiming Him as
divine, the Son of the Living God, the Redeemer and Savior of the
human race, the Eternal Judge of the souls of men, the Chosen and
Anointed of the Father ā in short, the Christ. Others there are who
deny His Godhood while extolling the transcendent qualities of His
unparalleled and unapproachable Manhood.
Ā Ā To the student of history this Man among men stands
first, foremost, and alone, as a directing personality in the
world's progression. Mankind has never produced a leader to rank
with Him. Regarded solely as a historic personage He is unique.
Judged by the standard of human estimation, Jesus of Nazareth is
supreme among men by reason of the excellence of His personal
character, the simplicity, beauty, and genuine worth of His
precepts, and the influence of His example and doctrines in the
advancement of the race. To these distinguishing characteristics of
surpassing greatness the devout Christian soul adds an attribute
that far exceeds the sum of all the others ā the divinity of
Christ's origin and the eternal reality of His status as Lord and
God.
Ā Ā Christian and unbeliever alike acknowledge His
supremacy as a Man, and respect the epoch-making significance of
His birth. Christ was born in the meridian of time;2 and His life on
earth marked at once the culmination of the past and the
inauguration of an era distinctive in human hope, endeavor, and
achievement. His advent determined a new order in the reckoning of
the years; and by common consent the centuries antedating His birth
have been counted backward from the pivotal event and are
designated accordingly. The rise and fall of dynasties, the birth
and dissolution of nations, all the cycles of history as to war and
peace, as to prosperity and adversity, as to health and pestilence,
seasons of plenty and of famine, the awful happenings of earthquake
and storm, the triumphs of invention and discovery, the epochs of
man's development in godliness and the long periods of his
dwindling in unbelief ā all the occurrences that make history ā are
chronicled throughout Christendom by reference to the year before
or after the birth of Jesus Christ.
Ā Ā His earthly life covered a period of thirty-three
years; and of these but three were spent by Him as an acknowledged
Teacher openly engaged in the activities of public ministry. He was
brought to a violent death before He had attained what we now
regard as the age of manhood's prime. As an individual He was
personally known to but few; and His fame as a world character
became general only after His death.
Ā Ā Brief account of some of His words and works has
been preserved to us; and this record, fragmentary and incomplete
though it be, is rightly esteemed as the world's greatest treasure.
The earliest and most extended history of His mortal existence is
embodied within the compilation of scriptures known as the New
Testament; indeed but little is said of Him by secular historians
of His time. Few and short as are the allusions to Him made by
non-scriptural writers in the period immediately following that of
His ministry, enough is found to corroborate the sacred record as
to the actuality and period of Christ's earthly existence.
Ā Ā No adequate biography of Jesus as Boy and Man has
been or can be written, for the sufficing reason that a fulness of
data is lacking. Nevertheless, man never lived of whom more has
been said and sung, none to whom is devoted a greater proportion of
the world's literature. He is extolled by Christian, Mohammedan and
Jew, by skeptic and infidel, by the world's greatest poets,
philosophers, statesmen, scientists, and historian. Even the
profane sinner in the foul, sacrilege of his oath acclaims the
divine supremacy of Him whose name he desecrates.
Ā Ā The purpose of the present treatise is that of
considering the life and mission of Jesus as the Christ. In
this undertaking we are to be guided by the light of both ancient
and modern scriptures; and, thus led, we shall discover, even in
the early stages of our course, that the word of God as revealed in
latter days is effective in illuming and making plain the Holy Writ
of ancient times, and this, in many matters of the profoundest
imports.3
Ā Ā Instead of beginning our study with the earthly
birth of the Holy Babe of Bethlehem, we shall consider the part
taken by the Firstborn Son of God in the primeval councils of
heaven, at the time when He was chosen and ordained to be the
Savior of the unborn race of mortals, the Redeemer of a world then
in its formative stages of development. We are to study Him as the
Creator of the world, as the Word of Power, through whom the
purposes of the Eternal Father were realized in the preparation of
the earth for the abode of His myriad spirit-children during the
appointed period of their mortal probation. Jesus Christ was and is
Jehovah, the God of Adam and of Noah, the God of Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob, the God of Israel, the God at whose instance the
prophets of the ages have spoken, the God of all nations, and He
who shall yet reign on earth as King of kings and Lord of
lords.
Ā Ā His wondrous yet natural birth, His immaculate life
in the flesh, and His voluntary death as a consecrated sacrifice
for the sins of mankind, shall claim our reverent attention; as
shall also His redeeming service in the world of disembodied
spirits; His literal resurrection from bodily death to immortality;
His several appearings to men and His continued ministry as the
Resurrected Lord on both continents; the reestablishment of His
Church through His personal presence and that of the Eternal Father
in the latter days; and His coming to His temple in the current
dispensation. All these developments in the ministration of the
Christ are already of the past. Our proposed course of
investigation will lead yet onward, into the future concerning
which the word of divine revelation is of record. We shall consider
the conditions incident to the Lord's return in power and glory to
inaugurate the dominion of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth, and to
usher in the predicted Millennium of peace and righteousness. And
yet beyond we shall follow Him, through the post-Millennial
conflict between the powers of heaven and the forces of hell, to
the completion of His victory over Satan, sin, and death, when He
shall present the glorified earth and its sanctified hosts,
spotless and celestialized, unto the Father.
