Reading the Prophets in Context
By Davis Bitton
Those who have wished to have
the teachings of the Latter-day prophets in their most convenient
form have long had available to them compilations of statements
arranged topically. Do you want to know what President Brigham
Young taught on the subject of agency? Go to the volume compiled
by Elder John A. Widtsoe, and you will find several good sentences
and paragraphs.
The
standard collections of the earliest presidents of the Church
have been the following:
- Teachings of the Prophet
Joseph Smith, comp. Joseph Fielding Smith.
- Discourses of Brigham
Young, comp. John A. Widtsoe (1926).
- John Taylor, Gospel
Kingdom, comp. G. Homer Durham (1943).
- Discourses of Wilford
Woodruff, comp. G. Homer Durham (1946).
- Teachings of Lorenzo
Snow, comp. Clyde J. Williams (1984).
- Joseph F. Smith, Gospel
Doctrine (1919).
- Heber J. Grant, Gospel
Standards, comp. G. Homer Durham (1941).
- Teachings of George Albert
Smith, comp. Robert and Susan McIntosh (1996).
- David O. McKay, Gospel
Ideals (1953).
- Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines
of Salvation, 3 vols., comp. Bruce R. McConkie (1954-1956).
- Teachings of Harold B.
Lee<, ed. Clyde J. Williams (1996).
- Teachings of Spencer
W. Kimball comp. Edward L. Kimball (1982).
- Teachings of Ezra Taft
Benson (1988).
- Teachings of Howard
W. Hunter, comp. Clyde J. Williams (1997).
- Teachings of Gordon B.
Hinckley (1997).
In addition to these volumes, Church presidents often published
separate works. Sometimes they are compilations of sermons,
sometimes they include passages drawn from sermons, revised
and rearranged, and sometimes they are entirely fresh works
appearing first in printed form. Here I wish to focus attention
on compilations.
Teacher, is it permissible to
ask a question? I raise my hand timidly. How did the compiler
choose which statements to include and which to exclude?
Is it possible that other statements equally memorable still
rest in the complete sermon, ignored by those who have available
only the compilation of selected passages?
Let us look at a single example,
a sermon delivered by Brigham Young on 6 October 1854 as published
in Journal of Discourses, volume 2, in 1855. As he
speaks, the main subject on President Youngs mind is the Perpetual
Emigrating Fund. Emigrants who lacked sufficient means could
borrow from it to pay their passage, but in so doing they
agreed to pay back the loan promptly. He now demands that
those who owe pay up and pay up now or in the very near future.
From this long discourse the compiler of Discourses of
Brigham Young selected the following three excerpts:
Poor men, or
poor women, who have nothing, and covet that which is not
their own, are just as wicked in their hearts, as the miserly
man who hounds up his gold and silver, and will not put it
out to use. I wish the poor to understand, and act as they
would wish others to act towards them in like circumstances.
Woe to those
who profess to be Saints and are not honest. Only be honest
with yourselves, and you will be honest to the brethren.
When you know
how to be a Saint to-day, you are in a fair way to know how
to be a Saint tomorrow. And if you can continue to be a Saint
to-day, you can through the week, and through the year, and
you can fill up your whole life in performing the duty and
labor of a Saint.
I like those statements, but
they are hanging out in the wind, disconnected. Reading
them in the compilation, we have no way of knowing their connection
to the problems of the Perpetual Emigrating Fund.
Following the first quotation,
President Youngs complete sermon continues:
Let the brethren
and sisters who have come in this season, as quick as the
Lord puts anything in their possession, first pay the debts
they owe the poor in foreign countries. They do not owe it
here; it is merely paid into the treasury here, from which
it is appropriated to bring the poor Saints of other countries
to this place. You owe it to people that cannot help themselves;
to those who may travel hundreds of miles, and apply to every
mechanics shop or factory for employment, to get a penny to
buy a loaf of bread, and to no avail.
We hear the sense of the urgency.
Any idea that powerful Church leaders are trying to squeeze
money from poor emigrants for their own benefit is dispelled.
And some sense of the extreme penury of many incoming Saints
comes through.
Not all of the gathered Saints
were angels. Some apparently took advantage of the system.
Listen to this:
Little occurrences
may be told with regard to the gathering of the Saints. For
instance, men or women put in a few pounds to bring them to
these valleys, and the Perpetual Emigrating Fund pays the
rest. When they get on the plains, the wagons break down.
They begin to weigh up, and find a few hundred pounds over
weight; they destroy their large boxes, or leave them on the
plains; and in the operation find silks and satins that would
twice pay their passage. After they arrive here, boxes of
English goods are taken away from the camping ground, which
have been smuggled here in the Fund train.
That is the statement that comes
immediately before the second excerpt quoted above that was
selected by the editor for printing.
