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Adam–God doctrine

The Adam–God doctrine (or Adam–God theory) was a theological idea taught in mid-19th century Mormonism by Brigham Young, a president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Although the doctrine is rejected by the LDS Church today,[1] it is still an accepted part of the modern theology of some Mormon fundamentalists.

According to Young, he was taught by Joseph Smith[2] that Adam is "our Father and our God, and the only God with whom we have to do."[3]

According to the doctrine, Adam was once a mortal man who became resurrected and exalted. From another planet, he then came as Michael to form Earth.[4] Adam then was given a physical body and a spouse, Eve, where they became mortal by eating the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden. After bearing mortal children and establishing the human race, Adam and Eve returned to their heavenly thrones, where Adam serves as God and is the Heavenly Father of humankind. Later, Adam returned to the Earth to the ancient prophets and to become the literal father of Jesus.

During the 19th century and the early 20th century, the Adam–God doctrine was featured as part of the church's endowment ceremony. However, the doctrine was startling to most members when it was introduced and remained controversial. Most Mormons and some breakoff groups, the most notable being apostle Orson Pratt, rejected the doctrine in favor of more traditional biblical Adam and Eve theory. Soon after Brigham Young died, the Adam–God doctrine fell out of favor within the LDS Church and was replaced by a theology more similar to Pratt's, as expounded by turn-of-the century Mormon theologians James E. Talmage, B. H. Roberts, and John A. Widtsoe. In 1976, church president Spencer W. Kimball stated the LDS Church does not support the doctrine. Most Mormons accept Adam as "the Ancient of Days," "father of all,"[5] and "Michael the Archangel" but do not recognize him as being "God the Father."

Background edit

Though Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, never used the term "Adam–God" in any of his recorded public statements, he provided several teachings from which the doctrine's adherents draw support. For example, Smith taught in an 1839 sermon that Adam was actually the archangel Michael, who held the First Presidency in the premortal life.[6] In the same sermon, Smith taught that Adam holds "the keys of the universe,"[7] and so it is through his authority that all priesthood "keys," the abilities to unlock particular priesthood powers, are revealed from heaven.[8] In 1840, Smith taught that Adam is the one "through whom Christ has been revealed from heaven, and will continue to be revealed from henceforth."[9] Finally, Smith taught in his 1844 King Follett discourse that God was once a man "like one of us."[10]

Young and other adherents of the doctrine claim that Smith was its originator[11] and that Smith privately taught it to them before his death, in 1844.[12] However, the prevailing academic view is that the doctrine taught by Young and others was an elaboration of Smith's vague references to Adam's unique role in Mormon doctrine.[13] Although Young is generally credited with originating the doctrine, the original source may also have been Young's counselor in the First Presidency, Heber C. Kimball.[14]

Description edit

The Adam–God doctrine teaches that Adam is the father of both the spirits and physical bodies of all humans born on Earth, including Jesus.[15]

Under the doctrine, Adam had a number of roles. First, he was a creator god. He and his wife, Eve, had become gods by living a mortal life, becoming resurrected, and receiving their exaltation.[16] As a god before the creation of the Earth, he was known as Michael, or the "Ancient of Days." Michael was not the only creator god, however, as he was a member of a council of Earth's creator gods, which also included the gods "Elohim" and "Jehovah." In Smith's original endowment ceremony, the gods involved in the creation were called "Elohim, Jehovah, and Michael," but unlike in modern Mormon theology, "Jehovah" was not identified as Jesus. Rather, it was explained by Joseph F. Smith that "Elohim, Jehovah and Michael are Father, Son, and Grandson. They made this Earth and Michael became Adam."[17][18] Within the council, Jehovah and Michael were subordinate to Elohim and created the Earth, under the direction of Elohim. Michael was selected by the heads of this council of gods to be the Father of this Earth.[19]

Also, the doctrine teaches that Michael was the father of the spirits in heaven who are associated with this Earth.[20] With Eve, and possibly his other wives, Michael had fathered the spirits of spirit offspring in the preexistence.[20]

Next, the doctrine teaches that Michael came to the Earth with one of his wives, where they became known as Adam and Eve,[20] and became the progenitor of the human race and the father of mortal bodies of all his spirit offspring so that they could progress and achieve godhood like themselves.[21] The names "Adam" and "Eve" are titles that reflect their roles as the parents of humanity, Adam meaning man or "[father] of mankind" and Eve meaning the "mother[s] of all living."The privilege of peopling the Earth was part of Adam and Eve's eternal purpose as exalted beings and eternal parents of their spirit children.[22] To bear mortal children, Adam and Eve had to take on mortal bodies.[20] The bodies of Adam and Eve fell to a mortal state when they ate the fruit of tree of knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden.[23]

Then, the doctrine teaches that after his mortal existence, Adam returned to his throne and reigned as the immortal God of this Earth.[24] He is thus considered to be the Biblical God of Israel.[25] Smith stated that Adam's ascension to godhood took place at or after a gathering at a holy place of the same name. Smith taught that a similar gathering is to prelude the second coming of Christ.[26]

Finally, the doctrine teaches that Michael/Adam was the literal, biological father of the mortal body of Jesus.[27]

History edit

Brigham Young's 1852 explanation edit

Whether or not Smith had taught the doctrine, the first recorded explanation of the doctrine using the term "Adam–God" was by Young, who first taught the doctrine at the church's spring general conference on April 9, 1852. This sermon was recorded stenographically by George D. Watt, Young's private secretary, who was an expert in Pitman shorthand.[28] Watt published the sermon in 1854 in the British periodical Journal of Discourses, which was endorsed by Young and his counselors in the church's First Presidency.[29]

In Watt's transcript of the sermon, Young said he intended to discuss "who it was that begat the Son of the Virgin Mary," a subject which he said "has remained a mystery in this kingdom up to this day."[30] The transcript reads:

When our father Adam came into the garden of Eden, he came into it with a celestial body, and brought Eve, one of his wives, with him. He helped to make and organize this world. He is MICHAEL, the Archangel, the ANCIENT OF DAYS! about whom holy men have written and spoken—He is our FATHER and our GOD, and the only God with whom WE have to do. Every man upon the earth, professing Christians or non-professing, must hear it, and will know it sooner or later.[30]

The transcript then reads: "When the Virgin Mary conceived the child Jesus, the Father had begotten him in his own likeness. He was not begotten by the Holy Ghost. And who is the Father? He is the first of the human family".[31] Young explained that Adam "was begotten by his Father in heaven" in the same way that Adam begat his own sons and daughters, and that there were "three distinct characters, namely, Eloheim, Yahovah, and Michael".[32] Then, reiterating, he said that "Jesus, our elder brother, was begotten in the flesh by the same character that was in the Garden of Eden, and who is our Father in Heaven."[33]

Young concluded, "I could tell you much more about this; but were I to tell you the whole truth, blasphemy would be nothing to it, in the estimation of the superstitious and overrighteous mankind .... Now, let all who may hear these doctrines, pause before they make light of them, or treat them with indifference, for they will prove their salvation or damnation."[34]

Further development by Young edit

In a special conference on August 28, 1852, Young explained in greater detail the mechanism by which celestial beings like Adam and Eve could give birth to mortal offspring. According to Young, when a couple first become gods and goddesses, they first begin to create spiritual offspring. Then, they begin creating "mortal tabernacles" in which those spirits can dwell, by going to a newly created world, where they: "eat and drink of the fruits of the corporal world, until this grosser matter is diffused sufficiently through their celestial bodies, to enable them according to the established laws to produce mortal tabernacles for their spiritual children" (Young 1852b, p. 13). This is what Adam and Eve did, Young said, and "Adam is my Father". (Young 1852b, p. 13).

On February 19, 1854, Young reiterated the doctrine in a sermon.[35] He also reiterated the doctrine at the October 1854 general conference,[36] in a sermon that was reported to have "held the vast audience as it were spellbound."[37] In the October conference, Young is reported as clarifying that Adam and Eve were "natural father and mother of every spirit that comes to this planet, or that receives tabernacles on this planet, consequently we are brother and sisters, and that Adam was God, our Eternal Father."[38]

When Young discussed the doctrine again in early 1857, he emphasized again that "to become acquainted with our Father and our God" was "one of the first principles of the doctrine of salvation", and that "no man can enjoy or be prepared for eternal life without that knowledge".[39] Nevertheless, he later said:

Whether Adam is the personage that we should consider Our Heavenly Father, or not, is considerable of a mystery to a good many. I do not care for one moment how that is; it is no matter whether we are to consider Him our God, or whether His Father, or his Grandfather, for in either case we are of one species of one family and Jesus Christ is also of our species.[40]

Initial reactions to the doctrine edit

The reaction within the Mormon community to Young's Adam–God teachings was mixed. While many accepted the doctrine, others regarded it as misguided, or interpreted it to adhere to their prior understanding.