Ā Ā The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
affirms her possession of divine authority for the use of the
sacred name, Jesus Christ, as the essential part of her distinctive
designation. In view of this exalted claim, it is pertinent to
inquire as to what special or particular message the Church has to
give to the world concerning the Redeemer and Savior of the race,
and as to what she has to say in justification of her solemn
affirmation, or in vindication of her exclusive name and title. As
we proceed with our study, we shall find that among the specific
teachings of the Church respecting the Christ are these: (1) The
unity and continuity of His mission in all ages ā this of necessity
involving the verity of His preexistence and foreordination. (2)
The fact of His antemortal Godship. (3) The actuality of His birth
in the flesh as the natural issue of divine and mortal parentage.
(4) The reality of His death and physical resurrection, as a result
of which the power of death shall be eventually overcome. (5) The
literalness of the atonement wrought by Him, including the absolute
requirement of individual compliance with the laws and ordinances
of His gospel as the means by which salvation may be attained. (6)
The restoration of His Priesthood and the reestablishment of His
Church in the current age, which is verily the Dispensation of the
Fulness of Times. (7) The certainty of His return to earth in the
near future, with power and great glory, to reign in Person and
bodily presence as Lord and King. the Pearl of Great Price
constitute the standard works of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints. These will be cited alike as Scriptures in the
following pages, for such they are.
Notes
1Ā As to the year of Christ's
birth, see chapter 8.
2Ā
See chapter 6.
3Ā
The Holy Bible, the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants,
and
CHAPTER 2.
PREEXISTENCE AND FOREORDINATION OF THE CHRIST.
We affirm, on the authority of Holy Scripture, that the Being who is known among men as Jesus of Nazareth, and by all who acknowledge His Godhood as Jesus the Christ, existed with the Father prior to birth in the flesh; and that in the preexistent state He was chosen and ordained to be the one and only Savior and Redeemer of the human race. Foreordination implies and comprizes preexistence as an essential condition; therefore scriptures bearing upon the one are germane to the other; and consequently in this presentation no segregation of evidence as applying specifically to the preexistence of Christ or to His foreordination will be attempted.
John the Revelator beheld in vision some of the scenes that had been enacted in the spirit-world before the beginning of human history. He witnessed strife and contention between loyalty and rebellion, with the hosts defending the former led by Michael the archangel, and the rebellious forces captained by Satan, who is also called the devil, the serpent, and the dragon. We read: "And there was war in heaven; Michael and his angels fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels."1
In this struggle between unembodied hosts the forces were unequally divided; Satan drew to his standard only a third part of the children of God, who are symbolized as the "stars of heaven";2 the majority either fought with Michael, or at least refrained from active opposition, thus accomplishing the purpose of their "first estate"; while the angels who arrayed themselves on the side of Satan "kept not their first estate",3 and therefore rendered themselves ineligible for the glorious possibilities of an advanced condition or "second estate".4 The victory was with Michael and his angels; and Satan or Lucifer, theretofore a "son of the morning", was cast out of heaven, yea "he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him".5 The prophet Isaiah, to whom these momentous occurrences had been revealed about eight centuries prior to the time of John's writings, laments with inspired pathos the fall of so great a one; and specifies selfish ambition as the occasion: "How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations! For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascent into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north: I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the most High. Yet thou shalt be brought down to hell, to the sides of the pit."6
Justification for citing these scriptures in connection with our present consideration will be found in the cause of the great contention ā the conditions that led to this war in heaven. It is plain from the words of Isaiah that Lucifer, already of exalted rank, sought to aggrandize himself without regard to the rights and agency of others. The matter is set forth, in words that none may misapprehend, in a revelation given to Moses and repeated through the first prophet of the present dispensation: "And I, the Lord God, spake unto Moses, saying: That Satan, whom thou hast commanded in the name of mine Only Begotten, is the same which was from the beginning, and he came before me, saying ā Behold, here am I, send me, I will be thy son, and I will redeem all mankind, that one soul shall not be lost, and surely I will do it; wherefore give me thine honor. But, behold, my Beloved son, which was my Beloved and Chosen from the beginning, said unto me ā Father, thy will be done, and the glory be thine forever. Wherefore, because that Satan rebelled against me, and sought to destroy the agency of man, which I, the Lord God, had given him, and also, that I should give unto him mine own power; by the power of mine Only Begotten, I caused that he should be cast down; and he became Satan, yea, even the devil, the father of all lies, to deceive and to blind men, and to lead them captive at his will, even as many as would not hearken unto my voice."7
Thus it is shown that prior to the placing of man upon the earth, how long before we do not know, Christ and Satan, together with the hosts of the spirit-children of God, existed as intelligent individuals,8 possessing power and opportunity to choose the course they would pursue and the leaders whom they would follow and obey.9 In that great concourse of spirit-intelligences, the Father's plan, whereby His children would be advanced to their second estate, was submitted and doubtless discussed. The opportunity so placed within the reach of the spirits who were to be privileged to take bodies upon the earth was so transcendently glorious that those heavenly multitudes burst forth into song and shouted for joy.10
Satan's plan of compul...