Heber K. Kimball
[From a sermon given at the funeral of Jedediah M. Grant]
I went to see him one day last week, and he reached out his hand and
shook hands with me; he could not speak, but he shook hands warmly with
me. I felt for him, and wanted to raise him up, and to have him stay and
help us whip the devils and bring to pass righteousness. Why? Because
he was valiant, and I loved him. He was a great help to us, and you
would be, if you were as valiant as he was, which you can be through
faithfulness and obedience. I laid my hands upon him and blessed him,
and asked God to strengthen his lungs that he might be easier, and in
two or three minutes he raised himself up and talked for about an hour
as busily as he could, telling me what he had seen and what he
understood, until I was afraid he would weary himself, when I arose and
left him.
He said to
me, brother Heber, I have been into the spirit world two nights in
succession, and, of all the dreads that ever came across me, the worst
was to have to again return to my body, through I had to do it. But O,
says he, the order and government that were there!
When in the spirit world, I saw the order of righteous men and women; beheld them organized in their several grades, and there appeared to be no obstruction to my vision; I could see every man and woman in their grade and order. I looked to see whether there was any disorder there, but there was none; neither could I see any death nor any darkness, disorder or confusion. He said that the people he there saw were organized in family capacities; and when he looked at them he saw grade after grade, and all were organized and in perfect harmony. He would mention one item after another and say, “Why, it is just as brother Brigham says it is; it is just as he has told us many a time.” That is a testimony as to the truth of what brother Brigham teaches us, and I know it is true, from what little light I have.
When in the spirit world, I saw the order of righteous men and women; beheld them organized in their several grades, and there appeared to be no obstruction to my vision; I could see every man and woman in their grade and order. I looked to see whether there was any disorder there, but there was none; neither could I see any death nor any darkness, disorder or confusion. He said that the people he there saw were organized in family capacities; and when he looked at them he saw grade after grade, and all were organized and in perfect harmony. He would mention one item after another and say, “Why, it is just as brother Brigham says it is; it is just as he has told us many a time.” That is a testimony as to the truth of what brother Brigham teaches us, and I know it is true, from what little light I have.
He
saw the righteous gathered together in the spirit world, and there were
no wicked spirits among them. He saw his wife; she was the first person
that came to him. He saw many that he knew, but did not have
conversation with any except his wife Caroline. She came to him, and he
said that she looked beautiful and had their little child, that died on
the Plains, in her arms, and said, “Mr. Grant, here is little Margaret;
you know that the wolves ate her up, but it did not hurt her; here she
is all right.”
“To my
astonishment,” he said, “when I looked at families there was a
deficiency in some, there was a lack, for I saw families that would not
be permitted to come and dwell together, because they had not honored
their calling here.”
He
asked his wife Caroline where Joseph and Hyrum and Father Smith and
others were; she replied, “they have gone away ahead, to perform and
transact business for us.” The same as when brother Brigham and his
brethren left Winter Quarters and came here to search out a home; they
came to find a location for their brethren.
He
also spoke of the buildings he saw there, remarking that the Lord gave
Solomon wisdom and poured gold and silver into his hands that he might
display his skill and ability, and said that the temple erected by
Solomon was much inferior to the most ordinary buildings he saw in the
spirit world. In regard to gardens, says brother Grant, “I have seen
good gardens on this earth, but I never saw any to compare with those
that were there. I saw flowers of numerous kinds, and some with from
fifty to a hundred different colored flowers growing upon one stalk.” We
have many kinds of flowers on the earth, and I suppose those very
articles came from heaven, or they would not be here.
After
mentioning the things that he had seen, he spoke of how much he
disliked to return and resume his body, after having seen the beauty and
glory of the spirit world, where the righteous spirits are gathered
together. Some may marvel at my speaking about these things, for many
profess to believe that we have no spiritual existence. But do you not
believe that my spirit was organized before it came to my body here? And
do you not think there can be houses and gardens, fruit trees, and
every other good thing there? The spirits of those things were made, as
well as our spirits, and it follows that they can exist upon the same
principle. After speaking of the gardens and the beauty of every thing
there, brother Grant said that he felt extremely sorrowful at having to
leave so beautiful a place and come back to earth, for he looked upon
his body with loathing, but was obliged to enter it again. He said that
after he came back he could look upon his family and see the spirit that
was in them, and the darkness that was in them; and that he conversed
with them about the Gospel, and what they should do, and they replied,
“Well, brother Grant, perhaps it is so, and perhaps it is not,” and said
that was the state of this people, to a great extent, for many are full
of darkness and will not believe me.
