“Is God asleep that he should cease to be all that he was to the prophets of the past?”
Sermon (1899)
Muhammad: A Prophet of Our Times
Muhammad: A Biography of The Prophet (2001)
“Is God asleep that he should cease to be all that he was to the prophets of the past?”
Sermon (1899)
Journal of Discourses 2:170-171 (February 18, 1855)
Young comments on Joseph Smith’s visions. This quote is often presented in a heavily edited form which reads: "The Lord did not come…But he did send his angel to this same obscure person, Joseph Smith Jun.,…"
1850s
The Principles of Success in Literature (1865)
Context: A man must be himself convinced if he is to convince others. The prophet must be his own disciple, or he will make none. Enthusiasm is contagious: belief creates belief. There is no influence issuing from unbelief or from languid acquiescence. This is peculiarly noticeable in Art, because Art depends on sympathy for its influence, and unless the artist has felt the emotions he depicts we remain unmoved: in proportion to the depth of his feeling is our sympathetic response; in proportion to the shallowness or falsehood of his presentation is our coldness or indifference.
Context: A man's first care should be to avoid the reproaches of his own heart; his next to escape the censures of the world: if the last interferes with the former, it ought to be entirely neglected; but otherwise there cannot be a greater satisfaction to an honest mind, than to see those approbations which it gives itself seconded by the applauses of the public: a man is more sure of his conduct, when the verdict which he passes upon his own behaviour is thus warranted and confirmed by the opinion of all that know him.
On "Sir Roger", in The Spectator No. 122 (20 July 1711).
Of course, after his death, his disciples tend to deify him or at least give him saintly status.
Man's Rise to Civilization (1968)
AJ 13.11.2
Antiquities of the Jews
1830s, The American Scholar http://www.emersoncentral.com/amscholar.htm (1837)