Peter, the Priesthood, the Temple, and Christ鈥檚 Atonement
Bruce C. Hafen
Bruce C. Hafen, "Peter, the Priesthood, the Temple, and Christ's Atonement," Religious Studies Center 16, no. 2 (2015): 8鈥31.
Elder Bruce C. Hafen is an emeritus member of the Seventy who recently served as president of the St. George Utah Temple.
Elder Bruce C. Hafen
Editor鈥檚 Note: This is part 2 in a two-part series for the Religious Educator. In this issue, Elder Hafen continues a conversation with religion teachers that offers some reflections on how we currently understand and teach about the Atonement. Part 1, 鈥淔ear Not, I Am with Thee,鈥 was based on a talk he and his wife, Marie, gave at the 2014 BYU Women鈥檚 Conference. Part 2 is based on his 2014 BYU Sperry Symposium keynote address.
Introduction: Peter and the Temple
Several historical clues tell us that the Apostle Peter had, and probably still has, a significant responsibility for our dispensation鈥攁 kind of 鈥渉ands-on鈥 role that symbolizes the earthly use of the priesthood. For example, the Lord revealed in 1829 that he had given certain keys to Peter, James, and John that would be in effect until the Second Coming.[1] Only a month later, when John the Baptist conferred the Aaronic Priesthood upon Joseph and Oliver, he told them that he acted 鈥渦nder the direction of Peter, James and John, who held the keys of the Priesthood of Melchizedek.鈥[2] Not long afterward, those same three men conferred that higher priesthood upon Joseph and Oliver.[3]
Less well known is Peter鈥檚 intriguing appearance at the Kirtland Temple dedication in 1836, a visit that hints that Peter also has some role with temples. During the dedication, an angel entered through a window and sat next to Joseph Smith Sr. The Prophet later told the congregation that this angel was Peter, who had been sent as a messenger to accept the temple dedication.[4]
Why would the Lord send Peter for that purpose? Perhaps it was because Peter holds the keys for the Melchizedek Priesthood, and the temple ordinances are the ordinances of that priesthood. If so, I wonder if that also explains, at least in part, the role that Peter plays in the temple endowment. Thinking of Peter in this way prompts these further thoughts: The primary ordinances of the Aaronic Priesthood are baptism and the sacrament. Those ordinances are also intertwined with the first principles of the gospel. Is there a similar interactive relationship between the temple ordinances of the high priesthood and some set of higher gospel principles?
If so, what are those higher principles, and what do they teach us about the natural pattern of our spiritual development as we move sequentially in the endowment鈥檚 pattern from the Aaronic through the Melchizedek Priesthood levels of our personal growth? And would that pattern also provide a framework for applying Christ鈥檚 Atonement to our experience beyond the Aaronic Priesthood ordinance of baptism?
The Temple Ordinances and the Two Priesthoods (D&C 84)
Whatever Peter鈥檚 exact duties are, the high priesthood for which he evidently holds keys is clearly related to the higher ordinances of the temple. Only in the ordinances of the higher priesthood鈥攖he temple ordinances鈥攃an 鈥渢he power of godliness鈥 be 鈥渕anifest unto men in the flesh.鈥[5] Moses had wanted the children of Israel to receive this higher priesthood and these higher ordinances. So he 鈥渟ought diligently to sanctify his people that they might behold the face of God; but they hardened their hearts and could not endure his presence; therefore, the Lord . . . swore that they should not enter into his rest.鈥 And when God took away Moses and the high priesthood, the people could no longer be sanctified by participating in the higher priesthood鈥檚 ordinances, even though they retained the Aaronic Priesthood.[6]
Differences between the Aaronic and Melchizedek Priesthoods. The Lord has explained that the 鈥渓esser鈥 or Aaronic Priesthood 鈥渉oldeth the key of the . . . preparatory gospel; which gospel is the gospel of repentance and of baptism, and the remission of sins, and the law of carnal [or temporal] commandments.鈥[7] Moreover, this preparatory priesthood administers the 鈥渙utward ordinances, the letter of the gospel, [and] the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins.鈥[8]
So the first few principles of the gospel鈥攆aith, repentance, and baptism鈥攁re identified with the 鈥減reparatory鈥 or 鈥渙utward鈥 ordinances of the lesser priesthood鈥攊n contrast to the more internal ordinances of the higher priesthood. That higher priesthood holds 鈥渢he keys of all the spiritual blessings of the church,鈥 including 鈥渢he privilege of receiving the mysteries of the kingdom鈥 and becoming worthy and able to enjoy 鈥渢he communion and presence鈥 of the Father and the Son.[9] Perhaps such higher principles as sacrifice and consecration are to the higher ordinances what the principles of faith and repentance are to the preparatory ordinances.
These scriptures about the two priesthoods make this simple point: As essential as faith, repentance, and baptism are鈥攕o essential that all of us must rely constantly on their power and their blessings鈥攕till, those elements really are 鈥渇irst鈥 or 鈥減reparatory.鈥 There is more. And we can find key portions of that 鈥渕ore鈥 through the initiatory, endowment, and sealing ordinances鈥攊n combination with the higher gospel principles that teach us to live in our lives the higher covenants we learn in the temple.
Obedience to the ordinances and principles of the Aaronic Priesthood makes us eligible for salvation. After that, the temple ordinances help us to internalize the higher principles that help qualify us for exaltation. As Brigham Young said, the temple endowment provides 鈥渁ll those ordinances in the house of the Lord, which are necessary鈥 for us to 鈥済ain [our] eternal exaltation.鈥[10]
What the higher ordinances and principles add. We don鈥檛 always speak of this complete pattern of the two priesthoods as much as we could鈥攐r perhaps should. Of course milk must come before meat. For example, the stated purpose of our full-time missionaries is 鈥渢o invite others to come unto Christ by helping them receive the restored gospel through faith in Jesus Christ and His Atonement, repentance, baptism, receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost, and enduring to the end.鈥[11]
The principles of faith and repentance are 鈥渇irst鈥 not only in the natural sequence of conversion, but also 鈥渇irst鈥 as the foundation for every step of our spiritual growth. These are the principles that allow us to learn and grow continually from all of our experience鈥攁 vital, lifelong process made possible by our continued reliance on the Atonement. Indeed, those who 鈥渉old out faithful to the end鈥 have the promise of eternal life. (See Mosiah 2:41)
Sometimes, however, we refer to the lesser priesthood鈥檚 elements in that sequence as if they were the entire process of discipleship. When we do that, 鈥渆ndure to the end鈥 can sound like an afterthought, as if our baptism and confirmation have hooked us like a trout on God鈥檚 fishing line, and so long as we don鈥檛 choose to squirm off the hook, He will just reel us safely in. Or some assume that 鈥渆ndure to the end鈥 simply describes the 鈥渘o worries鈥 stage of our spiritual retirement, when all we need to do is buy a Winnebago and go to Winnemucca鈥攁nd don鈥檛 do anything really bad along the way.
