Journal of Discourses Volume 15
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15
Journal of Discourses,
Volume 15
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, April 28th, 1872
Brigham Young, April 28th, 1872
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, April 28th, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE LORD'S SUPPER--PROGRESSION--CO-OPERATION--INDEPENDENCE.
1
I am very happy for the privilege of meeting with the Latter-day
Saints, and I have reason to be thankful that I am able to speak
a little to them. It brings many things to our reflections and
causes many thoughts to arise. When we look over the human family
what a variety we see and especially upon the subject of
religion. We take Christianity, for instance, and as nations, as
people, we believe in and on the Lord Jesus Christ. Most of
Christian professors believe in the ordinances, or some portions
of the ordinances of the house of God. Most of Christians believe
in the breaking of bread, in blessing it and partaking of it in
remembrance of the broken body of our Savior; also in taking the
cup, consecrating it and then partaking of it, in remembrance of
his blood that was shed for the sins of the world. And then take
up the hundreds of different denominations and what a motley mass
we present in our faith, feelings, sympathies, judgment, passions
and conduct; man against man, priest against priest, people
against people. Now let the Christian denominations come here:
"Yes, the Latter-day Saints believe in taking the Sacrament, it
is true, but what a pity," say they. "They profess to believe on
the Lord Jesus Christ. Oh dear! I wish they did! Yes, they seem
to manifest great confidence in the atonement, in the ordinances
and commandments. I wish they were a better people! What a pity
it is that they are such an outlawed, sinful race of beings as
they are! What a pity!!" "How we Christians do pity the
Latter-day Saints." Then again, how we Latter-day Saints do pity
the Christians! What a spectacle! And see us, as Christians,
warring with each other! What for? For our pure faith, for our
holy desires, for our great charity to each other, for the love
of Christ, for the salvation of the souls of the children of men.
4
Now is not this a spectacle to present to angels? Why if the Lord
Almighty was not beyond the conception of humanity in charity and
love, in mercy and longsuffering, in patience and kindness to his
creatures, where would we have been ere this? We would have been
weltering in his wrath, we would have been drinking his hot
displeasure. But he is more merciful than we are. I have thought
a great many times I was very thankful I was not the Lord
Almighty. I should be consuming my enemies. How I should contend
against those who hate me. I am glad I am not the Lord. And to
see the Latter-day Saints here following the example of the
Savior when he took his disciples into an upper room, and bade
some of them go and prepare to partake supper with him the last
time before his crucifixion. He took the bread and blessed and
brake. "Take and eat ye all of this, for this is my body in the
New Testament." He took the cup and blessed it; "Drink ye all of
this, for this is my blood in the New Testament." Here we are
doing the same to-day. What more? Do this until I come, for I
will neither eat nor drink any more with you in this capacity
until I drink anew with you in my father's kingdom on this earth.
Will he do it? Certainly he will. "Do this in remembrance of me
until I come." We are doing this to-day. Do not other Christians
do the same? They do. How do we Latter-day Saints feel towards
them? Were we to yield to the carnal passions of the natural man
and we had the power of the Almighty we would spew our enemies
out of our mouths, yes, we would hiss them from the face of human
society for their evils, their malice, for the revenge and wrath
they have towards us. But we are not the Almighty. I am glad of
it. I am happy in the reflection that I have not the power, and I
hope and pray I may never possess it until I can use it like a
God, until I can wield it as our Father in heaven wields it, with
all that eternity of majesty, glory, charity, with his judgment,
discretion, and with every faculty of compassion. I am happy in
the reflection that I do not possess the power. I am glad you
elders do not, I am really glad you do not. Will he ever grant
power to his Saints on the earth? Yes, they will take the
kingdom, and possess it for ever and ever; but in the capacity
they are now, in the condition that they now present themselves
before God, before the world and before each other? Never, never!
until we are sanctified, until we are filled with the wisdom of
God, with the knowledge of God, will he bequeath the power that
he has in reserve for his Saints; never will the Saints possess
it until they are prepared to wield it with all that judgment,
discretion, wisdom and forbearance that the Lord Almighty wields
in his own capacity, and uses at his pleasure? How do you feel
about it, brethren? Do not you wish sometimes you had power to
pinch their ears? Do not you wish you had power to stop them in
their mad career? Let the Lord Almighty do this. You think his
eye is upon the work of his hands? It is. His ears are open to
the prayers of his children, he will hear their prayers, he will
answer their desires; and when we as a people possess the
abundance of that patience, that longsuffering and forbearance
that we need, to possess the privileges and the power that the
Lord has in reserve for this people, we will receive to our
utmost satisfaction. We shall not have it now. The Lord says, "I
can not give it to you now." This church has now been traveling
over forty-two years--forty-two years the sixth day of this month
since it was organized with six members. What have we learned? We
assembled in Missouri, at the place of gathering on the borders
of the Lamanites, and there we bought our farms and built our
houses; but could we stay there? Were we prepared then to enter
into Zion, to build up the Zion of God and possess it? We were
not, we must suffer. "You Latter-day Saints, you, my children,"
says the Lord, "are not prepared to receive Zion." Why, we have
heard detailed by Elder Carrington the conduct of Elders at the
present time, dishonest in the matter of a few shillings or
dollars. Dishonest, covetous, selfish, grasping for that which is
not our own; borrowing and not paying; taking that which does not
belong to us; dishonest in our deal; oppressing each other. Are
we fit for Zion? I say nothing to the Christian world with regard
to this. Let them bite and devour as much as they please, it does
not belong to the Latter-day Saints at least. Could we stay in
Independence? No, we could not. What was the reason? Here are
some hearing me talk who were there--some who are aged, some here
who were then children and infants, some who were born there. But
we stayed a very few years--two or three--and we must get up and
march. Why did we leave? Why the enemy is upon us, our enemies
are gathered around us, our foes are besetting us on every hand.
There goes a house burned up; there is a man that is whipped;
there is a family turned out of doors! What is the matter with
all you Latter-day Saints? Can the world see? No. Can the Saints
see? No, or few of them can; and we can say that the light of the
Spirit upon the hearts and understandings of some Latter-day
Saints is like the peeping of the stars through the broken
shingles of the roof over our heads, when we are watching through
the silent watches of the night and behold the glimmer of a
twinkling star. "Oh yes, I see, I see, that we are not prepared
to receive the kingdom." Another one says, "Yes, I can see, we
were too selfish." Another one says, "I see, the wicked must be
prepared for their doom as well as the Saints for their
exaltation, and that the wicked are a rod in the hands of God to
chasten the Saints." Here are the two classes--the righteous and
the unrighteous, and the righteous must be prepared by suffering
and by rendering strict obedience to the commandments of heaven.
It seems to be absolutely necessary in the providence of Him who
created us, and who organized and fashioned all things according
to his wisdom, that man must descend below all things. It is
written of the Savior in the Bible that he descended below all
things that he might ascend above all. Is it not so with every
man? Certainly it is. It is fit then that we should descend below
all things and come up gradually, and learn a little now, and
again, receive "line upon line, precept upon precept, here a
little and there a little." But hark, do the people hear it? Do
the people understand it? Scarcely! scarcely! Do the Latter-day
Saints understand these principles, and are we prepared to
receive Zion? Are we prepared to receive the Kingdom and are we
prepared for the blessings that God has in reserve for his
children? Stop, think, consider, look around us! How is it? Are
not the sordid things of this life before our eyes, and have they
not thrown a mist before them so that we can not see? Are we not
of the earth, and still earthy? Certainly we are of the earth and
still earthy. What do we know of heavenly things? It is very true
we have the Bible; but when we come to our elders, men of limited
education and moderate reading, they are able to teach the whole
Christian world theology. Take them from the anvil, from the
plow, from the carpenter's bench, or from any occupation, if they
possess good common ability and the spirit of our holy religion
that God has revealed in these latter days, they understand more
of the Bible and the building up of the Kingdom of God than all
the world besides that are destitute of the priesthood of the Son
of God. And yet what do we know? Comparatively we have hardly
learned the first lesson.
4
Could our brethren stay in Jackson County, Missouri? No, no. Why?
They had no learned "a" concerning Zion; and we have been
traveling now forty-two years, and have we learned our a, b, c?
"Oh," say a good many, "I think we have." Have we learned our a b
ab? Have we got as far as b a k e r, baker? Have we got through
our first speller? Have we learned multiplication? Do we
understand anything with regard to the building up of the
kingdom? I will say, scarcely. Have we seen it as a people? How
long shall we travel, how long shall we live, how long shall God
wait for us to sanctify ourselves and become one in the Lord, in
our actions and in our ways for the building up of the kingdom of
God, that he can bless us? He defends us, it is very true, and
fights our battles. When we were driven from Missouri and had to
leave the State, I recollect very well, Gov. Boggs said, "You
must leave;" Gen. Clark said, "You must leave;" the mob said,
"You must leave," and we had to leave. And after we had signed
away our property, I'd see a widow send up her little boy to
brother Such-a-one, "Will you let me go to your timber land and
get a load of wood for my mother?" "Tell your mother that I have
got no more timber than I shall want, I do not think I can spare
her a load of wood." I recollect very well of telling the
Latter-day Saints, there and then, "I hope to God that we never
will have the privilege of stopping and making ourselves rich
while we grind the face of the poor; but let us be driven from
State to State until we can take what we have got and dispose of
it according to the dictation of the spirit of revelation from
the Lord. Said I, "You will not stay here;" but long faces would
come down, you know, with a gentle, mild scowl, "I can't spare
you a load of wood." Excuse me. When are the Latter-day Saints
going to be prepared to receive the kingdom? Are we now? Not at
all! We are prepared for some things, and we receive just as fast
as we prepare ourselves. Well, what can we do, what more can we
do? We can do just what we please to do. It is in our power to do
just what we please to do with regard to sanctifying ourselves
before the Lord, and preparing ourselves to build up his kingdom:
Have we not the liberty to build this Temple here? We have,
although earth and hell are opposed to it, and arrayed against
it. Have we not the privilege of preaching the Gospel to the
nations? We have. Have we not the privilege of uniting our faith
and our efforts for the benefit of the whole community? Yes, we
have.
5
Now come down, for example, to our present circumstances and
condition. Year after year, I labored with our merchants to unite
their efforts together to supply the wants of the people without
taking from them everything they had got; and when I assembled
these merchants some years before we entered into our present
co-operative institution in this mercantile trade, said I, "Will
you unite your efforts and your means, and start a business here
that we can put goods into the hands of the people that we will
not take their last sixpence? Have a calico dress at forty cents
a yard when it should be only eighteen, twenty or twenty-two, and
so on and so forth." After a long conference one of the gentlemen
present got up, walked the room back and forward, and finally
said, "President Young, if you will furnish the money we will do
as you say," as much as to say, "It is none of your business what
we do with the means that we have." I dropped the conversation
and said to myself. "Well then, gull the people, take what they
have got."
5
You recollect a man here in the time of the Buchanan war by the
name of A. B. Miller. He was a merchant here for Russell and
Majors. Our people were not merchandising much then. Well, the
merchants met together and wanted to put up their goods to a
certain notch, a dollar a pound for sugar, for instance. This A.
B. Miller--a gambler, though there were a great many good things
about him, he just turned in and damned them. Says he,
"Gentlemen, to turn in and cut the throats of these 'Mormons,'
and take what they have got, we might do, but for being so damned
mean as to ask a dollar a pound for sugar, I will not do it."
5
Now then, is this co-operative institution one step towards
bringing the people to a union? Yes, but it is a very small one,
and there is danger of it growing into a condition that will
cease to be one step in the right direction. Let men say, "Here
is what God has given me, do what you please with it," and we
shall be in the path of progress. But how is it now? "Brother,
have you paid any tithing? You have made fifty thousand, ten
thousand, a hundred thousand, one thousand or five hundred
dollars as the case may be, have you paid any tithing?" "Well, no
I have not yet, but I think perhaps, I will by and by;" and this
is said with stammering tongue, faltering voice, and covetous
heart. Who gave you your money and possessions? Who owns this
earth? Does the Devil? No, he does not, he pretended to own it
when the Savior was here, and promised it all to him if he would
fall down and worship him; but he did not own a foot of land, he
only had possession of it. He was an intruder, and is still: this
earth belongs to him that framed and organized it, and it is
expressly for his glory and the possession of those who love and
serve him and keep his commandments; but the enemy has possession
of it.
5
Now then, a few other items, brethren and sisters. Can you do
anything for the poor? "Well I do not know, but I can give you
fifty cents to gather the poor." "Brother, can you pay that debt?
You recollect you borrowed some money of a widow woman in
England. Do you recollect you borrowed a little money of such a
brother? Can you pay that?" "Well yes, I am going to." You heard
what Brother Carrington said about it, what fellowship does the
Lord Almighty have for such men? I think not the least. What
fellowship do angels have for such men? I should think not much.
What fellowship do I have for them? Not one particle. What ought
to be done with them? I will answer the question--they ought to
be disfellowshipped by the Saints: they are not fellowshipped in
the heavens, and they ought not to be here.
6
"Well, now then, Brother Brigham, what are you at, what do you
want?" I want you to do just that which will displease the
enemies of the kingdom of God, and that which will please the
Lord Almighty and the heavenly host to perfection. What is that?
Do as you are counseled to do by the spirit of revelation from
the Lord. What is the cry against us? "Brigham Young has too much
influence! All the people hearken to Brigham Young! All these
poor deluded Latter-day Saints take his counsel!" I wish it was
so. If this were the fact you would see Zion prosper upon the
hills and upon the plains, in the valleys and in the kanyons, and
upon the mountains. Go to with your might, seek unto the Lord
your God until you have the revelations of the Lord Jesus christ
upon you, until your minds are open, and the visions of heaven
are plain to you. Then follow the dictations of the spirit, and
watch Brother Brigham, and see if he counsels you wrong. I hope
to see the time when I can say to the Latter-day Saints, if I
preside over them, go and do this or that, and not ask a sixpence
of this man or a dollar from that, or a hundred dollars from
another. "Here is what I have, it is the Lord's. He has given me
all that I possess, it is only committed to my charge to see what
I will do with it. The heavens are his, the earth is his; the
gold and silver are his, the wheat and fine flour are his, the
wine and the oil are his; the cattle upon a thousand hills are
his. I am his, I am his servants, let the Lord say what he wants.
Here I am, with all thou hast given me." How displeasing this is
to the devil is it not? I can not help it, this is the true track
and path for the Latter-day Saints to walk in. Walk up, O ye
Latter-day Saints, and wake up! Come to the Lord, forsake your
covetousness, your back-slidings, forsake the spirit of the
world, and return to the Lord with full purpose of heart until
you get the spirit of Christ within you, that you, like others,
can cry, "Abba Father, the Lord he is God and I am his servant."
6
Do you think it would be difficult then for us to accomplish
anything we undertook? No. Very true the enemy, this potent foe
that we have to contend with, we know but little about him, very
little; but he is watching every avenue of the heart, rapping at
every door and every window, and if there is a crevice between
the clapboards, through the roof, or the brick or adobie wall, he
throws a dart into the feelings of each and every individual.
"Take care, think for yourselves, judge for yourselves; do not be
led astray, do not you wander off after these deluded people, and
their delusion. Be careful, there is danger in believing in the
Lord, there is danger in being a Saint; there is great danger in
you yielding your judgment in another man." Oh, what a pity!
Where do you get your judgment? Where did it come from? What is
your judgment? I tell you that the judgment of the world now is
pretty much for all to do just as they please if they possibly
can, to the injury of their neighbors, for their own
aggrandizement.
7
Can I not use my judgment in doing well just as much as in doing
evil? Am I not just as independent in performing a deed of
charity as a deed of cruelty? I contend that I am, what do you
say? Have I not got my liberty just as much, and exercise it just
as freely, in feeding the poor and clothing the naked as I have
in turning them out of doors, or in lifting myself up against God
and his anointed? Has a man got to apostatize from this kingdom,
from the faith of Christ, to be independent? Am I not as
independent in believing in the Lord Jesus Christ as I am in
denying him? Am I not as independent in believing the Gospel as I
am in believing in the whisperings and mutterings of these
spirits that are floating through the air, rapping at everybody's
door, sometimes tearing the clothes off their beds, rapping,
thundering and telling this, that and the other? You hearken to
that still small voice that whispers eternal truth, that opens
the visions of eternity to you that you can discern, understand
and follow, and the foul spirits that throng the air, and that
fill our houses if we let them in, will not have power over you.
7
Be just as independent as a God to do good. Love mercy, eschew
evil, be a savior to yourselves and to your families, and to your
fellow beings just as much as you possibly can, and go on with
your independence and do not yield yourselves servants to obey an
evil principle or an evil being.
7
God bless you. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Wilford Woodruff, April 6, 1872
Wilford Woodruff, April 6, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER WILFORD WOODRUFF,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, April 6, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
HIS TESTIMONY--THE FULFILLING OF PROPHECY--ADVICE TO MOTHERS.
8
Through the mercy and loving kindness of our Father in the
heavens we are again permitted to meet in a general conference of
the Church of Jesus christ of Latter-day Saints. Forty-two years
ago this day this church was organized with six members, by a
prophet of the living God, raised up in these last days by the
administration of angels from God, and ordained unto all the keys
and powers of the Melchizedek priesthood and apostleship, and of
the kingdom of God on the earth. According to the best knowledge
we have, 1842 years ago to-day, the Lord Jesus was crucified on
Mount Calvary for the sins of the world. The 6th day of April is
a very important day in many respects. It has certainly been very
interesting to the Latter-day Saints to watch the history and
progress of this Church and kingdom during the last forty-two
years. This is one of the most important generations that men, or
God, or angels have ever seen on the earth: it is a dispensation
and generation when the whole flood of prophecy and revelation
and vision given through inspired men for the last six thousand
years is to have its fulfillment, and especially in relation to
the establishment of the great kingdom and Zion of God on the
earth. Joseph Smith was one of the greatest prophets God ever
raised up on the earth, and the Lord has had his eye upon him
from the foundation of the world. Any man who has ever read the
book of Isaiah, which we frequently have quoted to us, can see
that he, with other prophets, had his eye upon the latter-day
Zion of God. He says in one place, "Sing O heavens, rejoice O
earth, break forth into singing, O ye mountains, for the Lord
hath comforted his people, he will have mercy upon his afflicted.
But Zion said: The Lord hath forsaken me, and my Lord hath
forgotten me," "Ah," says the Lord, "Can a woman forget her
sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of
her womb? Yea, they may forget, yet will not I forget thee.
Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands; thy walls
are continually before me."
8
The Lord never created this world at random; he has never done
any of his work at random. The earth was created for certain
purposes; and one of these purposes was its final redemption, and
the establishment of his government and kingdom upon it in the
latter days, to prepare it for the reign of the Lord Jesus
Christ, whose right it is to reign. That set time has come, that
dispensation is before us, we are living in the midst of it. It
is before the Latter-day Saints, it is before the world; whether
or not the people have more faith in the promises of God now than
they had in the days of Noah makes no difference, the unbelief of
men will not make the truth of God without effect. The great and
mighty events that the Lord Almighty has decreed from before the
foundation of the world, to be performed in the latter days are
resting upon us, and they will follow each other in quick
succession, whether men believe or not, for no prophecy of
Scripture is of any private interpretation, but holy men of God
spake as they were moved upon by the Holy Ghost, and what they
said will come to pass; though the heaven and the earth pass away
not one jot or title of the word of the Lord will go unfulfilled.
8
Some of us have lived in and been intimately acquainted with this
church for the last forty years, a very few more than that, and
some less; but where is the Latter-day Saint or any other person
who has ever seen this church or kingdom go backward? No matter
what position we were in, whether exterminated by the order of
Governor Boggs of Missouri, or whether we lay, sick and
afflicted, on the muddy banks of the Missouri river; whether it
was Zion's Camp going up for her redemption; whether it was the
pioneers coming to these mountains, making the roads, building
the bridges, killing the snakes and opening the way for the
gathering of the people, no matter what our circumstances may
have been, this kingdom has been onward and upward all the day
long until the present hour. Will it ever go backward? No, it
will not. This Zion of the Lord, in all its beauty, power and
glory is engraven upon the hands of Almighty God, and it is
before his face continually; his decrees are set and no man can
turn them aside.
9
There never was a dispensation on the earth when prophets and
apostles, the inspiration, revelation and power of God, the holy
priesthood and the keys of the kingdom were needed more than they
are in this generation. There never has been a dispensation when
the friends of God and righteousness among the children of men
needed more faith in the promises and prophecies than they do
to-day; and there certainly never has been a generation of people
on the earth that has had a greater work to perform than the
inhabitants of the earth in the later days. That is one reason
why this church and kingdom has progressed from its commencement
until to-day, in the midst of all the opposition, oppression and
warfare which have been waged against it by men inspired by the
evil one. If this had not been the dispensation of the fulness of
times--the dispensation in which God has declared that he will
establish his kingdom on the earth never more to be thrown down,
the inhabitants of the earth would have been enabled to overcome
the kingdom and Zion of God in this as well as in any former
dispensation. But the set time has come to favor Zion, and the
Lord Almighty has decreed in the heavens that every weapon formed
against her shall be broken. And if we take the history of any
man, from the days Joseph Smith received the plates from the hill
Cumorah, and translated the Book of Mormon by the Urim and
Thummim, until to-day, whoever has raised his hand against this
work has felt the chastening hand of Almighty God upon him; and I
am at the defiance of the world to show me a president, governor,
judge, ruler, priest or anybody else on the earth who has taken a
stand against this kingdom who is an exception, and you may
search their whole history. We have outlived several generations
of our persecutors. Where are the men who tarred and feathered
Joseph Smith in Portage County, Ohio? Where are the men who drove
this people from Kirtland? Where are the men who drove the Church
and kingdom from Jackson County, Missouri? Where are the men who
undertook to kidnap the prophet while in Illinois? Where are they
who drove the Latter-day Saints from Illinois into these
mountains? Trace their whole history and see for yourselves. The
fact is many of them are in their graves, awaiting their final
judgment. And in the whole history of this people and their
remarkable preservation, the invisible hand of God is as plainly
to be seen as it has been in the history of the Jews from the
days of Christ until now; and it will continue until this scene
is wound up.
10
We are led by men who are filled with inspiration. Joseph Smith
was a man of God, through the loins of the ancient Joseph who,
through the wisdom which God gave him, redeemed his father's
house after having been sold by his brethren into Egypt. All the
blessings that old father Jacob pronounced upon Joseph and upon
the sons of Ephraim, his son and grandsons have rested upon them
until this day. Joseph Smith was through that lineage. In his
youth he was inspired of God, and was administered to by angels.
Under their guidance and counsel he laid the foundation of this
work, and lived long enough to receive all the keys necessary for
bearing off this dispensation. He lived long enough to have these
individuals administer unto him--John the Baptist, Peter, James
and John the Apostles, Elisba and Elijah, who held the keys of
turning the hearts of the fathers to the children and the hearts
of the children to the fathers; and Moroni, who held the keys of
the stick of Joseph in the hands of Ephraim to come forth in the
latter day, administered in person to Joseph Smith, and gave him
these records and instructed him in the things of God from time
to time until he was qualified and prepared to lay the foundation
of this work. The Prophet Joseph lived to see the Church
organized with apostles and prophets, patriarchs, pastors,
teachers, helps, governments, and all the gifts and graces of the
spirit of God; to give the Twelve Apostles their endowments and
to seal upon their heads all the authority and power that were
necessary to enable them to fulfil their missions. Why did the
Lord take him away? He laid down his life, and sealed his
testimony with his blood that it might be in force upon the heads
of this generation, and that he might be crowned with crowns of
glory, immortality and eternal life; that he might go to the
other side of the vail, and there organize the Church and kingdom
in this last dispensation. He and his two brothers were taken
away into the spirit world, and they are at work there, while
Brigham Young and the quorum of the Twelve were preserved on the
earth for a special purpose in the hands of God. These things are
true, and the hand of the Lord has been over Brigham Young,
although now he is under bonds and a prisoner, and has his
privileges curtailed for the world of God and the testimony of
Jesus. Yet in the midst of all this he is calm and composed
before the Lord, and has his mind open to the things of God. He
still lives in the midst of this people and will live as long as
the Lord wishes him to remain in the flesh to guide the affairs
of Zion.
10
I will say to the Later-day Saints that we have been more blessed
in this land than has any other dispensation or generation of
men. The Lord has been at work for the last three hundred years
preparing this land, with a government and constitution which
would guarantee equal rights and privileges to the inhabitants
thereof, in the midst of which he could establish his kingdom.
The kingdom is established, the work of god is manifest in the
earth, the Saints have come up here into the valleys of the
mountains, and they are erecting the house of God in the tops
thereof, for the nations to flow unto. A standard of truth has
been lifted up to the people, and from the commencement of this
work the Latter-day Saints have been fulfilling that flood of
revelation and prophecy which was given formerly concerning this
great work in the last days. I rejoice in this, and also because
we have every reason to expect a continuation of these blessings
unto Zion. We have always had a vail over us, we have had to walk
by faith all the day long until the present time: this is the
decree of God. When we were driven from Jackson County, Clay
County, Caldwell county, Kirtland, and finally from Nauvoo into
these mountains, we did not see and understand what lay before
us: there was a vail over our faces, in a measure. It has been
the same with the people of God in all ages. At that time we
could not see this tabernacle, and the five hundred miles of
villages, towns, cities, gardens, orchards, fields, or the desert
blossoming as the rose as we see them to-day. We came here and
found a barren desert: we were led hither by inspiration, by a
law-giver, by a man of God; the Lord was with him, he was with
the pioneers. If we had not come here we could not have fulfilled
the prophecies which the prophets have left on record in the
stick of Judah as well as in the stick of Ephraim--the Bible and
the Book of Mormon. We have done that, and we can look back
twenty-four years and see the change that has been effected since
our arrival; but who can see the change that will be effected in
the next twenty-four years? No man can see it unless the vision
of his mind is opened by the power of God. The Lord told Joseph
Smith to lay the foundation of this work; he told him that the
day had come when the harvest was ready, and to thrust in the
sickle and reap; and every man who would do so was called of God
and had this privilege.
11
The Lord has sent forth the Gospel, and it is offered to the
children of men as it was in ancient days; men are required to
have faith in Jesus Christ, repent of their sins, and to be
baptized for the remission of them, and the promise is that they
shall receive the Holy Ghost, which shall teach them the things
of God, bring things past to their remembrance, and show them
things to come.
11
What principle has sustained the Elders of Israel for the last
forty years in their travels? They have gone forth without purse
or scrip, preached without money or price; they have swam rivers,
waded swamps, and traveled hundreds of thousands of miles on foot
to bear record of this work to the nations of the earth. What has
sustained them? It has been this power of God, this Holy Ghost,
the spirit of inspiration from the God of Israel that has been
given to his friends on the earth in these latter days. The blood
of Israel has flowed in the veins of the children of men, mixed
among the Gentile nations, and when they have heard the sound of
the Gospel of Christ it has been like vivid lightning to them; it
has opened their understandings, enlarged their minds, and
enabled them to see the things of God. They have been born of the
Spirit, and then they could behold the kingdom of God; they have
been baptized in water and had hands laid upon them for the
reception of the Holy Ghost, and they have received that Holy
Ghost among every Gentile nation under heaven wherever the Gospel
has been permitted to be preached; and here they are to-day, from
all those nations, gathered in the valleys of the mountains. And
this is but the beginning; it is like a mustard seed, it is very
small; but the little one is to become a thousand, and the small
one a strong nation. The Lord will hasten it in his own time.
