First Presidency, in statement on man's origins, distinguishes Adam from the God and Father of our spirits.

Date
Nov 1909
Type
Periodical
Source
First Presidency
LDS
Hearsay
Direct
Reference

First Presidency (Joseph F. Smith, John P. Winder and Anthon H. Lund), "The Origin of Man," Improvement Era 13, no. 1 (November 1909): 80

Scribe/Publisher
Improvement Era
People
John P. Winder, First Presidency, Anthon H. Lund, Joseph F. Smith
Audience
Latter-day Saints, Reading Public
PDF
Transcription

Adam, our great progenitor, "the first man," was, like Christ, a pre-existent spirit, and like Christ, he took upon him an appropriate body of a man, and so became a "living soul." The doctrine of the pre-existence,—revealed so plainly, particularly in the latter days, pours a wonderful flood of light upon the otherwise mysterious problem of man's origin. It shows that man, as a spirit, was begotten and born of heavenly parents, and reared to maturity in the eternal mansions of the Father, prior to coming upon the earth in a temporal body to undergo an experience in mortality. It teaches that all men existed in the spirit before any man existed in the flesh, and that all who have inhabited the earth since Adam have taken bodies and become souls in like manner.

It is held by some that Adam was not the first man upon this earth, and that the original human being was a development from lower orders of animal creation. These, however, are the theories of men. The word of the Lord declares that Adam was "the first man of all men" (Moses 1:34), and we are therefore in duty bound to regard him as the primal parent of our race. It is shown to the brother of Jared that all men were created in the beginning after the image of God; and whether we take this to mean the spirit or the body, or both, it commits us to the same conclusion: Man began life as a human being, in the likeness of our heavenly Father.

True it is that the body of man enters upon its career as a tiny germ or embryo, which becomes an infant, quickened at a certain stage by the spirit whose tabernacle it is, and the child, after being born, develops into a man. There is nothing in this, however, to indicate that the original man, the first of our race, began life as anything less than the human germ or embryo that becomes a man.

Citations in Mormonr Qnas
Copyright © B. H. Roberts Foundation
The B. H. Roberts Foundation is not owned by, operated by, or affiliated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.