Commentary on Doctrine & Covenants 76

/ Doctrine & Covenants 76 / Commentary

Verses 1-4

Casey Paul Griffiths (LDS Scholar)

The 1832 vision given to Joseph Smith is centered first and foremost on Jesus Christ and His Resurrection. The vision begins by proclaiming that Christ is the only Savior of mankind and the only source of salvation for men and women. The same emphasis is found throughout all of the revelations of the Restoration, which enlarge and enlighten our understanding of the role of Jesus Christ as our Savior.

When it comes to understanding the doctrinal content of the vision itself, it helps to reference a commentary of sorts that Joseph Smith provided through an exchange with W. W. Phelps almost a decade after the vision was given. Phelps published a poem in the Church newspaper the Times and Seasons entitled Vade Mecum (“Go With Me”). Phelps’s poem invited the Prophet to provide more details about the visions he saw of the eternal worlds. It read in part:

Go with me, will you go to the mansions above,

Where the bliss, and the knowledge, the light, and the love,

And the glory of God do eternally be?—

Death, the wages of sin, is not there. Go with me.1

In response to Vade Mecum another poem was published entitled “The Answer,” which is a poetic version of the vision. There is some debate over who authored “The Answer.”2 It is likely that W. W. Phelps composed the poem in collaboration with Joseph Smith, who signed his name at the end of “The Answer.” Because of Joseph Smith’s involvement, “The Answer” effectively functions as a commentary on the 1832 vision; in many places it clarifies and expands certain doctrinal points made in the vision. For example, verse 4 of section 76, which originally reads, “From eternity to eternity he is the same, and his years never fail,” was expanded to read:

His throne is the heavens, his life time is all

Of eternity now, and eternity then;

His union is power, and none stays his hand,—

The Alpha, Omega, for ever: Amen.3

Throughout our exploration of the 1832 vision, we will refer back to Joseph Smith and W. W. Phelps’s collaboration to provide a clearer understanding of the doctrines taught in section 76.

1. Poem from William W. Phelps, between 1 and 20 January 1843, p. 82, JSP.

2. See Bruce Van Orden, We’ll Sing and We’ll Shout: The Life and Times of W. W. Phelps, 2018, 394–95; Lawrence R. Flake, Three Degrees of Glory: Joseph Smith’s Insights on the Kingdoms of Heaven, 2000, 16–17.

3. Poem to William W. Phelps, between circa 1 and circa 15 February 1843, p. 82, JSP.

 

(Doctrine & Covenants Minute)

Verses 5-10
Verses 11-17
Verses 18-24
Verses 25-29
Verses 30-35
Verses 36-49
Verses 50-53
Verses 54-70
Verses 71-80
Verses 81-88
Verses 89-93
Verses 94-97
Verses 98-106
Verses 107-112
Verses 113-119
Supplemental Study Aid—The Poetic Version of the Vision
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