But there is more. Noel and Sydney Reynolds, former president and matron of the Mount Timpanogos Temple, believe that 鈥渆ndure to the end鈥 is a gospel principle that is paired with the temple endowment, just as repentance is paired with baptism. President Reynolds said this is the stage when we decide if we really want to become as the Father and the Son are.[12] Nephi offered a similarly expansive view of 鈥渆nduring:鈥 鈥淯nless a man shall endure to the end, in following the example of the Son of the living God, he cannot be saved.鈥[13] The first principles will always be first鈥攜et they are but the foundation for pressing on toward the Christlike life: 鈥淭herefore, not leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on unto perfection; not laying again the foundation of repentance . . . and of faith [and baptism].鈥[14]
Nephi also makes clear that faith, repentance, baptism, and the Holy Ghost are but the entry gate鈥攖he launching pad鈥攆or our lifetime spiritual journey toward the goal of eternal life. Now we must energetically press forward along the narrow path, seeking hope and charity, and feasting on Christ鈥檚 words鈥攏ot as snacks to entertain us as we coast smoothly toward Winnemucca, but because His words, through the Holy Ghost, 鈥渨ill tell you all things what ye should do.鈥[15] Tell us what to do鈥攁bout what?
Nephi said he was not free to explain further what he meant by telling us to feast on Christ鈥檚 words for more direction. He said, 鈥淭he Spirit stoppeth mine [further] utterance鈥 about that. He was allowed only to tell us to 鈥減ray always,鈥 and that we should not 鈥減erform any thing unto the Lord鈥 without asking God to 鈥渃onsecrate [our] performance unto [us],鈥 so that it 鈥渕ay be for the welfare of [our souls].鈥[16] I wonder if, not feeling free to speak more openly about sacred matters, Nephi was hinting about hearing Christ鈥檚 words through the prayerful performance of temple ordinances and temple worship, along with personal revelation. We do know that, before he wrote these words, Nephi and his people had already built a temple 鈥渁fter the manner鈥 of Solomon鈥檚 temple.[17] Perhaps he knew more than he was allowed to say.
Living the complete sequence makes possible complete spiritual growth. The Aaronic and Melchizedek Priesthood segments in this process work together to mirror for both men and women the pattern of personal spiritual growth embodied in the temple endowment. As President David O. McKay said, the endowment represents our 鈥渟tep-by-step ascent into the eternal Presence. If our young people could but glimpse it, [this] would be the most powerful spiritual motivation of their lives.鈥[18] As crucial as they are, when we focus mostly on the faith-repentance-baptism steps in that ascent, we are seeing only the first steps of the spiritual staircase.
In his classic 1920 sermon on temple worship, for example, Elder John A. Widtsoe said, 鈥淪ome people, having obeyed these first principles, believe their work done. . . . They are members of God鈥檚 chosen people鈥攚hat more need they? [But] the gift of the Holy Ghost . . . is a promise of growth into . . . a larger condition of life.鈥 We can realize 鈥渁 promise of added intelligence . . . in part at least in the worship and ordinances of the temples of the Lord.鈥[19] Therefore, we 鈥渕ay win salvation鈥 by 鈥渙bedience to the first principles . . . and a subsequent blameless life.鈥 However, 鈥渢hose who [truly] hunger and thirst for righteousness . . . will advance farther than those who placidly sit by with no driving desire within them. Temple worship is an avenue to exaltation in God鈥檚 kingdom.鈥[20]
Thus does exaltation ask us to step up, well beyond just doing nothing harmful. The theme of lifelong spiritual learning and growth was absolutely central to Joseph Smith. 鈥淲hen you climb up a ladder,鈥 he said, 鈥測ou must begin at the bottom, and ascend step by step. . . . You must begin with the first [principle], and go on until you learn all the principles of exaltation.鈥[21] Thus Joseph prayed at the Kirtland Temple dedication 鈥渢hat all those who shall worship in this house . . . may grow up in thee, and receive a fulness of the Holy Ghost.鈥[22]
How the Atonement relates to the higher ordinances and principles. Do the blessings of Christ鈥檚 Atonement play any role in this postbaptism, Melchizedek Priesthood journey鈥攐r does the Atonement apply only to the Aaronic Priesthood鈥檚 preparatory stage of faith, repentance, and baptism? Elder David A. Bednar has said that the fruit of the tree in Lehi鈥檚 dream is a symbol for all of the Atonement鈥檚 blessings. Elder Bednar then invited us to think of baptism and confirmation as the gate that puts us on the path toward the tree of life. Then, he wrote, 鈥減ressing forward [along the path] and partaking of the fruit of the tree [of life] may represent the receiving of additional ordinances and covenants whereby the Atonement can become fully efficacious in our lives.鈥[23] The natural, even obvious, place for those additional ordinances and covenants is the temple.
This doctrinal pattern suggests how the complete sequence of Aaronic and Melchizedek Priesthood ordinances鈥攁nd the gospel principles associated with them鈥攊nvite us through the complete process of our spiritual growth through salvation and then exaltation: baptism, confirmation, the sacrament, receiving the priesthood (for brethren), the initiatory ordinances, the endowment, and the sealing.
And throughout these ascending and sequential steps, we are blessed by the redeeming, strengthening, and perfecting powers of the Atonement. The Atonement鈥檚 redeeming blessings connect especially to the first principles and ordinances鈥攅ven though they obviously play a continued and critical role thereafter. Then its strengthening and perfecting blessings help us after baptism as we move from being forgiven (sometimes repeatedly),through the growing pains of being filled with Christ-like love and character. Thus can we 鈥渆ndure to the end, in following the example of the Son of the living God.鈥[24]
Even though the idea of sequential steps helps us to see more clearly the normal process of personal spiritual development, it is also clear that all of these steps, and all of the Atonement鈥檚 blessings, throughout both priesthoods and all ordinances, work together in the wholeness we call the gospel of Jesus Christ. In addition, they overlap and interact continually. We are never 鈥渄one鈥 with faith or repentance, and we can find entry points for our particular growth needs all along the spectrum.