Reading the complete sermon,
I learn about some of the problems associated with the Perpetual
Emigrating Fund, a magnificent idea that enabled thousands
of poor people to emigrate. But it did not operate like clockwork.
The third quotation above is
a good statement about practical religion. But why did not
the editor include these words that preceded it?
It is not for men to rise in this stand and tell what will
be in the Millennium, and what will be after the Millennium.
That which pertains to every day life and action, is what
pertains to us; that the Saints here may know how to order
their course before each other, and before the Lord; that
they may be justified, and have the Spirit of the Lord with
them continually. This is our Gospel, it is our salvation.
You need to be instructed with
regard to these items of every day duty one towards another.
That is Brother Brigham through
and through. Then, after the statement chosen for the compilation,
we read:
This is our
religion, and the Gospel of salvation, and the salvation held
out in the discourses we have been blessed with this morning;
and I wish you to treasure them up, and profit by them.
Treasure them up, and profit by them.
We could do worse than take these
words as our slogan when listening to the addresses given
at general conference in our day.
Comparing selected excerpts with
the complete sermon from which they are drawn is an instructive
exercise. Another is to have two or more people read through
a sermon and select passages they would put in a compilation
if they were performing that role. Assign a limit to make
it realistic: choose three quotations from this sermon, not
to exceed so many words. What do you think the chances are
that the readers would choose the same words?
Human beings have long utilized
books of quotations drawn from larger works. I do not criticize
compilations as such. But I am calling attention to the nature
of compiling, its basis in individual preference, and the
resulting divorce of the chosen passages from the context
that drew forth the remarks in the first place.
Of the making of compilations
there is no end. In 1957 Jerreld L. Newquist compiled Gospel
Truth from the works of George Q. Cannon, which in turn
has provided quotations for many general conference talks.
Having read all of the surviving sermons of George Q. Cannon,
I raise the same questions just asked about Brigham Young.
Why this selection and not that?
Why stop the quotation at this point? Why not include more
of the context? Obviously a compiler makes many judgment
calls, knowing that others would almost certainly choose differently.
There is the handy Of All
Things: A Nibley Quote Book, compiled by Garry P. Gillum
in 1981, containing many nuggets. But it is sad to think
of anyone using it who never reads the substantial works from
which the quotations are drawn.
Now we have the compilations
being used as lesson manuals in priesthood meeting and Relief
Society. Teachings of Presidents of the Church — this
is the general title, with separate volumes on Brigham Young,
John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, Joseph F. Smith, Heber J. Grant,
David O. McKay, and Harold B. Lee.
Each of these volumes is the
work of a committee. How did they go about their task? Did
they start with the existing published compilations, the works
listed above, and select passages from them? How much additional
research did they do? Footnote references inform us that
they utilized the work of previous compilers but also found
additional quotations.
If there was a difference of
opinion, how did the committee decide? I assume they selected
statements that, in their view, have application today, excluding
items that might be confusing or that refer to long forgotten
historical events. Knowing some persons who labored on these
committees, I am confident they went about their assignment
conscientiously and prayerfully.
Think of it. Throughout the
world a beautiful process is going on of transforming people
of different nationalities and languages into the Saints of
God, making them one people. Part of that process is our
common worship (including hymns), part is the temple, and
part the instruction that takes place in the home, the church
auxiliaries, and seminary and institute. But part also has
to do with the basic library that rests on the shelf of Latter-day
Saints in many lands, including the standard works and now
Teachings of Presidents of the Church. I rejoice at
that thought.
Yet some readers are not being
satisfied with snippets. They want to read entire sermons.
That is exactly what we do as conference addresses are published
twice each year in the Church magazines.
The Church News often
publishes excerpts from President Gordon B. Hinckleys addresses to different congregations
around the world. How we enjoy those! But snippets are
no substitute for the complete sermon. Happily, we can read
President Hinckleys conference addresses as they appear
in Church magazines and Conference Reports. And a
valuable work, Discourses of President Gordon B. Hinckley,
includes, not snippets, but complete talks he has given since
becoming president of the Church in 1995.
Two volumes have appeared.
Whether in the form of brief
snippets, the more satisfying complete sermon, or a combination
of the two, these are words of great importance to Latter-day
Saints. Why have living prophets if we pay no attention to
what they say? Let us make room for their words in our minds
— even if we have to spend a little less time on frivolous
entertainment and the evanescent news of the day.
.
This column concerns itself with compilation and its hazards.
On the different question of the accuracy of our versions
of Joseph Smiths sermons, one starts with Andrew F. Ehat and
Lyndon W. Cook, comps., The Words of Joseph Smith (1980),
while awaiting the volumes of the Joseph Smith Papers project
now being prepared in the Church Historians Office. A valuable
compilation of short quotations arranged topically is Encyclopedia
of Joseph Smith s Teachings, ed. Larry E. Dahl
and Donald Q. Cannon (1997).