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Stand Independent above All Other Creatures
Bruce R. McConkie
I
stand before the Church this day and raise the warning voice. It is a
prophetic voice, for I shall say only what the apostles and prophets
have spoken concerning our day.
It is the voice of Jesus on the Mount of Olives, of John on the Isle of Patmos, of Joseph Smith
during the mobbings and murders of Missouri. It is a voice calling upon
the Lord’s people to prepare for the troubles and desolations which are
about to be poured out upon the world without measure.
For
the moment we live in a day of peace and prosperity but it shall not
ever be thus. Great trials lie ahead. All of the sorrows and perils of
the past are but a foretaste of what is yet to be. And we must prepare
ourselves temporally and spiritually.
Our
spiritual preparation consists in keeping the commandments of God, and
taking the Holy Spirit for our guide, so that when this life is over we
shall find rest and peace in paradise and an ultimate inheritance of
glory and honor in the celestial kingdom.
Our
temporal preparation consists in using the good earth in the way the
Lord designed and intended so as to supply all our just wants and needs.
It is his purpose to provide for his Saints for all things are his,
but, he says, it must needs be done in his own way. (See D&C 104:14–18.)
There
is a common axiom among us which states: A religion that cannot save a
man temporally does not have power to save him spiritually. If we cannot
care for our temporal needs in this world, how can we ever succeed in
spiritual things in the world to come?
Thus,
speaking of temporal things—of lands and houses and crops, of work and
sweat and toil, of the man Adam eating his bread in the sweat of his
face (see Gen. 3:19)—the
Lord says: “If you will that I give unto you a place in the celestial
world, you must prepare yourselves by doing the things which I have
commanded you and required of you” (D&C 78:7).
Then
he commands both the Church and its members “to prepare and organize”
their temporal affairs according to the law of his gospel, “that through
my providence,” saith the Lord, “notwithstanding the tribulation which
shall descend upon you, that the church may stand independent above all
other creatures beneath the celestial world;
“That you may come up unto the crown prepared for you, and be made rulers over many kingdoms, saith the Lord God” (D&C 78:11, 14–15).
The
Church, which administers the gospel, and the Saints who have received
the gospel, must be independent of all the powers of earth, as they work
out their salvation—temporally and spiritually—with fear and trembling
before the Lord!
Be
it remembered that tribulations lie ahead. There will be wars in one
nation and kingdom after another until war is poured out upon all
nations and two hundred million men of war mass their armaments at
Armageddon.
Peace
has been taken from the earth, the angels of destruction have begun
their work, and their swords shall not be sheathed until the Prince of
Peace comes to destroy the wicked and usher in the great Millennium.
There
will be earthquakes and floods and famines. The waves of the sea shall
heave themselves beyond their bounds, the clouds shall withhold their
rain, and the crops of the earth shall wither and die.
There
will be plagues and pestilence and disease and death. An overflowing
scourge shall cover the earth and a desolating sickness shall sweep the
land. Flies shall take hold of the inhabitants of the earth, and maggots
shall come in upon them. (See D&C 29:14–20.) “Their flesh shall fall from off their bones, and their eyes from their sockets” (D&C 29:19).
Bands
of Gadianton robbers will infest every nation, immorality and murder
and crime will increase, and it will seem as though every man’s hand is
against his brother.
We
need not dwell more upon these things. We are commanded to search the
scriptures where they are recounted with force and fervor, and they
shall surely come to pass.
It
is one of the sad heresies of our time that peace will be gained by
weary diplomats as they prepare treaties of compromise, or that the
Millennium will be ushered in because men will learn to live in peace
and to keep the commandments, or that the predicted plagues and promised
desolations of latter days can in some way be avoided.
We
must do all we can to proclaim peace, to avoid war, to heal disease, to
prepare for natural disasters—but with it all, that which is to be
shall be.
Knowing
what we know, and having the light and understanding that has come to
us, we must—as individuals and as a Church—use our talents, strengths,
energies, abilities, and means to prepare for whatever may befall us and
our children.
We
know that the world will go on in wickedness until the end of the
world, which is the destruction of the wicked. We shall continue to live
in the world, but with the Lord’s help we shall not be of the world. We
shall strive to overcome carnality and worldliness of every sort and
shall invite all men to flee from Babylon, join with us, and live as
becometh Saints.
