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Ettie V. Smith | A FAIR Analysis of: One Nation Under Gods A work by author: Richard Abanes
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Church and state all one now |
The Israelites did nothing to destroy or battle the Egyptians, they simply obeyed God and God protected and defended them. This fits in well with the apocalyptic view which Heber and Brigham seem to share of Brigham's future leadership in a divine, temporal kingdom of God on earth. But this is no more than the faithful have always anticipated:
Brigham and Heber were a government-in-exile, but had faith their exile would soon end.[1] They needed only "stand still, and see the salvation of the Lord" (Exodus 14꞉13).
The author makes it appear that this is a desire or plan on behalf of Brigham Young for secular political power.
Bancroft reports a prophecy made by Brigham Young in 1847. He provides no sources, so it is difficult to assess Brigham's possible meaning from Bancroft's report.[2] However, Heber C. Kimball spoke in 1856 with Brigham present, and we can perhaps see what Brigham intended:
Kimball's meaning is clear. He does not foresee Brigham Young or other Church leaders ascending to power in the traditional way. Rather, he sees the end of the world as being near. Thus, he anticipates that the earthly Church will yet become "the kingdom of our God and his Christ"—a clear reference to DC 105꞉32, which promises that "the kingdoms of this world may be constrained to acknowledge that the kingdom of Zion is in very deed the kingdom of our God and his Christ; therefore, let us become subject unto her laws."
This imagery involves the Millennium or end-times, since it invokes the language of John's Revelation:
This triumph in which the Church achieves the world's secular rule does not happen until Satan—"the accuser of our brethren"—is cast down. Just as Satan was cast from heaven, so he will be cast from rulership of the temporal world.
As head of the Church, Brigham will thus be called to world leadership when the day of the Lord comes—"President," and something grander. (Biblical prophets in a monarchy would be more likely to speak of kings rather than Presidents.) Early Latter-day Saints (like the early Christians) tended to believe that the second coming was very near, and so Heber and Brigham doubtless anticipated that God's triumph over Satan might come soon, within their lifetimes.
Yet, despite ONUG's evident desire to portray the Church as militaristic and violent, Heber's next words are instructive:
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