I
never had a view of the righteous assembling in the spirit-world, but I
have had a view of the hosts of hell, and have seen them as plainly as I
see you to-day. The righteous spirits gather together to prepare and
qualify themselves for a future day, and evil spirits have no power over
them, though they are constantly striving for the mastery. I have seen
evil spirits attempt to overcome those holding the Priesthood, and I
know how they act. I feel well, and I do not feel to condescend to a
spirit of mourning. If I do weep, I will weep for my own sins and not
for Jedediah. If he could speak he would say, “Weep not for me, but weep
for your own sins.” (Journal of Discourses, 4:135-137)
Veil of Forgetfulness
Neal A. Maxwell
•
The veil of forgetfulness of the first estate apparently will not be
suddenly, automatically, and totally removed at the time of our temporal
death. This veil, a condition of our entire second estate, is
associated with and is part of our time of mortal trial, testing,
proving, and overcoming by faith— and thus will continue in some key
respects into the spirit world. (The Promise of Discipleship, p. 111)
• We do not now know
precisely how God handles things in the spirit world so that life there
is an extension of walking by faith. Death does not suddenly bestow
upon the disbeliever full awareness of all reality, thereby obviating
the need for any faith. Instead, what follows death is a continuum of
the basic structure in mortality-until the Judgment Day, when every knee
shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus is the Christ (see Romans
14:11; Philippians 2:10; D&C 76:110). Until then, we “walk by
faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7). How will God ensure this
condition in the spirit world? We do not know. Yet He has certainly so
handled the second estate in relation to the first estate, hasn’t He?
The memories of the first estate are not accessible in the second
estate. The spirit world will be so arranged that there will be no
legitimate complaints later over the justice and mercy of God (see
Mosiah 27:31; Alma 12:15). Furthermore, the gospel, when preached in the
spirit world, will bring the same responses as here: “some believed the
things which were spoken, and some believed not” (Acts 28:24). [That Ye
May Believe. Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1992, pp. 93-94]
Growth and Progression in the Spirit World
Spencer W. Kimball
•
The meaning of death has not changed. It releases a spirit for growth
and development and places a body in the repair shop of Mother Earth,
there to be recast, remolded into a perfect body, an immortal glorious
temple, clean, whole, perfected, and ready for its occupant for
eternity. (The Teachings of Spencer W. Kimball, p.45)
• As Jesus’ spirit
left his body hanging on the cross and later lying in the tomb, so shall
our spirits eventually leave our bodies lying lifeless. As Jesus
preached to spirits in the spirit world in his spiritual state, so shall
our spirits continue active and expand and develop. As Jesus appeared
in the garden a resurrected soul, so shall each of us come forth a
perfect immortal with every organ perfect, every limb intact, with every
injury or deformity restored and put right; with the infirmities of
mortality replaced with strength and vigor and power and beauty of
virile maturity. (The Teachings of Spencer W. Kimball, p.44)
Joseph Fielding Smith
Every
man and woman that has talent and hides it will be called a slothful
servant. Improve every day upon the capital you have. In proportion as
we are capacitated to receive, so it is our duty to do. I shall not
cease learning while I live, nor when I arrive in the spirit world; but
there shall learn with greater facility. And when I again regain my
body, I shall learn a thousand times more in a thousand times less time,
and then I do not mean to cease learning. (Conference Report, April
1939, p. 102)
Brigham Young
We
are in the school and keep learning, and we do not expect to cease
learning while we live on earth; and when we pass through the veil, we
expect still to continue to learn and increase our fund of information.