Young's initial 1852 announcement of the doctrine was greeted by some as prophetic. For example, the clerk of the conference, Thomas Bullock, recorded that during Young's sermon, "the Holy Ghost rest[ed] upon him with great power".[41] In a session of general conference the next day, Heber C. Kimball stated his agreement that "the God and Father of Jesus Christ was Adam".[42] Another apostle, Franklin D. Richards, accepted the doctrine "that Adam is our Father and our God" as well, stating in a conference held in June 1854 that "the Prophet and Apostle Brigham has declared it, and that it is the word of the Lord".[43]

Kimball readily adopted Young's views, and preached on June 29, 1856, that "I have learned by experience that there is but one God that pertains to this people, and He is the God that pertains to this earth—the first man. That first man sent his own Son to redeem the world."[44]

A number of hymns acknowledging this doctrine were sung in local congregations of the LDS Church. One published in 1856, entitled "We Believe in Our God", stated: "We believe in our God the great Prince of His race, / The Archangel Michael, the Ancient of Days, / Our own Father Adam, earth's Lord, as is plain".[45] This hymn was not found in subsequent editions.[46]

The first line of a poem published in 1861, titled "Sons of Michael", stated: "Sons of Michael, he approaches! / Rise; the Eternal Father greet".[47] The poem is included as a hymn in the current LDS Church hymnal, but the wording has been altered from "Eternal Father" to "ancient father".[48]

Acceptance of the doctrine by the LDS Church continued through the 19th century. George Q. Cannon, a member of the First Presidency, when asked by his son about the conception of Jesus by Mary, asked "what was to prevent Father Adam from visiting and overshadowing the mother of Jesus[?]"[49]

Resistance to the doctrine edit

However, some prominent members of the church took issue with the doctrine. Most significantly, apostle and philosopher Orson Pratt disagreed with the doctrine, and expressed that disagreement publicly[50] and in private meetings with other apostles.[51] Pratt also published his disagreement in his publication The Seer for which he was censured.[52]

Pratt did, however, teach similar doctrines in the same publication. For example, he stated that on the way to exaltation, one would have to "pass by" and "pay tribute to" various apostles and prophets, then Jesus, and "at length ... Father Adam."[52] He said many would be surprised and humiliated, after passing by Jesus, to find "Father Adam" standing there; however, he said, "those are ideas which do not concern us at present, although it is written in the Bible—'This is eternal life, to know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent.'"[52]

Pratt continued to debate the issue in public forums for months, despite being rebuked privately and publicly by Young on more than one occasion (Bergera 1980, pp. 13–16), until 1860, when faced with possible disfellowshipment from the church for teaching false doctrine, Pratt agreed to the language of a public confession affirming the doctrine as "the doctrine of the church." This confession was negotiated during a series of meetings among the church hierarchy (Bergera 1980).

A less open opposition to the doctrine may have been carried out by Mormon editors Samuel W. Richards and Franklin D. Richards who, according to one researcher, interpreted the idea of Adam being "our God" or "our Father" as meaning merely that Adam, as the first mortal man, stands at the head of the human family. For instance, "the Lord made Moses a god to Pharaoh" (Exodus 7:1) and as Paul was "as Christ Jesus" to the Galatians (4:14). In this way, Adam as our great progenitor, will preside over the human family as "father and God."[53]

Adam–God in Young's later administration edit

After the public debates between Young and Pratt subsided in 1860, Young continued to maintain his belief in the doctrine, but may have been disappointed that the people did not give the doctrine universal acceptance. In 1861, he stated:

Some years ago, I advanced a doctrine with regard to Adam being our father and God, that will be a curse to many of the Elders of Israel because of their folly. With regard to it they yet grovel in darkness and will. It is one of the most glorious revealments of the economy of heaven, yet the world hold derision. Had I revealed the doctrine of baptism from [sic] the dead instead [of] Joseph Smith there are men around me who would have ridiculed the idea until dooms day [sic?]. But they are ignorant and stupid like the dumb ass.[54]

Nevertheless, Young and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles continued to discuss the doctrine.[55] In 1873, Young again taught the doctrine publicly, and indicated that when Adam came to the Earth, he left behind many wives other than Eve at the place from which Adam came; however, he said he was "not disposed to give any farther knowledge concerning ... the great and glorious doctrine that pertains to this".[56] "How much unbelief exists in the minds of the Latter-day Saints in regard to one particular doctrine which is revealed to them, and which God revealed to me—namely that Adam is our father and God .... Our Father Adam is the man who stands at the gate and holds the keys of everlasting life and salvation to all his children who have or ever will come upon the earth".[57]

Just before his death, Young took steps to ensure that the Adam–God doctrine was taught in the church's temples as part of the endowment ceremony. In 1877, while he was standardizing the endowment for use in the St. George Temple, Young introduced as part of the endowment the "lecture at the veil." The final draft of the lecture is today kept private in the St. George Temple.[citation needed] L. John Nuttall, Young's secretary, recorded in his journal a transcription of Young's temple lecture regarding the Adam-God doctrine: A portion of that journal entry reads as follows:

Adam was an immortal being when he came. on this earth he had lived on an earth similar to ours … and had begotten all the spirit that was to come to this earth. and Eve our common Mother who is the mother of all living bore those spirits in the celestial world .... Father Adam's oldest son (Jesus the Saviour) who is the heir of the family is Father Adams first begotten in the spirit World. who according to the flesh is the only begotten as it is written. In his divinity he having gone back into the spirit World. and come in the spirit [glory] to Mary and she conceived for when Adam and Eve got through with their Work in this earth. they did not lay their bodies down in the dust, but returned to the spirit World from whence they came.[58]

After Young's death edit

There is some controversy as to whether or not Young considered Adam–God to be official church doctrine. At the end of his 1852 sermon, he stated, "Now, let all who may hear these doctrines, pause before they make light of them, or treat them with indifference, for they will prove their salvation or damnation."[59] Nevertheless, in 1854, after a great deal of controversy concerning the doctrine, Young minimized the importance of the doctrine, stating that the "subject ... does not immediately concern yours or my welfare .... I do not pretend to say that the items of doctrine and ideas I shall advance are necessary for the people to know".[60]

After Young's death, church leaders began to cast the various interpretations of this teaching as mere speculation and denied that any particular interpretation was binding on the church. In 1897, Joseph F. Smith, then an apostle and counselor in the First Presidency, wrote a private letter concerning Young's teachings on Adam, stating:

The doctrine was never submitted to the councils of the Priesthood nor to the church for approval or ratification, and was never formally or otherwise accepted by the church. It is therefore in no sense binding upon the Church. Brigham Young's "bare mention" was "without indubitable evidence and authority being given of its truth." Only the scripture, the "accepted word of God," is the Church's standard.[61]

Beginning around 1892, church leaders privately decided to no longer publicly teach the doctrine. In a private meeting held on April 4, 1897, church president Wilford Woodruff said. "Adam is our father and God and no use to discuss it with [the] Josephites [Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints] or any one else."[62]

In 1892, the doctrine was publicly opposed in St. George, Utah, by Edward Bunker. The First Presidency—Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Joseph F. Smith—traveled to St. George to address the issue. Records of the meeting state that Bunker was corrected: "Pres Woodruff and Cannon showed ... that Adam was an immortal being when he came to this earth and was made the same as all other men and Gods are made."[63] "The doctrine preached and contended for by Father Edward Bunker of Bunkerville was investigated, condemned and Father Bunker set right. Presidents Woodruff and Cannon present."[64]

After the start of the 20th century, church leaders openly took the position that the doctrine should no longer to be taught publicly.[65]

As early as 1902, apostle Charles W. Penrose claimed, "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has never formulated or adopted any theory concerning the subject treated upon by President Young as to Adam."[66]

Current position of the LDS Church edit

Eventually, the doctrine was publicly denounced as false by LDS Church leaders.[67] In 1976, church president Spencer W. Kimball stated, "We denounce that theory and hope that everyone will be cautioned against this and other kinds of false doctrine."[68][69]

In 1980, apostle Bruce R. McConkie gave a speech elaborating upon the church's position towards the Adam–God theory:

There are those who believe or say they believe that Adam is our father and our god, that he is the father of our spirits and our bodies, and that he is the one we worship.

The devil keeps this heresy alive as a means of obtaining converts to cultism. It is contrary to the whole plan of salvation set forth in the scriptures, and anyone who has read the Book of Moses, and anyone who has received the temple endowment and who yet believes the Adam–God theory does not deserve to be saved.* Those who are so ensnared reject the living prophet and close their ears to the apostles of their day. "We will follow those who went before," they say. And having so determined, they soon are ready to enter polygamous relationships that destroy their souls.

We worship the Father, in the name of the Son, by the power of the Holy Ghost; and Adam is their foremost servant, by whom the peopling of our planet was commenced.[70]

Later the same year, apostle Mark E. Petersen stated:

Adam was not our God, nor was he our Savior. But he was the humble servant of both in his status as an angel. ...