Zion shall be called a "City sought out." The Lord is watching
over us.
11
I wish to say to the Latter-day Saints, we must not forget our
position, nor the blessings that we hope for. All that we expect,
we have got to inquire of the Lord for. Some of our brethren, as
has been said here, have suffered a little through the spirit of
bigotry and persecution that is in the world. I wonder many times
there is not a great deal more of it. The Lord Almighty is going
to make a short work in the earth; lest no flesh should be saved
he will cut his work short in righteousness. The Lord is putting
his hook into the jaws of the nations. He holds Great Babylon in
his hands as well as Zion. He will control the children of men;
and, as the Lord God lives, if the Latter-day Saints do their
duty--live their religion and keep their covenants, Zion will
arise, put on her beautiful garments, be clothed with the glory
of God, have power in the earth, and the law will go forth from
Zion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. Then let our
prayers ascend into the ears of the Lord God of Sabbaoth, for he
will hear them, that the wisdom of the wise may perish and the
understanding of the prudent be hid. Our weapons are faith,
prayer, and confidence in God, for he is our friend if we have
any, and we are his if he has any on the face of the earth. The
Lord will work with us, and we should work with him; therefore,
brethren, let us live by faith, walk by faith, overcome by faith,
so that we may enjoy the Holy Spirit to guide and direct us. All
the institutions pertaining to the work of God in these latter
days are going to progress, Zion is bound to arise, and to arrive
at that position in our great future that he Prophets have seen
by prophecy and revelation.
12
I want to say a few words to the sisters, who have been referred
to this morning--the Female Relief Societies. Our mothers,
sisters, wives and daughters occupy a very important position in
this generation, far more so than they realize or understand. You
are raising up your sons and daughters as plants of renown in the
house of Israel in these latter-days. Upon the shoulders of you
mothers rests, in a great measure, the responsibility of
correctly developing the mental and moral powers of the rising
generation, whether in infancy, childhood, or still riper years.
Your husbands--the fathers of your children, are messengers to
the nations of the earth, or they are engaged in business, and
can not be at home to attend to the children. No mother in Israel
should let a day pass over her head without teaching her children
to pray. You should pray yourselves, and teach your children to
do the same, and you should bring them up in this way, that when
you have passed away and they take your places in bearing off the
great work of God, they may have principles instilled into their
minds that will sustain them in time and in eternity. I have
often said it is the mother who forms the mind of the child. Take
men anywhere, at sea, sinking with their ship, dying in battle,
lying down in death almost under any circumstances, and the last
thing they think of, the last word they say, is "mother." Such is
the influence of woman. Our children should not be neglected;
they should receive a proper education in both spiritual and
temporal things. That is the best legacy any parents can leave to
their children. We should teach them to pray, and instil into
their minds while young every correct principle. Ninety-nine out
of every hundred children who are taught by their parents the
principles of honesty and integrity, truth and virtue, will
observe them through life. Such principles will exalt any people
or nation who make them the rule of their conduct. Show me a
mother who prays, who has passed through the trials of life by
prayer, who has trusted in the Lord God of Israel in her trials
and difficulties, and her children will follow in the same path.
These things will not forsake them when they come to at in the
kingdom of God.
12
I want to say to our mothers in Israel, your children are
approaching a very important day and age of the world. In a few
more years their parents will pass away. We will go where our
brethren have gone--to the other side of the vail. Our children
will remain and will possess this kingdom when God's judgments
await the nations of the earth, when war, calamity, sword, fire,
famine, pestilence and earthquake will stalk abroad and distress
the people. Our children should be prepared to build up the
kingdom of God. Then qualify them in the days of childhood for
the great duties they will be called upon to perform; and that
God may enable us to do so is my prayer for Christ' sake. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / George
Albert Smith, April 7, 1872
George Albert Smith, April 7, 1872
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT GEORGE A. SMITH,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Morning, April 7, 1872.
(Report by David W. Evans.)
PERSECUTION--MISSIONARIES--EMIGRATION.
13
We are again assembled this morning to continue the duties and
services of our Conference, and I am requested by President Young
to state that he is in the enjoyment of comfortable health and in
excellent spirits. He regrets very much the circumstances which
render it inexpedient for him to meet with you this morning, and
hopes the time may soon come when he will again enjoy that
privilege, also the privilege of bearing testimony to the
glorious work of the last days, in the public congregation. He
desires and appreciates the prayers and faith of the Saints; he
thinks that it is quite proper that any man before he is
thoroughly qualified to rule shall learn to be ruled--that he
shall learn to obey before he learns to command. All these
lessons in their time and in their season are proper for us to
learn.
13
When we realize the malignity of the spirit of persecution which
is aimed at the Latter-day Saints in these valleys, we need not
wonder that we have to contend with vexatious lawsuits and with
illegal and unjustifiable prosecutions, for the influence of the
pulpit and the press when controlled by the spirit of lying is
very great for evil, but God is greater--his power is more
omnipotent; and although thousands of prophets, priests and wise
men in the earth have been compelled to lay down their lives for
the cause of Zion, and for the sake of the principles of the
gospel of peace, and in doing so they have acquired honors that
could not be attained in any other way; their reward is certain,
eternal and sure.
14
I wish to call the attention of the elders who have been in years
past, on missions, to one important item of duty. It is well
known that our emigration annually brings some thousands of
persons among whom our missionaries have labored and with whom
they are acquainted, and among whom are many who still look to
them for fatherly advice and encouragement, but many of the
elders who return immediately forget that they have been
missionaries. When they reach home they perhaps find their
affairs a little deranged, business having stopped in their
absence, money making or procuring the means of living having
gone rather behind hand, they drop right into a groove as it were
to catch up, and they forget their duties, and the people whom
they have been acquainted with and who have treated them with
kindness and generosity are also frequently forgotten and
neglected. The emigrants come into these valleys and fall perhaps
under influences that are wrong and wicked, for men inspired with
a spirit of hostility to the work of God will take more pains to
poison their minds than those who feel all right do to give them
correct information. I wish to say to all such elders and to all
the brethren, that when they get home their mission is not
consummated, and that when new comers arrive we should take pains
to look after their welfare, give them counsel and instruction,
aid and comfort, and realize that we are missionaries all our
lives, and that it is our duty to instruct such in the things of
the kingdom, to encourage them and set before them principles of
intelligence, such as will be for their benefit.
14
I wish further to say to the Elders and to the brethren who have
emigrated, that they should remember their friends they visited
before they came here, or when they were on missions in the old
world. Remember the poor family that went without their
provision, perhaps, to give you a feast, or the family that to
make you warm and comfortable gave up their beds to you,
themselves enduring cold, discomfort and inconvenience to do so;
or the family that opened their doors to shelter you from the
storm when their neighbors hooted and scouted them, as it were,
for entertaining a stranger. You missionaries in your experience
have all met with such families, and many of them are there yet
without the means to get here. Perhaps they have said to you,
"Will you help me when you get home?" and you may have given them
a look of encouragement, a half promise, or expressed a hope that
you might be able to do so. Have you forgotten it? Perhaps a
little effort on your part and on the part of your neighbors
might bring these families to this country and place them in a
position to acquire lots, farms, and homes of their own, redeem
them from thraldom and bondage worse than slavery, and place them
in a position of independence on their own soil, enjoy the fruits
of their own labors and help to build up and develop the rising,
spreading glory of Zion.
15
I have heard there is an Elder who, when on a mission borrowed
some money of a widow that had not means enough to get away, but
had a little she could spare until she could acquire enough to
bring her family here; and that Elder, peradventure, has
forgotten to pay it. I have heard there is such an Elder in Utah.
Shame on him if there is! Under such circumstances we should not
only pay punctually and faithfully what we owe, with good and
reasonable interest, but all of us European missionaries should
be prepared to do something handsome annually to help those from
the bondage and thraldom in which we found them, and where they
must remain until means are obtained to deliver them. I am
calling now for the donation to the Perpetual Emigration Fund. A
hundred thousand Latter-day Saints in Utah, and can we not help a
few thousand that yet remain in the old missions, and bring them
here? "Well," some may say, "they will apostatize if they come."
That is all right, they must have the privilege. I understand
that we have brought some men here with the Fund that have
apostatized, betrayed the Saints and done all in their power to
stain their garments in the blood of the prophets; but that is
not our fault, it is theirs. We should gather the Saints and they
themselves are responsible for the use they make of the blessings
which God bestows upon them, even if they come through our hands
and exertions. Look at the tens of thousands of families now in
Utah in comfortable circumstances with houses, farms, wagons,
cattle and horses of their own, many of them with carriages, and
these families taken by the contributions of the Latter-day
Saints from the most abject servitude and poverty from the bowels
of the earth, from within the walls of factories, where but for
this fund they must have remained for their lives; but now they
are in comparative independence and enjoying the blessings of
freemen.
15
After President Young returned from St. George for the purpose of
voluntarily placing himself in the custody of United States
Officers, as is well known, I received a letter from an eminent
gentleman in the State of Massachusetts, who said that the
prosecution against him could be nothing more nor less than a
put-up job, and that the people of the country understood it as
such; "and the fact is," said he, "Brigham Young has done more
for the benefit of large bodies of people than any other living
man on the earth." That is true. By the inspiration of Almighty
God through his servant Brigham Young, this Fund was organized,
and he has been the President of it, and through his energy and
enterprise and the aid of the Latter-day Saints--his friends--he
has gathered tens of thousands that could never have owned a rod
of ground or a house as long as they lived, but would have been
at the mercy of employers who looked upon them only as a portion
of their property, and the question with them has been how much
of this man's labor can I get for the smallest pittance; but
through the exertions and counsels of President Young and his
brethren they have been delivered from this bondage and placed in
comparative independence. I say God bless such a man,
(Congregation said Amen) and God bless every man and every woman
who will contribute to carry out this glorious purpose.
16
I am very anxious to wake up the Elders to labor at home, to keep
alive in the hearts of the Saints the spirit of truth. While all
those who so desire are free to apostatize, it should not be for
the want of proper information, care and instruction, or in
consequence of the neglect of the Elders to do their duty. I
exhort the Latter-day Saints to unite in carrying on the work of
gathering. A few years ago we thought that we would gather them
all. When we had raised what means we could, and had expended it,
we found the Elders were baptizing about as fast as we were
bringing the Saints away. That is all right. Let us get the old
and faithful Latter-day Saints away, and keep baptizing all that
desire to be baptized. In the Scandinavian Mission the number of
baptisms keep up, and some years a little more than keep up, with
the emigration. There are families from year to year that can be
brought away by a little assistance; they have part means, and
only need a little more to emigrate. I do think that the history
of the Perpetual Emigration Fund is a wonderful one. The
Latter-day Saints in Utah sent from here two hundred wagons one
year, three hundred another year, four hundred the next, and for
two years five hundred wagons each year, each wagon having four
yoke of oxen, or their equivalent in mules and horses, and bore
all the expenses consequent upon bringing people across the
Plains, bringing from one to four thousand persons a season. This
is certainly creditable, and it has been done through the
influence of Brigham Young and the united efforts of a
free-hearted and noble people. We have got a railroad now and do
not have to send the wagons; the business assumes another shape.
The emigration is brought here with less labor and in less time,
but with more outlay.
16
I have now laid before you my views on the emigration of the poor
Saints from abroad. Consider upon and think about them. Make your
calculations, and feel in your pockets and contribute to help on
the work, and carry with you to all the settlements of the Saints
a spirit that shall bring home to Zion the brethren and sisters
from abroad. In that way the work can continue. May God bless all
who aid in this glorious work is my prayer in the name of Jesus.
Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, April 28, 1872
Brigham Young, April 28, 1872
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Morning, April 28, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
HIS IMPRISONMENT--EMIGRATING THE POOR--THE USE OF
RICHES--TITHING.
16
A word to the Latter-day Saints. Good morning. (Congregation
responded, "Good morning.") How do you do? (Congregation replied,
"Very well.") How is your faith this morning? ("Strong in the
Lord," was the response.) How do you think I look after my long
confinement? (Congregation replied, "First rate.") I do not rise
expecting to preach a discourse or sermon, or to lengthen out
remarks. I spoke a few minutes yesterday in the school, but I
found that it exhausted me very soon. I will say a few words to
you. The Gospel of the Son of God is most precious. My faith is
not weakened in the Gospel in the least. I will answer a few of
the questions that probably many would like to ask of me. Many
would like to know how I have felt the past winter, and so much
of the spring as is now past. I have enjoyed myself exceedingly
well. I have been blessed with an opportunity to rest; and you
who are acquainted with me and my public speaking can discern at
once, if you listen closely to my voice, it is weak to what it
used to be, and I required rest. I feel well in body and better
in mind. I have no complaint to make, no fault to find, no
reflections to cast, for all that has been done has been directed
and overruled by the wisdom of Him who knows all things.
17
As to my treatment through the winter, it has been very
agreeable, very kind. My associate, my companion in tribulation,
I will say, has acted the gentleman as much as any man could. I
have not one word, one lisp or beat of the heart to complain of
him. He has been full of kindness, thoughtful, never intruding,
always ready to hearken and, I think, in the future, will be
perfectly willing to take the counsel of his prisoner. So much
for Captain Isaac Evans. I will say this to you, ladies and
gentlemen, you who profess to understand true etiquette, I have
not seen a gentleman in my acquaintance that possesses more of
the real spirit of gentility, caution and of true etiquette than
Captain Evans. He has passed the window where I have lodged
through the winter every morning to his breakfast and every
afternoon; he has walked in the street in front of my office and
on the opposite side, and he has never yet been seen gazing and
looking at my buildings, or to see who was at the window, or even
look at my window. He has never looked into the second room in my
office unless invited there--never. Can you say that for other
gentlemen? They are very scarce; there are very few of them.
17
I have no reflections to cast upon these courts. How much power,
ability or opportunity would I have to possess, do you think, if
all were combined, to disgrace them as they have disgraced
themselves? I have neither the power nor the ability,
consequently I have nothing to say with regard to their conduct.
It is before the world; it is before the Heavens continually. The
Lord has known the thoughts of the hearts of the children of men,
and he has overruled all for his glory, and for the benefit of
those who believe and obey the truth in Christ. I will say this:
when they started out with a writ for your humble servant, and I
had news of it before it was served, I told my brethren that all
their efforts would avail them nothing, and that they would end
in a grand fizzle. Do you think we have come to it? I think we
have.
18
Have you nothing to say, brother Brigham concerning the Supreme
Court of the United States? A few words. I am happy to learn that
there are yet men in our government who are too high-minded, too
pure in their thoughts and feelings to bow down to a sectarian
prejudice, and to hearken to the whinings and complaints of
prejudiced priests, or those who are wrapped up in the nutshell
of sectarianism; men of honor, nobility, judgment and discretion;
men who look at things as they are and judge according to the
nature thereof without any discrimination as to parties or
people. I am thankful that this fact does exist. Have they
decided in favor of the Latter-day Saints? Yes. Why? Because the
Latter-day Saints are on the track of truth; they are for law,
for right, for justice, for mercy, for judgment and equity,
consequently they are for God. Would I admire the conduct of a
jurist on the bench who would decide for a Latter-day Saint if he
were guilty? If he would justify a Latter-day Saint and condemn a
Methodist? No, I would despise him in my heart. I might look upon
him with pity, it is very true, and without malice, anger or
bitterness, and pity him in his ignorance; but if he was a man of
knowledge and understanding I would condemn him as quickly for
justifying a Latter-day Saint, or one called a Latter-day Saint,
or one called a Latter-day Saint, in evil, as I would a
Methodist. And a man who sits as President of the United States,
as a Governor of a State or Territory, or as a judge upon the
bench, or a member of a legislative assembly, who would reduce
himself to the feelings, and narrow contracted views of partyism,
is not fit for the place. As I said before a gentleman here, I
think it was last summer, who was stump-speeching through the
country and proclaiming his right to the Presidency "he that most
desires an office is the least fit for it." Perhaps I made a
mistake in that declaration, for though on general principles it
is true, it may not be true in every case. Some may desire an
office for the sake of the good work that they perform, seeing
that others have abused it. This is as much as I wish to say upon
these subjects.
18
As I shall probably desire to speak a little in the afternoon, I
shall soon bring my remarks to a close. I will say a few words
with regard to the Perpetual Emigration Fund. Perhaps you have
had a good deal said to you in the course of this Conference
concerning gathering the poor, but if you have I have not learned
it. I have not heard of any man coming forward and putting down
his name for a thousand or two thousand dollars. At the
commencement of the Conference I donated two thousand dollars for
the gathering of the poor, but I have not heard of anybody adding
another figure to mine or placing one under it. How is it? It is
very true we gather the Saints, and when they get here and gather
around them the comforts of life, and become the possessors of a
little wealth, the spirit of the world enters into a few of them
to that degree that it crowds out the Spirit of the Gospel. They
forget their God and their covenants, and turn to the beggarly
elements of the world, seek for its riches and finally leave the
faith. But we had better gather nine that are unworthy than to
neglect the tenth if he is worthy. If they come here, apostatize
and turn our enemies, they are in the hands of God, and what they
do will be to them everlasting life or everlasting condemnation.
For the good, for the wise, or for the froward and the ungodly,
it is our duty to do all we can. It is our duty to preach the
Gospel to the nations of the earth, to gather up the pure in
heart, and to lend a helping hand to the poor and needy; to
instruct, guide and direct them, and when they are gathered
together to teach them how to live, how to serve their God, how
to gather around them the comforts of life, and glorify their
Father in heaven in the enjoyment of the same.
19
When I cast my eyes upon the inhabitants of the earth and see the
weakness, inability, the shortsightedness, and I may say, the
height of folly in the hearts of the kings, rulers, and the
great, and those who should be wise and good an noble; when I see
them grovelling in the dust; longing, craving, desiring,
contending for the things of this life, I think, O foolish men,
to set your hearts on the things of this life! To-day they are
seeking after the honors and glories of the world, and by the
time the sun is hidden by the western mountains the breath is
gone out of their nostrils, they sink to their mother earth.
Where are their riches then? Gone for ever. As Job says, "Naked I
came into the world." Destitute and forlorn, they have to travel
a path that is untried and unknown to them, and wend their way
into the spirit world. They know not where they are going nor for
what. The designs of the Creator are hidden from their eyes;
darkness, ignorance, mourning and groaning take hold of them and
they pass into eternity. And this is the end of them concerning
this life as far as they know. A man or a woman who places the
wealth of this world and the things of time in the scales against
the things of God and the wisdom of eternity, has no eyes to see,
no ears to hear, no heart to understand. What are riches for? For
blessings, to do good. Then let us dispense that which the Lord
gives us to the best possible use for the building up of his
kingdom, for the promotion of the truth on the earth, that we may
see and enjoy the blessings of the Zion of God here upon this
earth. I look around among the world of mankind and see them
grabbing, scrambling, contending, and every one seeking to
aggrandize himself, and to accomplish his own individual
purposes, passing the community by, walking upon the heads of his
neighbors--all are seeking, planning, contriving in their wakeful
hours, and when asleep dreaming, "How can I get the advantage of
my neighbor? How can I spoil him, that I may ascend the ladder of
fame?" That is entirely a mistaken idea. You see that nobleman
seeking the benefit of all around him, trying to bring, we will
say, his servants, if you please, his tenants, to his knowledge,
to like blessings that he enjoys, to dispense his wisdom and
talents among them and to make them equal with himself. As they
ascend and increase, so does he, and he is in the advance. All
eyes are upon that king or that nobleman, and the feelings of
those around him are: "God bless him! How I love him! How I
delight in him! He seeks to bless and to fill me with joy, to
crown my labors with success, to give me comfort, that I may
enjoy the world as well as himself." But the man who seeks honor
and glory at the expense of his fellow-men is not worthy of the
society of the intelligent.
19
Now, a few words to my friends here--my colleagues the lawyers,
and others. I gave a little counsel here, I think it is a year
ago this last sixth of April, for the people of this Territory
and through these mountains not to go to law, but to arbitrate
their cases. I will ask if they do not think they would have
saved a good deal of money in their pockets if they had taken
this counsel? And to see our streets lined with lawyers as they
are! Why they are as thick as grogshop used to be in California.
What is the business of a lawyer? It is the case with too many to
keep what they have got, and to gather around them wealth, to
heap it up, but to do as little as possible for it; to give a
little counsel here, and a little counsel there. What for? To
keep their victims in bondage. Say they: "Let us stick to him as
long as he has a dollar in his pocket."
19
I will tell you a story. A man was going to market, a pretty
wicked swearing man, with his cart full of apples. He was going
up hill, and the hindboard as the Yankees call it--the Westerners
call it the hindgate, slipped out of his cart, and his apples
rolled down the hill. He stopped his team and looked at the
apples as they rolled down the hill, and said he, "I would swear
if I could do justice to the case, but as I can not I will not
swear a word." I will not say a word more than to class
dishonorable lawyers with other dishonest men.
20
Now what are the facts? Why this world is before us. The gold,
silver and precious stones are in the mountains, in the rivers,
in the plains, in the sands and in the waters, they all belong to
this world, and you and I belong to this world. Is there enough
to make each of us a finger ring? Certainly there is. Is there
enough to make us a breast pin? Certainly there is. Is there
enough to make jewelry for the ladies to set their diamonds and
precious stones in? Certainly there is. Is there enough to make
the silver plate, the spoons, platters, plates and knives and
forks? There is. Is there enough to make the goblets to drink out
of? There is. There is plenty if we want to make the wine casks
of gold, there is plenty of it in the earth for all these
purposes. Then what on earth are you and I quarrelling about it
for? Go to work systematically and take it from the mountains,
and put it to the use that we want it, without contending against
each other, and filching the pockets of each other. The world is
full of it. If it goes from my pocket it is still in the world,
it still belongs to this little ball, this little speck in God's
creation, so small that from the sun I expect you would have to
have a telescope that would magnify millions of times almost to
see it; and from any of the fixed stars I do not expect that it
has ever been seen only by the celestials--mortals could not see
this earth at that distance. And here people are contending,
quarreling, seeking how to get the advantage of each other, and
how to get all the wealth there is in the world; wanting to rule
nations, wanting to be president, king or ruler. What would they
do if they were? Most of them would make everybody around them
miserable, that is what they would do. There are very few men on
the earth who try to make people happy. Occasionally there have
been emperors and monarchs who have made their people happy but
they have been very rare. But suppose we go to work to gather up
all that there is in the bosom and upon the surface of our mother
earth and bring it into use, is there any lack? There is not,
there is enough for all. Then do look at these things as they
are, Latter-day Saints, and you who are not Latter-day Saints,
look at things as they are. And I do hope and pray for your
sakes, outsiders, and for the sakes of those who profess to be
Latter-day Saints, that we shall have good peace for a time here,
so that we can build our furnaces, open our mines, make our
railroads, till the soil, follow our mercantile business
uninterrupted; that we may attend to the business of beautifying
the earth. I see around me a few of my neighbors who are
beautifying their gardens. How beautiful! There is one here in
the Seventh Ward--Mr. Hussey's, I never drive out but I want to
drive by it. How much better that looks than it would be for him
to quarrel with his neighbors! Beautify your gardens, your
houses, your farms; beautify the city. This will make us happy,
and produce plenty. The earth is a good earth, the elements are
good if we will use them for our own benefit, in truth and
righteousness. Then let us be content, and go to with our mights
to make ourselves healthy, wealthy, and beautiful, and preserve
ourselves in the best possible manner, and live just as long as
we can, and do all the good we can.
21
Now, brethren and sisters and friends, I have said a few words
about lawyers; but I could pick up other classes of men just as
bad, and we can find fault with all. Let us be honest, let us be
upright, full of charity one toward another; and live as
agreeably as we possibly can here on this earth that the Lord has
given to man to cultivate and improve for his own benefit, and to
prepare it for an everlasting inheritance. There is a great deal
before us, and it is for us to live so that we will be able to
perform our part well in this great work. And I say to the
Latter-day Saints, it is for you to put forth your hands this
season in emigrating the poor. We will receive any amount. If it
is not more than a hundred dollars or so, we will be willing to
receive it. Talk about this people being poor, why we will get so
rich by and by that we will refuse to pay our taxes; we have got
so rich now that we cannot pay our tithing. The rich do not
pretend to pay any tithing, or but very few of them. I think I
have mentioned one fact with regard to our merchants. A few years
ago in the other tabernacle, I said that our merchants who lived
on the business part of East Temple street and professed to be
Latter-day Saints, if they were not very careful, would deny the
faith and be damned, and it would be by the skin of their teeth
if they ever got into heaven. How is it with the rest of us?
About the same. No matter about this. But here is one of our
merchants--William Jennings--about whom a great many have remarks
to make. Well, it is no matter about his trade. I want to say to
the rest of the merchants that he has paid a good many thousand
dollars tithing, more than all the rest of them put together.
That is for William Jennings. We are paying our tithing in the
Co-operative, I would not consent to go into the business on any
other terms only that the tithing should be paid on all we made.
But the other merchants, if they pay tithing on what they make it
has to come hereafter, for they have never done it yet; and I
think the more they make the less tithing they pay. But you are
welcome to give something to the poor; if you will help us a
little with regard to the emigration we will be very much obliged
to you, but you will have to trust in God for the future
blessings.
21
God bless you, Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / John
Taylor, April 7, 1872
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Morning, April 7, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
REVELATION--FORMER AND LATTER-DAY DISPENSATIONS--THE SURE
TRIUMPH OF THE CAUSE OF ZION.
21
We are again met, in our Annual Conference, for the purpose of
hearing the words of life, and of being instructed in the various
duties and responsibilities that rest upon us, and that we, as
Latter-day Saints, may be taught principles pertaining to our
holy faith, and be instructed in the duties devolving upon us in
the various positions that we occupy; that by a unity of faith,
purpose and action, we may be able to accomplish something that
will promote truth, advance the interests of Zion and the
establishment of the kingdom of God upon the earth.
22
We are told that it is not in man to direct his steps, and we
stand here in a peculiar position under the guidance and
direction of the Almighty. The Lord has seen fit to reveal unto
us the everlasting Gospel, and we have been enabled, by the grace
of God, to appreciate that message of life which he has
communicated unto us, and we have been gathered from the nations
of the earth under the influences and auspices of that Gospel. We
are gathered here for the accomplishment of certain objects
relative both to ourselves and others, the great leading
principle of which is--to help to fulfil the designs that existed
in the mind of the Almighty before the world was, relative to the
earth and humanity; and I presume that that exhortation which was
made eighteen hundred years ago to certain Saints, would be just
as applicable to us to-day as it was to them. They were exhorted
to "contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the
Saints." That, no doubt, sounded very strange to them in that day
and age of the world; they had had Jesus among them, he had
preached his Gospel unto them; the light of eternal truth had
been made manifest, and they had participated in the blessings of
the Gospel; and yet, under these peculiar circumstances, blessed,
as it were, with the light of revelation, with Apostles in their
midst, with a complete church organization, with everything that
was calculated to enlighten, instruct and lead them on in the
path of righteousness, they were told to contend earnestly for
that faith once delivered to the Saints.