That may appear a strange idea to some; but it is for the plain and
simple reason that we are not capacitated to receive all knowledge at
once. We must therefore receive a little here and a little there.
(Discourses of Brigham Young, p.91)
Ezra Taft Benson
On
the other side of the veil, the righteous are taught their duties
preparatory to the time when they will return with the Son of Man to
earth when He comes again, this time to judge every man according to his
works. These righteous spirits are close by us. They are organized
according to priesthood order in family organizations as we are here;
only there they exist in a more perfect order. This was revealed to the
Prophet Joseph. (Teachings of Ezra Taft Benson, pp.35-36)
Joseph F. Smith
Some
people dream, you know, and think, and teach that all the glory they
ever expect to have in the world to come is to sit in the light and
glory of the Son of God, and sing praises and songs of joy and gratitude
all their immortal lives. We do not believe in any such things. We
believe that every man will have his work to do in the other world, just
as surely as he had it to do here, and a greater work than he can do
here. We believe that we are on the road of advancement, of development
in knowledge, in understanding, and in every good thing, and that we
will continue to grow, advance, and develop throughout the eternities
that are before us. That is what we believe. (Gospel Doctrine, p. 432)
Neal A. Maxwell
Much
of our continuing to work out our own salvation in the spirit world
consists of our further correcting our personal deficiencies. If, for
instance, we fully accept Christ as our Savior, this includes accepting
the fact that He asks us to become more like Him (see 3 Nephi 27:27).
Clearly, in this rigorous process, not all gets done on this side of the
veil of death. (That Ye May Believe. Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1992,
p. 93)
Orson Pratt
When
I speak of the future state of man, and the situation of our spirits
between death and the resurrection, I long for the experience and
knowledge to be gained in that state, as well as this. We shall learn
many more things there; we need not suppose our five senses connect us
with all the things of heaven, and earth, and eternity, and space; we
need not think that we are conversant with all the elements of nature,
through the medium of the senses God has given us here. Suppose He
should give us a sixth sense, a seventh, an eighth, a ninth, or a
fiftieth. All these different senses would convey to us new ideas, as
much so as the senses of tasting, smelling, or seeing communicate
different ideas from that of hearing. (Journal of Discourses, 2:247)
Orson F. Whitney
Thus
we see that the Spirit World is not Heaven, except in a relative sense,
and then only in part. It is a temporary abode for God’s children,
while undergoing processes of purification and development, as a
preparation for better things beyond. Heaven, on the other hand—heaven
in the highest degree—is the permanent home of the perfected and
glorified. (Cowley and Whitney on Doctrine, p. 489)
Things Will Appear Natural
Brigham Young
When
the breath leaves the body, your life has not become extinct; your life
is still in existence. And when you are in the spirit world, everything
there will appear as natural as things now do. Spirits will be familiar
with spirits in the spirit world – will converse, behold, and exercise
every variety of communication with one another as familiarly and
naturally as while here in tabernacles. There, as here, all things will
be natural, and you will understand them as you now understand natural
things. You will there see that those spirits we are speaking of are
active; they sleep not. And you will learn that they are striving with
all their might – laboring and toiling diligently as any individual
would to accomplish an act in this world – to destroy the children of
men. (Discourses of Brigham Young, p. 380)
Ignorance Continues into Spirit World
Parley P. Pratt
Now,
how are they situated in the spirit world? If we reason from analogy,
we should at once conclude that things exist there after the same
pattern. I have not the least doubt but there are spirits there who have
dwelt there a thousand years, who, if we could converse with them face
to face, would be found as ignorant of the truths, the ordinances,
powers, keys, Priesthood, resurrection, and eternal life of the body, in
short, as ignorant of the fulness of the Gospel, with its hopes and
consolations, as is the Pope of Rome, or the Bishop of Canterbury, or as
are the Chiefs of the Indian tribes of Utah.
And
why this ignorance in the spirit world? Because a portion of the
inhabitants thereof are found unworthy of the consolations of the
Gospel, until the fulness of time, until they have suffered in hell, in
the dungeons of darkness, or the prisons of the condemned, amid the
buffetings of fiends, and malicious and lying spirits.