God had only one begotten son in the flesh. But Adam had many, including Cain and Abel and Seth. He lived nearly a thousand years. He could have had hundreds of children in that time.

Then how could it be said by anyone that he had "an only begotten" son? How could all of his other children be accounted for? Were they not all begotten in the flesh?

Were Cain and Abel and Seth and their brothers and sisters all orphans? Was any child ever begotten without a father? Adam was their father, and he had many sons. In no way whatever does he qualify as a father who had only one son in the flesh.

Yet God our Eternal Father had only one son in the flesh, who was Jesus Christ.

Then was Adam our God, or did God become Adam? Ridiculous!

Adam was neither God nor the Only Begotten Son of God. He was a child of God in the spirit as we all are (see Acts 17:29). Jesus was the firstborn in the spirit, and the only one born to God in the flesh. ...

If any of you have been confused by false teachers who come among us, if you have been assailed by advocates of erroneous doctrines, counsel with your priesthood leaders. They will not lead you astray, but will direct you into paths of truth and salvation.[71]

Acceptance by Mormon fundamentalists edit

Adherents of Mormon fundamentalism generally accept the Adam–God doctrine.

The LDS Church's disavowal of the doctrine contributes to what fundamentalists perceive to be a general intellectual or spiritual retreat from important principles that were rejected due to unpopularity. Along with the practice of plural marriage, belief in the Adam–God doctrine became a defining aspect of the Mormon fundamentalist movement.

Apostolic United Brethren edit

The Apostolic United Brethren (AUB), a fundamentalist Mormon group, accepts the Adam–God teaching, and their leader Joseph W. Musser wrote a book on it in the 1930s. In the book, Musser contended that the rejection of the doctrine by the LDS Church can be linked to its rejection of plural marriage, which occurred around the same time:

And let us here remind the reader that as long as belief in the Patriarchal order of marriage and other advanced principles of the Gospel was maintained, the minds of the Saints were open and receptive. ... But with the surrender of the glorious principle of Celestial Marriage—a union for time and eternity—came darkness, mental drowsiness, a detour from the Gospel path, until all sorts of speculation pertaining to the plan of Salvation was indulged in.[72]

