The Testimony of Jacob, the Son of Lehi, to Sherem:
“ . . . Behold, I say unto you that none of the prophets have
written, nor prophesied, save they have spoken concerning this Christ. And this is not all—it has been
made manifest unto me, for I have heard and seen; and it also has been made manifest unto
me by the power of the Holy Ghost; wherefore, I know if there should be no atonement made
all mankind must be lost.” (Jacob 7:11–12)
Carol: “Joy to the World”
Joy to the world, the Lord is come;
Let earth receive her King!
Let ev’ry heart prepare him room,
And Saints and angels sing,
And Saints and angels sing,
And Saints, and Saints and angels sing.
Rejoice! Rejoice when Jesus reigns,
And Saints their songs employ,
While fields and floods, rocks, hills, and plains
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat, repeat the sounding joy
No more will sin and sorrow grow,
Nor thorns infest the ground;
He’ll come and make the blessings flow
Far as the curse was found,
Far as the curse was found,
Far as, far as the curse was found.
Rejoice! Rejoice in the Most High,
While Israel spreads abroad
Like stars that glitter in the sky,
And ever worship God,
And ever worship God,
And ever, and ever worship God
The Littlest Angel
by Charles Tazewell
Once upon a time - oh, many, many years ago as time is calculated
by men - but which was only yesterday in the Celestial Calendar of Heaven - there was, in Paradise, a
most miserable, thoroughly unhappy, and utterly dejected cherub who was known throughout Heaven as THE
LITTLEST ANGEL.
He was exactly four weeks, six months, five days, seven hours and
forty-two minutes of age when he presented himself to the venerable Gate-Keeper and waited for
admittance to the glorious Kingdom of God.
Standing defiantly, with his short brown legs wide apart, the
Littlest Angel tried to pretend that he wasn’t at all impressed by such Unearthly Splendor, and that he wasn’t at
all afraid. But his lower lip trembled, and a tear disgraced him by making a new furrow down his already
tear-streaked face - coming to a precipitous halt at the very tip end of his small freckled nose.
But that wasn’t all. While the kindly Gate-Keeper was entering the
name in his great Book, the Littlest Angel, having left home as usual without a handkerchief,
endeavored to hide the tell-tale evidence by sniffling. A most unangelic sound which so unnerved the good
Gate-Keeper that he did something he had never done before in all Eternity. He blotted the page!
From that moment on, the heavenly peace was never quite the same,
and the Littlest Angel soon became the despair of all the Heavenly Host. His shrill, ear-splitting
whistle resounded at all hours through the Golden Streets. It startled the Patriarch Prophets and disturbed
their meditations. Yes, and on top of that, he inevitably and vociferously sang off-key at the singing
practice of the Heavenly Choir, spoiling its ethereal effect.
And, being so small that it seemed to take him just twice as long
as anyone else to get to the nightly prayers, the Littlest Angel always arrived late, and always
knocked everyone’s wings askew as he darted into his place.
Although these flaws in behavior might have been overlooked, the
general appearance of the Littlest Angel was even more disreputable than his deportment. It was first
whispered among the Seraphim and Cherubim, and then said aloud among the Angels and Archangels,
that he didn’t even look like an angel!
And they were all quite correct. He didn’t. His halo was
permanently tarnished where he had held on to it with one hot little chubby hand when he ran, and he was always
running. Furthermore, even when he stood very still, it never behaved like a halo should. It was always
slipping down over his right eye. Or over his left eye.
Or else, just for pure meanness, slipping off the back of his head
and rolling away down some Golden Street just so he’d have to chase after it.
Yes, and it must be here recorded that his wings were neither
useful nor ornamental. All Paradise held its breath when the Littlest Angel perched himself like a fledgling
sparrow on the very edge of a gilded cloud and prepared to take off. He would teeter this way - and that way
- but, after much coaxing and a few false starts, he would shut both of his eyes, hold his freckled nose,
count up to three hundred and three, and then
hurl himself s-l-o-w-l-y into space! However, owing to the
regrettable fact that he always forgot to move his wings, the Littlest Angel always fell head over halo!
It was also reported, and never denied, that whenever he was
nervous, which was most of the time, he bit his wing-tips!
Now, anyone can easily understand why the Littlest Angel would,
soon or later, have to be disciplined. And, so, on an Eternal Day of an Eternal Month in the Year
Eternal, he was directed to present his small self before an Angel of the Peace.
The Littlest Angel combed his hair, dusted his wings and scrambled
into an almost clean robe, and then, with a heavy heart, trudged his way to the place of judgment. He
tried to postpone the dreaded ordeal by loitering along the Street of The Guardian Angels, pausing a few
timeless moments to minutely pursue the long list of new arrivals, although all Heaven knew he couldn’t
read a word. And he idled more than several immortal moments to carefully examine a display of aureate
harps, although everyone in the Celestial City knew he couldn’t tell a crochet from a semiquaver.
But at length and at last he slowly approached a doorway which was surmounted by a pair of golden
scales, signifying that Heavenly Justice was dispensed within. To the Littlest Angel’s great surprise, he
heard a merry voice, singing!
The Littlest Angel removed his halo and breathed upon it heavily,
then polished it upon his robe, a procedure which added nothing to the garment’s already untidy
appearance, and then tip - toed in!
The Singer, who was known as the Understanding Angel, looked down
at the small culprit, and the Littlest Angel instantly tried to make himself invisible by the ingenious
process of withdrawing his head into the collar of his robe, very much like a snapping turtle.
At that, the Singer laughed, a jolly. heartwarming sound, and
said, “Oh! So you’re the one who’s been making Heaven so unheavenly! Come here, Cherub, and tell me all
about it!” The Littlest Angel ventured a furtive look from beneath his robe. First one eye.
And then the other eye.