As
in earth, so in the spirit world. No person can enter into the
privileges of the Gospel, until the keys are turned, and the Gospel
opened by those in authority, for all which there is a time, according
to the wise dispensations of justice and mercy. (Journal of Discourses,
1:10-11)
Will Non-Believers Change Suddenly?
Neal A. Maxwell
•
Yet, do people who have been wicked and agnostic, when they pass
through the veil of death, suddenly and fully realize that there is, in
spite of their earlier skepticism, life beyond the grave? Do they thus
have an advantage over those who have had to develop faith in mortality
concerning that prospect? If, for instance, the same attitudes with
which we die persist, then there will be no automatic or immediate
flip-flop into a totally different way of thinking. Such can occur
there, just as it does here, upon our accepting the gospel and
responding with both faith and repentance (Alma 34:34). Again, our
existence in the spirit world is part of the mortal sector of our
Father’s plan which culminates with the Judgment and the Resurrection.
(The Promise of Discipleship. Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 2001, p. 111)
• Death does not
suddenly bestow upon the disbeliever full awareness of all reality,
thereby obviating the need for any faith. Instead, what follows death is
a continuum of the basic structure in mortality-until the Judgment Day,
when every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus is the
Christ (see Romans 14:11; Philippians 2:10; D&C 76:110). Until then,
we “walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7).
How
will God ensure this condition in the spirit world? We do not know. Yet
He has certainly so handled the second estate in relation to the first
estate, hasn’t He? The memories of the first estate are not accessible
in the second estate. The spirit world will be so arranged that there
will be no legitimate complaints later over the justice and mercy of God
(see Mosiah 27:31; Alma 12:15). Furthermore, the gospel, when preached
in the spirit world, will bring the same responses as here: “some
believed the things which were spoken, and some believed not” (Acts
28:24). [That Ye May Believe. Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1992, pp. 93-
94]
Unencumbered by Physical Ailments in Spirit World
Brigham Young
The
brightness and glory of the next apartment is inexpressible. It is not
encumbered so that when we advance in years we have to be stubbing along
and be careful lest we fall down. We see our youth, even, frequently
stubbing their toes and falling down. But yonder, how different! They
move with ease and like lightning. If we want to visit Jerusalem, or
this, that, or the other place—and I presume we will be permitted if we
desire—there we are, looking at its streets. If we want to behold
Jerusalem as it was in the days of the Savior; or if we want to see the
Garden of Eden as it was when created, there we are, and we see it as it
existed spiritually, for it was created first spiritually and then
temporally, and spiritually it still remains. And when there we may
behold the earth as at the dawn of creation, or we may visit any city we
please that exists upon its surface. If we wish to understand how they
are living here on these western islands, or in China, we are there; in
fact, we are like the light of the morning, or, I will not say the
electric fluid but its operations on the wires. God has revealed some
little things, with regard to his movements and power, and the operation
and motion of the lightning furnish a fine illustration of the ability
of the Almighty. When we pass into the spirit world we shall possess a
measure of his power. Here, we are continually troubled with ills and
ailments of various kinds. In the spirit world we are free from all this
and enjoy life, glory, and intelligence; and we have the Father to
speak to us, Jesus to speak to us, and angels to speak to us, and we
shall enjoy the society of the just and the pure who are in the spirit
world until the resurrection. (Discourses of Brigham Young, pp.380-381)
Spirits Are of All Variety and Grades
Parley P. Pratt
In
this spirit world there are all the varieties and grades of
intellectual being which exist in the present world. For instance, Jesus
Christ and the thief on the cross, both went to the same place, and
found themselves associated in the spirit world. But the one was there
in all the intelligence, happiness, benevolence, and charity, which
characterized a teacher, a messenger, anointed to teach glad tidings to
the meek, to bind up the brokenhearted, to comfort those who mourned, to
preach deliverance to the captive, and open the prison to those who
were bound; or, in other words, to preach the Gospel to the spirits in
prison, that they might be judged according to men in the flesh; while
the other was there as a thief, who had expired on the cross for crime,
and who was guilty, ignorant, uncultivated, and unprepared for
resurrection, having need of remission of sins, and to be instructed in
the science of salvation. (Key to the Science of Theology, pp.130-131)
Spirits Have Remembrances of Mortal Life – Both Good and Evil
Orson Pratt
Do
you not suppose the spirits can have power to remember in that world as
well as in this? Yes, they certainly can. Have you never read in the
Book of Mormon, where it informs us, that every act of our lives will be
fresh upon the memory, and we shall have a clear consciousness of all
our doings in this life? Yes; we have read that in the Book of
Mormon--“a clear consciousness.”