Physical reflections of the complete pattern in the temple. During the first decades of complete proxy temple work for the dead (which began in 1877 in the St. George Temple), temple patrons would take each name through each of the steps in the complete sequence鈥攔ather than doing only baptisms/
In addition, the early temples (in some ways, even as early as the Nauvoo Temple) also followed a symbolically important and ascending room-to-room pattern. Again, the modern practice of combining some of these steps into one or two rooms of the temple is for reasons of practical convenience (especially in newer, smaller temples). The room-to-room approach made more clear how the entire pattern of the ordinances reflected the climbing, step-by-step nature of each person鈥檚 progress and growth through the mortal journey back to the Lord鈥檚 presence.
In those older temples, in order to complete all of the needed ordinances in their natural sequence, patrons began in the baptistry at the temple鈥檚 basement or lower level, then they walked physically upward (in somes cases only slightly upward, but still upward) from room to room鈥攖o the creation room, the Garden of Eden room, the world room, the terrestrial room, the celestial room, and finally the sealing room. That upward room-to-room pattern was a conscious reflection of what President McKay called a 鈥渟tep-by-step ascent into the eternal presence.鈥[25]
Ordinances and the Atonement Bless Our Growth Beyond Baptism鈥擲acrifice
The concept of sacrifice illustrates how the temple embodies and teaches higher, Melchizedek鈥憀evel principles. Sacrifice also demonstrates how the temple ordinances both reflect and apply the Savior鈥檚 Atonement in our lives.
Ordinances in similitude of Christ鈥檚 sacrifice. When they left the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve built an altar and offered animal sacrifices. Then an angel came to ask Adam why he offered sacrifices. He said, 鈥泪 know not, save the Lord commanded me.鈥 So the angel told him, 鈥淭his thing is a similitude of the sacrifice of the Only Begotten.鈥[26] The unblemished lambs they sacrificed pointed them toward the Father鈥檚 future sacrifice of His Son. The angel then taught Adam and Eve that Christ鈥檚 sacrifice and the plan of redemption gave meaning and purpose to their entire experience, from Eden throughout mortality.
Many of us go to the temple today the way Adam and Eve did at first鈥攕imply because we are commanded, without knowing why. And simple obedience is certainly better than not performing the ordinances at all. But the Lord who sent that angel must have wanted them to know why鈥攁nd I believe He wants us to know why.
Are today鈥檚 temple ordinances also 鈥渁 similitude of the Only Begotten鈥? Think of how the temple鈥檚 altars are, like the altar of Adam and Eve, altars of prayer, sacrifice, and covenant. Think of the dimensions of sacrifice in all the covenants of the endowment. Since Christ completed His atoning mission, we no longer offer animal sacrifice, but we do covenant to sacrifice鈥攊n what way? Christ taught the Nephites, 鈥淵e shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken heart and a contrite spirit.鈥[27]
Animal sacrifice symbolized the Father鈥檚 sacrifice of the Son. But the sacrifice of a broken heart and a contrite spirit symbolizes the Son鈥檚 sacrifice of Himself. Elder James E. Talmage wrote that Jesus literally 鈥渄ied of a broken heart.鈥[28] In similitude, we now offer ourselves鈥攐ur own broken hearts鈥攁s a personal sacrifice. As Elder Neal A. Maxwell said, 鈥淩eal, personal sacrifice never was placing an animal on the altar. Instead, it is a willingness to put the animal in us upon the altar and letting it be consumed!鈥 [29]
We promise to sacrifice ourselves in this personal way throughout the temple ordinances. Then we leave the temple, and we try to live our sacrifices鈥攁nd that process can help us flourish spiritually as the Savior鈥檚 strengthening and perfecting blessings, along with the priesthood power of the temple, interact with our moment-to-moment daily striving. Thus the doctrine of sacrifice illustrates how interaction between the higher ordinances and the higher principles helps us become more fully consecrated followers of Christ. As the sixth lecture on faith teaches, 鈥淎 religion that does not require the sacrifice of all things never has power sufficient to produce the faith necessary unto life and salvation.鈥[30]
Sacrificing and living 鈥渋n similitude鈥濃攖he marriage sealing. To illustrate how this process works, consider the sealing ordinance. Not long ago, I was about to seal a young couple in the St. George Temple. As I invited them to the altar, he took her by the hand, and I realized that they were about to place upon that altar of sacrifice their own broken hearts and contrite spirits鈥攁n offering of themselves, to each other and to God, in emulation of Christ鈥檚 sacrifice for them. And for what purpose? So that through a lifetime of sacrificing for each other鈥攖hat is, trying to live as He did鈥攖hey might become ever more as He is. By seeking to live that way every day, they would each come closer to God, which would also bring them closer to each other. Through their increasing closeness to the Lord, their own energy and discipline would also draw in an interactive way upon the strengthening and perfecting powers He offers them through their personal relationship with Him as his covenant son and daughter. This way of living the covenants of the sealing ordinance would then sanctify not only their marriage but also their hearts, even their lives.
This understanding of marriage differs starkly from the prevailing view in today鈥檚 culture. In His parable of the Good Shepherd, Jesus described a 鈥渉ireling鈥濃攕omeone who is paid to care for the sheep. When the wolf comes, He said, the hireling 鈥渓eaveth the sheep, and fleeth.鈥 Why does he flee? Because, Jesus said, 鈥淸his] own the sheep are not.鈥 By contrast, He said of Himself, 鈥泪 am the good shepherd. . . . I lay down my life for the sheep.鈥[31] Most people today think of marriage as an informal arrangement between two hirelings. And when a hireling feels threatened by some wolf of trouble, he will flee. If trouble is coming, why should he risk his comfort or convenience, let alone his life?
