Hosts of Hell.
            Excerpts from the "Life of Heber C. Kimball."
            Mission in England, Pages 129 – 132.
            "... Having now no public place to preach in, we began to preach at night in   private houses, which were opened in every direction, when numbers came to hear   and believed the Gospel." 
            Thus was Satan unsuccessful in stopping the spread of the work. The smoking   flax was bursting into flame, and all his efforts could not quench it. Chapels   and churches he might close, for of them he held the keys, but the hearts of the   humble and pure were in God’s keeping, and to these sacred temples His servants   had ready access. 
            Then came the stroke climacteric; the dernier ressort of satanic   hostility. 
            "Saturday evening," says Heber C. Kimball, "it was agreed that I should go   forward and baptize, the next morning, in the river Ribble, which runs through   Preston. 
            "By this time the adversary of souls began to rage, and he felt determined to   destroy us before we had fully established the kingdom of God in that land   (England), and the next morning I witnessed a scene of satanic power and   influence which I shall never forget. 
            "Sunday, July 30th 1837, about daybreak, Elder Isaac Russell (who   had been appointed to preach on the obelisk in Preston Square, that day) who   boarded with Elder Willard Richards in Wilfred Street, came up to the third   story, where Elder Orson Hyde and myself were sleeping, and called out, ‘Brother   Kimball, I want you should get up and pray for me that I may be delivered from   the evil spirits that are tormenting me to such a degree that I feel I cannot   live long, unless I obtain relief.’ 
            "I had been sleeping on the back of the bed. I immediately arose, slipped off   at the foot of the bed, and passed around to where he was. Elder Hyde threw his   feet out, and sat up in the bed, and we laid hands on him, I being mouth, and   prayed that the Lord would have mercy on him, and rebuked the devil. 
            "While thus engaged, I was struck with great force by some invisible power,   and fell senseless on the floor. The first thing I recollected was being   supported by Elders Hyde and Richards, who were praying for me; Elder Richards   having followed Russell up to my room. Elder Hyde and Richards then assisted me   to get on the bed, but my agony was so great I could not endure it, and I arose,   bowed my knees and prayed. I then arose and sat up on the bed, when a vision was   opened to our minds, and we could distinctly see the evil spirits, who foamed   and gnashed their teeth at us. We gazed upon them about an hour and a half (by   Willard’s watch). We were not looking towards the window, but towards the wall.   Space appeared before us, and we saw the devils coming in legions, with their   leaders, who came within a few feet of us. They came towards us like armies   rushing to battle. They appeared to be men of full stature, possessing every   form and feature of men in the flesh, who were angry and desperate; and I shall   never forget the vindictive malignity depicted on their countenances as they   looked me in the eye; and any attempt to paint the scene which then presented   itself, or portray their malice and enmity, would be vain. I perspired   exceedingly, my clothes becoming as wet as if I had been taken out of the river.   I felt excessive pain, and was in the greatest distress for some time. I cannot   even look back on the scene without feelings of horror; yet by it I learned the   power of the adversary, his enmity against the servants of God, and got some   understanding of the invisible world. We distinctly heard those spirits talk and   express their wrath and hellish designs against us. However, the Lord delivered   us from them, and blessed us exceedingly that day." 
            Elder Hyde’s supplemental description of that fearful scene is as follows,   taken from a letter addressed to President Kimball: 
            "Every circumstance that occurred at that scene of devils is just as fresh in   my recollection at this moment as it was at the moment of it’s occurrence, and   will ever remain so. After you were overcome by them and had fallen, their awful   rush upon me with knives, threats imprecations and hellish grins amply convinced   me that they were no friends of mine. While you were apparently senseless and   lifeless on the floor and upon the bed (after we had laid you there), I stood   between you and the devils and fought them and contended with them face to face,   until they began to diminish in number and to retreat from the room. The last   imp that left, turned round to me as he was going out and said, as if to   apologize, and appease my determined opposition to them, ‘I never said anything   against you!’ I replied to him thus: ‘It matters not to me whether you have or   have not; you are a liar from the beginning! In the name of Jesus Christ,   depart!’ He immediately left, and the room was clear. That closed the scene of   devils for that time." 
            Years later, narrating the experience of that awful morning to the Prophet   Joseph, Heber asked him what it all meant, and whether there was anything wrong   with him that he should have such a manifestation. 
            "No, Brother Heber," he replied, "at that time you were nigh unto the Lord;   there was only a veil between you and Him, but you could not see Him. When I   heard of it, it gave me great joy, for I then knew that the work of God had   taken root in that land. It was this that caused the devil to make a struggle to   kill you." 
            Joseph then related some of his own experiences, in many contests he had had   with the evil one, and said: "The nearer a person approaches the Lord, a greater   power will be manifested by the adversary to prevent the accomplishment of His   purposes." 
            An answer this, for the unbelieving and sophistical, who argue, with the   shallow reasoning of Job’s comforters, that they have sinned most who suffer   most, and are ever ready to ascribe spiritual manifestations, good or evil, to   madness, drunkenness or imbecility. It is needful, we are told, to experience   opposites, to be enabled to choose intelligently between them; and to those who   have this experience, and who "take the Holy Spirit for their guide," the way to   judge is as plain "as the daylight from the dark night." 
            "Tis Contrast sways unceasing sceptre 
            O’er vast Appreciation’s realm; 
            E’en Gods, through sacrifice descending, 
            Triumphant rise to overwhelm." 
              
            So it was with Apostles and Elders in Preston (England), after their   terrible encounter with the powers of evil, at Sunday day-break, July 30, 1837.   The Spirit of the Lord, with peace and joy that "passeth understanding," dawned   with the Sabbath sun upon their souls. They had tasted of the bitter, and would   thenceforth more fully know the sweet; emcompassed about by "the horror of   darkness," they hailed with ecstasy till then unknown, the glory of the golden   morn.
              
            
              		 |