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David O. McKay, age 17. Courtesy of lds.org. |
On May 29, 1899, just three months before the end of his mission in Glasgow, Elder David O. McKay felt "an excellent spirit of love and unity" at a missionary meeting. He wrote in his diary that "a peaceful heavenly influence pervaded the room." Another missionary, Elder Woolfenden, said: "Brethren, there are angels in this room! I see two there by Brother Young. One is his guardian angel. The other is a guardian angel, too; but I don't know whose it is." Elder McKay wrote in his diary that "everyone present, impressed with the spirit of the occasion and sensing the divine influence, could testify to the truth of his remarks." President James McMurrin recorded words he was inspired to say to Elder McKay: "Yes, there are angels in this room, and let me say to you, Brother David, Satan has desired you that he may sift you as wheat, but God is mindful of you. If you keep the faith you will yet sit in the leading councils of the Church" (James McMurrin diary, May 29, 1899). Seven years later, that prophecy was fulfilled when David O. McKay was called to be an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This experience reaffirms the reality of God, of angels, of the adversary, and of prophecy.
Summarized from Gregory A. Prince and Wm. Robert Wright, David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 2005), 33-34.
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