The previous two
posts about the unsettled doctrine of premortality have brought us to the main
point I am trying to make about God’s authority, but let us be clear about one
thing: the notion that our basic personal essence and individuality have always
existed is not just fodder for fascinating gospel speculation. It has some
significant ramifications. At a fundamental level, it defines our relationship
with Deity, our relationship with each other, and the source and nature of
God’s authority over us. By logical extension, it should also influence how we
view our own authority and the way we exercise it.
Joseph Smith’s “Heresy”
As a church, we claim to have been organized by men who had first
received authority from divinely commissioned messengers. The Savior himself
always grounded his own authority in the claim that he was sent by his Father
and always executed the Father’s will (see 3 Ne. 27:13; John 7:28–29; 8: 28–29,
42; 12:49). Regarding the gospel and the Restoration, everything is thus
dependent on correct authority that can be traced back to God. But this leads
to an even more fundamental question: What is the source of God’s authority?
Although on the surface this query may appear either obvious or blasphemous, if
we are to achieve a correct gospel perspective on authority and on the nature
of our relationship with Deity, this is a question we must address, for its
answer reveals the foundational pattern upon which all authority in the Church,
and even the Savior’s own authority, must rest. Let me clarify here that when I
talk about God’s authority I am not referring to his power over the physical
universe. That is unquestionably a consequence of his perfection and
intelligence. I am instead referring specifically to his authority over us. Why and how does he have
authority over us?
I am no expert in the beliefs of other religious traditions, but I assume
the customary Christian answer to this question would be that since God is
omnipotent and omniscient and since he created all things, including us, either
ex nihilo (out of nothing) or ex deo (out of himself), then we are no
different from any of his other creations and he can do whatever he pleases
with us. His authority needs no source, because he is the source—of everything. Interestingly, if we as Latter-day
Saints accept the theory proposed by Brigham Young, that we did not exist as
self-aware individual entities before our spirit birth, then our answer to the
question regarding God’s authority would be quite similar to the traditional
Christian answer, and because of nebulous doctrine here, LDS authority figures
sometimes do make statements that lean toward this view of our relationship
with Diety.1 But I believe Joseph Smith suggested a radically
different response to this question, a response most Christians would consider
heresy. Indeed, shortly before Joseph’s death, he completely redefined not only
the nature of mankind but also the nature of God and of our relationship to
him, which in turn circumscribe our ability to exercise authority in his name.
In William Clayton’s notes of the King Follett Discourse, we find the
following, some of which has already been quoted in a previous post:
Another
subject—the soul—the mind of man—they say God created it in the beginning. The
idea lessens man in my estimation. [I] don’t believe the doctrine—[I] know
better—God told me so. . . . We say that God was self-existent who told you so?
It’s correct enough but how did it get into your heads—who told you that man
did not exist upon the same principle. . . . The mind of man—the intelligent
part is coequal with, God himself. . . . Is it logic to say that a spirit is
immortal and yet have a beginning because if a spirit have a beginning it will
have an end—good logic—illustrated by his ring. All the fools and learned &
wise men that comes and tells that man has a beginning proves that he must have
an end and if that doctrine is true then the doctrine of annihilation is true.
But if I am right then I might be bold to say that God never did have power to
create the spirit of man at all. He could not create himself—Intelligence
exists upon a self-existent principle—is a spirit from age to age & no
creation about it. . . . That God himself—find himself in the midst of spirit
and glory because he was greater saw proper to institute laws whereby the rest
could have a privilege to advance like himself.2
If
Clayton’s notes from this sermon are accurate, it seems quite clear that Joseph
believed God did not create the essence of man—his spirit or intelligence, his
mind. Our spirits, writes Abraham, “have no beginning” (Abr. 3:18). God came
down among “the intelligences,” he told Abraham, and made some of these
“spirits” his rulers (Abr. 3:21–23).3 This does not mean, however,
that God came down among the weaker intelligences and forced them to accept his
plan and his laws. Such a notion runs counter to everything we know about our
Father in Heaven. It also runs counter to every notion we possess of behavior
that is moral and appropriate or authority that is exercised righteously. If,
as Joseph boldly declared, we are eternal beings whose minds or intelligence
could not be created, and if, as the account of Abraham suggests, God came down
in the beginning among a group of already existing beings, then we were, in a
very real sense, self-existent and independent, and God, no matter how much
more intelligent or perfect he was, would have had no right to dictate to us
how we were to exist. To put it in modern corporate terms, he did not conduct a
hostile takeover of our eternal spirits or intelligences. No, this is not how
God would behave. More consistent with the pattern he has established in all
his dealings with us, he likely entered into a covenant relationship with his
future children. Seeing his glory and intelligence when he “came down,” we
naturally desired to become like him, so we accepted his offer to become our
Father, and he promised to place us in a “sphere,” or repeated spheres (see D&C
93:30), where we could progress, where he would institute laws that would
enable us to advance. We were not forced into the premortal “sphere,” where we
were his spirit children, but accepted it freely as the price we had to pay to
progress. And in both the premortal sphere, where we purportedly lived with and
learned from him, and in this mortal sphere, where we are tried and tested away
from his presence, we have always been free to obey or disobey his commandments
and to accept the consequences of either choice. Because God did not create us ex nihilo or ex deo at either our mortal birth or our “spirit birth,” our
relationship to him is not that of puppet to puppeteer. Nor do we exist merely
at his whim and pleasure. Ours is a relationship founded on the principles of
free choice, covenant, and accountability.
