Pratt, Parley P. Editorial Remarks. Latter-day Saints' Mille
Pratt, Parley P. Editorial Remarks. Latter-day Saints' Millennial Star (Liverpool,
England) 3, no. 3 (July 1842): 44-47.
July 1, 1842
WHEN we reflect on the great purposes of God in the salvation of man, which, indeed, is
not only to effectuate good for him; but, through the efficacy of the atonement of Jesus,
to redeem the world--to remove from it the curse of sin--and to bring the planet on
which we dwell, back again into the presence of God, and [44] to make the intelligences
which people it, fit recipients of his own glory, in order that they may become one with
the Father and with the Son, even as they are one. We say, that, when we reflect on these
sublime purposes, we cannot but feel astonished that the religious public can possibly for
a moment suppose, that the present multifarious creeds and sects will be the agency by
which the God of heaven shall effect his will. His ways are not, indeed, as our ways, nor
his thoughts as our thoughts; and, truly, "the heart of man is deceitful above all things and
desperately wicked;" for while the professed followers of the meek and lowly Jesus
condemn the Jews for their treatment of him, and look upon it as a display of the most
diabolical conduct that ever degraded man, and justly so, yet we feel bold to ask the
question--how would the present generation have acted in similar circumstances, with
their present principles and feelings? Here was the Jewish religion, originally established
by divine revelation, with its horde of priests and its splendid ritual; when, lo! an
individual rises up from obscurity, of humble origin, a carpenter and the son of a
carpenter, whose parents were known to many, whose brothers were James, and Joses,
and Juda, and Simon, and whose sisters were there with them; and yet this individual
comes forth to the public, declaring that he had had a previous existence--that he had
come forth from the Father--that he was one with him, and thought it not robbery to
declare himself equal with God. Yes, we ask the question, how would the present
generation of religionists have received him? would they not have denounced him as the
greatest of impostors and blasphemers? There was nothing in his origin, conduct, or
teaching, with which they could have sympathised. God chooses the weak things of the
world to confound the mighty; but the dictates of modern wisdom would select the wise,
the learned, the eloquent, and the accomplished for their purposes; for is not, indeed,
every system of the present day upheld by the subtlety and skill of its advocates, and not
by the irresistible principles of truth?
The authority which the Saviour claimed would have fund no allegiance in them,
his professed mission by divine revelation would not have been listened to by those, who,
for ages, have had a form of godliness yet deny the power. And let us remember God will
ever act like himself; and we again express our surprise at the infatuation of the religious
* The Rev. J. ANGUS, secretary to the Baptist Missionary Society, declared at the late meeting at
Liverpool, that the greatest difficulty with which they had to contend was the hostile operations of the
agents belonging to the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, who were proclaiming aloud to the
natives, and amongst the heathen, that none had a right to convert them but themselves--that they alone
were the followers of Jesus and the representatives of the apostles ; and, in consequence, all their (the
Baptist ) services, and all their ministers and ordinances were entirely in vain.--Albion.
It is also stated in the writings of the lamented missionary, Williams, that in the South Seas they were
necessitated to make terms with the Wesleyans to labour in separate localities, lest the diversity of their
teachings should become known to their converts, and produce disastrous results for their individual
interests.
world, in supposing that the great and consummating work of God is to be effected by
agency, so unlike God in all things, so widely at variance with all history of his ways, and
so destitute of power. Well may the prophet exclaim, "Stay yourselves and wonder: they
are blind and make you blind: they are drunken, but not with wine; they stagger, but not
with strong drink. For the Lord hath covered you with a spirit of slumber, and hath shut
up your eyes: the prophets, and your chief seers hath he covered. And the vision of them
all is become unto you as the words of a book that is sealed up, which they deliver to one
that can read, saying.read this, I pray thee. Then shall he say--I cannot, for it is sealed.