But when we offer in our marriage a broken heart and a contrite spirit in similitude of the Good Shepherd, we will give our lives for the sheep of our covenant, a day or even an hour at a time. That process invites us to take selflessly upon ourselves both the afflictions and the joys of our companion and our children, emulating in our own limited way how the Savior takes upon Himself our afflictions. 鈥淏e you afflicted in all his afflictions,鈥 said the Lord to Peter Whitmer Jr. about his missionary companion.[32] In that same phrase, Isaiah described Christ and those He redeems: 鈥泪n all their afflictions he was afflicted. . . . [He] carried them all the days of old.鈥[33]
The more our sacrifices help us find Christ in the temple, the more we will find Him in our lives鈥攁nd that process will transform us over time, preparing us to live one day in the exalted company of those seen in vision by President Joseph F. Smith: 鈥淎nd there were gathered together . . . an innumerable company of the spirits of the just, who had been faithful in the testimony of Jesus while they lived in mortality; and who had offered sacrifice in the similitude of the great sacrifice of the Son of God, and had suffered tribulation in their Redeemer鈥檚 name.鈥[34]
As this statement suggests, those who seek the life of mature discipleship at the Melchizedek Priesthood level are likely to find that the higher principles and covenants of sacrifice are often linked to such higher sister principles as consecration, suffering, meekness, and sanctification. Thus the Lord told the Missouri Saints in 1833 that he had allowed their afflictions, because 鈥渢hey must needs be chastened and tried, even as Abraham. . . . For all those who will not endure chastening . . . cannot be sanctified.鈥[35] Or as Elder Neal A. Maxwell both said and experienced for himself, 鈥淭he very act of choosing to be a disciple . . . can bring to us a certain special suffering . . . [a] dimension that comes with deep discipleship. . . . [Thus] all who will can come to know [what Paul called] 鈥榯he fellowship of his sufferings.鈥欌[36]
In a sense, the sealing ordinance invites us into the fellowship of Christ鈥檚 suffering, as our sacrifices for one another may indeed ask us at times to suffer. The children born of that sealing are also part of the same fellowship, as we may suffer to bring them here, to rear them, and to suffer with them through their dark valleys. In such ways, living our temple covenants teaches us to be serious about deep discipleship.
The Power of Godliness Is Manifest
In addition to sacrifice, section 84 gives us another concept that illustrates how the temple conveys the higher 鈥渒eys of all the spiritual blessings鈥[37]鈥斺渋n the ordinances [of the greater priesthood] the power of godliness is manifest.鈥[38] Thus, as Truman Madsen put it, the temple offers 鈥渢he ordinances of godliness.鈥[39] And President Harold B. Lee said that the endowment contains the sacred but not secret 鈥渕ysteries of Godliness.鈥[40]
Forsaking ungodliness. These ordinances of godliness manifest godly power in several ways. First, as an example of how all of our temple covenants can influence the way we live, think again of the sealing. Trying to offer the attitude of a broken heart and contrite spirit to our families 鈥渋n similitude鈥 of the Savior will encourage us to see our spouses and our children as He sees them鈥攚hich will help us understand and try to love them as He would. Trying to live that way, even when we often fall short, will write the Lord鈥檚 pattern of marriage and family life upon our hearts, and by our own exertion we will become better companions, better parents, and better people鈥攋ust as people who choose to live the Word of Wisdom will have better health. So we bring one part of the power of godliness into our own lives simply by choosing to deny ourselves of ungodliness鈥攁nd that choice alone makes us a little more godly. The choice to live that way is, as Elder Christofferson said of the choice to repent, 鈥渁 self-willed change.鈥[41]
Godliness from the Atonement鈥檚 perfecting blessings. Moreover, the perfecting blessings help us to become ever more as He is鈥攎ore godly. As Moroni said, 鈥If ye shall deny yourselves of all ungodliness, and love God with all your might, mind and strength, then . . . by his grace ye may be perfect in Christ.鈥[42] 鈥淕odly鈥 also suggests 鈥渟aintly鈥濃攚e 鈥渂ecome a Saint through the Atonement鈥 (Mosiah 3:19) as the Lord鈥檚 influence leads us to develop saintly qualities. Our friend Peter spoke of this process when he urged us to become 鈥partakers of the divine nature.鈥[43]
I once asked a group of temple workers if working in the temple really had helped them to develop greater meekness, humility, love, and submissiveness. Listening to their warm personal examples, I asked myself鈥攁re these dear people more saintly because they love the temple, or do they love the temple because they are so saintly? That is, are they sanctified by the temple or for the temple? Both dimensions matter, but our time in the St. George Temple left us with no question. The temple lifted us to find Him and know Him better than before.
As my wife, Marie, said recently, 鈥淎s I was walking up to the temple one day, I came upon a grandmotherly woman鈥攐ne of our temple workers鈥攂ending over, tending to the flowers near the front door. She looked up. Her aging face was alive with light鈥攖he face of a lifetime of temple worship and [the sacrifices of] temple living. Her countenance enveloped me in the aura of the temple and filled me with the desire to have that same happy holiness in me.鈥 Like Joseph and Mary, we will 鈥渇ind Him in the temple.鈥 [44]
鈥淲ith you鈥濃攇odliness as being with Christ through the ordinances. Further, the temple鈥檚 power of godliness can enhance and deepen our personal relationship with the Lord simply by drawing us closer to Him, opening our hearts to whatever we need most from Him at a given time. In the temple we are 鈥淸endowed] . . . with power from on high.鈥[45] Moroni wrote that his people had gained power over their enemies by their faith, their religion, and their 鈥rites of worship.鈥[46]
Drawing on Moroni鈥檚 comment about gaining power from rites of worship, BYU professor Daniel Belnap has written that the 鈥減ower of godliness鈥 may refer to the state a mortal must be in to interact with divinity. If so, priesthood ordinances offer not only a symbolic way of learning but also 鈥渁n actual experience鈥 that makes us more conducive to the Spirit, as a means of entering into God鈥檚 presence.[47] Joseph Smith once said that knowledge about the purpose of mortality 鈥渃an only be obtained by experience through the ordinances of God set forth for that purpose.鈥[48]
Speaking of the endowment as given in Nauvoo, Richard Bushman wrote that 鈥渢he temple鈥檚 sacred story stabilized and perpetuated Joseph鈥檚 governing passion,鈥 which 鈥渨as to have his people experience God.鈥[49] That is also why Moses 鈥渟ought diligently to sanctify his people that they might behold the face of God.鈥 (D&C 84:23-24) Apparently both Moses and Joseph wanted for their people what they had experienced themselves.