We
read or learn a thing by observation yesterday, and to-day or to-morrow
it is gone, unless it be something that impresses us distinctly, that
makes a vivid impression upon the mind, that we can remember it perhaps
for days, months, and years; but common information and knowledge are
constantly coming into our minds, and as constantly being forgotten. And
some of the knowledge we receive here at one time becomes so completely
obliterated, through the weakness of the animal system, that we cannot
call it to mind, no association of ideas will again suggest it to our
minds; it is gone, erased, eradicated from the tablet of our memories.
This is not owing to the want of capacity in the spirit; no, but the
spirit has a full capacity to remember; for do you suppose that God in
begetting spirits in the eternal world would beget an imperfect thing,
that had no capacities? No. The Being, who is full of intelligence,
knowledge, and wisdom, and acting upon the great principles that are
ordained for the generation of living beings, spiritual beings, brings
them forth with capacities capable of being enlarged or extended wider
and wider; consequently it is not the want of capacity in the spirit of
man that causes him to forget the knowledge he may have learned
yesterday; but it is because of the imperfection of the tabernacle in
which the spirit dwells; because there is imperfection in the
organization of the flesh and bones, and in things pertaining to the
tabernacle; it is this that erases from our memory many things that
would be useful; we cannot retain them in our minds, they are gone into
oblivion. It is not so with the spirit when it is released from this
tabernacle.
... Wait
until these mortal bodies are laid in the tomb; when we return home to
God who gave us life; then is the time we shall have the most vivid
knowledge of all the past acts of our lives during our probationary
state; then is the time that we will find that this being we call
man--this spirit that dwells within the tabernacle, is a being that has
capacity sufficient to retain all its past doings, whether they be good
or bad. It is, then, this memory that will produce the suffering and the
pains upon that class of spirits whose works have been wicked and
abominable in the sight of God. A spirit, then, will remember, that “at
such a time in yonder world, and at such a place, I disobeyed the
commandments of God; I did not hearken to the counsel of those whom God
had appointed to be my counselors; I did not give heed to the man of
God; no: but I rejected his sayings; good counsel was imparted to me,
but I did not heed it.” In this life, things that may have been erased
from your memory for years will be presented before you with all the
vividness as if they had just taken place. This will be like a worm upon
the conscience; it will prey upon the spirit, and produce unhappiness,
wretchedness, and misery. This will cause you to lament, and mourn, and
weep after you are cast out from the presence of God--from the home to
which you have returned.
I
am speaking now of the wicked. What is it that produces the opposite
principle? There is an opposition in all things; it is the reflection of
the memory that produces joy; that is one of the elements by which joy
and happiness are produced upon the spirit of man in the future state;
we remember the acts of our past lives that they have been good; we
perceive by our memories that we have been obedient to counsel; we
perceive that when we have erred through our weakness we have repented
of that error; when we have been told of a fault we have forsaken it.