Suddenly, almost before he knew it, he was perched on the lap of
the understanding Angel, and was explaining how very difficult it was for a boy who suddenly finds
himself transformed into an angel. Yes, and no matter what the archangels said, he’d only swung once.
Well, twice. Oh, all right, then, he’d swung three times on the Golden Gates.
But that was just for something to do!
That was the whole trouble. There wasn’t anything for a small
angel to do. And he was very homesick. Oh, not that Paradise wasn’t beautiful! But the Earth was beautiful,
to! Wasn’t it created by God, Himself? Why, there were trees to climb, and brooks to fish, and caves to
play at pirate chief, the swimming holes, and sun, and rain, and dark, and dawn, and thick brown dust, so
soft and warm beneath your feet!
The Understanding Angel smiled, and in his eyes was a long
forgotten memory of another small boy in a long ago.
Then he asked the Littlest Angel what would make him most happy in
Paradise. The Cherub thought for a moment, and whispered in his ear.
“There’s a box. I left it under my bed back home. If only I could
have that?”
The Understanding Angel nodded his head, “You shall have it,” he
promised. And a fleet-winged Heavenly messenger was instantly dispatched to bring the box to
Paradise.
And then, in all those timeless days that followed, everyone
wondered at the great change in the Littlest Angel, for, among all the cherubs in God’s Kingdom, he was the
most happy. His conduct was above the slightest reproach. His appearance was all that the most
fastidious could wish for.
And on excursions to Elysian Fields, it could be said, and truly
said, that he flew like an angel!
Then it came to pass that Jesus, the Son of God, was to be born of
Mary, of Bethlehem, of Judea. And as the glorious tidings spread through Paradise, all the angels
rejoiced and their voices were lifted to herald the miracle of Miracles, the coming of the Christ Child.
The Angels and Archangels, the Seraphim and Cherubim, the
Gate-Keeper, the Wingmaker, yes, and even the Halosmith put aside their usual tasks to prepare their gifts
for the Blessed Infant. All but the Littlest Angel. He sat himself down on the top-most step of the Golden
Stairs and anxiously waited for inspiration. What could he give that would be most acceptable to the Son of
God? At one time he dreamed of composing a lyric hymn of adoration. But the Littlest Angel was
woefully wanting in musical talent.
Then he grew tremendously excited over writing a prayer! A prayer
that would live forever in the hearts of men, because it would be the first prayer ever to be heard by the
Christ Child. But the Littlest Angel was lamentably lacking in literate skill. “What, oh what, could a
small angel give that would please the Holy Infant?
The time of the Miracle was very close at hand when the Littlest
Angel at last decided on his gift. Then, on that Day of Days, he proudly brought it from its hiding place behind
a cloud, and humbly, with downcast eyes, placed it before the Throne of God. It was only a small,
rough, unsightly box, but inside were all those wonderful things that even a Child of God would treasure!
A small, rough, unsightly box, lying among all those other
glorious gifts from all the angels of paradise! Gifts of such rare and radiant splendor and breathless beauty that
heaven and all the universe were lighted by the mere reflection of their glory! And when the Littlest Angel
saw this, he suddenly knew that his gift to God’s child was irreverent, and he devoutly wished he might
reclaim his shabby gift. It was ugly. It was worthless. If only he could hide it away from the sight of God
before it was even noticed!
But it was too late! The hand of God moved slowly over all that
bright array of shining gifts... then paused... then dropped... then came to rest on the lowly gift of
the Littlest Angel!
The Littlest Angel trembled as the box was opened, and there,
before the eyes of God and all his heavenly host, was what he offered to the Christ child.
And what was his gift to the blessed infant? Well, there was a
butterfly with golden wings, captured one bright, summer day on the hills above Jerusalem, and a sky-blue
egg from a bird’s nest in the olive tree that stood to shade his mother’s kitchen door. Yes, and two white
stones, found on a muddy river bank, where he and his friends had played like small, brown beavers,
and, at the bottom of the box, a limp, toothmarked leather strap, once worn as a collar by his mongrel dog, who had
died as he had lived, in absolute love and infinite devotion.
The Littlest Angel wept hot, bitter tears, for now he knew that
instead of honoring the Son of God, he had been most blasphemous.
Why had he ever thought that the box was so wonderful!
Why had he dreamed that such utterly useless things would be loved
by the blessed infant!
In frantic terror, he turned to run and hide from the divine wrath
of the heavenly Father, but he stumbled and fell and, with a horrified wail and a clatter of halo, rolled
in a ball of misery to the very foot of the heavenly throne!
There was an ominous and dreadful silence in the celestial city, a
silence complete and undisturbed for the heartbroken sobbing of the Littlest Angel.
Then, suddenly, the voice of God, like divine music, rose and
swelled throughout paradise!
And the voice of God spoke, saying: Of all the gifts of all the
angels, I find that this small box pleases me the most. Its contents are of the earth and of men, and my Son is
born to be king of both. These are the things my Son, too, will know and love and cherish and then,
regretfully, will leave behind him when his task is done. I accept this gift in the name of the child, Jesus,
born of Mary this night in Bethlehem. There was a breathless pause, and then the rough, unsightly box of
the Littlest Angel began to glow with a bright, unearthly light, then the light became a lustrous flame,
and the flame became a radiant brilliance that blinded the eyes of all the angels!
None but the Littlest Angel saw it rise from its place before the
throne of God. And he, and only he, watched it arch away from heaven and shed its clear, white,
beckoning light over a stable where a child was born.
There it shone on that night of miracles, and its light was
reflected down the centuries deep in the heart of all mankind. Yet, earthly eyes, blinded, too, by its splendor,
could never know that the lowly gift of the Littlest Angel was what all men would call forever, “The shining
star of Bethlehem!”
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