22
It seems that in the different ages of the world in the past,
there has existed, as there does to-day, a species of
self-righteousness, self-complacence, a reliance upon the wisdom,
intelligence and virtue of man. In that day the Scribes and
Pharisees, the lawyers and doctors, the great Sanhedrin, the
pious men, thought they were the peculiar elect of God, and that
wisdom would die with them. Jesus came among them and told them
very many unpalatable truths; among others that they were "whited
walls and painted sepulchres; that they appeared fair on the
outside, but inwardly there was nothing but rottenness and dead
men's bones." He told them that for a pretence they made long
prayers; not that they had any reference to God at all, for God
had very little to do with them. They did it, he told them, in
order that "they might be heard of men." They made broad their
philacteries, (that is a species of writing which they bound on
all their garments,) with certain passages of Scripture. They
made them very broad, that they might be considered extra pure,
virtuous and holy. Jesus called these very pure, holy virtuous
people, painted sepulchres.
23
But there is something else associated with these matters very
peculiar. Jesus taught the principles of life and salvation--the
everlasting Gospel. He introduced men into the kingdom of God; he
organized a pure Church, based upon correct principles, according
to the order of God. Men were baptized into that Church; they had
hands laid upon them for the reception of the Holy Ghost, and
they received it. They had among them Apostles and Prophets,
Pastors and Teachers, Evangelists and inspired men. The Church
enjoyed among themselves the gift of tongues, visions, prophecy;
the sick were healed, the blind received their sight, the deaf
heard, and the lame leaped for joy; the visions of heaven were
unfolded to their view, and they had a knowledge of many things
pertaining to eternity; and yet, with all their light,
intelligence and blessings, with all their Apostles, with the
fulness of the Gospel in their midst, they were advised to
contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the Saints. The
Lord has revealed to us many blessings, and I sometimes think
that we hardly appreciate the light of truth which has been
developed, the glory that is connected with the Gospel which has
been restored, the light of revelation which has been
communicated, the position that we occupy in relation to God,
angels, our posterity and our progenitors, the hope that the
Gospel has implanted in the bosom of every faithful Latter-day
Saint, which blooms with immortality and eternal life; and
sometimes, when exposed to the various trials with which we are
encompassed, to the opprobrium and reproach frequently heaped
upon us by ignorant and evil disposed persons, some of us,
perhaps, think that our religion is something like that with
which we are surrounded. We sometimes forget our prayers,
responsibilities, duties and covenants, and we give way in many
instances to things which have a tendency to darken the mind,
becloud the understanding, weaken our faith, and deprive us of
the Spirit of God. We forget the pit whence we were dug, and the
rock from which we were hewn, and it is necessary that we should
reflect on the position that we occupy, upon the relationship we
sustain to God, to each other and to our families, that our minds
may be drawn back again to the God who made us--our Father in the
heavens, who hears our prayers, and who is ready at all times to
supply the wants of his faithful Saints. And it is sometimes
necessary that we should reflect upon the position we hold in
relation to the earth on which we live, to the existence that we
had before we came here, and to the eternities to come. We should
not be sluggish and dull and careless and indifferent; but as the
ancient Saints were exhorted, so let us exhort you
to-day--contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the
Saints.
23
The religion of the everlasting gospel did not originate with any
man or any set of men. It is wide as the world and originated
with the Great Eloheim. It is a plan ordained by him before the
world was for the salvation and redemption of the human family.
It is a thing that men, in various dispensations, under the
influence and inspiration of the Almighty, have possessed more or
less; and it is to that we are indebted for all the knowledge,
and the light, and all the intelligence in relation to eternity.
The gospel which you have received you received not of man,
neither by man, but on the same principle as they received it in
former days--by the revelation of Jesus Christ, by the
communication of God to man, and any religion that has not this
for its foundation amounts to nothing, and any superstructure
built upon any other foundation will fade and vanish away like
the baseless fabric of a vision, and leave not a wreck behind.
24
One of old in speaking of these things said: If any man build
with wood, or hay, or stubble, or anything perishable, the day
would come when it would be burned up and there would be left
neither root nor branch. But we, as eternal beings, associated
with an eternal God, having a religion that leads to that God,
are desirous, as the ancients were, to know something about him,
to be brought into communication with him, to fulfil the measure
of our creation and our destiny on the earth, and to help the
Lord to bring to pass those things that he designed from before
the foundation of the world, in regard to the human family. God
has designed to redeem the earth whereon we live. Mankind were
placed on this earth for a certain purpose, and however erratic,
foolish and visionary the course of man may have been, the
Almighty has never altered his purpose, never changed his designs
nor abrogated his laws; but with one steady undeviating course
from the time the morning stars first sang together for joy,
until the earth shall be redeemed from under the curse and every
creature in heaven and on the earth shall be heard to say:
"Blessing and glory, honor and power, might, majesty and dominion
be ascribed unto Him who sits upon the throne and to the Lamb for
ever;" and throughout all the successive ages that have been and
that will be, his course is one eternal round. He has had one
object in view, and that object will be accomplished in regard to
man and the earth whereon he lives. The only question with us is
whether we will co-operate with God, or whether we will
individually work out our own salvation or not; whether we will
individually fulfil the various responsibilities that devolve
upon us or not; whether we will attend to the ordinances that God
has introduced or not; for ourselves to begin with, for our
families, for the living and for the dead. Whether we will
co-operate in building temples and administering in them; whether
we will unite with the Almighty, under the direction of his holy
priesthood, in bringing to pass things that have been spoken of
by the holy prophets since the world was; whether we will contend
earnestly for the faith once delivered to the Saints. These
things rest with us to a certain extent. God has communicated to
the Latter-day Saints principles that the world are ignorant of,
and being ignorant of them they know not how to appreciate our
feelings. They call good evil, light darkness, error truth, and
truth error, because they have not the means of seeing the
difference between one and the other. "But you are a chosen
people, a royal generation, a holy priesthood," separate and set
apart by the Almighty for the accomplishment of his purposes. God
has ordained among you presidents, apostles, prophets, high
priests, seventies, bishops and other authorities; they are of
his appointment, empowered and directed by him, under his
influence, teaching his law, unfolding the principles of life,
and are organized and ordained expressly to lead the people in
the path of exaltation and eternal glory. The world know nothing
about these things--we are not talking to them to-day, they can
not comprehend them. Their religion teaches them nothing about
any such things--they are simply a phantasm to them. They have
not any revelation, they do not profess it. All that they have is
their Bible given by ancient men of God, who spoke as they were
moved upon by the Holy Ghost. They repudiate the Holy Ghost, not
in name, but in reality. Many of them are very sincere; we give
them credit for that. That is all right, but they do not
understand our principles, views, or ideas. They could not do as
we have done; they could not trust in God as our Elders do. Their
ideas are more material. Ask any of them to go to the ends of the
earth, as these Elders have done, without purse or scrip,
trusting in God, would they do it? No, they would not, they would
see the gospel damned first, and then they would not. They do not
understand the principle by which we are actuated, we have done
it and we will do it again, and we will keep doing it; we believe
in a living God, in a living religion, in the living, vital,
eternal principles which God has communicated; this is the reason
why we act as we do, why we talk and believe as we do. Men are
not supposed to understand our principles. The Scripture says
that no man knows the things of God but by the Spirit of God. And
how are they to get that? Just as you got it. And how was that?
By repenting of your sings, being baptized in the name of Jesus
for their remission; by having hands laid upon you by those
having authority for the reception of the Holy Ghost. This is the
way God appointed in former days, this is the way he has
appointed in our day.
25
And what brought you here? Why the light of revelation--the light
of truth, the gift of the Holy Ghost, the power of God. That is
what brought you here. The Gospel you received you received not
of men, but by the revelations of Jesus Christ; and consequently
how can men outside comprehend these things? They can not do it,
it is beyond their reach. They can reason on natural principles;
they have their own peculiar ideas, but they cannot comprehend
the Latter-day Saints. "Mormonism" is an enigma to the world.
Why, they United States have been trying to solve the problem of
"Mormonism" for years and years; but with all their sagacity and
intelligence they have not made it out yet; and they never will.
Philosophy can not comprehend it; it is beyond the reach of
natural philosophy. It is the philosophy of heaven, it is the
revelation of God to man. It is philosophical, but it is heavenly
philosophy, and beyond the ken of human judgment, beyond the
reach of human intelligence. They cannot grasp it, it is as high
as heaven, what can they know about it? It is deeper than hell,
they cannot fathom it. It is as wide as the universe, it extends
over all creation. It goes back into eternity and forward into
eternity. It associates with the past, present and future; it is
connected with time and eternity, with men, angels, and Gods,
with beings that were, that are and that are to come.
25
The Saints of God in all ages had the kind of faith that we have
to-day. You Latter-day Saints know it, but other men do not. They
will talk about their nonsense, their ideas and theories, and
call it the religion of God and the gospel of Jesus Christ. Well,
I am quite willing they should enjoy their notions. It is all
right; we would not interfere with them if we could. Our feelings
in regard to that are just the same as the Lord's. And what are
his? His ideas are not bound in a nutshell, there is nothing
contracted about the Almighty. He makes his sun shine on the evil
and on the good; he sends his rain on the just and on the unjust.
He is liberal, free, generous, philanthropic, full of benevolence
and kindness to the human family, and he hopes and desires that
all men may be saved, and he will save them all as far as they
are capable of being saved. But he desires that his people shall
contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the Saints,
that as immortal beings they may act in unison with the Almighty,
that they may be inspired by the principle of revelation; that
they should comprehend something of their dignity and manhood; of
their relationship to eternity, to the world that we live in as
it is and as it will be, and to the worlds that are to come. The
Lord has no such idea as some of these narrow, contracted
sectarian people have that we read of. They remind me of a prayer
of a man I once heard of, who in his prayer said: "Lord bless me
my wife, my son John and his wife, us four and no more, amen." I
do not believe in any such thing as that. I think the world on
which we live was organized for a certain purpose. I think that
man was made for a certain purpose, and so do you as Latter-day
Saints. We think that the spirit of man, possessing a body, will
through the medium of the everlasting Gospel, be exalted; and
that man, inasmuch as he is faithful, will, by and by, be
associated with the Gods in the eternal worlds; and while we
plant and sow and reap, and pursue the common avocations of life,
as other men do, our main object is eternal lives and
exaltations; our main object is to prepare ourselves, our
posterity and our progenitors for thrones, principalities and
powers in the eternal worlds.
26
This is what we are after, and what the ancient Saints were
after. This is what Adam, Noah, Enoch, Abraham and the Prophets
were after, that they might fulfil their destiny on the earth,
and, as one of the old Prophets said, "stand in their lot in the
end of days," when the books should be opened, when the great
white throne would appear and he who sits upon it, before whose
face the heavens and the earth fled away; that we and they, and
they and we might be prepared, having fulfilled the measure of
our creation on the earth, to associate with the intelligences
that exist in the eternal worlds; be admitted again to the
presence of our Father, whence we came, and participate in those
eternal realities which mankind, without revelation, know nothing
about. We are here for that purpose; we left our homes for that
purpose; we are building temples for that purpose; we are
receiving endowments for that purpose; we are making covenants
for that purpose; we are administering for the living and the
dead for that purpose, and all our objects, and all our aims,
like the object and aim of inspired men in former days, are
altogether with reference to eternal realities as well as to
time. We have a Zion to build up, and we shall build it. We shall
build it. WE SHALL BUILD IT. No power can stop it. God has
established his kingdom, it is in his hands, and no influence, no
power, no combination of whatever kind it may be can stop the
progress of the work of God. You Latter-day Saints know very well
that you have not received a cunningly devised fable, concocted
by the wisdom, ingenuity, talent or caprice of man. All of you
who comprehend the Gospel comprehend this; you all, male and
female, if you are living your religion, know this. Men of old
knew it as well as you; and by and by we expect to live and
associate with them, with Patriarchs, Prophets and men of God,
who had faith in him, the accomplishment of his purposes in
former times, and we are contending for the faith which they
possessed. For instance old Moses and Elias, you know, came to
Peter, James, John and Jesus while they were on the mount. They
did not think they were very old fogies that it was not worth
while to listen to; but said they, "Let us make three
tabernacles, one for thee, one for Moses and one for Elias. It is
good to be here, why here is old Moses, and old Elias." Who was
Moses? A man who had the ancient Gospel in former times. Who was
Elias? A man who had the ancient Gospel in former times. They
came and administered unto Jesus, and his Apostles would have
liked to stay with them for ever. But they could not do it at
that time.
26
Then again we read of John on the Isle of Patmos. You know he was
in vision, and the Lord revealed unto him many great things, and
there was a personage appeared, one of the old Prophets that used
to be led around probably by a marshal. John thought he was an
angel, and he was about to fall down and worship him after he had
unfolded to him the glories of eternity. "But," says he, "do not
do it." "Why?" "Because I am one of thy fellowservants, the
Prophets; I am one of those old fellows that used to have to
wander about in my day in sheepskins and goatskins. The priests,
hypocrites, &c., of that day persecuted me; but now I am exalted,
and have come to minister unto you John."
27
While the world was wrapped in superstition, ignorance and
darkness, the angels of God came and ministered to Joseph Smith,
and unfolded to him the purposes of God and made known his
designs. Joseph told it to the people, and through this means you
are gathered together as you are to-day. What did men, the best
of them, know about the Gospel, or about Apostles or Prophets,
when the Prophet Joseph made his appearance? Nothing at all, and
yet there have been good men. Old John Wesley, for instance, in
his day, was very anxious to see something of this kind, but he
could not see it. Says he--
27
"From chosen Abraham's seed,
The old apostles choose,
O'er isles and continents to spread
The dead reviving news."
27
He would have been glad to see something of that kind, but he
could not. It was reserved for Joseph Smith and the Latter-day
Saints; it was reserved for our day. Well, then, what will we do?
Fulfil the measure of our creation, go to work and redeem those
men who had not the Gospel, be baptized for them, as the
Scriptures tell us, and bring them up, for they without us can
not be made perfect, neither can we be made perfect without them.
And we will fulfil and accomplish the purposes of God, and bring
to pass the things which were spoken of by the Prophets.
27
This is what we are after, and we shall accomplish it, and no man
can stop it, no organization, no power, no authority, for God is
at the helm, and his kingdom is onward, onward, onward, and it
will continue, and grow and increase until the kingdoms of this
world shall become the kingdoms of our God and his Christ.
27
May God help us to be faithful, in the name of Jesus. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / George
Albert Smith, May 19, 1872
George Albert Smith, May 19, 1872
DISCOURSE BY PRESIDENT GEORGE A. SMITH.
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday, May 19, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
PATRIARCHAL MARRIAGE--THE SETTLEMENT OF UTAH.
27
And in that day seven women shall take hold of one man, saying,
We will eat our own bread and wear our own apparel: only let us
be called by thy name to take away our reproach.
27
In that day shall the branch of the Lord be beautiful and
glorious, and the fruit of the earth shall be excellent and
comely for them that are escaped of Israel.
27
And it shall come to pass that he that is left in Zion, and he
that remaineth in Jerusalem, shall be called holy, even every one
that is written among the living in Jerusalem.
28
The portion of the prophecy of Isaiah which I have read indicates
that at a certain day and under certain circumstances, spoken of
by the Prophet as being holy, seven women would claim to be
called by the name of one man. Most of us have a different
opinion with regard to the application of this prophecy. God
inspired the Prophet, and it might be necessary, peradventure, to
inquire what it all means. Seven women are to lay hold of one
man, saying, "We will eat our own bread and wear our own apparel;
only let us be called by thy name, to take away our reproach."
What is the meaning of this last sentiment? We will let the Bible
explain it. You remember that when Rachel, the second wife of
Jacob, the father of the tribes of Israel, found herself barren,
while the other wives of her husband were bearing children, she
prayed to the Lord that he, in his abundant mercy, would give her
children, and when God heard her prayer and worked a miracle in
her favor, causing her who was barren to become fruitful and
bring forth a child, she said, God had taken away her reproach.
This illustrates the meaning of the text. I did not make the
prophecy, neither had I anything to do with making the history of
Rachel, or even chronicling the Event named.
28
In relation to Father Jacob, it is true he had four wives, and
they bore him twelve sons, and their descendants are the twelve
tribes of Israel. We are told by the Apostle John that the names
of Jacob's twelve sons--the sons of a polygamist and his four
wives--will be written upon the gates of the holy Jerusalem; and
there are none of us who expect to enter in through those gates
but will have to acknowledge the truth of that doctrine. It is
true that the principle of plurality of wives was adopted by the
Church of Latter-day Saints in consequence of the revelation and
commandment which God gave to Joseph Smith, and which, through
him, were laid upon the heads of this people; and we quote the
passages that we do quote, in relation to the principle of
celestial marriage from the Old and New Testament, to prove that
God is consistent with himself; that if he revealed to his Saints
in the last days, the doctrine of plurality of wives, it was in
fulfillment of the prophecy of Isaiah and others of the Prophets,
and in accordance with the example which was set by Abraham,
Jacob, Moses, and by holy men of ancient days.
28
In relation to the world "reproach" in our text, I will make
another reference. In the first chapter of Luke's Gospel, verses
23 and 24, we find Elizabeth rejoicing because God had taken away
her reproach. She though she had been barren, became the mother
of John the Baptist.
28
These passages tell in so many plain words why it was that seven
women wished to be called by the name of one man--it was that
they might have the privilege of bearing children.
29
Now, if God brings to pass this prophecy in the glorious day
which our text speaks of, when holiness and righteousness are to
rule, and when truth is to have dominion, and peace dwell in the
earth, although all the world may have been opposed to it, we can
not be responsible. Until some person can find a passage in the
Old or New Testament that definitely forbids a plurality of
wives, with the many incidents of history, items of law, and
declarations of Prophets in relation to the practice by the
ancient Saints of that doctrine, we are able to assert that the
Bible is a polygamous book, and that no man can believe it
without believing plurality of wives, under some circumstances to
be correct. I know it has been said that the Old Testament
permitted plurality of wives, but the New forbids it. The Savior
said he came not to destroy the law but to fulfil it, and that
not a jot or tittle of the law or Prophets should pass away, but
all should be fulfilled. The new dispensation did not annihilate
the principles of law and right, as revealed in the Old. Both
John the Baptist and the Savior denounced all sins with an
unsparing hand, and especially adultery, fornication and divorce;
and not a sentence is found in the New Testament which prohibits
plurality of wives, though the Savior and his Apostles lived in a
country where it was practised; and it is impossible to believe
that if it were a sin it would have escaped definite rebuke and
absolute condemnation.
29
The petition to Congress which has been read here to-day is a
perfect wonder, I presume, to those who have heard it. It is
astonishing to me, and doubtless to all who listened to all who
listened to it, and especially those who reside here, that such a
statement could be got up by any individual whatever, that any
imagination could be so tortured as to manufacture so unmitigated
a tissue of utter and absolute falsehoods; and much more that
persons could be found who would think so little of their
reputation as to sign such a statement. We understand, however,
that many of the persons whose names are on that petition did not
see the original. Many of them thought they were simply signing a
petition against the admission of Utah as a State, without
bringing personal charges against a people among whom they have
lived in perfect safety, and in a country where peace and order
have prevailed, and where all have enjoyed the uniform protection
which our Territorial laws and the general organization of
society give. I regret exceedingly that such a document should be
made public; but as it is, with the list of names attached to it,
was published by order of the United States Senate, it was
thought proper to read it to the congregation that all might have
a chance to know what it was and judge for themselves.
29
I came to this valley in 1847, being one of the 143 pioneers who
searched out and made the roads from the Missouri river here. The
ample property we possessed in Illinois we had left there; and we
made the roads, about 300 miles, or nearly across the State of
Iowa, bridging about thirty streams, and passing through a
wilderness totally uninhabited save by a few scattered Indians.
That was as far as we could get the first year. The second
year--1847--we made the roads from what we termed Winter
Quarters, about five miles above where Omaha is now situated. We
traveled on the north side of the river, established our ferry
across the Elkhorn, and made our road, striking the old Oregon
trail, as it was called, at the mouth of Ash Hollow; that is, we
went up on the north side of the Platte to the north fork; while
Independence road went up on the south side, and struck the north
fork at Ash Hollow, probably a hundred and eighty miles below
Fort Laramie. We thought some of crossing the river and taking
the trapper's trail, but we found it difficult, so we continued
making anew road on the north side until we reached Fort Laramie.
There we crossed and made a road a portion of the way, and
followed the old trail a portion of the way through to Fort
Bridger. On this route we encountered some companies who were
going to Oregon, and being unable to get across the Platte and
Green Rivers we got up the means of ferrying, and ferried them
across both these rivers, and they proceeded on the route to
Oregon, while we worked our way across this Wasatch range into
this valley.
30
When we reached here we fond the place very barren; but it was
the best prospect we had seen for five hundred miles. The creek
we now call City Creek came out of the mountains, and divided
into branches, and finally sank down into the ground, apparently
without reaching Jordan river. It had about its sinks some green
spots of rushes and grass, but except that the country was very
naked and barren. The city plot here did not even bear good sage;
and there was a little grass, but it was very dry. Along the
stream were a dozen or so of scrubby cottonwoods and a few
willows. The rest of the ground was naked, except being nearly
covered with immense numbers of large, black crickets, which had
devoured most of the leaves of the cottonwoods and willows; and
when we went to work to cut a ditch to carry the water down to
the place known as Old Fort block, where we first built our fort,
so dry was the soil of the ditch that it took the whole stream
two and a half days to reach the desired point.
30
It was in this desolate place--1034 miles from the Missouri
river, and thirteen or fourteen hundred from Nauvoo--the place
whence we had ben expelled, that we commenced our location. It
was understood that a party had undertaken to cross west here,
some year or two before, and had perished. The name of the man
who led the party was Hastings, and the route west is called
Hastings' cut off. It is said that John C. Fremont had been in
this valley the fall previous, but we had no report of his
explorations. We had an account of him visiting the north end of
Great Salt Lake, and the south end of Utah Lake; but so ignorant
was he at the time of the country between the two lakes that his
map, published after his return from his exploration, shows Salt
Lake and Utah Lake to be one body or water, whereas there is a
river about fifty miles long between them.
31
In a few days after we reached here another party arrived,
increasing our numbers to about four hundred. We had but very
little provisions, which we had brought with us. The country was
destitute of game, and the most rigid economy was necessary in
order to subsist. We remained about a month, when a portion of
the pioneers, myself among the number, started back for our
families, who were still encamped at Winter Quarters, on the
Missouri river; and on our way back we met about seven hundred
wagons with families moving on for this place. These families
came in late, and enclosed themselves in the Old Fort block, and
the two blocks south of it, where they lived in security from the
Indians, and during the winter they succeeded, partially, in
enclosing a field, making preparations for irrigation, and sowing
several thousand acres of grain. They found it necessary to
ration themselves on account of the scarcity of their provisions,
and I believe that almost every family allowed themselves to half
a pound of flour a day, that is, if they had it, many to less;
and they went over these hills digging the sego--a wild, bulbous
root, sometimes eaten by the Indians, and everything that they
could get that had any nutriment in it. In those days the animals
that were killed, having crossed the plains, were generally very
poor; but they were used with the greatest economy, hides, feet
and tail, all being eaten. I believe they tell a story of a
certain rule among the Mahomedans, in relation to eating swine's
flesh. Some of them refuse it, but as a general thing the various
classes of them only refuse certain portions--some reject the
snout, some the ear, others the feet, others the tail, and so on;
but among the whole Mussulman race they "go the whole hog." Among
the earliest settlers in this valley there was no rejection; and
there are some, who lived here the first two years after our
arrival, who will now say that they never tasted any food so
sweet as boiled rawhide. About the time our first crop began to
head out, the crickets made their appearance, and devoured the
greater portion of it. This was awfully discouraging. Our
nurserymen had collected their seeds, and planted them, and some
twenty or thirty thousand trees had got up, may be five or six
inches high, and one day, while the nurserymen had gone to
dinner, a swarm of crickets came down and destroyed all the trees
but three. That was the commencement of our nursery business in
this city. It is believed, fully, by the Latter-day Saints of
that time, that God delivered them from utter starvation by
sending flocks of gulls from the lake, which ate up the crickets,
and saved a portion of their crop. The crickets have not troubled
the agriculturists in the valley, materially, since, but the
flying grasshoppers have come in immense numbers, and in 1855
reduced all the families in the Territory to half the allowance
of food they needed; and for several years back this plague has
probably destroyed from one-third to one-half the fruits of the
farmer's labors. These are very material drawbacks to our
prosperity with which we have had to contend here in Utah.
Persons unacquainted with the manner and difficulties of
irrigation can not realize the immense labor, care and attention
that are necessary to commence this work. Friends come in and
look over our city, and say, "Why, how nice this water is that
runs through all the streets!" But the fact is, there is not a
tree, bush, or spear of grass grown in these low valleys without
being irrigated naturally or artificially, and there is only very
few and very small spots where natural irrigation is attainable.
By natural irrigation I mean that the water is so near the
surface of the ground as to moisten it sufficiently to make it
produce vegetation, and these places are only found about the
sinks of creeks. Just turn the water that passes through these
streets back into the original channel, and next fall would see
most of the trees dead. All the results you see here, in the way
of agriculture, were made, are held by main strength and
constraint and continued diligence.
31
During the days of our early settlement, it was necessary that
measures be taken to supply the wants of those who were without
food, and for years a fast was held every month, and sometimes
every week. The amount of food that would have been consumed by a
family during that fast was presented to the needy, and in this
way, struggling for three years in succession, the people were
sustained, and nobody perished. When we did finally succeed in
raising the necessaries of life, thousands of strangers came
pouring in here, a great many of them destitute of bread. They
had started for the gold mines without knowing how far it was,
what outfit to take, or how to take care of themselves; and great
numbers of them, when they reached here, had to be assisted on
their journey, and there were thousands who went to California
during the early days of the gold excitement there, who must have
perished had it not been for the assistance they obtained from
the settlements of these valleys.
32
We came here full of enterprise, and our only hope for
subsistence was in agriculture. We found mines of lead, and
minerals of various kinds; but we could do nothing with them. The
Legislative Assembly memorialized Congress for a railroad and a
telegraph line across the continent, and they set forth in that
petition, in 1852, that the mineral resources of these mountains
could never be developed without a railroad; and that if they
would build a railroad, or make the necessary arrangement for
one, the trade of China and the East Indies would pass through
the heart of the American States. We have lived to see these
predictions fulfilled.