School of the Prophets edit

The School of the Prophets[73] spoken of in the book Under the Banner of Heaven claims revelation showing that Young was inaccurate in some points of his Adam–God teachings, but otherwise he was correct. The understanding from these revelations is that Jesus was the Only Begotten Son in the flesh of the Savior of the previous Earth where the father of all Spirits, Michael/Adam, had his mortal probation. The lineage of Michael/Adam, which includes all but Jesus on this Earth, will never become saviors of worlds. Thus the Adam–God doctrine of Young is simply a fuller understanding of the New Testament doctrine of joint-heirs with Christ.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ McConkie, Bruce R. "The Seven Deadly Heresies". speeches.byu.edu. Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  2. ^ Minutes of Meeting, at Historian's Office; Great Salt Lake City; 7 P.M. April 4, 1860 published in The Office Journal of Brigham Young 1858-1863, Appendix B. "It was Joseph's doctrine that Adam was God &c When in Luke Johnson's".
  3. ^ Young (1852a, p. 50) (statement given in the general conference of the LDS Church on April 9, 1852).
  4. ^ Journal of Discourses 7:285–90.
  5. ^ Doctrine and Covenants 138:38–39.
  6. ^ Roberts (1905, pp. 385–86) (Before the world was formed, the First Presidency "was first given to Adam.... He is Michael the Archangel, spoken of in the Scriptures."); Quinn (1998, p. 234) (doctrine of Adam as Michael and as premortal First President cited as a precursor for the Adam–God doctrine).
  7. ^ Roberts (1905, p. 387) ("Adam delivers up his stewardship to Christ, that which was delivered to him as holding the keys of the universe, but retains his standing as head of the human family.").
  8. ^ Quinn (1998, p. 234) (Adam's assignment of the keys of the universe cited as a precursor for the Adam–God doctrine).
  9. ^ Roberts (1908, p. 207); Quinn (1998, p. 234) (Adam-as-mediator doctrine cited as a precursor for the Adam–God doctrine).
  10. ^ Larson (1978, p. 201) (God "once was a man like one of us and... God Himself, the Father of us all, once dwelled on an earth the same as Jesus Christ himself did in the flesh."); Quinn (1998, p. 234) (citing teaching that God is an exalted man as a precursor for the Adam–God doctrine).
  11. ^ Widmer (2000, p. 130); Collier (1999, pp. 228–42); Kraut (1972, pp. 80–97) (same); Christensen (1981, pp. 131–49); Musser (1938, pp. 38, 43–46, 50–57) .
  12. ^ Collier (1999, p. 229 fn. 12) (citing minutes of meeting of the Quorum of the Twelve, 4 April 1860, in which it was recorded: "It was Joseph's doctrine that Adam was God.... God comes to earth and eats and partakes of fruit. Joseph could not reveal what was revealed to him, and if Joseph had it revealed, he was not told to reveal it."); Collier (1999, p. 360) (citing Wilford Woodruff Journal of 4 September 1860, in which George Q. Cannon said "that Adam is our Father [and] is a true doctrine revealed from God to Joseph & Brigham. For this same doctrine is taught in some of the old Jewish records which have never been in print."); Collier (1999, p. 367) (citing Wilford Woodruff Journal of 16 December 1867, stating that "President Young said Adam was Michael the Archangel, & he was the Father of Jesus Christ & was our God & that Joseph taught this principle."); Collier (1999, p. 233) (citing an 1877 reminiscence of Anson Call, who said he heard Smith say that "now regarding Adam: He came here from another planet [as] an immortalized being and brought his wife, Eve, with him, and by eating of the fruits of the earth became subject to death and decay and he became of the earth, earthly, was made mortal and subject to death.").
  13. ^ Widmer (2000, p. 130); Quinn (1998, p. 234) ("Young's Adam–God teachings were an expansion of Joseph Smith's sermons in 1839-44"); Bergera (1980, p. 48) (stating that there is "no reliable evidence contemporary to Smith's lifetime which lends support" to the view that Smith taught the Adam–God doctrine, and that Young "was not above inventing support for beliefs where none existed previously").
  14. ^ Bergera (1980, p. 48) (noting that Orson Pratt and contemporary historian T. B. H. Stenhouse both attributed the doctrine to Kimball).
  15. ^ Bergera (1980, p. 41) (describing the Adam–God doctrine as "that Adam was at once the spiritual as well as the physical father of all persons born on this world, including Jesus Christ").
  16. ^ Bergera (1980, p. 15).
  17. ^ Joseph F. Smith Journal, 6/17/1871)
  18. ^ Widmer (2000, pp. 131, 133) (describing Michael as a "God in the Council of Gods".); Kirkland (1984, p. 38)
  19. ^ Widmer (2000, p. 131); Kirkland (1984, p. 38) (citing Joseph Smith's statement in Larson (1978, pp. 202–03)).
  20. ^ a b c d Widmer (2000, p. 131).
  21. ^ Widmer (2000, p. 131); Bergera (1980, p. 15).
  22. ^ Bergera (1980, p. 15) (citing Woodruff (1982, 6 May 1855))).
  23. ^ Widmer (2000, p. 133).
  24. ^ Kirkland (1984, p. 39).
  25. ^ Kirkland (1984, pp. 39–41) (noting that in the late 19th century, several Mormon leaders who still adhered to the Adam–God doctrine began to adopt the modern Mormon belief that the Old Testament deity was also Jesus).
  26. ^ "Doctrine and Covenants 116". (LDS Church edition). The naming of Adam-ondi-Ahman is also recorded in the History of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in volume 2, chapter 9, pages 153–154.
  27. ^ Widmer (2000, p. 131); Bergera (1980, p. 41) (describing the Adam–God doctrine as "that Adam was at once the spiritual as well as the physical father of all persons born on this world, including Jesus Christ").
  28. ^ Watt (1977).
  29. ^ Young, Kimball & Richards (1853).
  30. ^ a b Young (1852a, p. 50).
  31. ^ Young (1852a, p. 50). The full text from Journal of Discourses 1:51 reads as follows: "It is true that the earth was organized by three distinct characters, namely, Eloheim, Yahovah, and Michael, these three forming a quorum, as in all heavenly bodies, and in organizing element, perfectly represented in the Deity, as Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Again, they will try to tell how the divinity of Jesus is joined to his humanity, and exhaust all their mental faculties, and wind up with this profound language, as describing the soul of man, "it is an immaterial substance!" What a learned idea! Jesus, our elder brother, was begotten in the flesh by the same character that was in the garden of Eden, and who is our Father in Heaven. Now, let all who may hear these doctrines, pause before they make light of them, or treat them with indifference, for they will prove their salvation or damnation. I have given you a few leading items upon this subject, but a great deal more remains to be told. Now, remember from this time forth, and for ever,that Jesus Christ was not begotten by the Holy Ghost."
  32. ^ Young (1852a, pp. 50–51).
  33. ^ Young (1852a, p. 51). Watt's transcript of the sermon was the only known stenographic recording; however, several other witnesses summarized it in their journals. These recountings vary somewhat in wording. For example, attendee Samuel Hollister Rogers wrote several days later, confirming that Young said that when Adam went to the Garden, he "brought his wife or one of his wives with him", that "Adam was the only God that we would have, and that Christ was not begotten by the Holy Ghost, but of the Father Adam." Brigham Young Addresses 2:12; Samuel Hollister Rogers Journal 145. Young's bodyguard Hosea Stout wrote that night in his diary that "President B. Young taught that Adam was the father of Jesus and the only God to us." Diary of Hosea Stout 2:435 (April 9, 1852). Wilford Woodruff wrote that Young said God went to the Garden of Eden with "one of his wifes", that "Adam is Michael or God And all the God that we have any thing to do with", and "when the VIRGIN MARY was begotton with Child it was By the Father and in no other way ownly as we were begotton." Journal of Wilford Woodruff 4:127–30 (April 9, 1852).
  34. ^ Young (1852a, p. 51).
  35. ^ Journal of Wilford Woodruff, February 19, 1854.
  36. ^ Journal of Joseph L. Robinson, October 6, 1854.
  37. ^ Minutes of the General Conference, Deseret News, October 12, 1853.
  38. ^ Journal of Joseph Lee Robinson, October 6, 1854. See also Diary of Thomas D. Brown, October 6, 1854, pp. 87–88 ("There are Lords many and there are Gods many, & the Father of our Spirits is the Father of Jesus Christ: He is the Father of Jesus Christ, Spirit & Body and he is the beginner of the bodies of all men"); John Pulsipher Papers, Mss 1041, p. 35–37, BYU Special Collections ("There are Lords many & Gods many But the God that we have to account to, is the father of our Spirits—Adam.").
  39. ^ Journal of Discourses 4:215.
  40. ^ Journal of Discourses 4:217.
  41. ^ Thomas Bullock, Minutes of the LDS General Conference Deseret News, April 17, 1852, p. 2.
  42. ^ Journal of Wilford Woodruff, April 10, 1852.
  43. ^ Franklin D. Richards, reported in "Minutes of the Special General Council", Millennial Star 16:534, 26 August 1854 (emphasis in original).
  44. ^ Journal of Discourses 4:1.
  45. ^ "Sacred Hymns and Spiritual Songs for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (11th ed.)". archive.org. 1856. p. 375. Retrieved 2023-11-08.
  46. ^ Sacred Hymns and Spiritual Songs: For the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (14th ed.). Salt Lake City: G.Q. Cannon. 1871. pp. Preface. Sacred Hymns and Spiritual Songs for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 1856.
  47. ^ E. L. T. Harrison, "Sons of Michael", Millennial Star 23: 240 (13 April 1861).
  48. ^ "Sons of Michael, He Approaches", Hymns of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, hymn 51.
  49. ^ Daily Journal of Abraham H. Cannon, March 10, 1888, Brigham Young University.
  50. ^ Journal of Thomas Evans Jeremy Sr., September 30, 1852 ("Also he did not believe that Father Adam had flesh and bones, when he came to the garden of Eden, but he and his wife Eve were spirits, and that God formed their bodies out of the dust of the ground, and the (sic) became a living souls. He also said that he believed that Jesus Christ and Adam are brothers in the Spirit, and that Adam is not the God that he is praying unto."). See generally, Bergera 1980.
  51. ^ Journal of William Clayton, October 3, 1852.
  52. ^ a b c Orson Pratt, "The Pre-Existence of Man", The Seer, 1:3, 158–59 (March, October 1853).
  53. ^ Stephen E. Robinson, "The Apocalypse of Adam", BYU Studies, vol. 17, no. 2, p. 131 ("this was the interpretation of Brigham Young's statement advocated in 1853 by Samuel W. Richards, who, as editor of the Millennial Star and President of the Church in the British Isles, first published President Young's initial sermon on the subject (Millennial Star, December 10, 1853)"; Robinson also argues that Franklin D. Richards, who replaced Samuel W. Richards in this position, also promoted this interpretation).
  54. ^ Quoted from Manuscript Addresses of Brigham Young December 26, 2005, at the Wayback Machine. Watt, G.D., transcriber, October 8, 1861, with minor misspellings corrected.
  55. ^ Collier (1999, p. 229 fn. 12) (citing minutes of meeting of the Quorum of Twelve, 4 April 1860, in which it was recorded: "It was Joseph's doctrine that Adam was God ... God comes to earth and eats and partakes of fruit. Joseph could not reveal what was revealed to him, and if Joseph had it revealed, he was not told to reveal it."). Collier (1999, p. 360) (citing Wilford Woodruff Journal of 4 September 1860, in which George Q. Cannon said "that Adam is our Father [and] is a true doctrine revealed from God to Joseph & Brigham. For this same doctrine is taught in some of the old Jewish records which have never been in print"). Collier (1999, p. 367) (citing Wilford Woodruff Journal of 16 December 1867, stating that "President Young said Adam was Michael the Archangel, & he was the Father of Jesus Christ & was our God & that Joseph taught this principle.")
  56. ^ Brigham Young (August 31, 1873), Journal of Discourses 16:160.
  57. ^ Sermon delivered on June 8, 1873. Printed in the Deseret Weekly News, June 18, 1873.
  58. ^ Journal of L. John Nuttall, personal secretary of Brigham Young, February 7, 1877, in BYU Special Collections. Prefacing the paragraph quoted, L. John Nuttall records in his private journal for 7 February 1877 that after serving that day in the St. George Temple and after taking his evening meal, he attended a meeting with Young, Wilford Woodruff, Erastus Snow, Brigham Young, Jr., and others. This meeting was held in Young's private winter home in St. George, Utah. During the course of the meeting, Young gave some teachings which Nuttall later recorded in his personal journal. It appears that Nuttall recorded Young's instructions on the 8 February, not on the 7th when they were delivered. The claim that Nuttall did not record Young's instructions on the same night they were delivered is made by Fred Collier. Collier notes that, after Nuttall had written the first sentence of paragraph 1B, "[a]t this point Nuttal stopped writing for the ink beginning the next sentence is much lighter and the same as that used for his diary entry of February 8." Collier notes that Nuttall resumed his entry for February 7 with the word "Works" and continues with the rest of his journal entry as set forth in this section. It would appear that Nuttall wrote the majority of that entry on the following day, the 8th.
  59. ^ Journal of Discourses 1:51.
  60. ^ October 8, 1854, Historical Department of the Church [HDC].
  61. ^ Joseph F. Smith, letter to A. Saxey, January 7, 1897, HDC.
  62. ^ Brigham Young Jr. Journal, April 4, 1897 – February 2, 1899, 30:107; CHO/Ms/f/326, December 16, 1897.
  63. ^ Diary of Charles Lowell Walker, 2:740–41, June 11, 1892 (typescript pp. 43–44).
  64. ^ Journal of J. D. T. McAllister, p. 99; BYU, Mor/M270.1/m/v.6, June 11, 1892.
  65. ^ See, e.g., the Proceedings of the First Sunday School Convention, November 28, 1898; Letter to Bishop Edward Bunker, February 27, 1902; Messages of the First Presidency 4:199–206; Journal of Thomas A. Clawson, 1912–1917, pp. 69–70, April 8, 1912; B. H. Roberts, Deseret News, July 23, 1921; Joseph Fielding Smith,Utah Genealogical Magazine, pp. 146–51, October 1930; Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines of Salvation 1:18, 76–77, 92 (1954).
  66. ^ Charles W. Penrose, "Our Father Adam", Improvement Era (September 1902): 873, reprinted in Charles W. Penrose, "Our Father Adam", Millennial Star (11 December 1902): 785–90 at 789.
  67. ^ Van Hale, "What About the Adam-God Theory?," Mormon Miscellaneous response series #3.
  68. ^ Conference Report, p. 115 (October 1–3, 1976).
  69. ^ Spencer W. Kimball, "Our Own Liahona," Ensign, November 1976, p. 77.
  70. ^ BYU Devotional, June 1, 1980. *This is what McConkie said in the audio recording of this sermon. The print version has subsequently been changed to "has no excuse whatever for being led astray by it." Compare PDF text with MP3 audio at 26:48:[1].
  71. ^ Mark E. Petersen, "Adam, the Archangel", Ensign, November 1980.
  72. ^ Musser, Joseph W. Michael, Our Father and Our God. Salt Lake City, Utah: Truth Publishing Company, 1963.
  73. ^ School of the Prophets (Crossfield)#School of the Prophets

References edit

External links edit

  • List of primary sources regarding the Adam–God doctrine (also archived ).