Consensual Authority
Significantly, this redefined relationship of humanity to Deity also
redefines the source of God’s authority over us. If I am correctly assessing
what Joseph was trying to teach toward the end of his life, then God’s
authority does not come from the mere fact that he is perfect, omniscient, and
omnipotent or from the mistaken idea that we were created at his caprice for
his own purposes. Rather, his authority must be a consensual matter. He has
authority over us only because we granted
it to him. Truman Madsen suggested as much: “In all-important ways even He,
the greatest of all, can only do with us what we will permit Him to do.”4
Now, I am not suggesting that we can escape God’s authority simply by declaring
we are no longer answerable to him, nor am I implying that our relationship
with him is in any way democratic, even though he has built this feature to a
certain degree into his Church, at least on a theoretical level (see D&C
20:65; 26:2). Of course God has great authority over us. That issue was settled
long ago—in the “beginning,” I assume. If he wishes to, he can punish us or
even end our earthly sojourn. All I am concerned about here is the source of this authority. Where did it
come from? Must it not exist because we elected at some point to grant him this
authority, trusting him to use it perfectly in helping us attain our full
potential? If so, this explains why he is so careful about our free will, why
Jesus insisted that authority among his disciples was to be exercised
differently than the authority wielded by unbelievers (see Matt. 20:26–28), why
Joseph Smith outlined strict parameters within which priesthood authority is
valid (see D&C 121:34–42), and why the human race is so compelled to seek
freedom and so abhors oppression. Thus, the source of God’s authority is not
power or force or position. He is neither tyrant nor dictator. He is the
ultimate Leader because we chose to follow
him. And apparently, this pattern is the one we should emulate, not the
opposite pattern, the one so common in the world, a pattern of usurping power
and exercising it unilaterally. Those who chose to not follow God—Lucifer and
his followers—were, in essence, reneging on their part of the covenant they had
made that granted God authority over them. Consequently, they were cast out of
heaven and will eventually be consigned to a place where they are cut off from
all light, because they chose to reject the course that would have led them
onward and upward to eternal glory and perfection.
Coming Full Circle
The picture I have painted in the
past three posts presents, I believe, a sound argument in settling some unresolved
doctrinal questions regarding our premortal existence. If God did indeed, at
some point, create us as sentient, individual personalities from some sort of
impersonal spirit element, then in a very real sense we are his creations—his
property, as it were—and he does not need our consent to do with us as he
pleases. He can place us in the most awful circumstances and refuse to help us
or even give us any understanding of why we are going through disease,
disaster, and destitution. In such a universe, God is indeed the source of all
intelligent beings and of all authority, as well as the source of all weakness
and suffering. But according to this theory, since he created us so
imperfectly, with inherent flaws, how can we possibly trust him to perform his
works of salvation perfectly? Something in this view of eternity, to put it in
Joseph’s terms, tastes bad.5
What I have
attempted to establish in these last three posts is the idea that we have
always been sentient, individual beings, which leads inexorably to the
conclusion that God’s authority over us and his relationship to us is far
different than if we assume he created our individual personalities, or minds,
out of raw material (or out of nothing). In other words, I am arguing that he is not the source of his authority
over us—we are. I have also attempted
to demonstrate that this idea is central, even essential, to Mormonism’s unique
message, because without it, our relationship with God is not fundamentally
different than that imagined by traditional Christianity, our belief in
premortality and in an embodied God notwithstanding. This unique Mormon understanding
of our eternal nature implies that as individuals we have certain eternal,
unalienable rights, and it is apparent from God’s dealings with us that he
strictly honors these rights, two of which are the freedom to choose and the
accountability for our choices (see 2 Ne. 2:26–27; D&C 101:78; Gal. 6:7).
Why he has refused to reveal more about our premortal relationship with him is
another matter altogether.
I began this long
series of posts by discussing two basic types of authority—personal and
institutional. God’s authority over us is certainly personal, unless he is
merely an officer in some larger, eternal organization. In that case, we should
not be worshipping our Father but some other superior God who gave him
authority over us. We would have a hard time supporting this notion. But
personal authority, as I pointed out earlier, is an influence over others that
comes either through consent or force. If what I have suggested above is true,
then God’s authority comes from the fact that we consented to it. If we toss
this idea aside, the only alternative we are left with is that he usurped
authority over us by force—unless we accept the idea that God created us, or
our consciousness, out of either nothing or out of himself. In either case, we
run into the inevitable conclusion that it is God, not we, who is responsible
for our sins.
