“Understanding
The Doctrine”
How many times have we heard in
meetings and conferences, a speaker, flaming with the fire of missionary work,
quote the Prophet Joseph Smith:
After all that has been said, the
greatest and most important duty is to preach the Gospel.
having heard not many weeks
before someone else, equally aflame with the fire of family history work, quote
the Prophet as saying:
The greatest responsibility
in this world that God has laid upon us is to seek after our dead.
How can this be? How can two “folds” of the
three-fold mission of the Church be the “greatest” or “most important”
work that we can do? Is there a
conflict here among the Prophet’s statements?
Not at all.
It’s merely a matter of
“context”. What were the circumstances
of the statements? When were they made?
The first statement (regarding
missionary work) was made on April 6, 1837.
The Church was in its infancy.
Of course, the most important work to be done was to spread the Gospel! Elijah had just restored the sealing power
one year earlier! The Nauvoo Temple
(the first to be built with a baptismal font for ordinance work) hadn’t even
been thought of, let alone built! Work
for the dead didn’t begin until sometime between 1840 and October 1841.
Joseph’s statement about work for
our dead wasn’t given until Sunday, April 7, 1844--two months before his
death. By that time, the Nauvoo Temple
was well underway. Baptisms were
already being held in the dedicated font area.
The great era of work for the dead had begun!
What greater missionary work can
we do? I have never, ever, heard of one
of my dead ancestors refusing baptism!
In the October conference of 1893, President Lorenzo Snow said this:
I believe,
strongly too, that when the Gospel is preached to the spirits in prison, the
success attending that preaching will be far greater than that attending the
preaching of our Elders in this life. I
believe there will be very few indeed of those spirits who will not gladly
receive the Gospel when it is carried to them.
The circumstances there will be a thousand times more favorable.
Yes, staying in context is always
important, lest we get carried away down a doctrinal path that may not be
true. For example, if we read what the
Savior said in the King James Version of Matthew 6:28-34,
--take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? or,
What shall we drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?--,
we come to the conclusion that we
shouldn’t worry about where our next mouthful of food will come from. Sounds like a conflict with the Brethren’s
counsel to store a year’s supply of food and clothing, doesn’t it? That’s because the Savior didn’t say that to
the multitude. He spoke those words
to the Twelve, who were being trained for proclaiming the Gospel without
purse or scrip (compare the Joseph Smith Translation of Matt. 6:1 & 7:1). Jesus taught the same things to the Twelve disciples in the Book
of Mormon (3 Nephi 13:29)
WHY DO WE DO WORK FOR THE DEAD?
I want to emphasize the word
“FOR” in the subtitle. That’s what this
chapter is all about. Selfless
service. In A Member’s Guide to
Temple and Family History Work (a copy of which you should obtain from your
bishop/branch president), Elder Boyd K. Packer declared:
Once we have
received [temple ordinances and covenants] for ourselves and for our families, we
are obligated to provide these ordinances vicariously for our kindred dead--
[Emphasis added]
Obligated? That’s a pretty strong term! It means “compelled”, “required”,
“duty-bound”. Why? Why is there such a strong admonition for
doing work for people we don’t even know? (Well, at least, we don’t remember
them.)
It has to do with D&C
128:15. Therein, Joseph Smith (who was
in hiding at the time) wrote the Saints in Nauvoo:
And now my
dearly beloved brethren and sisters, let me assure you that these are
principles in relation to the dead-- that cannot be lightly passed over, as
pertaining to our salvation. For their salvation is necessary and
essential to our salvation, as Paul says concerning the fathers--that they
without us cannot be made perfect--neither can we without our dead be made
perfect. [Emphasis added]
We’ve all heard this quote
before. And then someone will come
along who preaches that we