adam, doctrine, adam, theory, theological, idea, taught, 19th, century, mormonism, brigham, young, president, church, jesus, christ, latter, saints, church, although, doctrine, rejected, church, today, still, accepted, part, modern, theology, some, mormon, fun. The Adam God doctrine or Adam God theory was a theological idea taught in mid 19th century Mormonism by Brigham Young a president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church Although the doctrine is rejected by the LDS Church today 1 it is still an accepted part of the modern theology of some Mormon fundamentalists According to Young he was taught by Joseph Smith 2 that Adam is our Father and our God and the only God with whom we have to do 3 According to the doctrine Adam was once a mortal man who became resurrected and exalted From another planet he then came as Michael to form Earth 4 Adam then was given a physical body and a spouse Eve where they became mortal by eating the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden After bearing mortal children and establishing the human race Adam and Eve returned to their heavenly thrones where Adam serves as God and is the Heavenly Father of humankind Later Adam returned to the Earth to the ancient prophets and to become the literal father of Jesus During the 19th century and the early 20th century the Adam God doctrine was featured as part of the church s endowment ceremony However the doctrine was startling to most members when it was introduced and remained controversial Most Mormons and some breakoff groups the most notable being apostle Orson Pratt rejected the doctrine in favor of more traditional biblical Adam and Eve theory Soon after Brigham Young died the Adam God doctrine fell out of favor within the LDS Church and was replaced by a theology more similar to Pratt s as expounded by turn of the century Mormon theologians James E Talmage B H Roberts and John A Widtsoe In 1976 church president Spencer W Kimball stated the LDS Church does not support the doctrine Most Mormons accept Adam as the Ancient of Days father of all 5 and Michael the Archangel but do not recognize him as being God the Father Contents 1 Background 2 Description 3 History 3 1 Brigham Young s 1852 explanation 3 2 Further development by Young 3 3 Initial reactions to the doctrine 3 4 Resistance to the doctrine 3 5 Adam God in Young s later administration 3 6 After Young s death 3 7 Current position of the LDS Church 3 8 Acceptance by Mormon fundamentalists 3 8 1 Apostolic United Brethren 3 8 2 School of the Prophets 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBackground editThough Joseph Smith the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement never used the term Adam God in any of his recorded public statements he provided several teachings from which the doctrine s adherents draw support For example Smith taught in an 1839 sermon that Adam was actually the archangel Michael who held the First Presidency in the premortal life 6 In the same sermon Smith taught that Adam holds the keys of the universe 7 and so it is through his authority that all priesthood keys the abilities to unlock particular priesthood powers are revealed from heaven 8 In 1840 Smith taught that Adam is the one through whom Christ has been revealed from heaven and will continue to be revealed from henceforth 9 Finally Smith taught in his 1844 King Follett discourse that God was once a man like one of us 10 Young and other adherents of the doctrine claim that Smith was its originator 11 and that Smith privately taught it to them before his death in 1844 12 However the prevailing academic view is that the doctrine taught by Young and others was an elaboration of Smith s vague references to Adam s unique role in Mormon doctrine 13 Although Young is generally credited with originating the doctrine the original source may also have been Young s counselor in the First Presidency Heber C Kimball 14 Description editThe Adam God doctrine teaches that Adam is the father of both the spirits and physical bodies of all humans born on Earth including Jesus 15 Under the doctrine Adam had a number of roles First he was a creator god He and his wife Eve had become gods by living a mortal life becoming resurrected and receiving their exaltation 16 As a god before the creation of the Earth he was known as Michael or the Ancient of Days Michael was not the only creator god however as he was a member of a council of Earth s creator gods which also included the gods Elohim and Jehovah In Smith s original endowment ceremony the gods involved in the creation were called Elohim Jehovah and Michael but unlike in modern Mormon theology Jehovah was not identified as Jesus Rather it was explained by Joseph F Smith that Elohim Jehovah and Michael are Father Son and Grandson They made this Earth and Michael became Adam 17 18 Within the council Jehovah and Michael were subordinate to Elohim and created the Earth under the direction of Elohim Michael was selected by the heads of this council of gods to be the Father of this Earth 19 Also the doctrine teaches that Michael was the father of the spirits in heaven who are associated with this Earth 20 With Eve and possibly his other wives Michael had fathered the spirits of spirit offspring in the preexistence 20 Next the doctrine teaches that Michael came to the Earth with one of his wives where they became known as Adam and Eve 20 and became the progenitor of the human race and the father of mortal bodies of all his spirit offspring so that they could progress and achieve godhood like themselves 21 The names Adam and Eve are titles that reflect their roles as the parents of humanity Adam meaning man or father of mankind and Eve meaning the mother s of all living The privilege of peopling the Earth was part of Adam and Eve s eternal purpose as exalted beings and eternal parents of their spirit children 22 To bear mortal children Adam and Eve had to take on mortal bodies 20 The bodies of Adam and Eve fell to a mortal state when they ate the fruit of tree of knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden 23 Then the doctrine teaches that after his mortal existence Adam returned to his throne and reigned as the immortal God of this Earth 24 He is thus considered to be the Biblical God of Israel 25 Smith stated that Adam s ascension to godhood took place at or after a gathering at a holy place of the same name Smith taught that a similar gathering is to prelude the second coming of Christ 26 Finally the doctrine teaches that Michael Adam was the literal biological father of the mortal body of Jesus 27 History editBrigham Young s 1852 explanation edit Whether or not Smith had taught the doctrine the first recorded explanation of the doctrine using the term Adam God was by Young who first taught the doctrine at the church s spring general conference on April 9 1852 This sermon was recorded stenographically by George D Watt Young s private secretary who was an expert in Pitman shorthand 28 Watt published the sermon in 1854 in the British periodical Journal of Discourses which was endorsed by Young and his counselors in the church s First Presidency 29 In Watt s transcript of the sermon Young said he intended to discuss who it was that begat the Son of the Virgin Mary a subject which he said has remained a mystery in this kingdom up to this day 30 The transcript reads When our father Adam came into the garden of Eden he came into it with a celestial body and brought Eve one of his wives with him He helped to make and organize this world He is MICHAEL the Archangel the ANCIENT OF DAYS about whom holy men have written and spoken He is our FATHER and our GOD and the only God with whom WE have to do Every man upon the earth professing Christians or non professing must hear it and will know it sooner or later 30 The transcript then reads When the Virgin Mary conceived the child Jesus the Father had begotten him in his own likeness He was not begotten by the Holy Ghost And who is the Father He is the first of the human family 31 Young explained that Adam was begotten by his Father in heaven in the same way that Adam begat his own sons and daughters and that there were three distinct characters namely Eloheim Yahovah and Michael 32 Then reiterating he said that Jesus our elder brother was begotten in the flesh by the same character that was in the Garden of Eden and who is our Father in Heaven 33 Young concluded I could tell you much more about this but were I to tell you the whole truth blasphemy would be nothing to it in the estimation of the superstitious and overrighteous mankind Now let all who may hear these doctrines pause before they make light of them or treat them with indifference for they will prove their salvation or damnation 34 Further development by Young edit In a special conference on August 28 1852 Young explained in greater detail the mechanism by which celestial beings like Adam and Eve could give birth to mortal offspring According to Young when a couple first become gods and goddesses they first begin to create spiritual offspring Then they begin creating mortal tabernacles in which those spirits can dwell by going to a newly created world where they eat and drink of the fruits of the corporal world until this grosser matter is diffused sufficiently through their celestial bodies to enable them according to the established laws to produce mortal tabernacles for their spiritual children Young 1852b p 13 This is what Adam and Eve did Young said and Adam is my Father Young 1852b p 13 On February 19 1854 Young reiterated the doctrine in a sermon 35 He also reiterated the doctrine at the October 1854 general conference 36 in a sermon that was reported to have held the vast audience as it were spellbound 37 In the October conference Young is reported as clarifying that Adam and Eve were natural father and mother of every spirit that comes to this planet or that receives tabernacles on this planet consequently we are brother and sisters and that Adam was God our Eternal Father 38 When Young discussed the doctrine again in early 1857 he emphasized again that to become acquainted with our Father and our God was one of the first principles of the doctrine of salvation and that no man can enjoy or be prepared for eternal life without that knowledge 39 Nevertheless he later said Whether Adam is the personage that we should consider