So I see no other
reasonable alternative than the conclusion I have reached in this post—that
God’s authority, and the authority he granted Joseph Smith through divine
messengers actually originated with us.
In other words, the authority he gives us comes from us in the first place.6
If this seems like circular thinking, look at it through an analogy: The
president of the United States has authority, and that authority comes from the
citizens of the country. He can use that authority to appoint individuals to
perform certain functions that are legally binding upon all citizens, whether
they agree with the actions and decisions of those appointees or not. It is
similar with God. We granted him authority over us. He is therefore free, limited
only by his perfect grasp of moral parameters, to use that authority to appoint
servants to carry out his purpose, which is to save our souls, and sometimes we
may not like the way that authority is exercised. In the case of the U.S.
president, we can get rid of him after four years if we do not like how he and
his appointees exercise the authority we granted him. In the case of God, there
is no such termination clause. But we knew that when we signed on as his
children.
If, however, this
interpretation of our relationship with God is inaccurate, then we must toss
out the King Follett discourse, other statements by Joseph about the eternal
nature of spirits, and the assumption that we have always been sentient,
self-aware beings. In this case, we would be just what mainstream Christians
claim we are—creations of a God who can exercise arbitrary authority over us
because he created our consciousness. Thus, the ramifications of our view of
premortality are enormous. In other words, this is a question we really need to
settle.
________________________
1. For instance, we quite
often hear God referred to as “the Governor of the universe” or “the great God
of the universe.” LDS Bible Dictionary, 681; Gordon B. Hinckley, “We Bear
Witness of Him,” Ensign 28, no. 5
(May 199O): 71. But if we believe statements from earlier prophets—“As man now
is, God once was”; “he has passed the ordeals we are now passing through”; “God
Himself was once as we are now, and is an exalted man and sits enthroned in
yonder heavens!”—then God is not the Governor of the universe. These quotes are
from Teachings of the Presidents of the
Church: Lorenzo Snow (Salt Lake City: The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, 2012), 83; Teachings
of the Presidents of the Church: Brigham Young (Salt Lake City: The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1997), 30; and Teachings of the Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith (Salt Lake
City: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 2007), 40. How could he
be the great God of this universe if he was once a mortal inhabitant of a world
in this universe? The only possibility is if we accept the multiverse theory,
but no prophet has ever gone on record with such a claim. If we reject the
multiverse theory and accept doctrine taught by Joseph Smith, Brigham Young,
and Lorenzo Snow, we must admit that our Father is the Governor of a part of
this universe. Does this diminish him? No more than Joseph’s assertion that he
was once as we are now. Certainly, being the great God of even one galaxy such
as ours is consistent with his own statements about himself. “My works are
without end. . . . And worlds without
number have I created. . . . [A]nd innumerable are they unto man; but all
things are numbered unto me, for they are mine and I know them” (Moses 1:4, 32,
35). Here God is obviously claiming that his worlds are without number to us. They are too many for us to count. And that statement is
certainly true of the Milky Way galaxy. We have only vague estimates of the
number of stars in our galaxy and even more uncertain estimates of the number
of planets, and no mortal could live long enough to count them, even if we were
able to see them all.
2. Andrew F. Ehat and Lyndon
W. Cook, The Words of Joseph Smith: The
Contemporary Accounts of the Nauvoo Discourses of the Prophet Joseph (Orem,
Utah: Grandin Book, 1991), 359–60,
William Clayton Report.
3. Abraham records that the
Lord showed him “the intelligences that were organized before the world was;
and among all these there were many of the noble and great ones” (Abr. 3:22).
Some have interpreted “organized” here to mean that God organized the intelligences
into spirits, but a more plain reading is that God came down among
intelligences or spirits who were then (or perhaps already) organized socially.
Indeed, this is the way the Prophet Joseph repeatedly interpreted this
statement. Charles Harrell gives five different examples of this interpretation
between 1839 and 1843, then concludes, “The only organization of intelligences
envisioned by the Prophet in these statements is a social organization and not
an organization of intelligence into intelligences. Joseph taught that spirits,
like God, are self-existent.” Harrell, “Development of the Doctrine of
Preexistence,” 86.
4. Truman Madsen, Four Essays on Love (Provo, Utah:
Communications Workshop, 1971), 57.
5. Ehat and Cook, Words of Joseph Smith, 346, quoting
Wilford Woodruff’s journal: “this is good d doctrin, it tastes good, I
can taste the principles of eternal life, so can you.”
6. One inevitable question
arising from the conclusion I have reached here is relevant to the current
discussion in the Church about women and priesthood ordination: If 100 percent
of us consented to give our Father authority over us, why should we think it is
somehow appropriate that he then share that authority again with only half of
us? Somehow the circle here seems incomplete.
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