32
You may pass, friends, over the Territory at your leisure; go
from the north to the south, and you will find the inhabitants,
generally, industrious, temperate, moral, straightforward,
diligent and honest, very few spending their time about gambling
hells or drinking saloons; in fact very few villages support such
establishments, and wherever you find them you may be sure that
modern civilization has made inroads there. When you see a gang
of men standing round, loafing about a place, smoking cigars,
drinking whisky, and looking for something to turn up, you may
generally set it down there is no Latter-day Saint there, or if
there is a "Mormon" mixed up with them he is becoming
demoralized. If the faith of the Latter-day Saints be adhered to
as it should be, men would be temperate and moral, and they would
avoid sing profane language; and one of the injunctions of their
religion is that the idler shall not eat the bread of the
laborer.
32
We have fed thousands and tens of thousands of strangers who have
passed through here without means, and no person has been
permitted to go hungry in our midst if we knew it, admitting at
the same time that our means of subsistence were limited, and all
that we have wrenched from the soil has been by main strength.
33
I would like to draw a little comparison: I moved my family in
'49. I came out in '47, and went back again and made arrangements
to get back with my family, the earliest possible, which was in
49. I brought in two hundred pounds of flour a head for the
family, which I ran out in short allowances to each one of them,
and I divided some to the neighbors, there being numbers of them
around who had got out of food, and we eked it out little by
little, little by little. If a friend called and had his dinner
with us, why, we had to shorten our allowance of bread. There was
no place we could go and buy a little flour or a little beef, for
nobody had any but what they wanted themselves, and what they
must have themselves, and if we divided our little out we,
ourselves, must go hungry. If we lived fast to-day, we must
starve to-morrow, and in this way we stretched the matter along.
God, in his mercy, blessed us with good health; we had good
health, hard work and short allowance of food. There was one
thing we were very thankful for: We had been mobbed a number of
times--five times driven from our homes. We had left our
inheritances in Missouri and Illinois, and had got nothing for
them, and here, whatever other things we lacked, we had the
privilege of worshiping God according to the dictates of our
consciences, and we could go to meeting, and preach and pray
without anybody interrupting us; for although there were
thousands and thousands of strangers constantly passing through
our territory, they generally treated us with kindness and
consideration. How is it now with us with regard to the
necessaries of life? If a man is out of bread he can hardly find
a house but what, if he enters and says, "I am hungry, give me
something to eat," the reply will be, "yes, we have plenty." And
there are thousands of men and women who have come from the
States and from Europe. We have contributed immense sums, and
sent our teams by the hundred to the Missouri river to bring them
here; and when they got here, their labor, industry and economy
would enable them at once to obtain food and the necessaries of
life, plain, to be sure, but an abundance of such as the country
afforded. No one that is hungry can go to a house or a family and
ask for bread and not obtain it. Look at the contrast; and it has
been effected by years of fasting and united industry, poverty
and toil, by the pioneers of this country. To be sure we have had
plenty of the sayings of the Savior upon our heads to satisfy us
that we were right in one particular. He says: "Blessed are ye
when men shall persecute you, and say all manner of evil
concerning you, falsely, for my sake.
33
We bid welcome to our friends. The fields are wide and open, and
the mountains are, no doubt, full of mineral. At any rate, every
man has his chance, if he will dig for it. Dig for the treasures,
and open the fields and the farms, but do not trespass on the
rights of your neighbors. Worship God according to the dictates
of your conscience, observe the law of heaven, but never, under
any circumstances, intrude upon the rights of others. These are
the principles which rule here. Look at these things, and realize
that it is to the efforts of the inhabitants of this country,
their labors, toils and sacrifices, that we owe our present
comfort. We commenced by hauling carding machines and printing
offices across the mountains; we built factories, and undertook
to raise wool; we labored to produce flax and hemp, not very
successfully, but we did all we could. Thousands of our brethren
did not believe it possible ever to raise fruit; but God tempered
the climate, and, although in the tops of the mountains, we have
raised abundance of fruit in many of our settlements. Our sheep
have become productive, our herds have increased, and we have
laid a foundation for plenty; and any pilgrim who comes along,
who wishes to obtain food and raiment, can obtain it, for it is
here; and he can go into the mountains, and if fortune favor him
he may strike something which he may desire, though I must
honestly confess that, so far as I am concerned, I believe the
plan for any man to pursue who wishes to lay a foundation for
future independence, is to procure a piece of land and make a
farm. He might, peradventure, strike an "Emma" mine; but I think
that kind of luck will be the exception instead of the rule; but,
as a general thing, the man who labors industriously to make
himself a farm, creates around him a good, comfortable home in a
few years. Of course, if men go prospecting for minerals, they
know it is a good deal like a lottery. Our railroad is going
south, and as it progresses, new mines and new mining interests
will, without doubt, be opened and developed; and as a result of
the labors of developing the resources of the Territory, I
realize that millions will be benefitted.
34
There is one thing that our friends do not realize. When they
come here they make up their minds that "Mormonism" is a humbug,
and their mistake is, it is true. Joseph Smith was a Prophet of
God, and the plan of salvation revealed through him is the Gospel
of Jesus christ; and every man and every woman who rejects it,
rejects the truth, and will be responsible for it; and every man
and every woman who walks in obedience to its precepts will
receive glory, honor, immortality and endless lives. I am not
talking something I guess, I know these things are true; and it
is the wisdom and prudence, the light and the intelligence of the
Almighty, revealed through his servants to the Latter-day Saints,
that have gathered a hundred thousand people from the four
quarters of the earth and planted them down in comfortable homes
in Utah, and it is only the inspiration of the father of lies
that circulates the false reports and the abuse concerning them.
34
May God bless you my friends. You are welcome in this land. Go
and be blessed; and as you go to your homes, to the four winds of
heaven, tell the truth about the Latter-day Saints. May God
enable us to overcome and be faithful in all things, that we may
finally inherit his kingdom, through Jesus our Redeemer. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, May 26th, 1872
Brigham Young, May 26th, 1872
DISCOURSE BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered in the Tabernacle, Ogden City, Sunday Afternoon,
May 26th, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
RICHES--HURRY--FASHION--HELPING THE POOR--MYSTERIES.
35
I am happy for the privilege of standing before this congregation
and speaking to them. I am thankful to see the spirit that is
manifested by the people to inquire after the truth, to learn the
way of life. I rejoice to see the disposition manifested by the
Latter-day Saints to attend places of worship. But this is a
small part of our faith. I wish to say to the Latter-day Saints
that the Gospel of life and salvation is the best institution
that we, as mortal beings, can invest in. Go into the financial
circles of the world, and you will find men gather and project
their plans for business, for railroads, for ship companies, for
merchandizing, and various other pursuits. You will see those
engaged in these companies associate together, confer with each
other, lay their plans before each other, investigate them, scan
every branch, and every part and particle of their business. We
are engaged in a higher-toned branch of business than any
merchants or railroad men, or any institution of an earthly
nature, and it is pleasing to see the Latter-day Saints meet
together to talk over this matter, and to learn the course they
should pursue to gain the object of their pursuit. If an inquiry
arises in any of your minds with regard to this, I will answer it
by saying that we are in pursuit of all there is before us--life,
light, wealth, intelligence, all that can be possessed on the
earth by mortal man, and then in a higher state, where there will
be a more perfect development of the smattering of knowledge than
we received here, and all that can be enjoyed by intelligent
beings in the celestial kingdom of our God. Is this our object?
Certainly it is. We are not in the same attitude that the people
were a few thousand years ago--they were depending on the Prophet
or Prophets, or on having immediate revelation for themselves to
know the will of the Lord, without the record of their
predecessors, while we have the records of those who have lived
before us, also the testimony of the Holy Spirit; and, to the
satisfaction of all who desire a testimony, we can turn to this
book and read that which we believe, learn the object of our
pursuit, the end that we expect to accomplish--the end of the
race as far as mortality is concerned--and the fullness of the
glory that is beyond this valley of tears; consequently we have
the advantage of those who lived before us. We are in pursuit of
knowledge; and when you meet together, if you have a word of
prophecy, a dream, a vision, or a word of wisdom, impart the same
to the people.
35
Let me ask you, my brethren and sisters, Do you want wealth? If
you do, do not be in a hurry. Do you want the riches pertaining
to this world? Yes, we acknowledge we do. Then, be calm,
contented, composed; keep your pulses correct, do not let them
get up to a hundred and twenty, but keep them as nigh as you can,
ranging from seventy to seventy-six; and when there is an
appointment for a meeting be sure to attend that meeting. If
there is to be a two-days' meeting in Ogden, come to it; spend
the time here and learn what is going on. Watch closely, hear
every word that is spoken, let every heart be lifted to God for
wisdom, and know and understand every word of prophecy, every
revelation that may be given, every counsel that may be presented
to the people, that you may be able to weigh, measure, comprehend
and decide between that which is of God and that which is not of
God. Refuse the evil, learn wisdom, and grow in grace and in the
knowledge of the truth. If there is a meeting appointed for the
Seventies, let them come together, and let no man say "I am in a
hurry in my work, and have not time to attend." Every man that
belongs to these quorums should be on hand at the time appointed,
and not say, "I will work to the last minute, before I start fort
the meeting." Take time, prepare yourselves, be at the place of
gathering promptly, to the minute, that you may hear the first
word, then you will hear every word that is spoken and every
counsel that is given.
35
If there is a Bishop's meeting, let every Bishop, Priest, Teacher
and Deacon attend and no man among them say, "I must go and water
my grain," "cut my hay," or "gather my harvest;" but attend the
meeting, sit until it is out and hear every word. If you have to
speak, speak; if you are to hear only, hear every word that is
said. If there is a prayer meeting appointed, go to that prayer
meeting; go to the ward meetings, attend every meeting that is
appointed. I am telling you this, so that you can get rich.
37
I will say to the Latter-day Saints, there can not that community
be found on the face of the whole earth that, as a community, is
as well off as we are here in these mountains. There are more
women and children, with their husbands and fathers, sleep under
their own roof in the midst of the Latter-day Saints than in any
other community on the face of this earth, in civilization; and
less women and children go without food and clothing than in any
other community in Christendom. Looking around among the
Latter-day Saints I will ask, How many are there who have been
taken from cellars, from pits under ground, or from their little
rooms, where one pound, or five dollars, would buy everything
they possessed on the face of the earth, and brought to this
country and taught how to plant their potatoes, beans, beets,
carrots, how to raise their cucumbers and squashes, their corn
and their wheat, how to milk a cow; feed a calf, take care of the
chickens; how to build a pig-pen and put a pig in it; to take the
offals of the house and give to the pig, and how to raise a calf
or a colt, experience they never had before in their lives? Yet
they have learned this economy, and some of them, I am sorry to
say, lift their heel against the Almighty and his anointed. I am
happy to say, however, that the large percentage of those who
have been thus rescued from poverty, and placed in circumstances
of comfort and independence, are still in the faith. How many are
there here today who never owned a chicken or a pig, and could
not keep a cat because they had nothing to feed one on, who now
ride in their wagons, have their carriages, horses, fine harness,
fine stock of cows, and have butter, milk, cheese and wool at
their command, and granaries full of wheat, and their barns, if
they have them, full of hay? Do not the facts which present
themselves before us, prove that this very desirable change has
taken place in the circumstances of many? Then come to meeting.
Appoint your meetings, Elders, and call the Saints together and
instruct them in the things of the kingdom of God. We have
missionaries that are travelling through our settlements, and no
people need preaching more than the Latter-day Saints. They know
the way, but they are forgetful, and they want somebody or other
to come along and holloa to them, and say, comparatively, "I will
warm your ears, my lady;" "Brother, I will warm your ears." "Wake
up!" "What are you doing? Are you after this mine? Are you after
that job? Are you after that piece of work? Did you pray in your
family this morning?" "No." "Why?" "I was in too much of a
hurry." Stop! Wait! When you get up in the morning, before you
suffer yourselves to eat one mouthful of food, call your wives
and children together, bow down before the Lord, ask him to
forgive your sins, and protect you through the day, to preserve
you from temptation and all evil, to guide your steps aright,
that you may do something that day that shall be beneficial to
the kingdom of God on the earth. Have you time to do this?
Elders, sisters, have you time to pray? This is the counsel I
have for the Latter-day Saints to-day. Stop, do not be in a
hurry. I do not know that I could find a man in our community but
what wishes wealth, would like to have everything in his
possession that would conduce to his comfort and convenience. Do
you know how to get it? "Well," replies one, "If I do not, I wish
I did; but I do not seem to be exactly fortunate--fortune is
somewhat against me." I will tell you the reason of this--you are
in too much of a hurry; you do not go to meeting enough, you do
not pray enough, you do not red the Scriptures enough, you do not
meditate enough, you are all the time on the wing, and in such a
hurry that you do not know what to do first. This is not the way
to get rich. I merely use the term "rich" to lead the mind along,
until we obtain eternal riches in the celestial kingdom of God.
Here we wish for riches in a comparative sense, we wish for the
comforts of life. If we desire them let us take a course to get
them. Let me reduce this to a simple saying--one of the most
simple and homely that can be used--"Keep your dish right side
up," so that when the shower of porridge does come, you can catch
your dish full.
38
I am not going into the details, to instruct my brethren
particularly how to get wealth; but in the first place, do not be
in a hurry. I make that as a general remark. Do you want your
house neat and clean? Do you want to keep your children neat and
clean? Do you wish to see every portion of your dwelling, from
the cellar to the garret, from the wood-house to the parlor, neat
and clean? Certainly, every sister wishes this; then do not be in
a hurry. I shall tell you a little circumstance that occurred
some eighteen years ago, when we had been on a visit to the
Indians. We had reached Farmington, on our way home, and stopped
at a certain house. I think there were twelve of us in company.
Our teams were taken care of. When I alighted from my carriage I
looked at my watch and we went in, sat down, and chatted with the
master of the house, while his wife prepared dinner for us. I
noticed this lady. She whispered to a little girl to take her
baby out of doors and amuse it; then, when her baby was out of
the way, she moved about without the least noise--not a word was
heard from her. She brought everything she needed from the
buttery and cellar to the kitchen where she spread her table, and
she mixed and baked her bread, cooked her fruit and meat, and
from the time we alighted from the carriage until she came and
whispered in the ear of her husband, "Dinner is ready," it was
just fifty-five minutes. Said I to myself, "There is a
housekeeper." I could not help but see this; every time she
walked back and forth she accomplished a certain amount of
business. I saw this and was gratified. Now, sisters, you may do
likewise, if you are not in too big a hurry. Instead of shouting,
"Sally, where's the dish-cloth?" "Susan, where's the broom?" or,
"Nancy, have you seen the holder? I want the holder," be calm and
composed; you are in too much of a hurry. It is just so with men.
I see them through the world, I have watched their progress for
many years, and I see that many of them are too much in a hurry.
If we are not in too much of a hurry we can attend these
two-days' meetings, and talk to each other. Are you full of
faith? You can tell whether I am or not by looking at me. You can
tell whether the brethren who have been speaking to you are full
of faith in the Gospel by the look of their countenances. You can
see this if there is not a word spoken; we can tell by our
feelings when we look at a congregation whether they have faith
or not. I see there is a great amount of faith in the midst of
the Latter-day Saints, and I wish there was a little more
patience and obedience. Perhaps I have said enough with regard to
these meetings. Elders, appoint your meetings, and invite the
people to come to them. I want now to go to other matters.
39
I will tell you, my brethren, my own feelings with regard to the
conduct of the Latter-day Saints. In the first place I will say
that we are governed and controlled too much by the feelings and
fashions of the world. We lust after the leeks and onions; we
yield ourselves to the spirit of the world too much. You will
excuse me, for I must say a few words with regard to this. It is
true we are bound, and it seems that men's bounds are set by each
other, more or less. If I, for instance, were to have a coat made
to suit my own taste, I do not know any of my family and perhaps
my friends, and especially the tailors, merchants and business
men, but what would say, "You are an oddity," and they would
thin, "Your are not fit for society, because you do not fashion
and pattern after others." I commence here, you know, at myself.
Well, I will say that I am bound, I can not accomplish my own
wishes in these things altogether. Perhaps others can not. I go
to a tailor and say, "I have a piece of cloth, and I want you to
make me a coat." He cuts that coat to suit himself. I do not see
a fashion that suits me. What use or comeliness is there in
putting the legs of the pantaloons on my coat?" Well, perhaps the
tailor will be a little moderate, and will cut it down
considerably; but if I were my own tailor I certainly should
leave off--what shall we call them? "Bustles," "Grecian Bends,"
or what shall we call them? Though these coat sleeves are not
exactly like the sleeves of the frocks or dresses worn by the
ladies forty or fifty years ago, which they used to call
mutton-legged sleeves, shaped just like the ham of a mutton. I
recollect there used to be considerable said about them.
Sometimes a paper would come out and tell of the wreck of a ship,
on board of which were a hundred and fifty passengers; but, they
would say, "Thanks be to kind Providence, the ladies took all the
male passengers into the sleeves of their dresses, and went
ashore." Such narrations as these, you know, were only meant as a
satire upon the fashions of the day. Now I am coming right to the
point, and I wish to say to some of my sisters, not to all, that
if I were my own tailor I should cut my own coat to suit myself.
"What would be your fashion" says one? I will tell you. I have a
coat here which you can see--if I were to take hold of a
swill-pail, this part of the skirt must drop in; and if I took
hold of a milk-pail I must take the coat around by the other end,
and hold it, or else it is in the milk. I see no convenience or
beauty in it. That which is convenient should be beautiful; and I
want my coat cut so that when I lift a pail of water, or a milk
or swill pail the skirts shall not fail into it; and so with the
pockets, I would have them convenient. If I were a lady and had a
piece of cloth to make me a dress, I would cut it so as to cover
my person handsomely and neatly; and whether it was cut according
to the fashion or not, custom would soon make it beautiful. I
would not have eighteen or twenty yards to drag behind me, so
that if I had to turn round I would have to pick up my dress and
throw it after me, or, just as a cow does when she kicks over the
milk pail, throw out one foot to kick the dress out of the way.
That is not becoming, beautiful or convenient--all such fashions
are inconvenient. Take that cloth and cut you a skirt that will
be modest and neat, that does not drag in the dirt nor show your
garters, but cut it so that it will clear the ground when you
walk, when you are passing over the floor it will not drag
everything on the floor, or in the street as you pass along. Put
enough into the skirt to look well, and if we are to go into
particulars, of course, we would have to say, we must use enough
to cover the person. I do not expect mother Eve even did this. We
could relate some little incidents of our past experience, that
perhaps would not entertain the people, and still, perhaps, they
might learn something from them. For instance, in some circles it
has been fashionable for a lady to wear, perhaps, twelve yards in
the skirt of her dress, but when it came to the waist, I guess
three-quarters of a yard would have been enough. I will relate a
circumstance of which I heard, that took place in the metropolis
of our country. A gentleman, a stranger, was invited to a grand
dinner party there. The ladies of course were dressed in the
height of fashion, their trails dragging behind them, and
their--well, I suppose there was a band over the shoulder to the
waist, but I do not recollect whether the gentleman said there
was or not; but one gentleman present, who knew this gentleman
was a stranger, said to him, with all the loveliness and elegance
in his heart that one could imagine--"Is not this beautiful? Did
you ever see the like of this?" "No sir," said the party
questioned, "never since I was weaned." Well, all this, you know,
is custom and fashion.
40
Now, I wish to say to my sisters, If you will be just a little
more moderate, I should like it very much. Some of you, and
especially the young sisters, may say, "Why, Brother Brigham, how
do your daughters dress?" I will say, to my shame, many of them,
and many do not. Then I must have a great many, for if I have
many that do and many that do not, that will amount to a great
many. But I guess I will let it go. Some of them are modest,
delicate, neat, and look beautiful, and do not want twenty-four
yards for a dress, nor seventeen. But this is uncomely, uncouth
and ill-looking. What shall I call it? A camel's back? You will
say they go from the lady to the camel, and from the camel to the
lady, and so on and so forth. They are called, I believe,
"Grecian Bends," but I do not think this term is exactly proper.
Are they comely in appearance? No, they are not. Then I should
like my daughters and my sisters to lay them aside. They should
dress neatly and comely, and to suit themselves, but not to suit
anybody else. We have the ability to tell what looks well, just
as well as anybody else. We need not go to New York, London, or
Paris to tell whether a coat looks well if it has a collar half
an inch wide. Do you recollect when collars were not more than
that? I do, and I recollect when they were about six or seven
inches in width. Now we need not go to Paris to ask them whether
a coat looks just right with a half inch or a five-inch collar;
we are the judges, and can decide that just as well as anybody
else on the face of the earth. I would not swap my eyes with any
living person for beauty and comeliness. I would rather trust to
my eyes for beauty, excellency and comeliness in dress, than any
other person's eyes I know of. We should be our own judges. This,
I say, to my sisters. Pause, reflect, look at the facts in the
case as regards the folly and expense of fashion. Take the people
of this city, and if you can form a correct estimate of the cost
of the useless articles they wear. (I think I brought this
subject up a year ago this summer, when here.) Just take these
useless articles that do no good to the body of the persons who
use them, and we would find that the means expended in their
purchase would enable us to relieve many poor, suffering,
distressed creatures abroad in the nations of the earth, and
bring them here and put them in a situation in which they would
be healthy, wealthy and happy. If we make a calculation on this
subject we shall find that the waste of the Latter-day Saints is
immense. There is a little town, south of here, the ladies of
which--the F. R. Society, took it into their minds, along in the
latter part of the winter, when we commenced calling upon the
people to assist the emigration of the poor this summer, to give
the eggs that their hens laid on Sunday. If they did not serve
the Lord themselves they resolved to make their hens do it
one-seventh of the time; and over a month ago I heard they had
raised by this method about eight hundred dollars. Would they
miss this? No, they could do without these eggs very well.
Suppose the ladies of Ogden, who, on account of the many ribbons
and needless articles they require, are unable to give anything
else they have, should give one-seventh part of the services of
their fowls to the bringing of the poor here! If Ogden had
commenced this last January, thousands and thousands of dollars
might have been raised by this time. Can you think of such a
trifling thing as this? Suppose that every man who practices the
disgusting habit, says to himself, "I will stop eating tobacco,
and the means I spend in buying it I will give to emigrate the
poor;" or, that, "what I pay out for liquor I will give to
emigrate the poor;" and each of the ladies says, "What money I
pay out for my tea or coffee" (and tobacco, liquor, tea and
coffee are four very useless articles) "I will give to emigrate
the poor," how much could be saved, do you think, in this little
community? Go to the stores, and ask them how much tobacco they
have sold for twelve months past. Take these little retail
stores, and then go into the retail departments of the wholesale
stores, and we should find in this little town, I will ensure,
that within the twelve months past, more than twelve, yes twenty,
thousand dollars have been paid for tobacco; and I will say ten
or twelve, and perhaps twenty, thousand more for liquor; and then
I will say twenty-five or thirty thousand more for tea or coffee,
and I guess I could go up to forty thousand dollars, right here
in Ogden. It is immense, the people have no idea of it, unless
they go and look for themselves. Get the statistics, and then you
will know with regard to the facts in the case.
41
Now suppose we say we will take the means we are spending for tea
and coffee, liquor and tobacco, and useless articles in dressing,
and we will give this to the poor, we would soon have a wealthy
purse. Who has given anything this season? How many of you have
given the first five dollars this season to bring the poor to
Zion? If there is a man or woman in this house that has given
anything for this purpose, do me the favor to hold up your hand?
(One or two hands were held up.) I have given a very little, just
a trifle. Sometimes I give a thousand, sometimes two thousand,
mostly two thousand, and that is but a trifle. I suppose many
would say, "Why, that is no more for you than five dollars for
me." Well, perhaps it is not. I have nothing but what the Lord
gave me, that is certain; and if he wanted the whole of it, for
the gathering of the poor this year, he is just as welcome to it
as I am to eat with you when you invite me to your houses. But
one thing I can say of a truth, I have not been in a hurry, I
have taken things moderately, kindly, calmly, and have "kept my
dish right side up."
41
Well now, you who want to give a little to help the poor, please
hand it over to Bishop Herrick. Bishop Herrick, will you please
get the bishops together, and request them to ask every ward in
this county to give something for the gathering of the poor, and
see who will assist in this good work?
41
If we will not be in a hurry, and will pray in our families, pray
in secret, attend our meetings, be patient and live so that the
Spirit of the Lord will dwell within us, and witness to God every
day of our lives, by faithful obedience to this requirements,
that we are his, I will say we are bound to get the wealth of the
world. We read in this good book (the Bible) that "the earth is
the Lord's and the fulness thereof." Everything belongs to him,
and he is going to give it to his Saints; and all our concern and
care should be, to be sure that we are Saints. Then it is all
right, it is by a deed or warranty--a warranty deed, and he will
warrant and defend it, if we will serve him, and be satisfied
with his providences, turning neither to the right nor to the
left, but serving him with an undivided heart all the days of our
lives. If it pleases him, and he wishes us to travel and preach,
go to the right or to the left, to the east or to the west, to
the north or to the south, to live here or live there, to do this
or to do that, to have little or much and be perfectly satisfied
and contented his blessings will be secured to us by a warranty
deed, and he will warrant and defend it.
42
If we are not Saints it is a great pity. We have the experience
of those who lived before us, we have the testimony of the
fathers, we have the sayings of Jesus and his Apostles, and we
can peruse them and can exercise faith in the name of Jesus, and
be guided by the spirit of the Lord by which these testimonies
were given; and we can know whether we are Saints or whether we
are not. It has been proclaimed that there is a great difference
between us and the Christian world. There is. Is the difference
because we believe in another religion? By no means. The
difference arises from the fact that we believe this Bible, wide
open, from genesis to Revelations. They believe it, sealed up,
never to be opened again to the human family. They believe it
shut, we believe it open; they believe it in silence, we believe
it proclaimed on the hose top; and when we scan the Bible and the
feelings of the Christian world, we find that it is, as has been
proclaimed here--there probably never was a day on the face of
the earth when infidelity reigned more completely in the hearts
of the children of men than it does now. We, as Christians,
believe in God, in Christ and in his atonement, in repentance and
obedience, and in receiving the Spirit; but what are the facts in
the case? We are persecuted, our names are cast out as evil, we
have the world arrayed against us. And who are at the head of
this? The Christians. You go to a real infidel--one brought up to
disbelieve in, and pay no attention to, this book as the word of
God, and we receive little persecution from him; none whatever in
comparison with what we receive from those who profess to believe
it. Where are their witness and testimony that they are right and
that we are wrong? We have the Scriptures to testify to the right
and righteousness of the cause we have espoused. They shut up the
Bible, say they are Christians, and cry, "False prophets, false
teachers, delusion, delusion, heresy, outcasts, kill them if you
can not get rid of them without, they must leave, we cannot
endure them any longer!"
42
Where is their proof, where is our proof? What criterion shall we
go by? We have the Scriptures, we have the Prophets, Jesus and
the Apostles; we have the revelations of the Spirit of God to
ourselves; we have the truth within our hearts, and all this is
proof to us of the validity of the faith that we have embraced;
and if it is correct, and the Bible is correct; if it is true,
and the Lord has spoken through his servants, they must be wrong,
and their own mouths shall judge them in the latter days; and if
they are to be judged by the Saints of by the Almighty you will
find the secret, and that will be out of their own mouths they
will be judged. We have the testimony of all this for ourselves.
