Monday, May 6, 2024

Nephi L. Morris on the Means of Grace and Salvation

  

MEANS OF GRACE AND SALVATION.

 

Now a belief in this God, I say, is essential to the attainment of a salvation. Jesus made this plain when He established His Church upon the earth and revealed to mankind certain ordinances of obedience and certain principles of faith which must be accepted by those who receive Him. To every man who believes in God as his Heavenly Father, as the immaculate and omnipotent One, it is a perfectly natural thing for him to strive to reconcile himself to that omnipotent being and, feeling his own sinfulness by the monitor of his consciousness he would try to appease God whose purity he had offended. it is a natural thing for a man to repent as soon as he is convinced that God lives and it concerned and interested in him. This repentance would bring a man to a state of mind and spirit in which he would abhor sin and detest every form of evil and earnestly desire to rid himself of sin. This is genuine repentance but it is not genuine and sincere until an earnest and successful effort, to some extent at least has been made to forsake sin. To bemoan one's sinful state and continue in evildoing is not repentance, but to turn away form sin and, by the grace of God, to sin no more—that is repentance. If a man is given to temptation, and to the practise of vices which are immoral and improper which injure himself, retard his own progress, and deprive him of purity and cleanliness of mind and spirit that man is persisting in wrong-doing, and he should cease sinful conduct and make himself pure: but how shall he be reconciled to the Heavenly Father? Can be, by his own power, life himself up to the presence of God? No, God has come down to him to show him the way and lead him back again. In the ordinance of baptism God has provided a means for man's purification. Nicodemus was told by the Savior Himself that no man can enter the kingdom of God unless he be born again—unless he be born of the water and of the Spirit. This second birth is the ordinance of baptism as practised by the primitive Christians; for then, upon the day of Pentecost, the thousands of souls were touched, and men, repenting of their sins, felt the burden of wickedness rest upon them, as they were convicted by the preaching of the Apostle Peter, they cried out: "Men ad brethren, what shall we do?" Notice the admonition of the an who held the keys of the kingdom, the chief of the apostles, Peter: "Repent, every one of you, and be baptized for the remission of your sins, for the promise of unto you and to your children, and to all them that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call." This is the way that mankind were to be enabled to rid themselves of the burden of sin, by having their sins washed from them in the laver of regeneration. This baptism of water, however, was not complete; it requires the baptism of the Spirit, that of which John spoke. He told them that they were to be baptized of water, "but there cometh one after me who is mightier than I, and He shall baptize you with fire and with the Holy Ghost." This is the way the early Christians understood the gospel of Jesus Christ. Even though, in certain instances, when they had been baptized with water, yet the apostles did not believe that to be sufficient, for they laid hands upon the converts for the Holy Ghost came upon them, and manifested itself in a visible way and also in an auricular manner as the sound of the rushing of might wind and cloven tongues of fire. In those times, at least upon certain occasions, the Holy Ghost made itself manifest in this remarkable way, so that it could both be seen and heard by the people as it operated upon those who received it.

 

The Latter-day Saints hold to this idea, believing that that Holy Ghost is essential today in the regeneration of mankind, to their reconcilement to God. For that reason the elders of this Church carry the gospel message to all the world. They preach faith in God, a living God who is our Father, repentance form sin, baptism for a remission of sins, and the laying on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost. We hope by a strict obedience to these principles and ordinances, to attain unto salvation by the grace of God. We believe this message to be sent to all the world—not to a chosen few—for God's honor and glory consists in the salvation of His children. We do not believe God to be a selfish and egotistical being wo created all things for HIs own honor and for His own pleasure; but we are led to believe, from revelations that have been given to us, that God's glory consists in bringing about the salvation and exaltation of His children. This splendid conception of God's glory inspires in us a love for Him, a desire to affiliate with Hi in the great work of bringing salvation within reach of the entire race. (Nephi L. Morris, "Infinite Possibilities of Man," A Discourse Delivered in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, August 9, 1908, repr. Deseret Evening News [August 15, 1908]: 25)