Joseph Smith offered a similar thought in his translation of Mark about the sacrament. In the King James Version, Jesus said of the bread, 鈥淭ake, eat: this is my body.鈥 And then of the wine, 鈥淭his is my blood . . . which is shed for many.鈥[50] But in his translation of these verses, Joseph told us that the Savior further said, 鈥淭his is for you to do in remembrance of my body; for as oft as ye do this ye will remember this hour that I was with you.鈥 Then, as He offered them the wine, He said, 鈥淎nd as oft as ye do this ordinance, ye will remember me in this hour that I was with you and drank with you of this cup. 鈥[51]
He did not say 鈥測ou should remember me鈥 but rather, 鈥測ou will remember me.鈥 When we partake of the sacrament and the temple ordinances while in the right state of mind, could the power of godliness somehow help us remember and even visualize Him in some way? Perhaps from a similar perspective, Abinadi said that 鈥渨hen [Christ鈥檚] soul has been made an offering for sin he shall see his seed鈥濃攖hose 鈥渨hose sins he has borne.[52]
I have wondered if somehow, in the great eternal present tense of the Atonement, the Savior in Gethsemane was able to 鈥渟ee鈥 in some way all those who would accept His sacrifice. And if so, is there some reciprocal gift of sight that would let us 鈥渟ee鈥 or visualize Him as He drinks His bitter cup鈥攆or us, and with us? And when He said, 鈥淵ou will remember that I was with you and drank with you of this cup,鈥 could that mean that He 鈥渟ees鈥 us drink our bitter cups?
If so, perhaps the sacrament and the temple ordinances can somehow quicken our awareness not only to see Him drink his cup, but to know that He is 鈥with us鈥 when we drink ours鈥攋ust as He was in the fiery furnace with those three men in the book of Daniel, literally 鈥with them鈥 in the fires of their affliction. After all, it is only because He drank His bitter cup that the bitter cups of our own sacrifices can be sanctifying to us. Without Him, our sacrifice alone would not sanctify us. There is a reciprocity of sacrifice just as there is a reciprocity of grace.
The phrase 鈥渨ith you鈥 in these verses took on real meaning for Marie and me when we were in Sweden for one of the first international Especially for Youth (EFY) programs. We saw how much the Norwegian, Danish, and Swedish youth loved being with each other and with their young single adult counselors; most of them had never spent several days with so many their age who shared their faith. They didn鈥檛 want to go home. At a concluding fireside, the leaders asked us to take just ten minutes to teach them about the Atonement.
As the meeting began, we saw banners posted around the large gymnasium, showing their group names from the standard EFY pattern鈥攕hort scriptural phrases like 鈥淗appy Still,鈥 鈥淗ighly Favored,鈥 and 鈥淒reamed a Dream.鈥 Marie and I decided we should also choose a scriptural name for our two-person group. And our warm feeling about being with them prompted us to choose the name 鈥淲ith You.鈥
But what we could possibly say about the Savior鈥檚 Atonement to young people in ten minutes? We decided to share our group name as our theme. We told them about our grandson Clark, then just over two years old. As his mother was leaving him with a babysitter one morning, little Clark pleaded, 鈥淲ith you, Mom! With you!鈥 He didn鈥檛 want to be away from her. Then we said to the EFY youth, that鈥檚 what the Atonement is about鈥斺渨ith you.鈥 When we really come to know Him, we don鈥檛 want to be away from Him. We want to be with Him. Because of His sacrifice for us, He said, I will be with you in overcoming your sins. I will be with you in the hard moments; with you in becoming as I am. Because of Him, we can tell our families and each other, I will be with you forever.
Later that evening I said to Marie, 鈥泪 hope 鈥榳ith you鈥 is actually in the scriptures鈥攖hat鈥檚 the rule for EFY group names. But the sacrament prayer says 鈥榳ith them.鈥欌 I just knew it had to be there some place鈥攁nd a quick computer check found it in several places, such as 3 Nephi 18:7, 鈥泪f you do always remember me ye shall have my Spirit to be with you.鈥
Only months later did we run across the special use of 鈥渨ith you鈥 in Joseph鈥檚 translation of Mark 14: 鈥淸Y]e will remember me in this hour that I was with you and drank with you of this cup. 鈥[53] Our relationship with the Lord through the Atonement and the temple is all about the multiple meanings of 鈥渨ith you.鈥
Godliness and entering into 鈥渢he rest of the Lord.鈥 In addition, the idea that the temple ordinances can help infuse us with the power of being in the Lord鈥檚 presence also recalls His saying that because the Israelites hardened their hearts, they 鈥渃ould not endure his presence; therefore, the Lord鈥 would not allow them to 鈥渆nter into his rest.鈥[54] Entering into the 鈥渞est of the Lord鈥 is a significant, temple-related concept that describes the blessing of advancing from living a kind of worldly or telestial life to living on the higher spiritual plane, as if moving upward from one temple room or sphere to another, even though we may occasionally falter.
The prophet Mormon spoke of 鈥渢he peaceable followers of Christ鈥 who 鈥渉ave obtained a sufficient hope鈥 that they 鈥渃an enter into the rest of the Lord.鈥[55] President Joseph F. Smith described 鈥渢he rest of the Lord鈥 as a deep spiritual peace the Lord bestows on those who have 鈥渁n invincible determination in their hearts to be steadfast in the truth, and who are treading in humility and righteousness the path鈥 of the 鈥渇ollowers of Jesus Christ.鈥 These people receive 鈥渏oy to their hearts鈥 that frees them from 鈥渦nsettled, restless鈥 feelings of mortal discouragement, 鈥渟uspicion, unrest, [and] uncertainty.鈥 This is not just a hope for the next life. We can receive this tangible 鈥渟piritual contentment . . . here upon the earth . . . now, today.鈥[56]
Alma made it clear that entering into the Lord鈥檚 rest is not a privilege reserved for the elect few. He said there had been 鈥渕any, exceedingly great many [high priests], who were made pure and entered into the rest of the Lord their God.鈥 Alma also linked 鈥渢he rest of the Lord鈥 to ordinances while speaking of the higher priesthood: 鈥淭hese ordinances were given . . . that thereby the people might look forward on the Son of God, it being . . . his order.鈥 Then he implored all of us to become sufficiently 鈥渉umble, meek, submissive, patient, full of love and all long-suffering,鈥濃攖here are those same higher level words again鈥攖hat we too might 鈥enter into his rest.鈥 [57]
In this condition of ascending from within our own mortality while still on this side of the veil, we can also cast away the influence of Satan, as Moses did before regaining the Lord鈥檚 presence. At first Moses was afraid, but after being strengthened by the Lord, he commanded, 鈥淒epart hence, Satan.鈥 And Satan departed.[58]
The Blessings of Temple Sealings
Sealings to family and the general sealing blessings. The crowning dimensions for our spiritual growth through the Aaronic and Melchizedek levels come to us from the temple鈥檚 sealing power. After receiving all of the other ordinances, our sealings can bless us in multiple ways. First of all, we must be sealed to a spouse in order to qualify for exaltation in the celestial kingdom because only a sealed couple can enjoy the continuation of seeds promised by exaltation.[59] We may also be sealed to both our children and our parents, either through births in the covenant or specific sealing ordinances, live or by proxy. These child-to-parent sealings ensure not only eternal family bonds, they are also welding links in the great ancestral chain that joins all generations into the Family of God through all dispensations.[60]
This welding is part of what we might call the general sealing blessings of the temple鈥攅ternal promises regarding our own exaltation[61] that are bestowed in addition to, and in some sense independent of, our person-to-person sealings. Elder Carlos E. Asay said that鈥攊f we remain faithful鈥攖he sealing ordinance gives us 鈥渂lessings pertaining to the prospects of (1) participating in the first [that is, celestial] resurrection, (2) all the blessings of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and (3) the [exalted] blessings of powers and kingdoms.鈥[62]
I mention these general sealing blessings not only because their promises are so magnificent, but also because I found in the temple that too many Church members seem unaware of them. Many assume that temple sealings are for the sole purpose of sealing individuals and families to one another. This isn鈥檛 the time for a complete discussion of the general sealing blessings, but here is one illustration. If one parent in a temple-sealed family is excommunicated and therefore loses his or her temple blessings, that obviously cancels the sealings between him and his family members, and it cancels his general sealing promises. However, his cancellation does not impair the general sealing promises that remain with his spouse and children.