As the Saints of the Most High we shall strive to “stand independent above all other creatures beneath the celestial world” (D&C 78:14).
Our only hope is to free ourselves from the bondage of sin, to rid
ourselves from the chains of darkness, to rise above the world, to live
godly and upright lives.
Relying
always on the Lord, we must become independent of the world. We must be
self-reliant. Using the agency God has given us, we must work out our
own economic and temporal problems.
We
are here on earth to work—to work long, hard, arduous hours, to work
until our backs ache and our tired muscles knot, to work all our days.
This mortal probation is one in which we are to eat our bread in the
sweat of our faces until we return to the dust from whence we came.
Work
is the law of life; it is the ruling principle in the lives of the
Saints. We cannot, while physically able, voluntarily shift the burden
of our own support to others. Doles abound in evils. Industry, thrift,
and self-respect are essential to salvation.
We
must maintain our own health, sow our own gardens, store our own food,
educate and train ourselves to handle the daily affairs of life. No one
else can work out our salvation for us, either temporally or
spiritually.
We are here on earth to care for the needs of our family
members. Wives have claim on their husbands for their support, children
upon their parents, parents upon their children, brothers upon each
other, and relatives upon their kin.
It
is the aim of the Church to help the Saints to care for themselves and,
where need be, to make food and clothing and other necessities
available, lest the Saints turn to the doles and evils of Babylon. To
help care for the poor among them the Church must operate farms, grow
vineyards, run dairies, manage factories, and ten thousand other
things—all in such a way as to be independent of the powers of evil in
the world.
We
do not know when the calamities and troubles of the last days will fall
upon any of us as individuals or upon bodies of the Saints. The Lord
deliberately withholds from us the day and hour of his coming and of the
tribulations which shall precede it—all as part of the testing and
probationary experiences of mortality. He simply tells us to watch and
be ready.
We
can rest assured that if we have done all in our power to prepare for
whatever lies ahead, he will then help us with whatever else we need.
He
rained manna from heaven upon all Israel, six days each week for forty
years, lest they perish for want of bread, but the manna ceased on the
morrow after they ate of the parched corn of Canaan. Then they were
required to supply their own food. (See Ex. 16:3–4, 35.)
During
forty years in the wilderness the clothes worn by all Israel waxed not
old and their shoes wore not out, but when they entered their promised
land, then the Lord required them to provide their own wearing apparel.
(See Deut. 29:5.)
When
there was a famine in the land, at Elijah’s word, a certain barrel of
meal did not waste, and a certain cruse of oil did not fail, until the
Lord sent again rain on the earth. And it is worthy of note, as Jesus
said, that though there were many widows in Israel, unto one only was
Elijah sent. (See 1 Kgs. 17:10–16.)
We
do not say that all of the Saints will be spared and saved from the
coming day of desolation. But we do say there is no promise of safety
and no promise of security except for those who love the Lord and who
are seeking to do all that he commands.
It
may be, for instance, that nothing except the power of faith and the
authority of the priesthood can save individuals and congregations from
the atomic holocausts that surely shall be.
And
so we raise the warning voice and say: Take heed; prepare; watch and be
ready. There is no security in any course except the course of
obedience and conformity and righteousness.
For
thus saith the Lord: “The Lord’s scourge shall pass over by night and
by day, and the report thereof shall vex all people; yea, it shall not
be stayed until the Lord come; …
“Nevertheless, Zion shall escape if she observe to do all things whatsoever I have commanded her,” saith the Lord.
“But
if she observe not to do whatsoever I have commanded her, I will visit
her according to all her works, with sore affliction, with pestilence,
with plague, with sword, with vengeance, with devouring fire.” (D&C 97:23, 25–26.)
O
God, our Father, wilt thou grant us peace and security and safety in
the days of tribulation that shall come like a whirlwind upon all the
earth.
Wilt
thou hedge up the evil powers, and open up the way before us, thy
people, that as individuals and as a Church we may stand independent of
every creature beneath the celestial world.
And
wilt thou enfold us everlastingly in the arms of thy love; and finally,
wilt thou save us with an everlasting salvation in thy kingdom—for all
of which we pray.
In the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, amen
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