When we look back upon acquaintances and neighbors we perceive that we
have observed the golden rule, to do unto others as we would that others
should do unto us. We look back upon our past lives, and we perceive we
have never spoken evil against a brother or sister, that we have never
striven to stir up family broils, and that we have never desired to
injure any of the children of men, male or female. What do these
reflections produce? They produce joy, satisfaction, peace, consolation,
and this joy is a hundred fold more intense that what the spirit is
capable of perceiving or enjoying in this life. Why? Because just in
proportion to the vividness of the conscience, or the memory, so will be
the joy. This you may have knowledge of by every-day experience; just
in proportion to the vividness of your ideas, and of the truth set
before your minds, and or the good things that are imparted to you, the
more intense is your happiness here; how much more intense would it be
hereafter, when this mortal clog with all its imperfections has been
laid down in the gravel. The fact is, our spirits then will be happy,
far more happy than what we are capable even of conceiving, or having
the least idea of in this world. (Journal of Discourses, 2:239-240)
Satan Has No Power Over the Righteous in the Spirit World
Brigham Young
•
The advantage of this Priesthood that Brother George A. Smith has been
talking about is that when persons yield obedience to it, they secure to
themselves the sanction of Him who is its author, and who has bestowed
it upon the children of men. His power is around them and defends them;
and when they pass into the spirit world they are out of the reach of
the power of Satan, and they are not liable to be tempted, hunted, and
chased as the wicked are, although the wicked may rest and enjoy far
more there than here; but a person who obeys the Priesthood of the Son
of God is entirely free from this. Where the pure in heart are the
wicked cannot come. This is the state of the spirit world. (Journal of
Discourses, 14:229)
• . . . when we go
beyond this vail, and leave our bodies which were taken from mother
earth, and which must return; our spirits will pass beyond the vail; we
go where both Saints and sinners go; they all go to one place. Does the
devil have power over the spirits of just men? No. When he gets through
with this earth, he is at the length of his chain. (Journal of
Discourses, 3:94)
• Is a Saint subject
to the power of the Devil in the spirit world? No, because he has
gained the victory through faith, and can command Satan, and he must
obey. How is it with the wicked? The Devil has power over them to
distress and afflict them: they are in hell. (Journal of Discourses,
7:174)
George Q. Cannon
And
there is this promise given unto us, that after we have finished this
probation and are faithful to God, then--lay it as a comfort to your
hearts, and let it fill you with joy--Satan will have no more power over
us. If you are faithful to the truth, if you keep the commandments of
God all your days, when the time comes for you to pass away from this
state of existence, Satan’s power will have ended. After that he can
exercise no dominion over you. You are emancipated from his thraldom.
You will then be ushered into the presence of the holy and the just. You
will dwell in the paradise of God, waiting with delightful
anticipations the time when your spirits and your bodies will be
reunited, and when you shall dwell together with the holy, the just and
exalted ones in the presence of God and the Lamb, nevermore, as the
prophets have said, to depart or to go out thence. (Collected
Discourses, Vol.2, November, 1890)
Righteous Have Power Over Evil in Spirit World
Brigham Young
•
When the faithful Elders, holding this Priesthood, go into the spirit
world they carry with them the same power and Priesthood that they had
while in the mortal tabernacle. They have got the victory over the power
of the enemy here, consequently when they leave this world they have
perfect control over those evil spirits, and they cannot be buffeted by
Satan. But as long as they live in the flesh no being on this earth, of
the posterity of Adam, can be free from the power of the devil.
When
this portion of the school is out, the one in which we descend below
all things and commence upon this earth to learn the first lessons for
an eternal exaltation, if you have been a faithful scholar, and have
overcome, if you have brought the flesh into subjection by the power of
the Priesthood, if you have honored the body, when it crumbles to the
earth and your spirit is freed from this home of clay, has the devil any
power over it? Not one particle. This is an advantage which the
faithful will gain; but while they live on earth they are subject to the
buffetings of Satan. (Journal of Discourses, 3:371)
• If we are faithful
to our religion, when we go into the spirit world, the fallen spirits
-- Lucifer and the third part of the heavenly hosts that came with him,
and the spirits of wicked men who have dwelt upon this earth, the whole
of them combined will have no influence over our spirits. Is not that an
advantage? Yes. All the rest of the children of men are more or less
subject to them, and they are subject to them as they were while here in
the flesh. (Discourses of Brigham Young, p.379)
Those Who Die Without Gospel Still Subject to Evil Spirits
Brigham Young
Those
who have died without the Gospel are continually afflicted by those
evil spirits, who say to them--“Do not go to hear that man Joseph Smith
preach, or David Patten, or any of their associates, for they are
deceivers.” (Journal of Discourses, 3:371)
Heber C. Kimball
If
men and women do not qualify themselves and become sanctified and
purified in this life, they will go into a world of spirits where they
will have a greater contest with the devils than ever you had with them
here. (Journal of Discourses, 3:230)
The Wicked are Just as Wicked in the Spirit World
Brigham Young
The
wicked spirits that leave here and go into the spirit world, are they
wicked there? Yes. The spirits of people that have lived upon the earth
according to the best light they had, who were as honest and sincere as
men and women could be, if they lived on the earth without the privilege
of the Gospel and the Priesthood and the keys thereof are still under
the power and control of evil spirits, to a certain extent. No matter
where they lived on the face of the earth, all men and women that have
died without the keys and power of the Priesthood, though they might
have been honest and sincere and have done every thing they could, are
under the influence of the devil, more or less. Are they as much so as
others? No, no. Take those that were wicked designedly, who knowingly
lived without the Gospel when it was within their reach, they are given
up to the devil, they become tools to the devil and spirits of devils.