Jesus Christ will 鈥渟eal you his鈥濃攂ecoming sons of God. The scriptures speak of one other dimension of the sealing power that shows how the ordinances and principles of the two priesthoods lead the Savior鈥檚 followers through a complete upward sequence that fulfills the Atonement鈥檚 promise of at-one-ment with the Lord. After King Benjamin鈥檚 people covenanted to become 鈥渢he children of Christ,鈥[63] he exhorted them to retain Christ鈥檚 name in their hearts and to remain obedient, even 鈥渟teadfast and immovable.鈥 If they would do this, he said, the day would come when Christ 鈥渕ay seal you his, that you may . . . have everlasting salvation and eternal life.鈥[64]
When Benjamin鈥檚 people accepted the first principles, they became the children of Christ through the doctrine of adoption. And that lifelong process could find its fulfillment in their being sealed to Him eternally. This example is consistent with other references to the concept of adoption. Section 84 teaches that those who are faithful to the oath and covenant of both priesthoods are 鈥渟anctified by the Spirit鈥 until 鈥渢hey become the [adopted] sons of Moses and of Aaron and the seed of Abraham, and . . . the elect of God,鈥 and then 鈥渁ll that my Father hath shall be given鈥 to them.[65]
Other passages teach about adoption, often tying it to ideas about inheritance. Those who accept the gospel are adopted into Abraham鈥檚 lineage, allowing them to inherit his promises. Faithful people who are not literal descendants of Israel may be adopted into the House of Israel and their patriarchal blessings may assign them a lineage among Israel鈥檚 twelve sons.
Perhaps the most significant meaning of adoption is to become 鈥渢he sons God.鈥 For example, 鈥淸A]s many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God.鈥[66] And Paul said, 鈥淵e have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father.鈥 And if we are God鈥檚 children in this sense, we are also 鈥渉eirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ鈥濃if, as Paul added, 鈥淸it] so be that we suffer with him. . . . For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us鈥 in 鈥渢he manifestation of the sons of God.鈥[67]
Elder Bruce R. McConkie summarized what all of this means: 鈥淓ternal life or exaltation, is to be like God, to be a son of God, a joint-heir with Christ, receiving, inheriting, and possessing, as he does, the fullness of the kingdom of the Father.鈥[68] Elder McConkie and President Joseph Fielding Smith were particularly explicit in teaching that the temple ordinances, particularly the marriage sealing, are the source of our adoption as sons and daughters of God in this sense.[69]
But haven鈥檛 we been God鈥檚 sons and daughters ever since our premortal birth? Yes, He is the father of our spirits. Yet prior to that birth or organizing process, some essence of our being existed co-eternally with God. 鈥淢an was also in the beginning with God.鈥[70] Then, as Joseph Smith taught, 鈥渇inding [that] he was in the midst of [these] spirits,鈥 God essentially invited them into a relationship with Him whereby they could 鈥渁dvance like himself鈥 [71] and be exalted with Him. In Terryl Givens鈥 words, this is 鈥渕ore like spiritual adoption than primordial birth.鈥[72]
Still, as something of a second pre-existent stage, we know that 鈥渕an, as a spirit, was begotten and born of heavenly parents, and reared to maturity in the eternal mansions of the Father.鈥[73] Against this rich but not precisely defined background, 鈥淕od is not a creator who fashions humans for his own purposes,鈥 but is more a 鈥渉eavenly mentor who . . . endows spirit matter with the form and conditions conducive to . . . full emulation of a perfect Father.鈥[74]
At the same time, only Christ is the Father鈥檚 natural, physical child in mortality鈥擧is unblemished 鈥渙nly begotten.鈥 So only Jesus is a natural heir to the Father鈥檚 kingdom. He invites us to share fully in His sonship鈥攁nd thus His inheritance鈥攂y adopting us through the act and power of His Atonement. Therefore, the scriptures say鈥攂y and of Christ, the earth鈥檚 inhabitants can be 鈥渂egotten sons and daughters unto God.鈥[75]
After becoming Christ鈥檚 adopted children through baptism, if we remain faithful through the sequence of the remaining principles, covenants, and ordinances of the two priesthoods, we may one day 鈥渃ome unto the Father in [Christ鈥檚] name, and in due time receive of [the Father鈥檚] fullness.鈥[76] 鈥泪 . . . am the Firstborn,鈥 He said. 鈥淎nd all those who are begotten through me鈥 and remain faithful shall one day receive the Father鈥檚 fullness and thereby become eternal partakers of Christ鈥檚 glory as members of 鈥渢he church of the Firstborn.鈥[77] Then Christ will seal us His as sons and daughters of the Father who are joint heirs with Christ, inheriting all that the Father hath. They have received their exaltation, for 鈥渁ll things are theirs and they are Christ鈥檚, and Christ is God鈥檚.鈥[78]
In his masterful book on Christ鈥檚 Atonement, President John Taylor described these links between the Atonement, the adoption, and our exaltation. His language speaks of this process as endowing us not only with the forgiveness made possible by the first principles and ordinances, but, beyond that, with the Christlike capacities of godliness: 鈥泪t is for the exaltation of man to this state of superior intelligence and Godhead that the mediation and atonement of Jesus Christ is instituted; and . . . man . . . is rendered capable not only of being a son of man, but also a son of God, through adoption. . . . And thus through the atonement of Jesus Christ and the adoption he [or she] is capable of eternal exaltation [and] eternal lives. . . . Through that atonement and the power of the Priesthood associated therewith, they become heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus Christ,鈥 inheriting 鈥渄ominions in the eternal worlds,鈥 where they 鈥渃an become the fathers and mothers of lives.鈥[79]
So what does it mean that Christ might seal us His? This is one of those sacred doctrines about which we can catch and share only slight glimpses. It does seem to be part of the fulfillment of our relationship with Him, a personal process that is enhanced and authorized by the sealing ordinances of the temple and linked to the blessings of the Atonement. As Truman Madsen said:
The answer to 鈥淲ho am I?鈥 can never be complete unless it answers 鈥淲hose am I?鈥 You are the son or daughter of a king. The Father himself. Through the ordinances you are begotten spiritually through his Son. You become heir to his throne. . . . You take his name. To receive him fully is to receive the fullness of his atonement. . . . [D&C 131:5, which speaks of being sealed up to eternal life, is talking] about coming to know by revelation through the power of the Holy Priesthood not only that Jesus is the Christ, but also that a relationship has been forged between you and Jesus Christ. . . . How do you come to know that? I can only tell you that the promise does pertain to the temple. . . .