42
How are you going to know whether this work is true, whether the
Bible is true, whether Joseph was a Prophet, whether Jesus was
the Savior, and his Apostles were correct in their teachings?
There is no way for you and me to know these things but by the
Spirit of God; and if we live so as to enjoy the light of that
Spirit, the light of revelation, it will be in us like a well of
water springing up to everlasting life. If we do not live thus,
we are in the dark as well as they.
42
All religion is a mystery. Do we know this? Certainly. I have an
experience in this, and so have the elder members of this
community: we have lived with the Christians. What have been the
declaration and the sayings of the wisest of the wise among them?
Is God a personage of Tabernacle? "I know not." Does God dwell
anywhere, is he a local being, or is he a traveling being? "I
know not." Does he possess a body, parts and passions? "I know
not." What of his Son Jesus? What of the evil? Acknowledge there
is evil in the world--that character that fell from heaven--the
Son of the Morning, has he a located place where he dwells? "I
know not." That is the answer. What do you understand by the
Scriptures? "We do not know what to understand, they are a
mystery, and beyond our comprehension, we can not comprehend
them. We are students of divinity but the Scriptures are a
mystery to us." I recollect once, in my early career, well nigh
forty years ago, conversing about two hours with a cousin of
mine, who had finished his studies to be a priest. As I left him
he said to me, "Cousin Brigham, I have learned more divinity from
your mouth to-day than I have learned in my four years' study.
You have told me things that I know are in the Scriptures, and I
know they are correct, for I feel in my heart and can testify to
the truth of them; but," said he, "they are not in the books,
neither in the mouths and hearts of our teachers; our preceptors
do not understand them, and I have learned more divinity from you
in two hours than in all my life before." This is their
experience. Have they knowledge? Go after it, and you will find
an aching void, a shadow instead of a substance, words which are
wind, instead of realities.
43
We would take the world of mankind by the hand and lead them to
life and salvation, if they would let us. It was said in my
office, a few days ago, by a party or railroad men, while
conversing with me about us as a people, "President Young, you
are not known, your people are not known; we shall know you
better hereafter, and they need not publish about you as they
have, or, if they do, we shall know better than to believe them.
Why do they publish such things? We are glad to become acquainted
with you." I replied, "For over forty years I have been striving
with all my might, in my weak capacity, and with my limited
knowledge, to make the world acquainted with us and our
doctrines. There are also thousands and thousand of Elders who
have traversed this earth over, without purse or scrip, trying to
get people to learn who the Latter-day Saints are, and what they
believe in, and why have you not known us? The Bible, Book of
Mormon, and the Book of Doctrine and Covenants, are published to
the world with other works, giving to the whole reading world the
principles we are proclaiming. Why are we not known? I will tell
you why: the liars are industrious, and, according to the old
saying, a lie will creep through a keyhole and travel leagues and
leagues while truth is getting up, wiping her eyes and putting
her shoes on. That is the reason, and you believe lies instead of
truth. And," said I, "from this time henceforth, when you read an
article about the people of Utah, read it candidly and honestly,
and the Spirit will tell you whether it is true or a lie, and
believe the truth about us."
43
I will say again, brethren and sisters, do not be in a hurry.
Brethren, if you want to get rich, live so as to enjoy the Spirit
of the Lord. You will then know exactly what to do in all
matters. You want the spirit of wisdom in all your business
transactions, and just as much in faring as anything else. We
want the Spirit of the Lord from the least chore of labor that we
perform, to the highest spiritual duty devolving upon the highest
man in the kingdom of God. We want the Spirit of the Lord to
guide and direct us through this world, to teach us in spiritual
things and in temporal things, that we may learn how to gain to
ourselves the riches of eternity, and secure to ourselves eternal
lives.
43
God bless you. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, April 7, 1872
Orson Pratt, April 7, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
April 7, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE LATTER-DAY KINGDOM--THE PRESENT FULFILMENT OF ANCIENT
PROPHECY.
44
When I look over this vast congregation, assembled in the body of
this house as well as in the gallery, it seems to be an
impossibility to make all hear; and to give all an opportunity to
do so it will be necessary that the closest attention be given
and that shuffling of feet and whispering cease. I suppose there
must be congregated here something in the neighborhood of twelve
thousands persons, and there are but very few voices or lungs
that are able to reach such a multitude, and edify and instruct
them. I know from former experience in speaking from this stand,
that it requires a great exertion of the lungs and body to speak
so as to be understood, and this great exertion of the physical
system is calculated in a very short time to weary also the mind,
therefore I may not be able to address you for any great length
of time.
45
It is now forty-two years since the organization of the Church of
Jesus Christ on the earth. Forty-two years ago, on the 6th day of
April, the Prophet Joseph Smith was commanded by the Lord
Almighty to organize the Kingdom of God on the earth for the last
time--to set up and make a beginning--to form the nucleus of a
Government that never should be destroyed from the earth, or, in
other words, that should stand forever. The founding of
governments, of whatsoever nature they may be, may be considered
in the estimation of some, very honorable; but there is no
special honor attached to a man who is called upon by the
Almighty to found a Government on the earth, for it is the Lord
who works by him as an instrument, using him for that purpose.
That, of course, is honorable. Perhaps there never was a work
accomplished among men of so great and important a nature as that
of the foundation of a kingdom that never is to be destroyed.
About six thousand years have passed away since the Government
established by the Patriarchs, or by the first man, was commenced
here on the earth. From that time until the present vast numbers
and descriptions of Governments, some Patriarchal in their
nature, others taking the form of kingdoms, others of empires and
so forth, have been organized here on the earth. During that long
interval of time whenever a man has founded a Government he has
ben greatly honored, not only by the generation among whom he
lied, and in which he formed the Government, but he has been
honored generally by after generations. But nearly all the
Governments that have been established have been thrown
down--they have been only temporary in their nature--existing for
a few centuries perhaps, and then overthrown. It is not my
intention this afternoon to examine the nature and forms of these
various human Governments, but to state in a few words that there
is now organized on the earth a Government which never will be
broken as former Governments have been. This will stand for ever.
It began very small--only six members were organized in this
Government on Tuesday the 6th day of April, 1830, that is
according to the vulgar era; according to the true era it was
some two or three years longer. The Christian era that is in
common use now among the human family is called the vulgar era,
because it is incorrect. Jesus, it is acknowledged by the most
learned men at the present day, was born two or three years
before the period that is now commonly called the vulgar
Christian era. It is also acknowledged by the greater portion of
the learned men of the day, who have carefully examined the
subject, that Jesus was crucified on the 6th day of April; and
according to the true Christian era it was precisely eighteen
hundred years from the day of his crucifixion until the day that
this Church was organized. Why the Lord chose this particular
period--the anniversary of the day of his crucifixion for the
organization of his kingdom on the earth I do not know. I do know
that he has a set time in his own mind for accomplishing his
great purposes; but why he should purpose in his own mind that
precisely eighteen hundred years should elapse from the day of
the crucifixion until the day of the organization of his church,
we do not know. Suffice it to say that this is the interval that
elapsed. The Book of Mormon gives the exact interval from the day
of his birth to the day of the crucifixion, and by putting these
two periods together we can ascertain the true Christian era.
There is a great dispute, however, among chronologists in regard
to this matter; many of them say Jesus was born one year before
the vulgar era, others that he was born two years before that.
Four different chronologists, mentioned by name in Smith's Bible
Dictionary, place the period three years before the vulgar era;
others place it at four years before, some five, and some have
placed it seven years before the present vulgar era. If we take a
medium between these combined with the testimony of a great many
who have written upon the subject, we find, as I said before,
that it makes precisely eighteen hundred years between the two
great events that took place, namely the crucifixion and the
building up of his kingdom in these latter days.
46
God has seen proper in the progress of this kingdom to restore to
his servants holding the priesthood every key and power
pertaining to the restitution of all things spoken of by the
mouth of all the Holy Prophets since the world began. One of the
first things that he condescended to restore was the fullness of
the everlasting Gospel, just according to the prediction of the
ancient Prophets--by the coming of an angel from heaven. Mr.
Smith fulfilled that prediction, or rather it was fulfilled to
him. He declares, in language most plain and positive, that God
did send an angel from heaven and committed to him the
everlasting Gospel on plates of gold; or in other words, he had
it revealed to him by this angel, where the plates of gold were
deposited containing the everlasting Gospel, as it was preached
to the ancient inhabitants of this American continent, by the
personal ministry of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. This was
the restoration predicted by John in the 14th chapter of
Revelations, where it is declared that such an event should take
place. John says that he saw, in vision, and angel come from
heaven to earth, to restore the everlasting Gospel. No people on
earth, prior to the advent of the Prophet Joseph Smith, ever
testified to the fulfilment of John's prediction. If you make the
inquiry of the various Christian denominations, whether Catholic,
Greek or Dissenters, they will tell you unitedly that no such
event characterized the rise of their churches; we have therefore
their testimony, proving that God never fulfilled this portion of
his word through them; but on the contrary the united voice and
testimony of all these Christians, from one end of the earth to
the other is that the Bible contains the Gospel, "And we have
preached the Gospel," say they, "as we found it recorded in the
Bible," and no angel to restore the authority to preach the
Gospel, to baptize, to confirm by the laying on of hands, to
administer the Lord's Supper, or to restore or give authority to
organize the kingdom of God on the earth, was necessary." To this
we reply, the history of the Gospel is one thing, and the
authority to preach it and administer its ordinances is another.
We can read its history in the New Testament; and we can also
read there how the ancient servants of God organized the Church
in their day; we can read what ordinances they performed or
administered among the children of men; we can read what was
needful for the organization of the Christian Church eighteen
hundred years ago. We have the history of all these things in the
Scriptures, but for some seventeen centuries past prior to the
coming of this angel, there has been no authority to preach it;
no Apostles, no Prophets, no revelators, no visions from heaven,
no inspiration from heaven; no voice of the Lord has been heard
among the nations during the long interval that has elapsed since
the putting to death of the ancient servants of God, and the
destruction of the ancient Christian Church. Joseph Smith came to
this generation testifying to the fulfillment of that which God
predicted in the Revelations of Saint John--the restoration of
the Gospel. But says John the Revelator, "when it is restored it
shall be preached to every nation, kindred, tongue and people."
47
Is there any prospect of this Gospel being thus extensively
preached among the inhabitants of the earth in this generation?
We need not refer you to the missions that have been taken by the
Elders of this Church. Their works speak for themselves. Behold
this vast congregation of people assembled here, and nearly all
who inhabit this Territory. Why are they here? Because the angel
has brought the everlasting Gospel, and because the servants of
God have been commissioned and sent forth with the sound of the
Gospel among the various nations and kingdoms of the earth; and
because they have succeeded in preaching it among vast numbers of
people, and gathering them out from the midst of the nations. But
it has not yet gone to all nations, kindreds, tongues and people;
but wait a little longer, it will shortly go, for just as sure as
it has already been preached to nearly all the nations of
Christendom, so will it go to every other people--heathen,
Mahomedan, and every class, whether in Europe, Asia, Africa, or
the uttermost parts of South America, the frozen regions in the
north, or the numerous islands in the great western and eastern
oceans. Every people must be warned that the great day of the
Lord is close at hand; every people must know that the Lord God
has spoken in these latter times; every people must know
something concerning the purposes of the Great Jehovah in
fulfilling and accomplishing the great preparatory work for the
second advent of the Son of God from the heavens. Here then is
the fulfilment of one prophecy. Let us now come to another.
47
John, who saw this angel restore the everlasting Gospel to be
preached to all the nations, declares that another proclamation
was closely connected with the preaching of the Gospel. What was
it? "The hour of his judgment has come"--the eleventh hour, the
last time that God will warn the nations of the earth. "The hour
of God's judgment has come," and that is the reason why the
Gospel is to be so extensively preached among all people, nations
and tongues, because the Lord intends through this warning to
prepare them, if they will, to escape the hour of his judgment,
which must come upon all people who will refuse to receive the
divine message of the everlasting Gospel.
47
We will now pass on to another prophecy. Another angel followed.
What was his proclamation? Another angel followed, and he cried
with a loud voice, saying: "Babylon is fallen, is fallen. She has
made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her
fornication," &c. Spiritual Babylon the Great, "the mother of
harlots and abominations of the earth." "Mystery Babylon"--that
great power that has held sway over the nations of the
earth--that great ecclesiastical power which has ruled over the
consciences of the children of men, she is to fall and is to be
destroyed from the face of the earth. Will the righteous fall
with her? No. Why not? Because there is a way for their escape.
47
Now mark another prophecy. "I heard a great voice," says John,
"from heaven, saying, 'Come out of her, O my people!'" Out of
where? "Mystery Babylon, the Great"--out of this great confusion
that exists throughout all the nations and multitudes of
Christendom. "Come out of her, O my people, that ye partake not
of her sins, that ye receive not of her plagues; for her sins
have reached to the heavens, and God hath remembered her
iniquities!" Is this being fulfilled? Do you see any indications
of the people of God coming out from "Mystery Babylon the Great?"
Yes, for forty-two years, and upwards, God has commanded his
people, not by something devised by a congregation of divines, of
by human ingenuity, but by a voice from heaven which has been
published and printed, requiring all who receive the everlasting
Gospel to come out from the midst of great Babylon. One hundred
thousand Latter-day Saints, approximately speaking, now inherit
these mountain regions. They are here because of this prediction
of John, because of its being fulfilled, because of the voice
that has come from heaven--the proclamation of the Almighty for
his people to flee from amongst the nations of the earth. I need
not say any more in regard to this prophecy; it is in the Bible,
and is being fulfilled before the eyes of all people.
48
Let me refer now to another prophecy. Daniel the Prophet has told
us that in the latter days after the great image that was seen in
dream by Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, representing the
various kingdoms of the world, should be destroyed, and those
nations should pass away and become like the chaff of the summer
threshing floor, the Lord would establish an everlasting
Government here upon the earth. The Lord God saw proper to reveal
to his servant Daniel the nature of this Government. He
represented it as having a very small beginning--as a stone cut
out of the mountain without hands, which stone should fall upon
the feet of the image, and they should be broken in pieces. After
the destruction of the feet all the image should fall--the legs
of iron, the belly and thighs of brass, the breast and arms of
silver, the head of gold--representing the remnants of all those
ancient nations--the Babylonians, Medes and Persians, and the
Greeks; also the remnants of those that once constituted the
great Roman empire--those now in Europe and those of European
origin which have come across the great ocean and established
themselves here on the vast continent of the west, all, all were
to be destroyed by the force of this little kingdom to be
established by the power of truth, and by the authority that
should characterize the nature of the stone cut out of the
mountains. "In the days of these kings," says the Prophet, "shall
the God of heaven set up a kingdom that shall never be destroyed,
neither shall it be left to any other people, but it shall stand
for ever," etc. The Prophet Daniel uttered the prophecy; Joseph
Smith, by authority of the Almighty, fulfilled it, so far as the
organization or setting up of the kingdom was concerned.
48
Let me refer now to some other prophecies. I do not want to dwell
long upon any of them. We are told in the prophecies of Isaiah
that before the time of the second advent, when the glory of the
Lord should be revealed and all flesh should see it together,
there should be a Zion built up on the earth. The Prophet gives
the following exhortation to that Zion--"O Zion, thou that
bringest good tidings, get thee up into the high mountain." Here
then is a prophecy that, in the latter days, God would have a
Zion on the earth before he should reveal himself from heaven and
manifest his glory to all people; and the people called Zion are
exhorted, in the 40th chapter of Isaiah, to get up into the high
mountain. Here we are in this great mountain region, in a
Territory called the mountain Territory. Here we are on the great
backbone, as it were, of the western hemisphere, located among
the valleys of this great ridge of mountains, which extends for
thousands of miles--from the frozen regions in the north almost
to the southern extremity of South America. Here are the people
called Zion, gone up into the high mountain, according to the
prediction of the Prophet Isaiah. Isaiah uttered the prophecy;
Joseph Smith also prophecied the same thing, but died without
seeing it fulfilled. His successor, Brigham Young, lived to be
the favored instrument in the hands of God, of taking the people
from those countries down in the States, those countries upon the
low elevations of our globe, and bringing them up here into this
vast mountain region. Thus the prophecy was uttered--thus it has
been fulfilled.
49
We will pass on to some other prophecies. In the eighteenth
chapter of the prophecies of Isaiah we have a prediction about a
time when the Lord should make a great destruction upon a certain
portion of the earth. The Prophet begins the chapter by saying,
"woe to the land shadowing with wings, which is beyond the rivers
of Ethiopia. Recollect where the Prophet dwelt when he uttered
this prophecy--in Palestine, east of the Mediterranean Sea. Where
was Ethiopia? South-west from Palestine. Where was there a land
located beyond the rivers of Ethiopia. Every person acquainted
with the geography of our globe knows that this American
continent was beyond the rivers of Ethiopia from the land of
Palestine, where the prophecy was uttered. A woe was pronounced
upon that land, and that woe is this: "For afore the harvest,
when the bud is perfect and the sour grape is ripening in the
flower, he shall both cut off the sprigs with pruning-hooks, and
take away and cut down the branches. They shall be left together
unto the fowls of the mountains, and to the beasts of the earth.
And the fowls shall summer upon them, and all the beasts of the
earth shall winter upon them." But first, before this
destruction, there is a remarkable prophecy. Says the Prophet:
"All ye inhabitants of the world, and dwellers on the earth, see
ye when he lifteth up an ensign on the mountains, and when he
bloweth a trumpet, hear ye." From this we learn that, before this
great destruction, there is to be an ensign lifted up on the
mountains, and this, too, beyond the rivers of Ethiopia, from
Palestine. This is the reason why Zion in the latter days goes up
into the mountains, in order that an ensign might be lifted up on
the mountains. This prophecy was uttered some twenty-five hundred
years ago, and has been fulfilled before the eyes of the people
in our day.
49
But more in regard to this ensign; we find that it was not an
ensign to be lifted up in Palestine, for in the fifth chapter of
his prophecies, Isaiah, speaking of it says--"The Lord shall lift
up an ensign for the nations from afar." What does this mean? It
means a land far distant from where the Prophet Isaiah lived--the
land of Palestine. Now there is no land of magnitude or greatness
that is far off from Palestine that would answer the description
of this prophecy any better than this great western hemisphere;
it is located almost on the opposite side of the globe from
Palestine. The Lord, then, was to lift the ensign on a land that
was far off from where the Prophet lived; and that ensign, we are
told, should be set up on the mountains, and that, too, on a land
shadowing with wings. When looking on the map of North and South
America it has oftentimes suggested to my own mind the two wings
of a great bird. No doubt the Prophet Isaiah saw this great
western continent in vision, and recognized the resemblance to
the wings of a bird in the general outline of the two branches of
the continent. On such a land, on the mountains afar off from
Palestine, an ensign was to be raised. But remember another thing
in connection with this ensign--See how extensive the
proclamation was to be--"All ye inhabitants of the world and
dwellers on the earth, see ye when he lifts up an ensign on the
mountains." It was to be a work that was to attract the attention
of all people, unto the ends of the world.
50
"But," enquires one, "what do you call an ensign?" Webster gives
the definition of an ensign or standard--"Something to which the
people gather; a notice for the people to assemble." In other
words it is the great standard of the Almighty--the great ensign
that he is lifting up in the shape of his Church and kingdom, on
the mountains in the latter days, with all the order and form of
his ancient system of church government, with its inspired
Apostles and Prophets and with all the gifts, powers and
blessings characterizing the Christian Church in ancient days.
That is an ensign that should attract the people unto the very
ends of the world.
50
With the establishment of this ensign God has not only restored
the Gospel, but the keys of gathering the people together and
building up Zion, and he has also restored other keys and
blessings that were to characterize the great and last
dispensation of the fullness of times. What are they? The same as
predicted in the last chapter of the prophecy of Malachi. That
Prophet, speaking of the great day of burning says, "Behold the
day shall come that shall burn as an oven, and all the proud and
they that do wickedly shall become as stubble, and the day that
cometh shall burn them up saith the Lord of Hosts, that it shall
leave them neither root nor branch." This is something that has
never been fulfilled yet. But mark! Before the Lord burns all the
proud and those who do wickedly, he has told us he would send
Elijah the Prophet. He says, "Behold, I will send unto you Elijah
the Prophet, he shall turn the hearts of the fathers to the
children and the hearts of the children to the fathers, lest I
come and smite the earth with a curse." Recollect, this is to be
just before the day of burning, before the great and notable day
of the Lord should come.
51
Elijah, the Prophet, then, must come from heaven--that same man
who was translated in a chariot of fire, and who had such power
while on the earth that he could fight, as it were, all the
enemies of Israel that came against him; he could call down fire
from heaven and consume the fifties as they came by companies to
take him. That same man was to be sent in the last days, before
the great and notable day of the Lord. What for? To restore a
very important principle--a principle which will turn the hearts
of the children to the fathers, and the hearts of the fathers to
the children. Has that Prophet been sent to the earth, according
to the prediction? Yes. When did he come, and to whom did he
come? He came to that despised young man, Joseph Smith. According
to the testimony of Joseph Smith, the Prophet Elijah stood before
him, in the presence of Oliver Cowdery, and gave them these keys.
What is included in this turning of the hearts of the children to
the fathers and the hearts of the fathers to the children? There
is included in it a principle for the salvation of the fathers
that are dead, as well as for the children who are living. You
have heard, Latter-day Saints, for years and years, that God has
given keys, by which the living in this Church might do, not only
the works necessary for their own salvation, but also certain
works necessary to the salvation of their ancestors as far back
as they could obtain their genealogies. What can be done by us
for our fathers who have lived and died during the last seventeen
hundred years, without hearing the Gospel in its fullness and
power? Hundreds and thousands, and millions of them were sincere
and honest, and served the Lord the best they knew; but they
lived in the midst of apostate Christendom, and never heard the
Gospel preached by inspired men, neither had they the chance of
having its ordinances administered to them by men having
authority from God. Must they be shut out from the kingdom of
God, and be deprived of the glory, joys and blessings of
celestial life because of this? No, God is an impartial being,
and when he sent Elijah the Prophet to confer the keys I have
referred to upon Joseph Smith, he intended that this people
should work for the generations of the dead, as well as for the
generations of the living; that these ordinances which pertain to
men here in the flesh might be administered in their behalf by
those of their kindred living in this day and generation. In this
way the Latter-day Saints will be baptized and receive the
various ordinances of the Gospel of the Son of God for their
forefathers, as far as they can trace them; and when we have
traced them as far back as we can possibly go, the Lord God has
promised that he will reveal our ancestry back until it shall
connect with the ancient priesthood, so that there will be no
link wanting in the great chain of redemption.
51
Here then was a restoration in fulfillment of the prediction of
Malachi, and for this reason Temples are being built. The Temple,
of which the foundation is laid on this block, is intended for
that purpose among others. It is not intended for the assembling
of vast congregations of the Saints, but it is intended to be for
the administration of sacred and holy ordinances. There will be a
font for baptism, in its proper place, built according to the
pattern that God shall give unto his servants. It is intended
that, in these sacred and holy places, appointed, set apart and
dedicated by the command of the Almighty, genealogies shall be
revealed, and that the living shall officiate for the dead, that
those who have not had the opportunity while in the flesh in past
generations to obey the Gospel, might have their friends now
living, officiate for them. This does not destroy their agency,
for although they laid down their bodies and went to their graves
in a day of darkness, and they are now mingled with the hosts of
spirits in the eternal worlds, their agency still continues, and
that agency gives them power to believe in Jesus Christ there,
just as well as we can who are here. Those spirits on the other
side of the veil can repent just the same as we, in the flesh,
can repent. Faith in God and in his son Jesus Christ, and
repentance are acts of the mind--mental operations--but when it
comes to baptism for the remission of sins they cannot perform
that, we act for them, that having been ordained to be performed
in the flesh. They can receive the benefit of whatever is done
for them here, and whatever the Lord God commands his people here
in the flesh to do for them will be published to them there by
those holding the everlasting Priesthood of the Son of God. If,
when the Gospel is preached to them there, they will believe in
the Lord Jesus Christ, they will receive the benefits of the
ordinances performed on their behalf here, and they will be
partakers, with their kindred, of all the blessings of the
fullness of the Gospel of the Son of God; but if they will not do
this they will be bound over in chains of darkness until the
judgment of the great day, when they will be judged according to
men in the flesh. We are here in the flesh, and the same Gospel
that condemns the disobedient and the sinner here, will, by the
same law, condemn those who are on the other side of the veil.
52
We have an account of baptism for the dead, as it was
administered among the ancient Saints. Paul refers to it in his
epistle to the Corinthians, to prove to them that the
resurrection was a reality, "else," says he, "what shall they do
who are baptized for the dead? If the dead rise not at all, why
then are they baptized for the dead?" It was a strong argument
that Paul brought forward, and one that the Corinthians well
understood. It was a practice among them to be baptized for their
dead, and Paul, knowing that they understood this principle, used
an argument to show that the dead would have a resurrection, and
that baptism or immersion in water, a being buried in and the
coming forth out of the water, was a simile of the resurrection
from the dead. The same doctrine is taught in one of Peter's
epistles. About preaching to those who are dead, Peter says that
"Jesus was put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the
Spirit, by which also he went and preached to the spirits in
prison, which sometimes were disobedient, when once the
long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah while the ark
was preparing?" Indeed! Jesus himself go to the dead and preach
to them? Yes. Go to the old antediluvian spirits, and preach to
them? Yes, preach to spirits who had lain in prison over two
thousand years, shut up and deprived of entering into the fulness
of the kingdom of God because of their disobedience. Jesus went
and preached to them. "What did he preach?" He did not preach
eternal damnation, for that would have been no use. He did not go
and say to them, "You antediluvian spirits, I have come here to
torment you." He did not declare that "I have opened your prison
doors to tell you there is no hope for you, your case is past
recovery, you must be damned to everlasting despair." This was
not his preaching. He went there to declare glad tidings. When he
entered the prison of those antediluvians, Peter says he preached
the Gospel. "For, for this cause was the Gospel preached to them
that are dead, that they might be judged according to men in the
flesh, and live according to God in the spirit." Yes, the
inhabitants of the spirit world--far more numerous than those in
the flesh--must hear the glad tidings of the Gospel of the Son of
God, that all may be judged by the same Gospel and the same law;
and if they will receive it be blessed, exalted from their prison
house, and brought into the presence of the Father and the Son,
and inherit celestial glory.
