JOEL - It is clear that in some cases, when a person is
especially chosen, God makes exceptions to His own
rules. Such must have been the case with Elijah Abel
when he received the priesthood.
There is a similar situation in the Bible in The Book
of Ruth. Because the Moabites (a white-skinned people
who were the descendants of Lot, the nephew of
Abraham) did not give food or water to the Israelites
when they came out of Egypt into the desert, the LORD
cursed them; proclaiming that a Moabite would not
enter the Congregation of the LORD until the 10th
generation(Deut. 23:3). However, Ruth, a first generation
Moabitess, showed such great faith that the LORD made
an exception, and she became an Israelite(Ruth 4).
Elijah Abel was ordained to the priesthood office of
Elder on March 3, 1836, and to the office of Seventy
later that year, because of his faithfulness and
because he had helped to build the Kirtland Temple.
It is clear from membership records that
he received certification as a Seventy on April 4,
1841, and again in Salt Lake City. It is also clear
from membership records that he was a member of the
Third Quorum of Seventy in 1883, when he left on a
mission to Canada. Further, it is clear from his
patriarchal blessing that he was to be made (in the
words of his Patriarchal Blessing) "equal to thy
brethren." Apparently, also, Joseph Smith had told him
that he was "entitled to the priesthood," according to
Abel's recollection of the event. His Priesthood
status is also verified by his Patriarchal Blessing,
given by Joseph Smith, Sr., in 1836 (Joseph Smith's
Patriarchal Blessing Record, p. 88, as cited in
Council Meeting Minutes, 4 June 1879, Adam S. Bennion
Papers, BYU, Provo, Utah).
It was Joseph Smith himself who translated the
scripture that relates to the denial of priesthood to
the blacks(Abraham 1:26-27). But even though he knew
this he was apparently inspired by God to allow an
exception in the case of Elijah Abel.
Elder Abel was not stripped of his priesthood by
Brigham Young but, according to Young's and subsequent
church presidents' interpretation of the scriptures,
he was denied the ordinances of the temple. However,
no attempt was made to remove his priesthood or drop
him from the third quorum of the seventies. He
remained active in the quorum until his death.
President Taylor called him to serve a mission to Ohio
and Canada. He returned very ill and died at the age
of 83. (Chester L. Hawkin, "Report on Elijah Abel and
his Priesthood," unpublished manuscript, special
collections, Brigham Young University, 1985.)
It is true that we are punished for our own sins and
not for Adam's trangressions. But this punishment
refers to that which we receive after this life and
after God's judgment because of unrepented sins.
We will not be punished for
Adams transgression in the next life and the blacks
will also not be punished for Cain's sin in the next
life. But God can and has placed curses on groups of
people, including their decendents, in this life from
time to time, as illustrated by the experience of the
Moabites I refered to earlier.
We still suffer from the curse that God placed upon the
earth as a result of Adam's falling(Moses 4:23-25).
Cain's curse was to live as a fugitive and a vagabond
and that the ground would not yield fruit for him(Gen.
4: 11-15), and for reasons only God knows, the curse
included denial of the priesthood to the decendants of
Cain until at a later time when He determined they
were ready to receive it.
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