[The] patterns of worship [in some religions fill our relationship to God with darkness, distance, and] irrational fear. [But] God the Father and his Son Jesus Christ yearn not to widen that gap, but to close it. In the house of the Lord we may come to him in light, in intimacy, and in holy embrace. . . . The temple is many things: a house of faith, a house of study, [a house of learning, order, prayer, fasting, and glory]. But surrounding all of those, it is a house of love. None of us receives enough love in this world, none of us. . . . The Father and the Son call us to come in the spirit of sacrifice and be surrounded by that holy environment which embraces us in love.[80]
This essay has been concerned with growing up spiritually to become sons and daughters of God in the fullest sense鈥攔ather than merely enduring. Just as we began with a reference to Peter, I conclude with another scripture from Peter鈥檚 life about growing up. This verse marked a turning point in my own life nearly forty years ago. I had barely begun what was my dream career鈥攂eing a full time law professor at Brigham Young University. I was then shocked when Elder Maxwell asked me on two-weeks鈥 notice in midsemester to leave my dream job and work for 鈥渁 year or two鈥 in a new correlation department at Church headquarters.
In my first meeting with the members of the Quorum of the Twelve to whom we reported, I was asked to say a few words. Only recently did I recall again the scripture I quoted on that long-ago day. It was from Christ鈥檚 final words to Peter: 鈥淲hen thou wast young, thou girdest thyself, and walkedst whither thou wouldest: but when thou shalt be old [also perhaps meaning fully grown] . . . . another shall gird thee, and carry thee whither thou wouldest not.鈥[81]
Those words refer to how Peter would die, but for me that day, and now, they also have a more general meaning: Most of us are quite full of ourselves when we are young. But when we grow up spiritually, we will, we hope, no longer be so self-absorbed. Rather, perhaps we will then desire to live more outside ourselves and to be carried by Him who was afflicted in all our afflictions, He who 鈥渞edeemed them, and bore them, and carried them all the days of old.鈥[82]
I was secretly praying that day that I could grow up enough to accept what felt like an unwanted intrusion into my life plans鈥攁n intrusion that essentially continued for the next 38 years. In retrospect, I bear witness that I have been carried and stretched and changed for the better by Him who said those sobering words to Peter. So now I respond to Him in Cordelia鈥檚 words from King Lear: O good Master, 鈥淗ow shall I live and work, / To match thy goodness? My life will be too short / And every measure fail me.鈥[83] In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
Notes
[1] D&C 7:7.
[2] Joseph Smith鈥擧istory 1:72.
[3] D&C 27:12鈥13.
[4] 鈥泪n his account of the dedication of the Kirtland Temple, the Prophet recorded in his journal, 鈥楶resdt Williams also arose and testified that while Presdt Rigdon was making his first prayer an angel entered the window and seated himself between father Smith, and himself, and remained there during his prayer.鈥 Truman O. Angell later added, 鈥榃hen the afternoon meeting assembled, Joseph, feeling very much elated, arose the first thing and said the Personage who had appeared in the morning was the Angel Peter come to accept the dedication.鈥 President Heber C. Kimball even gave a description of Peter鈥檚 appearance. 鈥楾hey had a fair view of his person. He was a very tall personage, black eyes, white hair, and stoop shouldered; his garment was whole, extending to near his ankles; on his feet he had sandals. He was sent as a messenger to accept of the dedication.鈥欌 Scott C. Esplin, 鈥淲ondering at His Words: Peter鈥檚 Influence on the Knowledge of Salvation for the Dead,鈥 in The Ministry of Peter the Chief Apostle, ed. Frank F. Judd Jr., Eric D. Huntsman, and Shon D. Hopkin (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2014), 303.
[5] D&C 84:20鈥21.
[6] D&C 84:23鈥25.
[7] D&C 84:26鈥27; emphasis added.
[8] D&C 107:20.
[9] D&C 107:18鈥19; emphasis added.
[10] Discourses of Brigham Young, comp. John A. Widtsoe (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1954), 416.
[11] Preach My Gospel: A Guide to Missionary Service (Salt Lake City: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 2004), 1.
[12] From a stake conference talk, Orem Utah Sharon Stake May 2014
[13] 2 Nephi 31:16; emphasis added.
[14] Joseph Smith Translation, Hebrews 6:1; emphasis added.
[15] 2 Nephi 32:3.
[16] 2 Nephi 32:7鈥9.
[17] 2 Nephi 5:16.
[18] Truman G. Madsen, 鈥淗ouse of Glory,鈥 BYU ten-stake fireside address, March 5, 1972, 7.
[19] John A. Widtsoe, 鈥淭emple Worship,鈥 Utah Genealogical and Historical Magazine, 12 (April 1921): 54鈥55.
[20] Widtsoe, 鈥淭emple Worship鈥 55; emphasis added.
[21] B. H. Roberts, A Comprehensive History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1957), 6:306鈥307.颅
[22] D&C 109:14鈥15; emphasis added.
[23] David A. Bednar, Power to Become: Spiritual Patterns for Pressing Forward with a Steadfastness in Christ (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2014), 77; emphasis added.