Our Heavenly Father or not is considerable of a mystery to a good many I do not care for one moment how that is it is no matter whether we are to consider Him our God or whether His Father or his Grandfather for in either case we are of one species of one family and Jesus Christ is also of our species 40 Initial reactions to the doctrine edit The reaction within the Mormon community to Young s Adam God teachings was mixed While many accepted the doctrine others regarded it as misguided or interpreted it to adhere to their prior understanding Young s initial 1852 announcement of the doctrine was greeted by some as prophetic For example the clerk of the conference Thomas Bullock recorded that during Young s sermon the Holy Ghost rest ed upon him with great power 41 In a session of general conference the next day Heber C Kimball stated his agreement that the God and Father of Jesus Christ was Adam 42 Another apostle Franklin D Richards accepted the doctrine that Adam is our Father and our God as well stating in a conference held in June 1854 that the Prophet and Apostle Brigham has declared it and that it is the word of the Lord 43 Kimball readily adopted Young s views and preached on June 29 1856 that I have learned by experience that there is but one God that pertains to this people and He is the God that pertains to this earth the first man That first man sent his own Son to redeem the world 44 A number of hymns acknowledging this doctrine were sung in local congregations of the LDS Church One published in 1856 entitled We Believe in Our God stated We believe in our God the great Prince of His race The Archangel Michael the Ancient of Days Our own Father Adam earth s Lord as is plain 45 This hymn was not found in subsequent editions 46 The first line of a poem published in 1861 titled Sons of Michael stated Sons of Michael he approaches Rise the Eternal Father greet 47 The poem is included as a hymn in the current LDS Church hymnal but the wording has been altered from Eternal Father to ancient father 48 Acceptance of the doctrine by the LDS Church continued through the 19th century George Q Cannon a member of the First Presidency when asked by his son about the conception of Jesus by Mary asked what was to prevent Father Adam from visiting and overshadowing the mother of Jesus 49 Resistance to the doctrine edit However some prominent members of the church took issue with the doctrine Most significantly apostle and philosopher Orson Pratt disagreed with the doctrine and expressed that disagreement publicly 50 and in private meetings with other apostles 51 Pratt also published his disagreement in his publication The Seer for which he was censured 52 Pratt did however teach similar doctrines in the same publication For example he stated that on the way to exaltation one would have to pass by and pay tribute to various apostles and prophets then Jesus and at length Father Adam 52 He said many would be surprised and humiliated after passing by Jesus to find Father Adam standing there however he said those are ideas which do not concern us at present although it is written in the Bible This is eternal life to know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent 52 Pratt continued to debate the issue in public forums for months despite being rebuked privately and publicly by Young on more than one occasion Bergera 1980 pp 13 16 until 1860 when faced with possible disfellowshipment from the church for teaching false doctrine Pratt agreed to the language of a public confession affirming the doctrine as the doctrine of the church This confession was negotiated during a series of meetings among the church hierarchy Bergera 1980 A less open opposition to the doctrine may have been carried out by Mormon editors Samuel W Richards and Franklin D Richards who according to one researcher interpreted the idea of Adam being our God or our Father as meaning merely that Adam as the first mortal man stands at the head of the human family For instance the Lord made Moses a god to Pharaoh Exodus 7 1 and as Paul was as Christ Jesus to the Galatians 4 14 In this way Adam as our great progenitor will preside over the human family as father and God 53 Adam God in Young s later administration edit After the public debates between Young and Pratt subsided in 1860 Young continued to maintain his belief in the doctrine but may have been disappointed that the people did not give the doctrine universal acceptance In 1861 he stated Some years ago I advanced a doctrine with regard to Adam being our father and God that will be a curse to many of the Elders of Israel because of their folly With regard to it they yet grovel in darkness and will It is one of the most glorious revealments of the economy of heaven yet the world hold derision Had I revealed the doctrine of baptism from sic the dead instead of Joseph Smith there are men around me who would have ridiculed the idea until dooms day sic But they are ignorant and stupid like the dumb ass 54 Nevertheless Young and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles continued to discuss the doctrine 55 In 1873 Young again taught the doctrine publicly and indicated that when Adam came to the Earth he left behind many wives other than Eve at the place from which Adam came however he said he was not disposed to give any farther knowledge concerning the great and glorious doctrine that pertains to this 56 How much unbelief exists in the minds of the Latter day Saints in regard to one particular doctrine which is revealed to them and which God revealed to me namely that Adam is our father and God Our Father Adam is the man who stands at the gate and holds the keys of everlasting life and salvation to all his children who have or ever will come upon the earth 57 Just before his death Young took steps to ensure that the Adam God doctrine was taught in the church s temples as part of the endowment ceremony In 1877 while he was standardizing the endowment for use in the St George Temple Young introduced as part of the endowment the lecture at the veil The final draft of the lecture is today kept private in the St George Temple citation needed L John Nuttall Young s secretary recorded in his journal a transcription of Young s temple lecture regarding the Adam God doctrine A portion of that journal entry reads as follows Adam was an immortal being when he came on this earth he had lived on an earth similar to ours and had begotten all the spirit that was to come to this earth and Eve our common Mother who is the mother of all living bore those spirits in the celestial world Father Adam s oldest son Jesus the Saviour who is the heir of the family is Father Adams first begotten in the spirit World who according to the flesh is the only begotten as it is written In his divinity he having gone back into the spirit World and come in the spirit glory to Mary and she conceived for when Adam and Eve got through with their Work in this earth they did not lay their bodies down in the dust but returned to the spirit World from whence they came 58 After Young s death edit There is some controversy as to whether or not Young considered Adam God to be official church doctrine At the end of his 1852 sermon he stated Now let all who may hear these doctrines pause before they make light of them or treat them with indifference for they will prove their salvation or damnation 59 Nevertheless in 1854 after a great deal of controversy concerning the doctrine Young minimized the importance of the doctrine stating that the subject does not immediately concern yours or my welfare I do not pretend to say that the items of doctrine and ideas I shall advance are necessary for the people to know 60 After Young s death church leaders began to cast the various interpretations of this teaching as mere speculation and denied that any particular interpretation was binding on the church In 1897 Joseph F Smith then an apostle and counselor in the First Presidency wrote a private letter concerning Young s teachings on Adam stating The doctrine was never submitted to the councils of the Priesthood nor to the church for approval or ratification and was never formally or otherwise accepted by the church It is therefore in no sense binding upon the Church Brigham Young s bare mention was without indubitable evidence and authority being given of its truth Only the scripture the accepted word of God is the Church s standard 61 Beginning around 1892 church leaders privately decided to no longer publicly teach the doctrine In a private meeting held on April 4 1897 church president Wilford Woodruff said Adam is our father and God and no use to discuss it with the Josephites Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints or any one else 62 In 1892 the doctrine was publicly opposed in St George Utah by Edward Bunker The First Presidency Woodruff George Q Cannon and Joseph F Smith traveled to St George to address the issue Records of the meeting state that Bunker was corrected Pres Woodruff and Cannon showed that Adam was an immortal being when he came to this earth and was made the same as all other men and Gods are made 63 The doctrine preached and contended for by Father Edward Bunker of Bunkerville was investigated condemned and Father Bunker set right Presidents Woodruff and Cannon present 64 After the start of the 20th century church leaders openly took the position that the doctrine should no longer to be taught publicly 65 As early as 1902 apostle Charles W Penrose claimed The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints has never formulated or adopted any theory concerning the subject treated upon by President Young as to Adam 66 Current position of the LDS Church edit Eventually the doctrine was publicly denounced as false by LDS Church leaders 67 In 1976 church president Spencer W Kimball stated We denounce that theory and hope that everyone will be cautioned against this and other kinds of false doctrine 68 69 In 1980 apostle Bruce R McConkie gave a speech elaborating upon the church s position towards the Adam God theory There are those who believe or say they believe that Adam is our father and our god that he is the father of our spirits and our bodies and that he is the one we worship The devil keeps this heresy alive as a means of obtaining converts to cultism It is contrary to the whole plan of salvation set forth in the