Joseph Smith — "It is an unchangeable decree of God, that whenever God gives a commandment to a …"
It is an unchangeable decree of God, that whenever God gives a commandment to a man, if that man will not obey that commandment, he will be damned.
It is an unchangeable decree of God, that whenever God gives a commandment to a man, if that man will not obey that commandment, he will be damned.
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"I am a man of peace, and hate contention."
"I have learned for myself that God is a God of order, and not of confusion."
"I have seen the face of God, and I have seen the face of the devil."
"If I had not been persecuted, I would not have been a prophet."
"I defy all the world to show a more perfect law than the one that is given to us."
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Divine commandments carry absolute, non-negotiable consequences. Disobedience to God's direct commands results in damnation — not as arbitrary punishment but as an immutable moral law woven into the universe's structure. Spiritual law is fixed and objective, comparable to physical law. Obedience isn't optional or gradable; it is the sole condition for salvation. The word 'unchangeable' is key — no appeal, no exception, no mercy clause overrides the decree.
Joseph Smith (1805–1844) built his entire prophetic identity on claiming direct revelation from God, including restoration of lost commandments and priesthood authority. This quote reflects his foundational teaching that God speaks to living prophets and that those revelations carry binding weight. His theology demanded obedience to commandments he himself delivered, making this statement simultaneously doctrinal and a reinforcement of his own prophetic authority over the early LDS community.
The Second Great Awakening swept early 19th-century America, producing competing revivalist movements, new denominations, and fierce theological debate about salvation, grace, and works. Smith emerged in this chaotic religious landscape of western New York's 'Burned-over District,' where multiple sects claimed truth. His absolute framing of divine commandment as cosmic law offered certainty and clarity against Protestant disagreements over predestination and free will during Jacksonian America's era of democratic individualism.
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