53
This, therefore, is among the greatest of all the keys that God
has revealed in the last dispensation--the saving of the
generations of the dead, as well as the generations of the
living, inasmuch as they will repent. Shall we stop here? Perhaps
I have spoken sufficiently long. There are other principles, just
as important in their nature, that must be restored in the
latter-days, but I have not time to dwell upon them. I have
reference now to the restoration of that eternal principle--the
marriage covenant, which once was on the earth in the days of our
first parents, the eternal union of husband and wife, according
to the law of God, in the first pattern of marriage that is given
to the children of men. That must also be restored, and
everything in its time and in its season must be restored, in
order that all things spoken of by the mouth of all the holy
Prophets since the world began may be fulfilled. But we will
leave this subject for some future time. There must, however, be
a restoration of the eternal covenant of marriage, and also of
that order of marriage which existed among the old Patriarchs,
before the prophecies can be fulfilled, wherein seven women shall
take hold of one man, saying, "we will eat our own bread, and
wear our own apparel, only let us be called by thy name to take
away our reproach." That must be restored, or the prophecies of
Isaiah never can be fulfilled. A great many other things might be
named which must be restored in the dispensation of the fulness
of times. It is a dispensation to restore all things, it is the
dispensation of the spirit and power of Elias or Elijah, "to seal
all things unto the end of all things" preparatory to the coming
of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
53
The wicked as well as the righteous will feel the power of these
keys. The wicked as well as the righteous must be sealed to that
end for which they have lived. The wicked, who have disobeyed the
law of God, must be sealed over unto darkness, until they have
been punished and beaten with many stripes, until the last
resurrection, until the last trump shall sound. But the
righteous, in the flesh and behind the veil, will come forth in
the first resurrection, but prior to that great event they will
co-operate in their labors for the consummation of the purposes
of the Almighty so far as necessary to prepare the way for the
second coming of the Lord Jesus Christ to reign here, personally,
on the earth for the space of one thousand years. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, December 18, 1870
Orson Pratt, December 18, 1870
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
December 18, 1870.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
SECOND COMING OF CHRIST--PREPARATORY WORK THERETO.
53
I will read a few passages of Scripture, which will be found in
the 50th Psalm--
53
"The mighty God, even the Lord, hath spoken, and called the earth
from the rising of the sun to the going down thereof.
53
"Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God hath shined.
53
"Our God shall come, and shall not keep silence--a fire shall
devour before him, and it shall be very tempestuous round about
him.
53
"He shall call to the heavens from above, and to the earth, that
he may judge his people.
53
"Gather my saints together unto me; those that have made a
covenant with me by sacrifice."
54
This congregation, the members of which are generally speaking
Bible believers, have no doubt in their minds but the ancient
servants of God were inspired by the gift of the Holy Ghost to
utter many things concerning the future, to deliver many
predictions concerning events which should take place among
mankind down to the latest generations. David, in a peculiar
manner, was inspired, and composed his psalms by the spirit of
prophecy; he foresaw, by that spirit that knows all things, some
of the grand events of the future, pertaining to the inhabitants
of this world, and the purposes of God in relation to this
creation. These passages which I have read have reference to some
of these great events, a portion of which have already, in a
measure, been fulfilled; but the greater portion remains yet to
be accomplished. "The mighty God, even the Lord, hath spoken,"
has literally been fulfilled so far as this present generation is
concerned. It has been fulfilled also in relation to past
generations; but it is very evident from the meaning of the
context, that the speaking of the lord here referred to was a
work of latter times when God should again speak to the
inhabitants of the earth; when he should again call upon all
people, far and near, "from the rising of the sun," as he
expresses here, "to the going down thereof." To show more fully
that this was a latter-day work, he speaks or predicts that the
"Lord our God shall come and not keep silence." This had no
reference to his first coming; for though he did then come and
utter forth his doctrine and did not keep silence, yet you will
see by reading a little further, that the Psalmist had reference
to another coming of the Son of God, very different in its
character from his first advent. "Our God shall come and shall
not keep silence." Now mark, in an especial manner, the following
sentence, and you will see that it has no reference to his first
coming--"A fire shall devour before him, and it shall be very
tempestuous round about him." This was not a characteristic of
his first coming; there was nothing specially connected with that
event that would excite the attention of mankind generally. He
came in a very meek and humble manner; his birth and advent into
this world were in the most humble position. Born, as it were, in
a stable, laid down in a manger. Not born in king's palace--not
born among the great and noble, but in a very obscure manner. He
grew up from infancy to manhood engaged in the carpenter's
business. Some thirty years of his life were spent at home with
his reputed father, and with his mother Mary, dwelling
comparatively in obscurity, occasionally breaking forth and
arguing with the wise and the great. Nothing characterizing him
as the Great Creator of this world, or as its Redeemer, only to
those who were well acquainted with the predictions of the
Prophets. But this last coming, or the coming here spoken of by
the Psalmist, represents him as coming with power--"A fire shall
devour before him and it shall be very tempestuous round about
him. He shall call to the heavens from above," says the next
passage, "and to the earth from beneath." What object had he in
view in calling upon the heavens above and upon the earth
beneath? What end had he in view in again speaking and breaking
the silence of ages, and in giving a revelation to the heavens
and then to the earth? It was in order to bring about a
preparatory work before the face of his coming the second time,
when he should come in flaming fire. A preparation was needed,
and this preparations is mentioned in part in the last verse
which I read, which declares that he should call to the heavens
from above and to the earth from beneath.
54
He gives us some insight into the nature of that call. His call
to his servants was, "Gather ye my Saints together unto me, they
that have made a covenant with me by sacrifice."
55
This seems, then, to be a work preparatory to the coming of the
Lord in flaming fire. The nature of the fire that will be
exhibited at his second coming in the clouds of heaven will be
such that it will consume the wicked and ungodly, and those who
repent not and who do not sanctify themselves before the Lord.
Our God in that day will be a consuming fire; the intensity of
this fire will be so great that the very hills, the Psalmist
David informs us in another place, "will melt like wax before his
presence." The Prophet Isaiah, in speaking of the fire or heat
that would accompany the second advent of the Son of God,
declares that the mountains shall flow down at his presence. The
elements that now constitute these rugged mountains which we see
here on this continent and in all parts of the earth where we
travel will melt with fervent heat, and will flow down before the
presence of the Lord. The brightness of this fire will be greater
than that of the sun in its glory. I mean our temporal, literal
sun, from which we receive light and heat, as you will find
recorded in the last verse of the 24th chapter of isaiah, which
says that "when the Lord of Hosts shall come to reign in Mount
Zion and in Jerusalem, and before his ancients gloriously, the
sun shall hide his face in shame and the moon shall be
confounded." With all the brightness of that luminary which
lights this creation it will hide its face in shame; and the
bright luminaries of heaven will be confounded as it were, so
great will be the glory of his presence--a fire devouring before
him and all nature feeling the power of the Almighty, which will
be exerted on that grand occasion.
55
Will the wicked be able to endure this intense heat and not be
consumed? I now have reference to their physical tabernacles,
their temporal bodies. Hear what prophecy has declared in
relation to this. Read the last chapter contained in the Old
Testament; that will answer the question.
55
"For, behold, the day cometh, that shall burn as an oven; and all
the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be stubble; and
the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord of Hosts,
that it shall leave them neither root nor branch."
56
Notice, now, how completely it will sweep the proud and those who
do wickedly from the face of this creation. The fire that
proceeds forth from the presence of God at his second coming
shall burn as an oven, and shall not only affect the mountains
and the elements so as to melt them, but it will also consume the
proud and them that do wickedly from the face of the globe. What
effect will this intense heat have upon the righteous? No more
than the heated furnace of Nebuchadnezzar had upon the Hebrews
who were cast therein; and though it was heated seven times
hotter than it was wont to be heated and slew those who cast
their fellows into it, yet they who were thrown into it received
no harm, not even the smell of fire on their garments. They were
protected by a miracle, and the fire that slew their enemies was
their preservation. So likewise when the Son of God shall burn up
the wicked and consume their bodies to ashes, both root and
branch, leaving no remnants of them among all people, nations and
tongues, the righteous will be prepared to enter into the midst
of this flaming fire without receiving any harm; indeed they will
be caught up into the very presence of God, and they will be
surrounded with a pillar of fire as Moses was when he came down
from Mount Sinai, only to a far greater extent; but it will have
no power over them, in fact it will be their protection and
salvation, their glory, happiness and joy. To prepare the people
for that great day it is necessary that the Saints should be
gathered together, as predicted in the 5th verse, when he should
give this great and grand revelation in the last days, when the
mighty God, even the Lord, shall speak. He will call to the
heavens to assist in the great latter-day work; and all the
angels and the heavenly host, who do his bidding, will go forth
as swift messengers to execute his decrees and fulfil his
purposes in bringing about this grand gathering of his elect from
the four quarters of the earth. Who will they be? Those who have
made a covenant with him by sacrifice. What kind of a sacrifice?
The sacrifice of every earthly thing required, their native
countries, their fathers and mothers, for in many instances those
who obey the Gospel are compelled to sever the nearest earthly
ties--parents from their children, children from their parents
and kindred from their kin, in order that they may come forth and
be gathered into one grand body preparatory to the coming of the
Son of God in flaming fire.
56
There are many people who have believed that the coming of our
Lord was near at hand. We might refer to many persons by name who
have even set times for his coming--certain particular days,
months and years in which the Lord would be revealed from heaven.
But they have entirely overlooked the prophecies of the great
preparatory work for his coming. If they had read closely, and
instead of studying for dates had carefully looked for the great
purposes to be fulfilled before he comes they would have known
that their predictions were false. There is to be a grand
gathering of all his people from the four quarters of the earth
into one body, one family as it were; one people consolidated in
one region of country, before he shall come.
56
Let me refer to this great gathering of the Saints from every
land and nation; we find it predicted in various portions of the
prophetic writings. I will first refer you to the prediction
recorded, if I recollect aright, in the 43d chapter of Isaiah.
There is a prediction that before the great day of rest the Lord
will again speak and will say to the north give up, to the south
keep not back! Bring my sons from afar and my daughters from the
ends of the earth--the same thing that David has reference to.
56
This is not a work to be accomplished by the wisdom of man or by
a combination of the wisest men that are uninspired, among the
nations; but the Lord is to speak, and will say to the north give
up. A new revelation is to be given: he will say to the south
keep not back, and he will command that his sons and his
daughters be brought from the ends of the earth.
57
Has any such thing happened in our days? Has the mighty God, even
the Lord, spoken in our days? Yes, and connected with this
proclamation we are informed that the elect of God are to be
gathered from the four winds of heaven; and we have been called
upon to perform this work. How much have we accomplished during
the forty years that have intervened since the Lord spoke? In the
year 1827, '28, '29 and '30 the Lord spoke and gave many
revelations, among which was this record called the Book of
Mormon, unfolding to us not only the everlasting Gospel in all
its plainness, simplicity and ancient purity, as it was taught to
the inhabitants of this continent eighteen hundred years ago; but
also many sacred predictions relating to the great work which God
would accomplish when he should bring this record forth in the
latter days. This book was translated by a mighty Prophet who was
inspired of God for the purpose; and since it came forth--in the
short space of forty years--it has been published in many of the
languages of the earth. It has gone forth in the German, Italian,
French, Welsh and Scandinavian languages, and also in the tongue
spoken by the Sandwich Islanders; and it has been proclaimed, as
it were, on the housetops, in the streets and highways, upon the
hills and mountains and in all public places, so far as the
Missionaries and Elders of this Church could find access and
liberty to proclaim it; and wherever the people have repented and
turned from their sins and have desired to receive the
everlasting Gospel, they have continued to gather together in
one. His gathering has been going on for nearly forty years,
until the effects can now be seen in this Territory, by any
person who will travel through it, in the towns and cities which
have been built, the settlements which have been formed, the
meeting-houses and school-houses and public halls that have been
erected; and in the fencing of farms, and the opening of water
canals an ditches for irrigating the soul. I say those who will
travel through this Territory may see some of the effects of the
gathering out of the Saints who have made a covenant with the
Lord by sacrifice. If we had gathered together into a country
that was well timbered, where we could go out and get a load of
fence poles or firewood before breakfast; if we had settled in a
country that was not, comparatively a desert, and that was
blessed with the rains of heaven, we could no doubt have
accomplished far more than we now see. But the Lord purposely led
us into this desert to fulfil prophecy. A great many people,
perhaps, reflect upon and wonder at our coming into a sterile,
barren district of country, inhabited by hostile savages, and
which, to all natural appearance, would not sustain a farming or
agricultural population. But the Lord brought us into a country
of this description in order that he might fulfil prophecies that
must come to pass before "our God shall come in flaming fire."
57
In proof of this let me refer you to the nature of the country,
the redemption of the desert and so forth, that is to take place
before the Lord comes. I will refer you now to some of the
sayings of the Prophet Isaiah. In the last two verses of his 34th
chapter he says:
57
"Seek ye out of the book of the Lord, and read; no one of these
shall fail, none shall want her mate; for my mouth it hath
commanded, and his spirit it hath gathered them.
57
"And he hath cast the lot for them, and his hand hath divided it
unto them by line; they shall possess it for ever, from
generation to generation shall they dwell therein."
57
In the 35th chapter, first and second verse, you will find these
words:
57
"The wilderness and the solitary place shall be glad for them;
and the desert shall rejoice, and blossom as the rose.
57
"It shall blossom abundantly, and rejoice even with joy and
singing; the glory of Lebanon shall be given unto it, the
excellency of Carmel and Sharon; they shall see the glory of the
Lord, and the excellency of our God."
58
Notice now that the Lord, by his Spirit, is to have a great
gathering in the latter days of his people, and we are advised to
seek out of the book of the Lord and learn of this gathering, and
how his Saints should inhabit the land. It should be divided unto
them by lot, the same as many people received their inheritances
when they came into this desert. They cast lots, and drew their
lots and inheritances. "And the wilderness and the solitary
places shall be glad for them." If you can find a country that
answers better the description here given anywhere in the four
quarters of the earth, I should like to know it. When we came
here, the country to all natural appearance was so barren that it
seemed impossible to locate a people upon it. But you see what we
have accomplished. Not by our own wisdom nor by our own strength,
but by being gathered by the voice of the Lord and by his
commandment, and being guided and directed by the spirit of
inspiration.
58
After we are gathered, the desert is to rejoice and blossom as
the rose. How often I have thought of this in the spring time,
when all of this city, covering some four, or perhaps five square
miles with orchards and gardens, is in bloom! Then is the time to
realize how literally this prophecy has been fulfilled. Every one
knows that fruitful as it now is, when we came here it was called
a desert. If you do not believe me, go to the old maps, and you
will find this section of the country laid down as "The Great
American Desert." That is the name that was given to it then.
People, when banded together in a numerous company, and well
armed, would hardly venture to pass through this desert country,
it was so unpropitious and forbidding, the rains of heaven never
having been, apparently, shed forth upon it. When we came we
could dig down some eighteen inches or two feet, and in other
places there was no moisture at all, and it looked as though
there never had been any rain here. But "the wilderness and the
solitary place shall be made glad for them, and the desert shall
blossom abundantly, even with joy and singing."
58
"But," says one, "perhaps this had reference to some other
period, and not to the preparatory work for the coming of the
Lord." Let us read a few verses further in this 35th chapter of
Isaiah's prophecies. The third and fourth verses read:
58
"Strengthen ye the weak hands, and confirm the feeble knees.
58
"Say to them that are of a fearful heart, Be strong, fear not;
behold, your God will come with vengeance, even God with a
recompense; he will come and save you."
58
Now notice, this is not the first coming. He did not come with
vengeance then; he came to be spit upon, to be meek and lowly, to
be ridiculed by the mob if they felt disposed, and finally to be
lifted up upon the cross and crucified for the sins of the world.
But the people who are to be gathered together, and for whom the
desert is to rejoice, are called upon not to fear--"Don't be
faint-hearted, don't be discouraged." Says the Prophet, "Be
strong, fear not, for behold your God will come with vengeance;
he will come with a recompence and he will save you," that is,
you who are in the desert. Then there will be splendid miracles
wrought again, as in ancient days. Then the eyes of the blind are
to be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped; then
"shall the lame man leap as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb
shall sing, for in the wilderness shall waters break out and
streams in the desert."
59
Latter-day Saints, and what I ask of you I might ask of the whole
people of the Territory, have you seen a fulfilment of this
saying of the Prophet Isaiah since you have been located here in
the desert? Has there been any such things as springs breaking
out in the wilderness and rivulets of water in the desert? Yes,
not in one or two isolated instances, but in almost every
settlement throughout this Territory. Many places in which, in
early days, there was not water enough for a settlement of twenty
individuals, now support their hundreds. In what way? By the
great increase of water. How was Salt Lake when we first came
here? We, that is, a few of the Pioneers, went over in July 1847,
to the banks of Salt Lake, to what is called the Black Rock. Some
of us went in bathing, and we could walk out to Black Rock, and
look down on the water on each side. But how is it now? The
waters are some ten feet above that land that we trod upon then.
What is the matter? Ought not the waters of the Lake to have
decreased, seeing that the waters of the various streams that,
before our arrival, emptied their contents into it, are turned
broadcast over thousands and tens of thousands of acres of land?
Certainly one would think so, for when all this water is turned
on the land it evaporates instead of going to increase the volume
of the Great Salt Lake; but instead of diminishing, the waters of
the Lake have risen some ten or twelve feet above the surface as
it existed in 1847, when I first saw it. Hence streams have
broken out in the desert, and waters in the wilderness, as it is
prophecied, not only in this chapter, but also in various
portions of the Psalms.
59
When speaking of the great day of the coming of the Lord, how
often do Isaiah and David speak of the desert, and the waters,
rivers and springs that should break out to water the barren,
thirsty land! "The parched ground shall become a pool, and the
thirsty land springs of water."
60
We might go on and speak about the highway that the Lord would
have there, that has also been thrown up since we came here. It
is even called a highway by the world, that know nothing of these
prophecies. I believe I will say, as I pass along, something
about the highway, for the same Prophet that predicts about this
alteration in the desert, also says there shall be a highway
there. Let me refer to another prophecy about this highway, by
the same Prophet. It reads thus: "And the Lord shall proclaim to
the ends of the world, say ye to the daughter of Zion, beheld thy
salvation cometh; behold his reward is with him and his work
before him." But in the sentence preceding this the Prophet says:
"Cast up, cast up a highway, gather out the stones, prepare ye
the way of the people, lift up a standard for the people." Then
come in the words I have quoted. How was the great highway that
crosses this continent constructed? You ought to know, for you
were the ones who constructed it through these mountains; you
were the ones who built some four hundred miles of this railroad,
you therefore know how it was done. Did you gather out the
stones? Did you prepare the level places for this great highway
that the Prophet had predicted? Did you cast it up where there
were hollows? Did you fill up the hollows and gather out the
stones in order to make it level and convenient? O, yes. Did you
make any tunnels and gateways? I don't suppose that the ancient
Prophet knew what a tunnel was, hence he says, "go through, go
through the gates, cast up cast up a highway." No doubt he saw in
vision how the railroad looked, saw the carriages driving along
with almost lightning speed, darting into the mountains on one
side, and by and by saw them coming out on the other side; and he
did not know how to represent it any better than to speak of it
as a gate--"go through, go through the gates," &c. "Prepare ye
the way of the people, cast up, cast up a highway, and lift up a
standard for the people;" and then come in those notable words,
showing that it was a highway to be cast up before the coming of
the Son of God. "The Lord has proclaimed to the ends of the
world, say ye to the daughters of Zion, behold thy salvation
cometh, behold his reward is with him and his work before him."
60
Don't you see from these passages that this is a latter-day work?
That there is a proclamation connected with the casting up of
this highway? And that it is a proclamation which has reference
to every nation, kindred, tongue and people? God was to speak,
deliver a message, send forth his servants as missionaries; they
were to publish that message to the ends of the world, and to
declare to all people that the Lord was to come, "behold thy
salvation cometh, and his reward is with him, and his work is
before him." The Prophet further says "They shall call them," for
whom this highway was built that their way might be prepared, and
for whom a standard should be raise, "the redeemed of the Lord, a
holy people; they shall be called, sought out, a city not
forsaken," Oh, how different from old Jerusalem, a city that has
been forsaken! It is almost two thousand years since the Lord
forsook it, and the Jews have been forsaken, and scattered among
all people.
60
But when the Lord lifts up this highway, gathers out the stones,
sends forth his proclamation and gathers out his Saints who have
made a covenant by sacrifice, they will build a city, one that
shall be sought out. Old Jerusalem was not sought out; it was
built before the Jews went to inhabit it. It was one of the early
cities of the ancient nations of Canaan. But this latter-day
city, that is called Zion, is to be sought out, and the people
that were to search it out were to be a very good people. "They
shall call them the Redeemed of the Lord; they shall be called,
sought out, a city not forsaken."
60
Now, with all the difficulties we have encountered here, and with
all the imaginations of our enemies in regard to us, I humbly
trust and hope that the time has come for this prophecy to be
literally fulfilled; when this city of the Lord, which is built
up according to this prophecy will not be forsaken. I hope that
the Lord our God will protect his people and guarantee to them
the rights already guaranteed by the Constitution of our Country
to every religious denomination in the land.
60
There are some other prophecies about the gathering of the
Saints. I think I will read one that has reference to our coming
to this place. You will find it in the 107th Psalm, and it is
very applicable to the journey which we performed when we came
here.
60
"O give thank unto the Lord, for He is good: for His mercy
endureth for ever.
60
"Let the redeemed of the Lord say so, whom He hath redeemed from
the hand of the enemy;
60
"And gathered them out of the lands, from the east, and from the
west, from the north, and from the south.
60
"They wandered in the wilderness in a solitary way; they found no
city to dwell in.
60
"Hungry and thirsty their soul fainted in them.
60
"Then they cried unto the Lord in their trouble, and He delivered
them out of their distresses.
60
"And he led them forth by the right way, that they might go to a
city of habitation.
60
"Oh that men would praise the Lord for His goodness, and for His
wonderful works to the children of men."
61
This has been fulfilled since the day that David uttered it. "Let
the redeemed of the Lord say so!" What redeemed of the Lord? Not
those who were gathered out of the land of Egypt before the days
of David, but those who are gathered out of all lands, says the
Prophet, "from the East and from the West, and from the North and
from the South." From the four points of the compass, from every
nation and every clime. "Let them praise the Lord and give thanks
to his holy name, because of his mercy and his goodness to them."
They were not to find it at first all to their satisfaction;
their journey was to be in a solitary way; they were to find no
city to dwell in. I can bear testimony to this, for I was among
the pioneers, and when we came here we didn't find any great
city, with houses already built to go into. We had to live in our
wagons, and had to build a little fort to defend ourselves
against the half-naked Indians. And thus we located in the midst
of a dried-up and thirsty land--a desert; and here in this
region, where the solitude was so great that it was only broken
by the yells of savages and the howling of wild beasts, we had to
go to work to prepare a city for habitation. We had some
afflictions--hunger and thirst; "and their souls fainted within
them," says David, "but they cried unto the Lord in their
afflictions, and he had mercy upon them and delivered them out of
their distresses."
61
In the 31st and 32d verses the Psalmist says--
61
"Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodness, and for his
wonderful works to the children of men!"
61
"Let them exalt him also in the congregation of the people, and
praise him in the assembly of the Elders."
61
Why should they be so glad to praise him? He tells us in the next
verses--
61
"He turneth rivers into a wilderness, and the water springs into
dry ground."
61
"A fruitful land into barrenness, for the wickedness of them that
dwell therein."
61
This has reference to what will take place in the fruitful lands
of the Gentiles by and by; but he is going to reverse this so far
as his people in the desert are concerned, for he turns the
wilderness into standing water, and the dry ground into water
springs; and "there he makes the hungry to dwell that they may
prepare a city for habitations." Just as you did, brethren and
sisters. "And sow the fields and plant vineyards, which may yield
fruits of increase. He blesseth them also so that they are
multiplied greatly, and suffereth not their cattle to decrease."
61
Has this been fulfilled? I have been away a great many years, and
I do not know so much about it as some of these old farmers; but
I think if we will traverse this Territory, we will find that our
cattle have not decreased since we came here.
61
There is another prophecy in this Psalm to which I will call your
attention, connected with this people that was to be gathered out
from all lands into a wilderness and solitary place. The Prophet
says--"yet setteth he the poor on high from affliction and maketh
him families like a flock." Now, is that true? I would ask some
of my brethren here, as I have been gone so much, is there any
man here who has families like a flock? If you have, you are
fulfilling this prophecy of the Psalmist. I think I herd of and
saw in my travels in the Territory quite a number of such men,
quite poor men, just such men as David refers to. What wonderful
things take place in the last days, in order to fulfil prophecy!
"The righteous shall see it and rejoice, and all iniquity shall
stop her mouth." This latter clause has yet to be fulfilled, it
has not yet come to pass. "Whoso is wise, and will observe these
things, even they shall understand the loving kindness of the
Lord." Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, June 9, 1872
Brigham Young, June 9, 1872
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered in the Bowery, Brigham City, June 9, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
CONTINUED TEACHING NECESSARY--IGNORANCE OF PROFESSORS OF
MODERN CHRISTIANITY--PRAYER, ETC.
62
If I can speak so as to be heard, I will talk to the brethren and
sisters a few minutes. It requires stillness and close attention
to hear those who speak in this bowery. A great deal has been
said with regard to the salvation of the human family. I might
say that more should be done, then we could talk less. Of
necessity, through the weakness of human nature, a great deal has
to be said; but if the people could understand the principles of
life and salvation, and would act accordingly, it would require a
great deal less talking. Words are wind, they go into the ear and
are forgotten; still there is a certain portion that will be
retained by a few, and they will be profited thereby. The work in
which we are engaged is not magnified in the least by talking
about it; it is only in the weak capacity of man that these
principles become exalted through the hearing of the ear. The
principles we preach are the gospel of life and salvation; and we
have entered into covenant with God to observe the rules,
ordinances and laws pertaining to this life and salvation. The
question arises, Do we perform this labor, in keeping the sayings
of the Lord as strictly as we should? No, we do not.
63
Suppose that we name a few of the rules and regulations by which
we are to live. If I attempt to classify them, perhaps I shall
get them imperfectly in the science of the law of God. But first,
to me, after hearing and believing that there is such a character
as the Savior of mankind, who has acted his part well and
performed his duty in purchasing redemption for the human family,
and is now pleading for his brethren, I at once inquired what he
requires of me. This is the inquiry of my reflections, and I
learn that faith is the starting point. If I believe sincerely
and honestly, I must obey, and the next step in the plan of
salvation, as laid down by Jesus and his disciples, is for me to
be baptized for the remission of my sins. To the Christian world,
to the heathen world and the infidel world, we can say that all
things are spiritual, all things are temporal, all things are
natural; all things are natural, all things are temporal, all
things are spiritual; and there is not that being on the earth,
and never was, that I have any knowledge of, that can divide
them. But in the act, and in the performance of the duty of those
who believe in this plan of salvation, we can define our faith in
our secret closet by exercising faith in the name of Jesus, and
seeking unto the Father secretly in our hearts. Here we find a
difference and a distinction between this and the actual
performance of rising up from my seat, going down into the water
and being baptized for the remission of my sins. Still the work
is the same, consequently it is spiritual, it is temporal, it is
natural; it is natural, it is temporal, it is spiritual.