scriptures and anyone who has read the Book of Moses and anyone who has received the temple endowment and who yet believes the Adam God theory does not deserve to be saved Those who are so ensnared reject the living prophet and close their ears to the apostles of their day We will follow those who went before they say And having so determined they soon are ready to enter polygamous relationships that destroy their souls We worship the Father in the name of the Son by the power of the Holy Ghost and Adam is their foremost servant by whom the peopling of our planet was commenced 70 Later the same year apostle Mark E Petersen stated Adam was not our God nor was he our Savior But he was the humble servant of both in his status as an angel God had only one begotten son in the flesh But Adam had many including Cain and Abel and Seth He lived nearly a thousand years He could have had hundreds of children in that time Then how could it be said by anyone that he had an only begotten son How could all of his other children be accounted for Were they not all begotten in the flesh Were Cain and Abel and Seth and their brothers and sisters all orphans Was any child ever begotten without a father Adam was their father and he had many sons In no way whatever does he qualify as a father who had only one son in the flesh Yet God our Eternal Father had only one son in the flesh who was Jesus Christ Then was Adam our God or did God become Adam Ridiculous Adam was neither God nor the Only Begotten Son of God He was a child of God in the spirit as we all are see Acts 17 29 Jesus was the firstborn in the spirit and the only one born to God in the flesh If any of you have been confused by false teachers who come among us if you have been assailed by advocates of erroneous doctrines counsel with your priesthood leaders They will not lead you astray but will direct you into paths of truth and salvation 71 Acceptance by Mormon fundamentalists edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2010 Adherents of Mormon fundamentalism generally accept the Adam God doctrine The LDS Church s disavowal of the doctrine contributes to what fundamentalists perceive to be a general intellectual or spiritual retreat from important principles that were rejected due to unpopularity Along with the practice of plural marriage belief in the Adam God doctrine became a defining aspect of the Mormon fundamentalist movement Apostolic United Brethren edit The Apostolic United Brethren AUB a fundamentalist Mormon group accepts the Adam God teaching and their leader Joseph W Musser wrote a book on it in the 1930s In the book Musser contended that the rejection of the doctrine by the LDS Church can be linked to its rejection of plural marriage which occurred around the same time And let us here remind the reader that as long as belief in the Patriarchal order of marriage and other advanced principles of the Gospel was maintained the minds of the Saints were open and receptive But with the surrender of the glorious principle of Celestial Marriage a union for time and eternity came darkness mental drowsiness a detour from the Gospel path until all sorts of speculation pertaining to the plan of Salvation was indulged in 72 School of the Prophets edit The School of the Prophets 73 spoken of in the book Under the Banner of Heaven claims revelation showing that Young was inaccurate in some points of his Adam God teachings but otherwise he was correct The understanding from these revelations is that Jesus was the Only Begotten Son in the flesh of the Savior of the previous Earth where the father of all Spirits Michael Adam had his mortal probation The lineage of Michael Adam which includes all but Jesus on this Earth will never become saviors of worlds Thus the Adam God doctrine of Young is simply a fuller understanding of the New Testament doctrine of joint heirs with Christ See also edit nbsp Latter Day Saint movement portalAdam and Eve LDS Church Adam Kadmon Criticism of the Latter Day Saint movement Mormon cosmologyNotes edit McConkie Bruce R The Seven Deadly Heresies speeches byu edu Retrieved 2017 11 04 Minutes of Meeting at Historian s Office Great Salt Lake City 7 P M April 4 1860 published in The Office Journal of Brigham Young 1858 1863 Appendix B It was Joseph s doctrine that Adam was God amp c When in Luke Johnson s Young 1852a p 50 statement given in the general conference of the LDS Church on April 9 1852 Journal of Discourses 7 285 90 Doctrine and Covenants 138 38 39 Roberts 1905 pp 385 86 Before the world was formed the First Presidency was first given to Adam He is Michael the Archangel spoken of in the Scriptures Quinn 1998 p 234 doctrine of Adam as Michael and as premortal First President cited as a precursor for the Adam God doctrine Roberts 1905 p 387 Adam delivers up his stewardship to Christ that which was delivered to him as holding the keys of the universe but retains his standing as head of the human family Quinn 1998 p 234 Adam s assignment of the keys of the universe cited as a precursor for the Adam God doctrine Roberts 1908 p 207 Quinn 1998 p 234 Adam as mediator doctrine cited as a precursor for the Adam God doctrine Larson 1978 p 201 God once was a man like one of us and God Himself the Father of us all once dwelled on an earth the same as Jesus Christ himself did in the flesh Quinn 1998 p 234 citing teaching that God is an exalted man as a precursor for the Adam God doctrine Widmer 2000 p 130 Collier 1999 pp 228 42 Kraut 1972 pp 80 97 same Christensen 1981 pp 131 49 Musser 1938 pp 38 43 46 50 57 Collier 1999 p 229 fn 12 citing minutes of meeting of the Quorum of the Twelve 4 April 1860 in which it was recorded It was Joseph s doctrine that Adam was God God comes to earth and eats and partakes of fruit Joseph could not reveal what was revealed to him and if Joseph had it revealed he was not told to reveal it Collier 1999 p 360 citing Wilford Woodruff Journal of 4 September 1860 in which George Q Cannon said that Adam is our Father and is a true doctrine revealed from God to Joseph amp Brigham For this same doctrine is taught in some of the old Jewish records which have never been in print Collier 1999 p 367 citing Wilford Woodruff Journal of 16 December 1867 stating that President Young said Adam was Michael the Archangel amp he was the Father of Jesus Christ amp was our God amp that Joseph taught this principle Collier 1999 p 233 citing an 1877 reminiscence of Anson Call who said he heard Smith say that now regarding Adam He came here from another planet as an immortalized being and brought his wife Eve with him and by eating of the fruits of the earth became subject to death and decay and he became of the earth earthly was made mortal and subject to death Widmer 2000 p 130 Quinn 1998 p 234 Young s Adam God teachings were an expansion of Joseph Smith s sermons in 1839 44 Bergera 1980 p 48 stating that there is no reliable evidence contemporary to Smith s lifetime which lends support to the view that Smith taught the Adam God doctrine and that Young was not above inventing support for beliefs where none existed previously Bergera 1980 p 48 noting that Orson Pratt and contemporary historian T B H Stenhouse both attributed the doctrine to Kimball Bergera 1980 p 41 describing the Adam God doctrine as that Adam was at once the spiritual as well as the physical father of all persons born on this world including Jesus Christ Bergera 1980 p 15 Joseph F Smith Journal 6 17 1871 Widmer 2000 pp 131 133 describing Michael as a God in the Council of Gods Kirkland 1984 p 38 Widmer 2000 p 131 Kirkland 1984 p 38 citing Joseph Smith s statement in Larson 1978 pp 202 03 a b c d Widmer 2000 p 131 Widmer 2000 p 131 Bergera 1980 p 15 Bergera 1980 p 15 citing Woodruff 1982 6 May 1855 Widmer 2000 p 133 Kirkland 1984 p 39 Kirkland 1984 pp 39 41 noting that in the late 19th century several Mormon leaders who still adhered to the Adam God doctrine began to adopt the modern Mormon belief that the Old Testament deity was also Jesus Doctrine and Covenants 116 LDS Church edition The naming of Adam ondi Ahman is also recorded in the History of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in volume 2 chapter 9 pages 153 154 Widmer 2000 p 131 Bergera 1980 p 41 describing the Adam God doctrine as that Adam was at once the spiritual as well as the physical father of all persons born on this world including Jesus Christ Watt 1977 Young Kimball amp Richards 1853 a b Young 1852a p 50 Young 1852a p 50 The full text from Journal of Discourses 1 51 reads as follows It is true that the earth was organized by three distinct characters namely Eloheim Yahovah and Michael these three forming a quorum as in all heavenly bodies and in organizing element perfectly represented in the Deity as Father Son and Holy Ghost Again they will try to tell how the divinity of Jesus is joined to his humanity and exhaust all their mental faculties and wind up with this profound language as describing the soul of man it is an immaterial substance What a learned idea Jesus our elder brother was begotten in the flesh by the same character that was in the garden of Eden and who is our Father in Heaven Now let all who may hear these doctrines pause before they make light of them or treat them with indifference for they will prove their salvation or damnation I have given you a few leading items upon this subject but a great deal more remains to be told Now remember from this time forth and for ever that Jesus Christ was not begotten by the Holy Ghost Young 1852a pp 50 51 Young 1852a p 51 Watt s transcript of the sermon was the only known stenographic recording however several other witnesses summarized it in their journals These recountings vary somewhat in wording For example attendee Samuel Hollister Rogers wrote several days later confirming that Young said that when Adam went to the Garden he brought his wife or one of his wives with him that Adam was the only God that we would have and that Christ was not begotten by the Holy Ghost but of the Father Adam Brigham Young Addresses 2 12 Samuel Hollister Rogers Journal 145 Young s bodyguard Hosea Stout wrote that night in his diary that President B Young taught that Adam was the father of Jesus and the only God to us Diary of Hosea Stout 2 435 April 9 1852 Wilford Woodruff wrote that Young said God went to the Garden of Eden with one of his wifes that Adam is Michael or God And