Go
to the time when the Gospel came to the earth in the days of Joseph,
take the wicked that have opposed this people and persecuted them to the
death, and they are sent to hell. Where are they? They are in the
spirit world, and are just as busy as they possibly can be to do every
thing they can against the Prophet and the Apostles, against Jesus and
his kingdom. They are just as wicked and malicious in their actions
against the cause of truth, as they were while on the earth in their
fleshly tabernacles. (Journal of Discourses, 3:370)
Wicked Spirits Still Oppose Lord’s Work on Earth
Brigham Young
The
spirits of the ancient Gadiantons are around us. You may see
battle-field after battle-field, scattered over this American continent,
where the wicked have slain the wicked. Their spirits are watching us
continually for an opportunity to influence us to do evil, or to make us
decline in the performance of our duties. And I will defy any man on
earth to be more gentlemanly and bland in his manners than the master
spirit of all evil. We call him the devil; a gentleman so smooth and so
oily, that he can almost deceive the very elect. We have been baptized
by men having the authority of the holy Priesthood of the Son of God,
and consequently we have power over him which the rest of the world do
not possess, and all who possess the power of the Priesthood have the
power and right to rebuke those evil powers, and they obey not, it is
because we do not live so as to have the power with God, which it is our
privilege to have. If we do not live for this privilege and right we
are under condemnation. (Journal of Discourses, 12:128)
Heber C. Kimball
It
is written, “resist the devil and he will flee from you.” Some people
do not believe that there are any devils. There are thousands of evil
spirits that are just as ugly as evil can make them. The wicked die, and
their spirits remain not far from where their tabernacles are. When I
was in England, twenty-eight years ago next June, I saw more devils than
there are persons here to-day; they came upon me with an intention to
destroy me; they are the spirits of wicked men who, while in the flesh,
were opposed to God and his purposes. I saw them with what we call the
spiritual eyes, but what is in reality the natural eye. The atmosphere
of many parts of these mountains is doubtless the abode of the spirits
of Gadianton robbers, whose spirits are as wicked as hell, and who would
kill Jesus Christ and every Apostle and righteous person that ever
lived if they had the power. It is by the influence of such wicked
spirits that men and women are all the time tempted to tell little lies,
to steal a little, to take advantage of their neighbor a little, and
they tell us there is no harm in it. It is by the influence and power of
evil spirits that the minds of men are prejudiced against each other,
until they are led to doeach other an injury, and sometimes to kill each
other.(Journal of Discourses, 11:84-85)
Those on the Other Side Concerned for their Posterity in this World
George Albert Smith
Think
of the devotion and the faithfulness of those who day after day go into
these temples and officiate for those who have passed to the other
side; and know this, that those who are on the other side are just as
anxious about us. They are praying for us and for our success. They are
pleading, in their own way, for their descendants, for their posterity
who live upon the earth, many of whom, because they have been unwise,
have been betrayed into fighting the Church and kingdom of God and
opposing those who are its leaders. (Conference Reports, April 1937, pp.
34-35.)
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