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B. H. Roberts

B. H. Roberts

Famous Quotes

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“A temple, first of all, is a place ofprayer; and prayer is communion with God. It is the 'infinite in manseeking the infinite in God.' Where they find each other, there is holysanctuary--a temple.””

“Missouri in her treatment of the Latter-day Saints during the years 1833-9, sowed the wind; in the disastrous events which overtook her during the years 1855-65, she reaped the whirlwind. Let us hope that in those events Justice was fully vindicated so far as the state of Missouri is concerned; and that the lessons of her sad experience may not be lost to the world. May the awful and visible retribution visited upon Missouri teach all states and nations that when they feel power they must not forget Justice; may it teach all peoples that states and nations in their corporate capacity are such entities as may be held accountable before God and the world for their actions; that righteousness exalteth a nation, while injustice is a reproach to any people.””

“These unwise utterances, however, were made, for the most part, by the overzealous and ignorant. Men who had no grasp of the real genius of the great work whose foundations were then being laid; men who, in common with men of like nature in all ages and in all great movements, have been trouble-breeders; who, in their contemplation of ultimate results to be achieved, overleaped the intervening space through which the movement must pass, the difficulties it must encounter and overcome, the experiences its adherents must gain, the great and varied labors they must perform. They seem not to understand that great movements require time for the achievement of their ends; that time with God is one thing, with man quite another thing; that the thing which is "nigh at hand" with the Lord may be to men afar off; and overlooking these important facts leads such men into many errors of thought and action.””

“A temple, first of all, is a place ofprayer; and prayer is communion with God. It is the 'infinite in manseeking the infinite in God.' Where they find each other, there is holysanctuary--a temple.””

“Missouri in her treatment of the Latter-day Saints during the years 1833-9, sowed the wind; in the disastrous events which overtook her during the years 1855-65, she reaped the whirlwind. Let us hope that in those events Justice was fully vindicated so far as the state of Missouri is concerned; and that the lessons of her sad experience may not be lost to the world. May the awful and visible retribution visited upon Missouri teach all states and nations that when they feel power they must not forget Justice; may it teach all peoples that states and nations in their corporate capacity are such entities as may be held accountable before God and the world for their actions; that righteousness exalteth a nation, while injustice is a reproach to any people.””

“These unwise utterances, however, were made, for the most part, by the overzealous and ignorant. Men who had no grasp of the real genius of the great work whose foundations were then being laid; men who, in common with men of like nature in all ages and in all great movements, have been trouble-breeders; who, in their contemplation of ultimate results to be achieved, overleaped the intervening space through which the movement must pass, the difficulties it must encounter and overcome, the experiences its adherents must gain, the great and varied labors they must perform. They seem not to understand that great movements require time for the achievement of their ends; that time with God is one thing, with man quite another thing; that the thing which is "nigh at hand" with the Lord may be to men afar off; and overlooking these important facts leads such men into many errors of thought and action.””

Books from the author

The Life of John Taylorthird President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
New Witnesses for God (volume 2 of 3)
Outlines of Ecclesiastical History
The Rise and Fall of Nauvoo
New Witnesses for God (Volume 3 of 3)
The Mormon Doctrine of Deity: The Roberts-Van Der Donckt Discussion: To Which Is Added a Discourse, Jesus Christ, the Revelation of God; Also a Collection of Authoritative Mormon Utterances on the Being and Nature of God
Defense of the Faith and the Saints (volume 2 of 2)
The Mormon Battalion, Its History and Achievements
Defense of the Faith and the Saints (volume 1 of 2)
The Seventy's Course in Theology, Third Year
A New Witness for God (volume 1 of 3)
The Seventy's Course in Theology, Fifth Year
The Gospel: An Exposition of Its First Principles: Revised and Enlarged Edition
The Missouri Persecutions
The Seventy's Course in Theology, Fourth Year
The Seventy's Course in Theology, Second Year
The Seventy's Course in Theology, First Year
Succession in the Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
Joseph Smith the Prophet-Teacher: A Discourse
Corianton: A Nephite Story

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