all the God that we have any thing to do with and when the VIRGIN MARY was begotton with Child it was By the Father and in no other way ownly as we were begotton Journal of Wilford Woodruff 4 127 30 April 9 1852 Young 1852a p 51 Journal of Wilford Woodruff February 19 1854 Journal of Joseph L Robinson October 6 1854 Minutes of the General Conference Deseret News October 12 1853 Journal of Joseph Lee Robinson October 6 1854 See also Diary of Thomas D Brown October 6 1854 pp 87 88 There are Lords many and there are Gods many amp the Father of our Spirits is the Father of Jesus Christ He is the Father of Jesus Christ Spirit amp Body and he is the beginner of the bodies of all men John Pulsipher Papers Mss 1041 p 35 37 BYU Special Collections There are Lords many amp Gods many But the God that we have to account to is the father of our Spirits Adam Journal of Discourses 4 215 Journal of Discourses 4 217 Thomas Bullock Minutes of the LDS General Conference Deseret News April 17 1852 p 2 Journal of Wilford Woodruff April 10 1852 Franklin D Richards reported in Minutes of the Special General Council Millennial Star 16 534 26 August 1854 emphasis in original Journal of Discourses 4 1 Sacred Hymns and Spiritual Songs for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 11th ed archive org 1856 p 375 Retrieved 2023 11 08 Sacred Hymns and Spiritual Songs For the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 14th ed Salt Lake City G Q Cannon 1871 pp Preface Sacred Hymns and Spiritual Songs for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 1856 E L T Harrison Sons of Michael Millennial Star 23 240 13 April 1861 Sons of Michael He Approaches Hymns of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints hymn 51 Daily Journal of Abraham H Cannon March 10 1888 Brigham Young University Journal of Thomas Evans Jeremy Sr September 30 1852 Also he did not believe that Father Adam had flesh and bones when he came to the garden of Eden but he and his wife Eve were spirits and that God formed their bodies out of the dust of the ground and the sic became a living souls He also said that he believed that Jesus Christ and Adam are brothers in the Spirit and that Adam is not the God that he is praying unto See generally Bergera 1980 Journal of William Clayton October 3 1852 a b c Orson Pratt The Pre Existence of Man The Seer 1 3 158 59 March October 1853 Stephen E Robinson The Apocalypse of Adam BYU Studies vol 17 no 2 p 131 this was the interpretation of Brigham Young s statement advocated in 1853 by Samuel W Richards who as editor of the Millennial Star and President of the Church in the British Isles first published President Young s initial sermon on the subject Millennial Star December 10 1853 Robinson also argues that Franklin D Richards who replaced Samuel W Richards in this position also promoted this interpretation Quoted from Manuscript Addresses of Brigham Young Archived December 26 2005 at the Wayback Machine Watt G D transcriber October 8 1861 with minor misspellings corrected Collier 1999 p 229 fn 12 citing minutes of meeting of the Quorum of Twelve 4 April 1860 in which it was recorded It was Joseph s doctrine that Adam was God God comes to earth and eats and partakes of fruit Joseph could not reveal what was revealed to him and if Joseph had it revealed he was not told to reveal it Collier 1999 p 360 citing Wilford Woodruff Journal of 4 September 1860 in which George Q Cannon said that Adam is our Father and is a true doctrine revealed from God to Joseph amp Brigham For this same doctrine is taught in some of the old Jewish records which have never been in print Collier 1999 p 367 citing Wilford Woodruff Journal of 16 December 1867 stating that President Young said Adam was Michael the Archangel amp he was the Father of Jesus Christ amp was our God amp that Joseph taught this principle Brigham Young August 31 1873 Journal of Discourses 16 160 Sermon delivered on June 8 1873 Printed in the Deseret Weekly News June 18 1873 Journal of L John Nuttall personal secretary of Brigham Young February 7 1877 in BYU Special Collections Prefacing the paragraph quoted L John Nuttall records in his private journal for 7 February 1877 that after serving that day in the St George Temple and after taking his evening meal he attended a meeting with Young Wilford Woodruff Erastus Snow Brigham Young Jr and others This meeting was held in Young s private winter home in St George Utah During the course of the meeting Young gave some teachings which Nuttall later recorded in his personal journal It appears that Nuttall recorded Young s instructions on the 8 February not on the 7th when they were delivered The claim that Nuttall did not record Young s instructions on the same night they were delivered is made by Fred Collier Collier notes that after Nuttall had written the first sentence of paragraph 1B a t this point Nuttal stopped writing for the ink beginning the next sentence is much lighter and the same as that used for his diary entry of February 8 Collier notes that Nuttall resumed his entry for February 7 with the word Works and continues with the rest of his journal entry as set forth in this section It would appear that Nuttall wrote the majority of that entry on the following day the 8th Journal of Discourses 1 51 October 8 1854 Historical Department of the Church HDC Joseph F Smith letter to A Saxey January 7 1897 HDC Brigham Young Jr Journal April 4 1897 February 2 1899 30 107 CHO Ms f 326 December 16 1897 Diary of Charles Lowell Walker 2 740 41 June 11 1892 typescript pp 43 44 Journal of J D T McAllister p 99 BYU Mor M270 1 m v 6 June 11 1892 See e g the Proceedings of the First Sunday School Convention November 28 1898 Letter to Bishop Edward Bunker February 27 1902 Messages of the First Presidency 4 199 206 Journal of Thomas A Clawson 1912 1917 pp 69 70 April 8 1912 B H Roberts Deseret News July 23 1921 Joseph Fielding Smith Utah Genealogical Magazine pp 146 51 October 1930 Joseph Fielding Smith Doctrines of Salvation 1 18 76 77 92 1954 Charles W Penrose Our Father Adam Improvement Era September 1902 873 reprinted in Charles W Penrose Our Father Adam Millennial Star 11 December 1902 785 90 at 789 Van Hale What About the Adam God Theory Mormon Miscellaneous response series 3 Conference Report p 115 October 1 3 1976 Spencer W Kimball Our Own Liahona Ensign November 1976 p 77 BYU Devotional June 1 1980 This is what McConkie said in the audio recording of this sermon The print version has subsequently been changed to has no excuse whatever for being led astray by it Compare PDF text with MP3 audio at 26 48 1 Mark E Petersen Adam the Archangel Ensign November 1980 Musser Joseph W Michael Our Father and Our God Salt Lake City Utah Truth Publishing Company 1963 School of the Prophets Crossfield School of the ProphetsReferences editBergera Gary James 1980 The Orson Pratt Brigham Young Controversies Conflict Within the Quorums 1853 to 1868 PDF Dialogue A Journal of Mormon Thought 13 2 7 49 doi 10 2307 45224861 JSTOR 45224861 S2CID 254314595 Briney Drew Understanding Adam God Teachings Privately published hardback book 2005 Broderick Carl Jr 1983 Another Look at Adam God letter to the editor PDF Dialogue A Journal of Mormon Thought 16 2 4 7 doi 10 2307 45228228 JSTOR 45228228 Buerger David John 1982 The Adam God Doctrine PDF Dialogue A Journal of Mormon Thought 15 1 14 58 doi 10 2307 45225052 JSTOR 45225052 S2CID 254403590 Christensen Culley K 1981 The Adam God Maze Independent Publishers ISBN 0 9608134 0 3 Collier Fred 1999 President Brigham Young s Doctrine of Deity vol 1 Collier s Publishing ISBN 0 934964 05 X Kirkland Boyd 1984 Jehovah as the Father The Development of the Mormon Jehovah Doctrine PDF Sunstone Magazine 44 Autumn 36 44 Doddridge Dennis D The Adam God Revelation 2012 Kraut Ogden 1972 Michael Adam Pioneer Press Farkas John Adam God Teaching A Theory or a Doctrine 1991 Matthews Robert J Origin of Man the Doctrinal Framework Musser Joseph W 1938 Michael Our Father and Our God Truth Publishing Larson Stan 1978 The King Follett Discourse A Newly Amalgamated Text BYU Studies 18 2 193 208 archived from the original on 2017 08 28 Norris Elwood G Be Not Deceived 1978 ISBN 0 88290 101 X Mark E Petersen Adam Who Is He Bookcraft 1976 ISBN 0 87747 592 X Quinn D Michael 1998 Early Mormonism and the Magic World View 2nd ed Salt Lake City Signature Books ISBN 1 56085 089 2 Roberts B H ed 1905 History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints vol 3 Salt Lake City Deseret News Roberts B H ed 1908 History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints vol 4 Salt Lake City Deseret News Taylor Nate 2008 The Unknown God 4th ed Messenger Publications ISBN 978 1 4382 5122 6 Tholson Craig L Adam God 1991 Publishment ASIN B0006F6490 Turner Rodney 1953 The Position of Adam in Latter day Saint Scripture and Theology BYU Masters Thesis Watt Ronald G 1977 Sailing the Old Ship Zion The Life of George D Watt BYU Studies 18 48 65 Widmer Kurt 2000 Mormonism and the Nature of God A Theological Evolution 1830 1915 Jefferson N C McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 0776 7 Woodruff Wilford 1982 Wilford Woodruff s Journal PDF Kraut s Pioneer Press Van Hale What About the Adam God Theory Mormon Miscellaneous 1983 Vlachos Chris A Adam is God 1979 Young Brigham April 9 1852a Self Government Mysteries Recreation and Amusements not in Themselves Sinful Tithing Adam Our Father and Our God in Watt G D ed Journal of Discourses by Brigham Young President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints His Two Counsellors the Twelve Apostles and Others vol 1 Liverpool F D amp S W Richards published 1854 pp 46 53 Young Brigham August 28 1852b Address Deseret News Extra Salt Lake City LDS Church published September 14 1852 pp 11 14 Young Brigham Kimball Heber C Richards Willard June 1 1853 Letter from the First Presidency in Watt G D ed Journal of Discourses by Brigham Young President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints His Two Counsellors the Twelve Apostles and Others vol 1 Liverpool F D amp S W Richards published 1854 p 6 External links editList of primary sources regarding the Adam God doctrine also archived here Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adam God doctrine amp oldid 1184156935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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