And the book is given to him that cannot read, saying--read this, I pray thee; and he shall
say, I cannot read. Therefore the Lord said.because this people come near unto me with
their mouth, and honour me with their lips, [45] but have removed their heart far from
me, and their fear toward me was taught by the precept of men; therefore behold, I will
again do a marvellous work and a wonder; for the wisdom of their wise men shall perish,
and the understanding of their prudent men shall be hid." Indeed, this great event to
which the prophet alludes, transpired some fourteen years ago; and how has it been
received? He has, indeed, commenced to do a "marvellous work and a wonder," by
causing his servant JOSEPH, who was not learned, to be the instrument in bringing forth
the record of the house of Joseph, and with it the Fulness of the Gospel. And what is the
result? The religious public, with a morbid sensibility, denounce the Book of Mormon as
a tissue of weakness and blasphemy, and the propagators of its simple and sublime
principles as the greatest impostors that have ever arisen. Invention has been racked to
put down the work of God; self-opinionated men, wise in their own conceits, vainly
hoped that a little time would put a stop to the progress of the work; savage bigotry, with
fiendish zeal, went forth shedding the blood of the Saints, despoiling their homes, and
inflicting upon them every act of injustice. And has the work stayed in its progress? nay,
but on the contrary; the truth is onward with unexampled success; the God of heaven is
manifesting his purposes in gathering the honest in heart, who through obedience to the
simple truth of the gospel, have entered into covenant with himself; and by revealing unto
them continually more of his will, in order that they may do it, and live by every word
that proceedeth out of his mouth. We congratulate the Saints of the Last Days on their
inestimable privileges in having raised up unto them a servant of the Lord, like unto
Moses, to guide his people and make know unto them the purposes of the Most High.
We have much pleasure this month in being able to give an illustration and extract
from the BOOK OF ABRAHAM; a book of higher antiquity than any portion of the bible.
Singular is the providence by which this ancient record fell into the hands of the servant
of the Lord, JOSEPH SMITH. A gentleman, travelling in Egypt, made a selection of several
mummies, of the best kind of embalming, and of course in the best state of preservation;
on his way to England he died, bequeathing them to a gentleman of the name of
CHANDLER. They arrived in the Thames, but it was found the gentleman was in America,
they were than forwarded to New York and advertised, when Mr. CHANDLER came
forward and claimed them. One of the mummies, on being unrolled, had underneath the
cloths in which it was wrapped, lying upon the breast , a roll of papyrus, in an excellent
state of preservation, written in Egyptian character, and illustrated in the manner of our
engraving, which is a copy from a portion of it. The mummies, together with the record,
have been exhibited, generally, through the States, previous to their falling into our
* Old translation.
hands. Mr. CHANDLER was, of course, anxious to find some one who could interpret or
translate this valuable relic of antiquity, and, we believe, on one occasion, met with an
individual who was enabled to decipher a small portion, or, at least, to give an opinion of
what he supposed its meaning to be. He every where heard mention of JOSEPH SMITH and
the Book of Mormon, but so generally associated with something slanderous, that he
could scarcely think seriously of applying to him. But at length, however, he called upon
Mr. SMITH, to inquire if he had a power by which he could translate the ancient Egyptian.
Mr. SMITH replied that he had, when Mr. CHANDLER presented the fragment which had
been partially interpreted. Mr. SMITH retired into his translating room, and presently
returned with a written translation in English, of [46] the fragment, confirming the
supposed meaning ascribed to it by the gentleman to whom it had been previously
presented. An event, of a nature so extraordinary, was of course soon noised abroad,
when a number of gentlemen in the neighbourhood, not connected with the Saints, united
together, and, purchasing the record together with some or all of the mummies, made Mr.
SMITH a present of them. The record is now in course of translation by the means of the
Urim and Thummim, and proves to be a record written partly by the father of the faithful,
Abraham, and finished by Joseph when in Egypt. After his death, it is supposed they were
preserved in the family of the Pharaohs and afterwards hid up with the embalmed body of
the female with whom they were found. Thus it is, indeed, true, that the ways of the Lord
are not as man's ways, nor his thoughts as our thoughts. Here, then, is another subject for
the Gentile world to stumble at, and for which to persecute the Saints, not knowing that
there is nothing hidden but what shall be brought to light, and nothing secret but what
shall be discovered. Let us have no revelations is the popular cry of the day; any one's
creed but God's. How true were the word's of Jesus, "because I come unto you in my
father's name ye will not receive me; if another should come in his own name, him ye
will receive."
The language of the present generation is, we can believe in the marvellous works
of God in former ages, but not now; how will they be confounded as the mighty purposes
of Jehovah roll on unfolding mystery after mystery to his people, while his judgments are
pouring out upon the ungodly and the unbelieving.
Let the Saints be faithful and watchful, and be ready to receive all things that God
shall be pleased to communicate for their well-being in these the last days; bearing in
mind that his great and finishing work, his gathering of the Saints together into one, in
order to establish his kingdom, the dominion of which shall be universal, and all powers
become subject unto it, will require revelations peculiar to itself, such as were never
communicated at any former period of time. Now is the day of the trial of our faith, the
day of warfare and of strife against the powers of darkness; but anon shall be the day of
triumph, blessed shall they be who endure unto the end, and overcome, and swell the
song of victory, for they shall have power over the nations to rule them with a rod of iron,
and they shall have given unto them the morning star.