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Blacks & The Mormon Priesthood
QUOTE Could you please provide a source for that? Elijah served as a Seventy until his death.
The reference is from "Neither White Nor Black," Pp. 130-131. To correct my original statement, they did not actually ask him to not use his priesthood but to limit his ministering to the black community.
I am well aware of the fact that Abel served as a Seventy until his death, but he was still limited as to what he could do with that Priesthood. For example, he was not allowed to enter the temple to receive his endowments, nor to be sealed to his wife or family.
QUOTE Are you saying that these three apostles or others also visited Walker Lewis (Who also was ordained in the Priesthood at the time of Joseph) William Mc Cary, Enoch Abel (Son of Elijah Abel) and Elijah Abel (Grandson of Elijah Abel, ordained as far as 1935) and told them the same thing?
Did I say that? No, I did not. Those brethren just happened to be in the same area as Elijah Able, that's all. If they had been in the same area as one of the other brethren, then perhaps they might have done the same thing, except for Abel's posterity, who were well-known exceptions to the general rule.
I am not impressed by a quote from someone who "Works very closely with LDS leaders." Many people work "Very closely with LDS leaders." That doesn't make them experts on LDS doctrine.
There is only one man on earth who has authority to pronounce doctrine for the Church, and neither Dorian Grey nor even Elder Holland is that man.
In spite of what anyone may say, the fact of the matter is, we do know why the Lord would not allow those blacks who lived and died prior to 1978 to hold the priesthood. It was revealed to us by none other than the Prophet Joseph Smith, himself:
QUOTE Now the Lord had shown unto me, Abraham, the intelligences that were organized before the world was; and among all these were many of the noble and great ones.
And God saw these souls that they were good, and he stood in the midst of them, and said: These I will make my rulers, for he stood among those that were spirits, and he saw that they were good, and he said unto me: Abraham, thou art one of them: thou wast chosen before thou wast born. (Abraham 3:22-23)
Now, what does the Lord mean when He says, "These I will make MY rulers"? Who are the Lord's rulers? They are clearly NOT the kings and queens or Presidents of the world. Those rulers have been anything BUT noble and great. But what is Priesthood? The Prophet Joseph Smith revealed the answer to that question in the following:
QUOTE Amen to the priesthood or the authority of that man. (D&C 121:37)
Clearly, the Lord equates priesthood with authority. Thus, when the Lord says, "These I will make my rulers," He is talking about those to whom He would give authority, I.e., priesthood.
This interpretation is supported by the fact that the Lord goes on to tell Abraham that he was one of the "Noble and great ones" Who had been chosen before they were born. Was Abraham a king or a ruler? Obviously not, but he did hold the priesthood. Thus, it should be clear that when the Lord said, "These I will make my rulers," He was talking about those to whom He was planning to give authority, or Priesthood.
Now, some people might be inclined to think that this only applies to the prophets, but I would disagree. Yes, the Prophets of God do preside over the Lord's people, along with their counselors, the Quourm of the Twelve, the Seventy, and the Area Presidencies, but so do the Stake Presidencies, High Councils, Bishoprics, High Priest Group leaders, Elders' Quorum Presidencies, Teachers' Quorum Presidencies, and even the Deacons' Quorum Presidencies. And most of these callings are not lifetime callings but are only for a period of time, after which they are released and others are called to fill those positions. Thus, virtually all faithful priesthood holders can expect to be called to a presiding position sometime in their life. That is why I say that when the Lord said, "These I will make my rulers," He as not just talking about the Prophets but about all Priesthood holders.
Was everyone "Noble and great" In the preexistence? Obviously not. In fact, one third of the host of heaven were so ignoble and ungreat that they were actually cast out of heaven. Does it seem likely that the two thirds who remained were all on the same level? I don't think so, but it was only the "Noble and great ones" To whom the Lord was planning to give His priesthood.
And if there was a group that was actually prohibited by the Prophets of God from holding the Priesthood, then what does that tell us about those spirits in the preexistence? Obviously, they were not among the "Noble and great" Ones in the preexistence.
Of course, it should be obvious that this only applies to those who lived and died prior to 1978. Those blacks who hold the priesthood today must have been among the "Noble and great" Ones in the preexistence, including some in my own ward.
Nevertheless, there are many who seem to be overly sensitive about the fact that their ancestors were not among the "Noble and great" Ones. This is a pride issue. They are too proud to admit that their ancestors were not "Noble and great" In the preexistence.
The fact of the matter is that we all have ancestors who were not "Noble and great" In the preexistence, because we all have ancestors who did not hold the Priesthood. And if we are descendants of the House of Israel, then we have ancestors who were actually prohibited from holding the priesthood, because for hundreds of years, the tribe of Levi was the only one that could hold the priesthood, and even they could only hold the Levitical or Aaronic Priesthood and not the Melchizedek Priesthood.
Donna Hill says:
QUOTE Anson Call said that Joseph had told him and several others that some spirits had remained neutral during the council in heaven, and because of that came to earth as Negroes, through the lineage of Cain, whose black skin was perpetuated after the flood through the seed of Ham and his son Canaan.
Yes, I know that Brigham taught that there were no neutrals in the preexistence, but if Anson Call "And several others" Were saying that Joseph had taught that doctrine, then that would explain why Brigham found it necessary to come out and correct what he considered to be a false doctrine.
But then why were Anson Call "And several others" Going around saying that Joseph had taught that doctrine? Suppose, for the sake of argument, that they were merely misquoting the Prophet as saying that the blacks had been neutral in the preexistence, when in fact what he had actually said was that the blacks were leas valiant in the preexistence, but Anson Call "And several others" Merely interpreted him as saying that they had been neutral, when he had not actually said that? That would clarify the apparent discrepancy between Brigham Young and Anson Call, and now we know that Joseph actually would have had a basis for saying that the blacks, in his day, had been less valiant in the preexistence--Abraham 3:22-23--which he actually revealed to us, himself, and it did not come to us from Brigham Young.