63
Well, now, this is the work that we have before us; not that I am
going to have time to preach on these points, or delineate them
to any length; but these are the facts. If we believe, we obey,
we are baptized for the remission of our sins, which is the
commencement of the labor, the outward performance and
manifestation of obedience to God, through faith in the name of
his son Jesus Christ. Then comes the blessing by the imposition
of hands upon the head of the individual who has received baptism
for the remission of sins, and he receives the Holy Ghost. This
is the blessing and the consolation of believing in the truth;
and this stimulates the individual to still exercise faith and to
continue in obedience to the commandments of the Lord, to pray
always, without ceasing, and in everything to give thanks; his
heart uplifted to God, day by day, from morning until evening,
and from evening until morning, for the blessings of heaven to be
with him, for his feet to be guided in the path of rectitude, and
that he may be preserved from speaking, thinking, and doing in
anywise, that which is wrong. This is simple and plain, and can
be understood by all classes of the children of men who are
endowed with the common sense and ability that are given to man.
63
The duty of the Latter-day Saints is to pray without ceasing, and
in everything to give thanks, to acknowledge the hand of the Lord
in all things, and to be subject to his requirements. We, as
Latter-day Saints, can say that our duty is laid before us. We
can read it, not only in the faith and feelings of the
individuals of the community; but it is actually printed, it lies
upon the pages of our history, and we can read at our pleasure.
We meet together for the express purpose of having somebody or
other tell us that which we know and have known all the time. We
have read it over and over; we have thought of it and meditated
upon it, yet we meet together and hear our brethren speak to
force these things into the affections of the people; and if we
can persuade them to hearken to every requirement of heaven, then
we are not under the necessity of talking so much. We are freed
from this task and toil.
64
What is our duty: To pray. Pray always? Yes. To pray in our
families? Yes. Let no man be in a hurry, but what he can get up
in a morning and pray with his family before he permits himself
to partake of refreshment. Let every man and every woman call
upon the name of the Lord, and that too, from a pure heart, while
they are at work as well as in their closet; while they are in
public as well as while they are in private, asking the Father in
the name of Jesus, to bless them, and to preserve and guide in,
and to teach them, the way of life and salvation, and to enable
them so to live that they will obtain this eternal salvation that
we are after.
Now, besides being our duty to pray, it is our duty to live in
peace one with another. it is also our duty to love the Gospel
and the spirit of the Gospel, so that we can become one in the
Lord, not out of him, that our faith, our affections for the
truth, the kingdom of heaven, our acts, all our labor will be
concentrated in the salvation of the children of men, and the
establishment of the kingdom of God on the earth. This is
co-operation on a very large scale. This is the work of
redemption that is entered into by the Latter-day Saints.
Unitedly we perform these duties, we stand, we endure, we
increase and multiply, awe strengthen and spread abroad, and
shall continue so to do until the kingdoms of this world are the
kingdoms of our God and his Christ.
64
We can read that these are our duties in the Bible, Book of
Mormon, Book of Doctrine and Covenants, and many other sayings
that we have from the Elders, which are just as true as any in
these three books; and all combined are a way-mark pointing us to
life and salvation, and we can read for ourselves.
65
We might say, if one man has a difficulty with another, let him,
in the first place, go to him privately and talk with him, and
see if he will be reconciled, or take another, and so on. We can
say of a truth, that if there be hard feelings in the midst of
the Saints, they should be eradicated from our bosoms by taking
the proper course to enjoy the Spirit of the Lord instead of the
spirit of animosity and strife. All these things you can define
and enlarge upon at your leisure. It is our duty to observe our
sacraments, to observe our fast-days and offerings; it is our
duty to observe our tithing and to pay them. There is a great
deal said by our enemies with regard to the members of this
Church paying tithing. We are as free from taxation as any other
church on the earth, right or wrong, true or untrue, and we pay
as little as any other people, and if my tithing is required let
it be paid. That is the way to get rich. We have entered upon a
great system of co-operation for the building up of the kingdom
of God, and, when it is built up, it is ours, we own it. If we
are Saints of God, and sanctify ourselves through his Gospel,
then we shall be worthy to possess all things. The kingdoms of
this world will be ours, all will be ours, the heavens and the
earth, and the fulness thereof will be ours, and we are the
Lord's, we are his servants, and we possess all things in common
with him. That word "all," perhaps, conveys too much to the minds
of some; but that is no matter. With regard to the Latter-day
Saints, in the performance of their duties, we could tell them
what to do to be saved. The path is as clear and plain as this
highway is here for the travel of teams and the people. But when
we inquire about the character of our Father, there are some
things connected therewith that men do not understand, neither
should they understand them. It is not in accordance with the
mind and will of him we worship as our God, that the inhabitants
of the earth, in their weak and wicked capacity, and in
ignorance, should understand them. It was mentioned here
yesterday, and is frequently mentioned by myself and others, that
those who profess Christianity are in the dark, and why? They
mystify everything; they read the Bible as a sealed book, and
they believe it when it is closed and laid upon the shelf. They
do not know how to read it any other way, they do not know how to
believe it any other way, and it is right and reasonable that
they should not; but as for detailing the reasons why this is so,
we have not time. Suffice it to say, all things are done in the
wisdom of him who knows all things. It is not right, I will say,
for people to know the truth and live in disobedience to it; it
is not right for them to understand the ways and providences of
God as they are dealt out to the people on the earth, when they
live and are determined to live in violation of every commandment
and law of God; and because they do so live, ignorance covers
them as with a mantle, shuts out the light of truth from them,
and keeps them in darkness; and if the light were to shine upon
them, as it does now and as it did in the days of the Apostles,
would they receive it? No, they would not. Light has come into
the world, but the wicked choose darkness rather than light? Why?
It was told in days of old that their deeds were evil. That is
the fact to-day--"they choose darkness rather than light, because
their deeds are evil," and their hearts are fully set in them to
do evil; and here I might venture to say to all the inhabitants
of the earth, high and low, rich and poor, to the king upon his
throne and to the beggar in the street, if they had the truth and
loved it they would rejoice in it. But they will not receive it.
Is not this lamentable? It is; but we can not help it. We can
declare the truth to the people, but we can not force them to
receive it. If the inhabitants of the earth were honest, they
would receive the truth; and there is not a man or woman now
living on the earth, or ever did live on it, who would speak,
write, think or act against the Gospel of life and salvation as
they do, were they not in darkness; but they are kept in
ignorance through their own wickedness and unbelief, and they
nourish and cherish the spirit of evil, and that prompts them to
reject the words of life. We can say this to all the human
family; but to the Latter-day Saints, you believe, now obey; and
if we obey, all will be right, and we shall gain the salvation
that we are after.
65
I am happy, brethren, for the privilege of being in your midst. I
frequently shake hands with my brethren and sisters, and they
rejoice, they congratulate me on my freedom. I have been free. I
do not feel, and have not felt, that I was bound in the least.
The question can be asked, Were you not a prisoner for some five
months through the indiscreet, unmanly, inhuman, disloyal and
rebellious decision and doings of our officials? It seemed so; it
had the appearance that I was confined, and had not my liberty,
through the ill-treatment, mistaken ideas, selfishness and
prejudice of the ungodly. But I did not feel that I was in
prison, or that I was confined. I will say to the Latter-day
Saints, my heart has rejoiced for the privilege of resting. I
have rejoiced for the privilege, as it was observed here, by
Elder Hyde, yesterday, of entering into my closet, that is, I
entered into my closet just as he did into his. He kept himself
where he had a mind to, and I did the same. He entered his
closet, and I into mine, or into my house, and there I abode, and
continued to abide, for a time, and was thankful for the
privilege. Now I have the privilege of going here and there
without having anyone to accompany me only those I invite. I was
very happy for the privilege of being quiet, still and retired in
my own house last winter. My companion, not my sleeping
companion, but my companion in tribulation and confinement, for
the gentleman who was with me, I really think was, in his
feelings, confined more than I, a great deal, and felt so, would
urge me to ride, or to go to this party or that, or to the
theater. I kindly declined and thanked him for his kindness in
offering to accompany me; and I would say, "you go and enjoy
yourself, and I will stay here," and I got him to go
occasionally.
66
I say this with regard to myself, that you may know my own
feelings. But I can say still more--the Lord Almighty has guided
and directed the ship of state in our behalf and for the
deliverance and protection of the innocent and the honest.
Victory has perched on Zion's banner. We have obtained that that
we could not have obtained had it not been for the persecuting
spirit that has followed on the heels of the Latter-day Saints
within the two years that are past. How could we, without this
very conduct of our enemies, have ever approached the highest
tribunal in this government to have it give its decision with
regard to right and wrong, law, legality, that that is equitable
and according to the spirit of our government, and that which is
contrary thereto? How could we have approached that body? How
could we have had our cause before it, had it not been for the
acts of our enemies, with which they designed to bring us to
death? For there is no question that, in their own feelings, the
knot was tied around the neck of your humble servant, and he hung
dangling in the air. But God designed this for good, for the
deliverance of the humble and the meek. What have we to say? We
acknowledge his hand in these things as well as everything else,
and say, God be praised!
66
I will not occupy more time, I want others to talk. I will close
by saying a few things to you with regard to your duties. Attend
to your meetings, attend to your prayers; attend to your daily
labor. Be honest and upright with one another; be punctual, keep
your word, preserve yourselves inviolate in all things. Be
chaste, preserve your faith before God, do not demoralize or
prostitute yourselves, and all will be right. I can say that when
a man comes along and turns his cattle into his neighbor's field
without liberty, he prostitutes his own feelings--his virtue,
truthfulness, honesty and uprightness before God and angels. If
we will preserve ourselves in purity, in the integrity of our
hearts, it will be well with us.
66
We have quite a number of the people present from the settlements
of this county generally, and from Cache Valley. I see you have a
little railroad here, and the people are building it. I am
thankful to see this enterprise. Go ahead, brethren, build this
road and own it, and do what you please with it. It will be a
fine piece of improvement; it will open up this northern country,
and give you facilities that you could not otherwise enjoy here.
How beautiful that is! How comfortable, yes, that is the
word--how comfortable and easy it is for me to get into a coach,
or a good carriage, and run over this railroad, from Salt Lake
City to this place in less than three hours, as we did yesterday
morning. In less than three hours from the time we left the depot
of the Utah Central in Salt Lake City, we were in this bowery;
and, this evening, we expect, in less than three hours from the
time we leave this bowery, to be in Salt Lake City--a distance of
over sixty miles. It is very comfortable, very consoling! And if
we can see these things as they are, they open up a field for the
contemplation of the wise to improve upon, that we may shape our
lives for the benefit of ourselves and the human family and to
promote truth and righteousness upon the earth.
66
God bless you. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, February 4, 1872
Orson Pratt, February 4, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, February 4, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE SETTING UP OF GOD'S KINGDOM IN THESE LATTER DAYS.
67
I will call the attention of this congregation to a portion of
prophecy which will be found in the 44th and 45th verses of the
2nd chapter of the book of Daniel:
67
And in the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a
kingdom, which shall never be destroyed: and the kingdom shall
not be left to other people, but it shall break in pieces and
consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand forever.
67
Forasmuch as thou sawest that the stone was cut out of the
mountain without hands, and that it brake in pieces the iron, the
brass, the clay, the silver, and the gold; the great God hath
made known to the king what shall come to pass hereafter; and the
dream is certain, and the interpretation thereof sure.
68
I have often, in my remarks in former times, addressed the
Latter-day Saints upon these passages; but as there are some
strangers in our midst who have not, perhaps, heard our views in
regard to setting up the kingdom of God in the latter time, it
may not be amiss for us to set forth before them the views of the
Latter-day Saints in regard to this prediction. We have, during
the last six thousand years, or nearly so, had a very great
variety of human governments established on the earth.
Governments began to be established in the days of our first
parents. As they lived to be very aged--or almost a thousand
years before they were taken from the earth, they saw their
children multiplying around them in vast numbers, and governments
began to be established. Among those governments, however, was
maintained also the government of God--a patriarchal government,
that continued with the righteous from the days of Adam down till
the days of Enoch, and for a short period after his days. This
government was patriarchal in its nature, or, in other words,
directed and dictated by the Creator of man--the great Law-giver.
He directed and counseled his servants, and they obeyed his
counsels. In other words, a divine government existed on the
earth in those ancient times; but at length, about the period of
the death of Adam, or a little after, human governments rooted
out of the earth the government of God, mankind apostatized from
the great principles which were revealed from heaven, and all
flesh corrupted its way in the sight of God to that degree, that
the just anger of their Creator was kindled against them, and he
decreed that they should be swept off from the face of the earth
by a flood of waters. Again, after this great destruction, a
divine government was organized on the earth, Noah being the
great Patriarch, Revelator, and Prophet, to whom was given laws
and institutions for the government of his posterity. This order,
however, continued only for a short period of time, and human
governments again prevailed. The Lord sought, from time to time,
in the midst of these human governments, to select a people who
would give heed to his law and be governed by him as the Being
who had the right to govern; inasmuch as he had created the earth
and the inhabitants thereof, he had the right to give laws and
institutions for the government of man. But few, indeed, there
were that gave heed to these divine institutions. The Lord, at
length, called out a people from Egypt, and took upon himself the
power, and gave revelation to them in a very conspicuous and
wonderful manner. He came down in the sight of some twenty-five
hundred thousand people, and gave them laws; they heard those
laws proclaimed from Mount Sinai. Male and female, old and young,
throughout all the hosts of Israel, had the opportunity of
learning something in regard to the laws of heaven. However, they
quickly corrupted themselves in the sight of God, and while Moses
yet tarried in the mount, not being satisfied with the laws which
God had revealed, and which he intended to give unto them, they
devised institutions of their own. They gathered together their
jewels, their gold and their silver, and so forth, and began to
make gods of their own for the people to worship, among which we
have an account of two calves that were made by Aaron, while
Moses was yet in the mount talking with the Lord and receiving
oracles and laws for the government of that people. Having
received these laws, written upon tables of stone, Moses departed
out of the mount, by the command of God, to go down and visit the
people. The Lord had told Moses that they had corrupted
themselves, and he went down, being filled with the justice of
the Almighty, or, as it is written, his anger was kindled against
the people, which I interpret as a spirit of justice. He found
that they had made gods and bowed down before them, and
said--"these be the gods, oh Israel, that brought thee up out of
the land of Egypt." However, a revolution was performed in the
midst of the people, and Moses succeeded in bringing most of the
people to their senses again, that they were willing to receive
the divine law. Their sin however was so great, that the first
law which the Lord intended to bestow upon them, namely, the law
of the Gospel, was withheld.
69
Now here is something, perhaps, that may be a little new to
strangers, to hear the Latter-day Saints say that the Gospel of
the Son of God was withheld from the people of Israel. But in
proof of my assertion, I will refer you to Paul's declaration to
the Hebrews, wherein he says--"The Gospel was preached unto them
in the wilderness as well as unto us; but the word preached did
not profit them, not being mixed with faith in them that heard
it." From this we learn that the children of Israel, at first,
were not place under the law of carnal commandments. They were
not placed under the law which exacts an eye for an eye, a tooth
for a tooth, and if a man smite thee on the cheek, turn and
resist the evil. This was not the first law that was given to
Israel. The law of the Gospel, the same Gospel that was taught in
the days of Christ, was given to them first, with this one
exception--the children of Israel were required to look forward
to the coming of their Messiah, and to the atonement that he
should make upon the cross, that they, by faith in the future
atonement that was to be made, might be partakers of the
blessings of the Gospel. But having hardened their hearts against
Moses and against God, the Lord determined to take away this
higher law from the midst of the children of Israel, and give
them a law which is termed by the Apostles the law of carnal
commandments--a law by which they should not live. They could
have lived by the law of the Gospel; they could have entered into
the Lord's rest by that law, even into the fulness of his glory;
but having transgressed the higher law, God gave them an inferior
law adapted to their carnal capacity. This law is mentioned in
the 20th chapter of Ezekiel, in these words--"Wherefore I gave
them also statutes that were not good, and judgments whereby they
should not live." Why is it that the Lord gave to Israel
statutes, and judgments, and laws that were not good? Because
they were incapable of receiving anything greater or higher. He
gave them this law as a schoolmaster, to school them and bring
them to the higher law, namely, the law of Christ, and they
continued under this law, under this condemnation for a long
time, and the Lord swore in his wrath that they should not enter
into his rest in consequence of having broken the higher law.
69
Moses again went up into Mount Sinai, and was gone a second time
forty days and forty nights, without eating and drinking, and
received this law, this carnal law that is generally denominated
the law of Moses, upon second tables of stone, the first covenant
having been dashed to pieces, or in other words the first law,
the higher law of the Gospel contained on the first tables, was
destroyed and the covenant broken, and a new law was introduced.
Incorporated on the second tables of stone were the Ten
Commandments, which pertain to the Gospel, which were also on the
first tables. In addition to these Ten Commandments which pertain
to the Gospel, were many of those carnal laws that I have been
speaking of. By this second code of laws it was impossible for
Israel to enter into the fulness of celestial glory, in other
words, they could not be redeemed and brought into the presence
of the Father and the Son; they could not enter into the fulness
of that rest that was intended to be given to such only as obeyed
the higher law of the Gospel.
69
After the days of Moses the children of Israel, from time to
time, corrupted themselves before the Most High; they would not
abide even in the lower law; but there were a few individuals in
the various generations of Israel, such as Prophets, Schools of
Prophets, &c., which received the higher law, and obtained the
higher priesthood, and were blessed of the Lord, and had the
privilege of entering into his rest, being filled with the spirit
of prophecy and revelation, having the power not only to prophecy
and to obtain revelation, but to come up by virtue of the higher
law, into near communion with the Father and the Son, having the
privilege to behold, by vision, the face of the Lord.
70
About six hundred years before Christ the children of Israel, or
rather the house of Judah, that was still left remaining in the
land of Palestine, had again so far apostatized from the Lord
their God, that the Lord threatened, by the mouth of the
Prophets, that he would destroy that great city Jerusalem, and
that the people should be led away captive into great Babylon. We
find this was fulfilled. But eleven years previous to this great
captivity, the Lord led one of the Prophets, whose name was Lehi
and his sons and one or two other families from the land of
Jerusalem to this American continent. That was about six hundred
years before Christ; of these families the American Indians are
the descendants. But we will leave this branch of Israel on the
American continent and return again to the house of Judah. While
they were in captivity in Babylon the Lord raised up Daniel, the
Prophet, from whose words I have taken my text. Daniel had the
great privilege given unto him of knowing concerning the rise and
fall of kingdoms and empires, of beholding the kingdoms of the
earth, from his day, down until that universal kingdom of God
should be established on the earth never more to be destroyed.
70
First, Nebuchadnezzar, the heathen king, was visited by the
Almighty in a heavenly dream, but his dream was taken from him,
and he could not remember it when he awoke. He called for the
wise men of Babylon--the astrologers, soothsayers, magicians and
the wisest men that could be found, requesting them to tell him
his dream, and then give him the interpretation of it. The dream
left a deep impression on the mind of this great heathen king,
and he believed that it was something of great importance, but
still it could not be remembered.
70
I will here remark, by the way, that the heathen nations in those
days were not so far corrupted, and had not so far apostatized
from the religion of heaven but what they believed in dreams and
in revelations, and thought there might be something contained
within them that related to the future that would be advantageous
to understand. What man, at this day, at this enlightened era,
among the Christian nations, is so near to the Lord as to
acknowledge new revelation as did Nebuchadnezzar? Far have they
fallen beneath the standard of heathen idolators!
72
King Nebuchadnezzar was so earnest in regard to this matter that
he sent forth a decree that unless the wise men of Babylon would
interpret to him his dream and also tell the dream itself, he
would destroy the whole of them. I suppose he had not much
confidence in them, and consequently concluded that if they could
not tell the dream he could not put confidence in their
interpretations. When Daniel heard of the decree of the king, to
destroy all the wise man, he sent in a request that the king
would not be quite so hasty in his measures, but give him a
little time, during which he and his fellows besought the God of
heaven that they might know concerning the dream and the
interpretation thereof. The Lord heard the prayers of his
servants and revealed to Daniel concerning the dream, and also
gave him the interpretation. Daniel requested to be brought
before his majesty the king, and he promised to give the dream
and the interpretation. He was brought in before him, and
addressed him in language something like the following--"The wise
men, astrologers, soothsayers, magicians, &c., can not interpret
the dream, O king, neither is there any wisdom in me that I can;
but there is a God in heaven who is able to give the
interpretation thereof. Thou, O king, art a king of kings, and
the God of heaven hath given thee a kingdom, and dominion over
all the nations. Thou art a part and portion of the dream; or, in
other words, you represent a portion of the dream you had. Thou,
O king, sawest and beheld a great image. This image's head was of
fine gold, the breast and the arms of silver, the belly and the
thighs of brass, the legs were of iron, the feet were part of
iron and part of potter's clay. Thou sawest until that a stone
was cut out of the mountain without hands, which smote the image
upon the feet that was part of iron and part of clay, and brake
them to pieces, then was the iron, the clay, the silver, the
brass and the gold all broken to pieces together, and became like
the chaff of the summer threshing floor, and the wind carried
them away, and there was no place found for them, but the stone
that smote the image became a great mountain and filled the whole
earth. This was the dream--he then gives the interpretation.
"Thou, O king, art this head of gold." That is, the kingdom of
Nebuchadnezzar, that bore rule over all the earth, was considered
the head of gold. "After thee shall come another kingdom
represented by the breast and the arms of silver." That is the
Medo-Persian kingdom. After that another kingdom still inferior,
called the kingdom of brass, forasmuch as gold is better than
silver, silver more precious than brass, so these kingdoms that
were to arise, to succeed each other, were to be inferior as time
should pass along. The third kingdom, of brass, represented the
Macedonian empire; then after that another kingdom, great and
terrible, whose legs were of iron, strong and powerful. The
fourth kingdom bore rule over the earth; that is admitted, by all
commentators, to be the great Roman Empire, and by the division
of the Roman empire into two divisions, representing the legs,
and afterwards into the feet and toes. I shall not go through and
bring up historical facts to show the particular divisions that
grew out of the Roman empire, but will merely state that the
present modern kingdoms of Europe that have grown out from the
Roman empire represent the last vestiges of that great and
powerful empire of Rome; that is, it fills up and makes the image
complete. First the head of gold--the Babylonian empire; second,
the breast and arms of silver--the Medo-persian empire; third,
the belly and thighs of brass, the Macedonian kingdom; fourth,
the great Roman empire represented by the two legs of iron, the
eastern and the western empires of Rome. Afterwards a division of
the Roman empire into feet and toes, constituting all the modern
European governments and those, governments that have grown out
of the European governments located in North and South America.
72
Do we wish to understand the geographical position of the great
image? if we do, we must consider the head located in Asia; the
breast and the arms of silver a little west of the great
Babylonian Empire, the belly and thighs of brass still westward;
the legs of iron and the modern kingdoms composing the feet and
toes, part of iron and part of clay, as extending throughout
Europe and branching across the Atlantic Ocean, and extending
from the East Sea even to the West, from the Atlantic unto the
Pacific. This will constitute the location of the great image,
running westward.
72
The image being now complete, all that we need now is to find
something that will represent the stone cut out of the mountain
without hands, something distinct entirely from the image, having
no fellowship with it, that has not grown out of it, and that has
no authority that comes from it, but a distinct and entirely
separate government that should be established in some mountain.
"Thou sawest until that a stone was cut out of the mountain
without hands." What shall that stone do? It shall smite the
image upon the feet and toes. Not upon the head, at first, not
upon the breast and arms of silver, not upon the belly and thighs
of brass, not upon the modern kingdoms of Europe that have grown
out of the legs of iron, but shall smite upon the feet and toes
of the great image; there is where it is to commence its attack.
72
Now let us inquire, for a few moments, how or in what manner this
kingdom, called the stone cut out of the mountain, commences this
severe attack. Is it to be with weapons of a carnal nature, with
sword in hands and weapons of warfare to wage a war against the
kingdoms or governments of the earth? No, indeed! Connected with
the kingdom or stone cut out of the mountain without hands is a
power superior to that of carnal weapons--the power of truth, for
the kingdom of God cannot be organized on the earth without truth
being sent down from heaven, without authority being given from
the Most High; without men again being called to the holy
Priesthood and Apostleship, and set forth to publish the truth in
its naked simplicity and plainness to the inhabitants of the
earth. This truth will be the weapon of warfare, this authority
and power sent down from heaven will go forth and will proclaim
the message of the everlasting Gospel, the Gospel of the
latter-day kingdom, publishing it first among the nations that
compose the feet and toes of the great image. Will they be broken
to pieces? Yes, when this message is published to them. When they
are sufficiently warned, when the servants of God have gone forth
in obedience to his commandments, and published in their towns,
villages, cities, States and governments these sacred and holy
principles that God Almighty has sent down from heaven in the
latter times, it will leave all people, nations and tongues that
hear the Gospel, and the principles and message pertaining to
that kingdom, without any excuse. It will be a warning that will
be everlasting on the one hand, or on the other, either to the
bringing of the people to repentance, reformation and obedience
to the Gospel of the kingdom, or the judgments which are
predicted in this prophecy of Daniel will be poured out upon the
heads of those nations and kingdoms, and they will become like
the chaff of the summer threshing floor, even all those kingdoms
that compose the great image; for be it known that the remnants
of the Babylonish kingdom, represented by the head of gold, still
exist in Asia; the remnants of the silver kingdom, of the brass
kingdom, and the kingdom of iron still have their existence; but
when the Lord Almighty shall fulfil this prophecy, the toes and
feet and legs of iron of that great image, or all these kingdoms,
will be broken in pieces, and they will become like the chaff of
the summer threshing floor; the wind will carry them away and no
place will be found for them.
73
This prophecy of Daniel will give a true understanding of the
matter to our wise men and statesmen, and all who desire to know
the future destiny of the American government, the European
governments, and all the kingdoms of the earth. Their destiny is
total destruction from our earth, no matter how great or powerful
they may become. Though our nation may grasp on the right hand
and on the left; though it may annex the British possessions, and
extend its dominions to the south and grasp the whole of this
great western hemisphere, and although our nation shall become as
powerful in population as in extent of territory, its destiny is
foretold in the saying of the Prophet Daniel, "They shall become
like the chaff of the summer threshing floor, the wind shall
carry them away and no place shall be found for them." So with
the kingdoms of Europe, so with the kingdoms of Western Asia and
Eastern Europe.
74
Let us now say a few words in regard to this stone which shall be
cut out of the mountain without hands. Now there must be
something very peculiar in regard to the organization of the
Latter-day kingdom that is never to be destroyed. All these other
governments that I have named have been the production of human
hands, that is, of human ingenuity, human wisdom; the power of
uninspired men has been exerted to the uttermost in the
establishment of human governments, consequently all has been
done by human ingenuity and power. Not so with the little stone.
Man has nothing to do with the organization of that kingdom. Hear
what the Prophet has said: "In the days of these kings the God of
heaven shall set up a kingdom." It is not to be done by human
means or power, or by the wisdom of man, neither by mighty
conquests by the sword; but it is to be done by him that rules on
high, who is King of kings and Lord of lords; by him that
suffered and died upon the cross that we might live; by him whose
right it is to reign and govern the nations of the earth. He it
is that will give laws; he it is that will give commandment; he
it is that will organize that kingdom, and it will be done
according to the pattern in all things. Has there been any such
kingdom organized since the day that the Prophet Daniel delivered
this prophecy? I know that there are some who believe that the
kingdom spoken of under the name of the "little stone" was
organized 1800 years ago by our Savior and his Apostles. I do not
know why they believe this, unless because it is fashionable.