[24] 2 Nephi 31:16.
[25] For a description of the name, nature, and purpose of each of these rooms in the Salt Lake Temple, see James E. Talmage, The House of the Lord (1962; Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1912), 183鈥92.
[26] Moses 5:6鈥7.
[27] 3 Nephi 9:20.
[28] James E. Talmage, Jesus the Christ (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1984), 621.
[29] Neal A. Maxwell, 鈥淒eny Yourselves of All Ungodliness,鈥 Ensign, May 1995; emphasis added.
[30] Joseph Smith, Lectures on Faith, sixth lecture (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1985), 69.
[31] John 10:11鈥15.
[32] D&C 30:6.
[33] D&C 133:53.
[34] D&C 138:12鈥13; emphasis added.
[35] D&C 101:4鈥6; emphasis added.
[36] Neal A. Maxwell, All These Things Shall Give Thee Experience (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1979), 32, 34, 36.
[37] D&C 107:18.
[38] D&C 84:20; emphasis added.
[39] Truman G. Madsen, 鈥淭he Temple and the Atonement,鈥 adapted from a lecture delivered in Saratoga, California, October 19, 1994, http://
[40] 鈥淭hese revelations, which are reserved for and taught only to the faithful Church members in sacred temples, constitute what are called the 鈥榤ysteries of Godliness.鈥 The Lord said He had given to Joseph 鈥榯he keys of the mysteries, and the revelations which are sealed. . . .鈥 (.) As a reward to the faithful, the Lord promised: 鈥楢nd to them will I reveal all mysteries, yea, all the hidden mysteries of my kingdom from days of old. . . .鈥 (.).鈥 Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Harold B. Lee (Salt Lake City: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 2000), 102. Perhaps speaking of such mysteries, Alma said that to him who 鈥渨ill not harden his heart鈥 is 鈥済iven the greater portion of the word,鈥 until he knows 鈥渢he mysteries of God鈥 in full. But those who harden their hearts receive the lesser portion until 鈥渢hey know nothing concerning his mysteries鈥 (Alma 12:10鈥11).
[41] D. Todd Christofferson, 鈥淔ree Forever, to Act for Themselves,鈥 Ensign or Liahona, November 2014, 18.
[42] Moroni 10:32; emphasis added.
[43] 2 Peter 1:4; emphasis added.
[44] Bruce C. Hafen and Marie K. Hafen, 鈥溾楩ear Not, I am With Thee鈥: Christ鈥檚 Atonement and our Personal Growth,鈥 address given May 1, 2014, at Brigham Young University鈥檚 Women鈥檚 Conference. Transcript available online.
[45] D&C 95:8; emphasis added.
[46] Alma 44:5; emphasis added.
[47] Daniel L. Belnap, ed., By Our Rites of Worship: Latter-day Saint Views on Ritual in Scripture, History, and Practice (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2013), 4鈥5; emphasis added.
[48] Teachings of the Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith (Salt Lake City: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 2011), 419.
[49] Richard Lyman Busman, Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling (New York: Knopf, 2006), 451l emphasis added.
[50] Mark 14:22鈥25.
[51] Joseph Smith Translation, Mark 14:21鈥24; emphasis added.
[52] Mosiah 15:10鈥12.
[53] Joseph Smith Translation, Mark 14:21鈥24; emphasis added.
[54] D&C 84:24; emphasis added.
[55] Moroni 7:3; emphasis added.
[56] Gospel Doctrine, 11th ed. (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1959), 126鈥27.
[57] Alma 13:12, 16, 28鈥29; emphasis added.
[58] Moses 1:20鈥22.
[59] D&C 131:2鈥4.
[60] D&C 128:18.
[61]鈥Those portions of [the Abrahamic covenant] which pertain to personal exaltation and eternal increase are renewed with each member of the house of Israel who enters the order of celestial marriage; through that order the participating parties become inheritors of all the blessings of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.鈥 Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, 2nd ed. (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1966), 13; emphasis in original.
[62] Carlos E. Asay, In the Lord鈥檚 Service: A Guide to Spiritual Development (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book 1990), 11.
[63] Mosiah 5:7.
[64] Mosiah 5:15.
[65] D&C 84:33鈥38.
[66] John 1:12.
[67] Romans 8:14鈥19.
[68] Bruce R. McConkie, A New Witness for the Articles of Faith,1st ed. (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1985), 144.
[69] 鈥泪f you [would become a son or a daughter of God and an heir of the kingdom], you have got to go into the temple of the Lord and receive these holy ordinances . . . which cannot be had elsewhere. . . . The higher ordinances in the temple of God [the endowment and sealings] pertain to exaltation in the celestial kingdom . . . The Lord has made it possible for us to become members of the Church of the Firstborn, by receiving the blessings of the house of the Lord and overcoming all things. Thus we become heirs, 鈥榩riests and kings, who have received of his fulness . . .鈥 who shall 鈥榙well in the presence of God and his Christ forever . . .鈥 with full exaltation.鈥 Temple sealers 鈥渟eal upon us the keys and powers which, through our obedience, entitle us to become sons and daughters and members of the Church of the Firstborn, receiving all things in the kingdom. This is what we can get in the temple, so that we become members of the family, sons and daughters of God, not servants. . . . No person can receive an exaltation in the celestial kingdom without the ordinances of the temple. The endowments are for advancement in that kingdom, and the sealings for our perfection, provided we keep our covenants.鈥 Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines of Salvation, comp. Bruce R. McConkie (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1954鈥56), 2:41鈥45; emphasis in original. See also McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, 13.
[70] D&C 93:29.
[71] Times and Seasons, August 15, 1844, 614.
[72] Terryl L. Givens, Wrestling the Angel: The Foundations of Mormon Thought: Cosmos, God, Humanity (New York: Oxford, 2014), 157.
[73] 鈥溾楳ormon鈥 View of Evolution,鈥 in Messages of the First Presidency, ed. James R. Clark (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1971), 5:244.
[74] Givens, Wrestling the Angel, 163.
[75] D&C 76:24.
[76] D&C 93:19.
[77] D&C 93:21鈥22.
[78] D&C 76:59.
[79] John Taylor, Mediation and Atonement of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ (Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1892), 140鈥41; emphasis added.
[80] Madsen, 鈥淭he Temple and the Atonement.鈥
[81] John 21:18.
[82] D&C 133:53; emphasis added.
[83] William Shakespeare, King Lear, act 4, scene 7.