There is no evidence to prove any such thing. Indeed that kingdom
that was organized 1800 years ago was organized altogether too
soon to accomplish the prophecies that are here given. The two
legs of iron, and the feet and toes were not yet formed, and
remember that the stone is not cut out of the mountain without
hands, until this great image is complete, not only the head,
breast, arms and the legs, but the feet and the toes also; they
all become complete before the kingdom called the "stone" is made
manifest. Now the feet did not exist, and did not begin to exist
until many centuries after the days of Christ. What did that
kingdom do that was built up by our Savior and his Apostles? Did
it break in pieces any part of that great image? No. What did
that image do to that kingdom? It accomplished the prophecies of
Daniel--made war with the Saints and overcame them. Very
different from the latter-day kingdom! The powers of this world,
under the name of the great image, made war with Jesus, with the
Apostles, with the former-day Saints, with the kingdom that was
then established and overcame them, not only in fulfillment of
what is declared by the Prophet Daniel, but also what is declared
by John the Revelator; and those powers obtained dominion over
all people, nations and tongues, and made them drink of the wine
of the wrath of the fornication of Great Babylon, and they became
drunken with her abominations. Instead of the kingdom of God then
being built up in fulfillment of the prophecy of Daniel 1800
years ago, the nations of the earth overcame it and rooted it out
of the earth. But mark the words of the text: "And in the days of
these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom that shall
never be destroyed." Very different from the former-day kingdom;
"and the kingdom shall not be left to other people." All these
human governments have been changing hands, and have been left to
some other people. The Babylonish kingdom was left to the Medes
and Persians, the Medo-Persian kingdom to the Macedonian, the
Macedonian to the Roman; but the latter-day kingdom shall not be
left to another people, but it shall break in pieces and consume
all these kingdoms, and it shall stand forever. "Forasmuch as
thou sawest that the stone was cut out of the mountains without
hands, and that it brake in pieces the iron, the brass, the clay
the silver and the gold; and the great God hath made known unto
thee what shall come to pass hereafter, and the dream is certain
and the interpretation thereof sure."
74
Having learned, then, that the kingdom built up by our Savior and
his Apostles did not fulfil this prophecy; that that kingdom
itself was rooted out of the earth, and every vestige of its
authority destroyed, and that nothing in the shape or appearance
of the kingdom of God has existed for some sixteen or seventeen
centuries past, inasmuch as this is the case and all nations
without any such Church, without any such kingdom without any
authority to baptize or lay on hands for the gift of the Holy
Ghost; without authority to administer the Lord's supper; without
the authority to build up the kingdom of God; without Prophets,
without Revelators, without inspired Apostles, without angels,
without visions, without the revelations and prophecies of
heaven, which always characterize the kingdom of God; I say
inasmuch as this is the case, and darkness has covered the earth
and gross darkness the people for so many generations, no wonder
that, in the wisdom of God, the time should at length arrive to
send another messenger from heaven. No wonder that an angel
should be commissioned from the eternal heavens from the throne
of the Almighty with another message to the inhabitants of our
globe! For do you suppose that this latter-day kingdom that is to
be set up without hands will be set up without any communication
from heaven, without any new revelation, without any Prophets,
without any Apostles, or inspired men? Do you suppose that God
will accomplish a work of this nature and yet the heavens be
veiled over our heads like brass? Oh no. When the glad time shall
come for God Almighty to organize and set up the latter-day
kingdom on the earth, he will make it known by sending an
angel--and in no other way, for that is the way pointed out in
prophecy.
75
If a man rises up, like John Wesley, Martin Luther, John Calvin,
or Henry the Eighth, and undertakes to organize a new church and
new creeds, &c., without receiving the ministration of an angel,
you may know that the ecclesiastical governments that they may
form on the earth, are not the kingdom of God. But when a people
shall rise on our earth, testifying that the Lord God has sent an
angel from heaven, with the everlasting Gospel to be preached to
every people, kindred, nation and tongue, on our globe, with the
proclamation that the hour of God's judgment is at hand, that
people are worthy of being listened to, at least it should call
forth the most careful investigation of all people, nations and
kindreds under the whole heaven. But when they do not come in
this way, they are not even worthy of being listened to, for we
know that they are not the kingdom of God.
75
John the Revelator tells us that when the kingdom of God is to be
established on the earth, before the coming of the Son of man,
before he should unveil his face in the clouds of heaven, he
would send an angel with that Gospel. Now, query, has he done so?
Go make the enquiry if you are not satisfied. Ask the Roman
Catholics if God has sent that angel predicted in the 14th
chapter of the revelations of St. John to re-establish his
kingdom on the earth, and they will tell you no; they will tell
you that the kingdom of God has continued on the earth, that it
needs no re-establishing, that they have maintained in unbroken
succession the authority of the apostleship from the days of
Peter down until the present time, and that they will retain it
while the earth shall stand; that there will be no angel sent
with the everlasting Gospel to organize the kingdom anew. Well,
then, we have their testimony that they are not the kingdom of
God, for they have denied many of the great characteristics
belonging to the kingdom, such as the gift of new revelation, the
gift of prophecy, which was always in the kingdom of God, and
have bound up a few books and called them the full canon of
Scripture. And if a Prophet should arise among them and undertake
to give more Scripture, they would exclude his Scripture and him
with it, as being a heretic and fanatic. They are not the kingdom
of God then.
75
Go then to the Greek Church and make the same inquiry of them.
Has God sent an angel to you Greeks? I mean the millions in
Russia who profess the Greek religion, and they will tell you
about the same thing as the Catholics--that God has said nothing
since the days of the Apostles.
75
No inspired men among them and no additional Scriptures by
Prophets and Revelators.
76
Then go to the 666 different Protestant denominations that have
come out from these ecclesiastical powers and inquire of them if
God did send an angel to those who founded their several
denominations, and they will tell you nay. Most of them will say
that God does not send angels in the latter times, that he has no
Prophets, no Revelators, and that there is no need of any further
light from heaven. Go through all the ranks of Christendom and
make diligent inquiry for a people that answer the description of
John's prophecy, namely a people that bear testimony that an
angel has come with the everlasting Gospel. By and by, in your
inquiry you will get away up here into the heights of the Rocky
Mountains, or as some term it the backbone of the American
continent; inquire of the people you find here, ask of them at
their great headquarters, Salt Lake City, whether they believe
that God has established his kingdom by sending an angel in
fulfillment of the revelations of St. John, and you will hear one
united voice throughout all this city among the Latter-day
Saints, saying that God has sent an Angel from heaven with the
everlasting Gospel to be preached to every nation, kindred,
tongue and people. Make the same inquiry in the hundred towns,
cities and villages throughout this Territory, and there will be
a united voice of all the Latter-day Saints to this one same
great fact. We therefore contend, and rightfully too, that we are
the only people in America, in Europe, in Asia, in Africa and in
the islands of the sea that are testifying to the fulfillment of
the prophecy that was uttered by John the Revelator. We have no
need, then, to inquire whether all these contending sects are the
kingdom of God or not, for this is the only people that bear a
testimony, to the coming of the angel with the Gospel.
Consequently this is the only people that need engage our
attention or investigations in regard to setting up the
latter-day kingdom; and if we, by our investigation, find that
this people answer the description, not only of John's prophecy
but of Daniel's prophecy and all the prophecies throughout the
Old Testament in regard to the establishment of the kingdom of
God, then certainly the doctrines and principles of this kingdom
are worthy the attention and obedience of every good person.
76
If we had time we would examine the doctrines of the kingdom, to
see whether, the doctrines that were brought by the angels in
these latter times agree with the doctrines that were taught 1800
years ago; but we have not time to do that on this occasion.
Suffice it to say that if the former-day Saints taught faith in
God, repentance, baptism for the remission of sins, the reception
of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands; if they taught these
things in former days, be it known unto all people, nations, and
tongues that the angel has commissioned his servants to preach
the same things in these days. If the former-day Saints taught
the necessity of having the various gifts of the Gospel, such as
the gifts of vision, the ministration of angels, prophecy,
revelation, healing the sick, speaking with tongues, the
interpretation of tongues, and all the various gifts mentioned in
the New Testament; if they taught these things in former days,
the Latter-day Saints have been commissioned to teach the same
things in our day, consequently there is no difference so far as
doctrines, ordinances and the gifts are concerned.
76
Did the Prophets in ancient times testify that when the kingdom
of God should be organized, the Saints should be gathered from
the four quarters of the earth, that all that were called by the
name of the Lord should be brought out from the north and from
the south, and from the east and from the west, even the sons and
daughters of God should be brought from all nations? The
Latter-day Saints teach that the same angel which brought the
Gospel, the same God that has set up his kingdom on the earth in
the latter days has commanded his servants that go forth with
these doctrines, to gather out his elect from the four winds of
heaven. Did the ancient Prophets testify that another book should
come forth, another revelation to accomplish the great
preparatory work to build up the kingdom of God in the last days?
The Latter-day Saints testify that the angel that has brought the
Gospel has delivered to them another book containing that Gospel
in all its fullness and plainness, fulfilling these prophecies.
76
May God bless you. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Wilford Woodruff, April 8, 1872
Wilford Woodruff, April 8, 1872
REMARKS BY ELDER WILFORD WOODRUFF,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, April 8, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
COMPREHENSIVENESS OF THE LATTER-DAY WORK.
77
We have had a very good Conference; we have heard a great deal of
testimony from the servants of the Lord, and that testimony has
been true. The building up of the Zion of God in these latter
days includes, I may say of a truth, every branch of business,
both temporal and spiritual, in which we are engaged. We can not
touch upon any subject which is lawful in the sight of God and
man, that is not embraced in our religion. The Gospel of Jesus
Christ which we have embraced, and which we preach, includes all
truth, and every lawful calling and occupation of man. One
subject that we are deeply interested in I wish to say a few
words upon. In the first place I wish to give notice in this
stage of my remarks to the members of the Deseret Agricultural
and Manufacturing Society, that they are requested to meet, at
the close of this meeting, at the Historian's Office, to appoint
their president and board of directors for the coming season, for
the times demand that we should hold a State fair in this city
this fall.
78
Strangers may think this a very strange subject to present in a
religious meeting, but we are building up the literal kingdom of
God on the earth, and we have temporal duties to perform. We
inhabit temporal bodies, we eat temporal food, we build temporal
houses, we raise temporal cattle and temporal wheat; we contend
with temporal weeds, and with temporal enemies in our soil, and
these things naturally give rise to the necessity of attending to
and performing many duties of a temporal and arduous nature, and
they, of course, are embraced in our religion. In building up the
Zion and kingdom of God in these latter days, our agricultural
and manufacturing interests are of the most vital importance; in
fact manufacturing and agricultural pursuits are of vital
importance to any nation under heaven. Show me a nation whose
people cultivate the earth, and manufacture what they need, and I
will show you a rich and independent nation. Show me a nation
that lives entirely by mining and I will show you a rich and
independent nation. Show me a nation that lives entirely by
mining and I will show you a poor nation--one that is ready to
run out and become obsolete. You see this manifest in the history
of all nations under heaven. What gives England her wealth
to-day? Her coal, iron, and the products of her soil, in
connection with her prodigious manufactures; and it is so with
all the nations of the earth. What makes the United States what
she is to-day? Her products and the cultivation of her soil, and
the constant efforts she has made to supply the wants of her
people. Not but what mining is all right, there is no fault with
the development of the resources of the earth under favorable
circumstances. When we came here our position demanded that the
very first thing we did was to plant our potatoes and sow our
wheat, or we had starvation before us; and I will here say that
the Saints and the Elders of Israel have gone before the Lord day
after day and week after week, and prayed the Almighty to hide up
the treasures of these mountains, lest even the Latter-day
Saints, with all the faith they had, should be tempted to turn
away from the cultivation of the earth and the manufacture of
what they needed; and the Lord heard our prayers, and we dwelt
here many years and filled these valleys for six hundred miles
with cities, towns, villages, gardens. orchards, fields,
vineyards, hundreds of school-houses, and places of worship,
until we made the desert blossom as the rose, and had a supply of
wheat, bread and clothing upon our hands. Then, I do not know but
the Elders ceased praying for the Lord to hide up the treasures
of the earth--I guess they did, for very soon after mines began
to be opened, and now silver mines are being worked in many parts
of the Territory. A few years ago General Connor and others, who
dwelt here, with soldiers under them, spent very many days in
prospecting these mountains from one end to the other for gold
and silver, but they could find none; to-day you may go over the
same places, and if you dig into the earth you may find plenty of
silver, and you may find it almost anywhere in these mountains. I
suppose this is all right, I have no fault to find with it; but I
still say that the interest of the Latter-day Saints in these
mountains is to cultivate the soil and to manufacture what they
use.
78
Through the influence of President Young we have many
manufactories for wool and cotton already established in this
Territory. He has done more than any man living in these last
days, according to the means he has had at his command, to
establish these branches of business in the midst of these
mountains. We have now many large factories in this Territory
that have to stand still for want of wool. I want to say a few
words on this subject to the wool growers of Deseret. Instead of
sending our wool out of the Territory, to eastern States to be
manufactured into cloth, and purchasing it and paying eastern
manufacturers a large per centage for it when brought here by
railroad, I feel that it is our duty, and it would be far wiser
for us, to sell our wool to those who own factories in this
Territory, and to sustain ourselves by sustaining home
manufactures.
79
One of the first commands given to Adam, after being placed in
eden, was to dress the garden; and he was permitted to eat of the
fruit of every tree except one. After a while Adam and his wife,
Eve, partook of the fruit of this tree, and the history of the
Fall is before us and the world. After Adam was cast out of the
garden the Lord told him that there should be a curse on the
earth, and instead of bringing forth beautiful flowers, fruit and
grain spontaneously, as before the Fall, it should bring forth
horns, briers, thistles and noxious weeds, and that man should
earn his bread by the sweat of his brow; and from that time to
the present mankind has had this curse to contend with in the
cultivation of the earth. In consequence of this the inhabitants
of Utah, in their agricultural operations have to fight against
the cockle burr, the black seed and sunflower, as well as thorns
and thistles and many other noxious weeds, which, if not
eradicated, speedily take advantage of us, and to a great extent,
mar the result of our labors. It will pay us to pay attention to
these things; it will pay us to dress the earth, to till it, to
take care of and spend time and means in manuring and feeding it;
it will pay us to gather out these noxious weeds, for the earth
will then have a chance to bring forth in its strength. This,
with the blessing of God upon our labors, has made the soil of
Utah as productive as it is to-day. I wish to see this interest
increase in our midst; and I hope, in addition to this, that
those who are raising sheep--our wool growers--will pay attention
to and carry on that branch of business systematically, and that
we will sell our wool to those who manufacture it at home,
instead of sending it out of the Territory to be manufactured. I
feel that this is our duty, and the course which will promote our
best interests, and it is a principle which is true, independent
of religion, in any community or nation; it is a self-sustaining
principle.
79
God has blessed us, he has blessed the earth, and our labors in
the tilling of the soil have been greatly prospered. As has been
said by some of our brethren in their remarks, when the pioneers
came here, no mark of civilization or of the white man, was
found. If those who are now so anxious to obtain the homes we
have made, had seen Utah as we saw it, they would never have
desired a habitation here, but they would have got out of it as
soon as they could. It was barren, desolate, abounding with
grasshoppers, crickets and kiote wolves, and these things seemed
to be the only natural productions of the soil. We went to work
by faith, not much by sight, to cultivate the earth. We broke
almost all the prows we had the first day. We had to let streams
of water out to moisten the earth, and by experience we had to
learn to raise anything. The stranger comes into Salt Lake City
and sees our orchards, and the trees in our streets, and he
thinks, what a fruitful and delightful place it is. He does not
think that, for twenty or twenty-four years, almost every tree he
beholds, according to its age, has had to be watered twice a week
through the whole summer season, or they would all have been dead
long since. We have had to unite upon these things, the Lord has
blessed our labors, and his mercies have been over this people.
80
If we had not cultivated the earth, but had turned our attention
to mining, we should not only have starved to death ourselves,
but thousands of strangers, who have passed through, would have
shared the same fate. Utah Territory has been the great highway
to California, Nevada, and all the western States and
Territories, and they have all looked, in a measure, to Utah for
their bread. Nobody but Latter-day Saints would have lived here,
and endured the trails and afflictions that we endured in the
beginning; none others would have stayed and fought the crickets
one year, as we had to do year after year. Any people but the
Latter-day Saints would have left this country long ago. Not only
so, on account of the things I have already named, but I will
here say that no other people could have lived here--no, they
would have knocked each other's brains out on account of the
little water they would have had in their irrigating operations.
When men saw their crops and trees withering and perishing for
the want of water, the selfishness so general in the world would
have worked up to such an extent, that they would have killed one
another, and hence I say that none but Latter-day Saints would
have stood it; but they, by the training and experience they had
before received, were prepared for the hardships and trials they
had to encounter in this country.
80
Brethren and sisters, let us continue our efforts in cultivating
the earth, and in manufacturing what we want. And I still urge
upon our Female Relief Societies, in this city and throughout the
Territory, to carry out the counsel President Young gave us years
and years ago, and try, as far as possible, within ourselves, to
make our own bonnets, hats and clothing, and to let the beauty of
what we wear be the workmanship of our own hands. It is true that
our religion is not in our coat or bonnet, or it should not be.
If a man's religion is there it is not generally very deep
anywhere else. But God has blessed us with the products of earth
and the blessings of heaven, and his Spirit has been with us; we
have been preserved, and the Lord has turned away the edge of the
sword, and he has protected us during many years past and gone,
and we all have to acknowledge his hand in these things.
80
I do not wish to detain this Conference. I felt as though I
wanted to make a few remarks on these subjects. I hope, brethren,
that we will not slacken our hands with regard to the cultivation
of the earth. In the prosecution of our labors in that respect we
have everything to contend with that man has been cursed with for
five thousand years. We should clean our fields, as far as we
can, of the noxious weeds, and our streets of sunflowers. These
things encumber the earth. We have come difficulty to contend
with, unknown save in those portions of the earth where
irrigation is practiced. It is true that a man may clean his
fields of sunflowers, cockle burrs, blackseed and every other
noxious weed that grows, and the very first time he waters his
land here will come a peck or a bushel of foul seed from the
mountains, and fill every field through which the stream flows.
These difficulties we have to fight against, but we must do the
best we can. As farmers, we should clean our seed, and not sow
the foul along with the good. One man, in a few hours, with a
good wire sieve, can sift enough seed for ten acres of land, and
perhaps for twenty; while, to pull that bad seed out when grown
will cost from one to five hundred dollars, for it will take a
score of men days to do it. We should use our time, judgment and
the wisdom God has given us to the best advantage in all these
things.
81
I want the brethren to come together this afternoon and elect
their officers, for we desire to hold a fair this fall, in which
the agricultural and manufacturing interests of the Territory may
be represented and interested. Let us not be weary in well doing;
let us not slacken our hands, either in cultivating the earth or
in the manufacturing of what we need. Co-operate in agricultural
and mercantile matters, also in our tanneries, and in the making
of butter and cheese. One man may engage in these branches of
business with advantage if he have skill and experience to guide
him; but in co-operation the wisdom of all is combined for the
general good. This plan has been adopted with advantage in other
communities, cities, States, Territories and countries, and it
can be in this more extensively than it has been hitherto. I pray
that God will bless us, and bless this whole people; and I pray
that the testimony which we have received here during this
Conference, which is true, may not be forgotten by us. I can bear
the same testimony. I know this work is of God. I know Joseph
Smith was a Prophet of God. I have heard two or three of the
brethren testify about brother Young in Nauvoo. Every man and
every woman in that assembly, which perhaps might number
thousands, could bear the same testimony. I was there, the Twelve
were there, and a good many others, and all can bear the same
testimony. The question might be asked, why was the appearance of
Joseph Smith given to Brigham Young? Because here was Sidney
Rigdon and other men rising up and claiming to be the leaders of
the Church, and men stood, as it were, on a pivot, not knowing
which way to turn. But just as quick as Brigham Young rose in
that assembly, his face was that of Joseph Smith--the mantle of
Joseph had fallen upon him, the power of God that was upon Joseph
Smith was upon him, he had the voice of Joseph, and it was the
voice of the shepherd. There was not a person in that assembly,
Rigdon, himself, not excepted, but was satisfied in his own mind
that Brigham was the proper leader of the people, for he would
not have his name presented, by his own consent, after that
sermon was delivered. There was a reason for this in the mind of
God; it convinced the people. They saw and heard for themselves,
and it was by the power of God.
81
May God bless you. May he give us wisdom to direct us in all
things, and promote all the interests of Zion for Jesus' sake.
Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, June 2, 1872
Brigham Young, June 2, 1872
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, Sunday, June 2,
1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
OBSERVE THE SABBATH DAY.
82
I have a request to make of the Bishops and Elders, of fathers
and mothers, and of the brethren and sisters in general. There
are a few points upon which I feel that I should like the people
to receive a little counsel. One is, I would be very much
pleased, and I do not think I would be any more satisfied than
the Spirit of the Lord would, to have the Latter-day Saints pay a
little more attention to the Sabbath day, instead of riding
about, visiting, and going on excursions. There has been a great
deal said upon this subject. We are continually teaching the
people how to be saved, but they seem to forget the
responsibilities that are upon them. I am as liberal in my
feelings with regard to using the Sabbath for anything and
everything, where duty demands it, as any person living, and
believe that the Sabbath was made for man, instead of man for the
Sabbath. But it is a day of rest. The Lord has directed his
people to rest one-seventh part of the time, and we take the
first day of the week, and call it our Sabbath. This is according
to the order of the Christians. We should observe this for our
own temporal good and spiritual welfare. When we see a farmer in
such a hurry, that he has to attend to his harvest, and to
haying, fencemaking, or to gathering his cattle on the Sabbath
day, as far as I am concerned, I count him weak in the faith. He
has lost the spirit of his religion, more or less. Six days are
enough for us to work, and if we wish to play, play within the
six days; if we wish to go on excursions, take one of those six
days, but on the seventh day, come to the place of worship,
attend to the Sacrament, confess your faults one to another and
to our God, and pay attention to the ordinances of the house of
God.
82
How many ears will hear this, and how many hearts will receive it
and treasure it up? That is the question. Words go into the ear
and are forgotten; but I say to you, Latter-day Saints, it is
your duty and my duty to pay attention to the Sabbath day. When
my brethren, my friends, and my family have business on hand, and
manage to start it on a Sunday morning, I head them off if I
possibly can, by throwing some obstacle or other in the way, or
by persuasion get them to omit it on that day. As far as I can, I
also persuade my own family to observe the hours of meeting. Not
that I can say that my family is as fond of meeting as I am
myself. I like to meet with the brethren, and I like to go to a
place of worship; I like to hear, and learn and pay attention to
the ordinances of the house of God. I teach my family in these
respects, and I do not know that I have any more fault to find
with my own family than others have with theirs; perhaps there
may be some credit due to them. But I say to the brethren and
sisters, in the name of the Lord, it is our duty and it is
required of us by our father in heaven, by the spirit of our
religion, by our covenants with God and each other, that we
observe the ordinances of the house of God, and especially on the
Sabbath day, to attend to the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper.
Then attend the Ward meetings and the quorum meetings.
83
Another thing: I do wish that parents would urge upon their
children to cease playing in the streets as much as they do.
There are sufficient places of resort in various parts of the
city without the boys being compelled to play in the middle of
the streets. Every time I travel through the streets I see
children playing in them. And will they turn out of the way for a
carriage? No, they will not, and some of them will sometimes even
dare you to drive over them; and sometimes people have to stop
their carriages to save the lives of children. We have been more
fortunate, here, I presume than in any other city in Christendom
where they drive as many carriages as we drive in our city, in
having so few accidents; but this I attribute to the kind hand of
Providence. But we see children in the street, daring teamsters
to run over them, and whether they are in a carriage, wagon,
buggy, or cart it is no matter, they will not give the road for a
horse team. I will say this to all Israel, to every man that
carries himself discreetly--as a gentleman, if one of my boys
attempts to obstruct the highway, so that you cannot drive along
and attend to your business, leave your carriage, take your whip
and give him a good sound horse-whipping, and tell him you will
do it every time you find him in the street trying to obstruct
the highway. I will not complain of you, although I can say this,
I think, of a truth, that a boy of mine never did this, never. I
have no knowledge of it at least. Look upon a community like
ours, see the conduct of the youth in this respect, it is a
disgrace to civilization; it is a disgrace to any people that
profess good morals. Well, I wish to say this to the Saints, keep
your boys from the streets, and from playing ball there. There
are plenty of grounds for them to play upon and use at their
pleasure, without going into the streets; and when we are so
numerous that we have no place of resort for our boys to pitch
quoits and play ball, there is plenty of ground on the earth, and
we will thin out a little here and go where we can have a little
more room. But we have plenty here at present.
83
Now, remember, my brethren, those who go skating, buggy riding,
or on excursions on the Sabbath day--and there is a great deal of
this practiced--are weak in the faith. Gradually, little by
little, little by little, the spirit of their religion leaks out
of their hearts and their affections, and by and by they begin to
see faults in their brethren, faults in the doctrines of the
Church, faults in the organization, and at last they leave the
kingdom of God and go to destruction. I really wish you would
remember this, and tell it to your neighbors.
83
And furthermore, how many Latter-day Saints, who live in this
city, and are perfectly able to go to meeting, are away to-day?
We have people enough in this city to fill this small building to
overflowing every Sabbath, if they liked to hear the words of
life. In the morning, it is true, there are many in the Sunday
school, and that we recommend; but in the afterpart of the day,
where are these school children? Are they playing in the streets,
or are they visiting? In going to Sunday school they have done
their duty so far; but they ought to be here. In their youth they
ought to learn the principles and doctrines of their faith, the
arguments for truth, and the advantages of truth, for we can say
with one of old, "Bring up a child in the way it should go, and
when it is old it will not depart from it." If we are capable of
bringing up a child in the way it should go, I will assure you
that it will never depart from that way. Many persons think they
do bring up their children in the way they should go, but in my
lifetime I have seen very few, if any, parents, perfectly capable
of bringing up a child in the way it should go; still most of us
know better than we do, and if we will bring up our children
according to the best of our knowledge, very few of them will
ever forsake the truth.
84
Now, I beseech you, my brethren and sisters, old and young,
parents and children, all of you, try and observe good, wholesome
rules! Be moral, be upright, be honest in your deal. I do not
wish to find fault with the Latter-day Saints, but I assure you,
my brethren and sisters, we take too much liberty with each
other; we do not observe the strict order of right and honesty in
many instances, as much as we should, and we have got to improve
in these things. We have been hearing, today, how the kingdom of
God is going to prosper on the earth. So it is, that is very
true. Do we think that we will prosper and abide in it, in
unholiness and unrighteousness? If we do, we are mistaken. If we
do not sanctify the Lord God in our hearts and live by every word
that proceeds out of his mouth, and shape our lives according to
the rules laid down in Holy Writ, and by what the Lord has
revealed in latter days, we will come short of being members of
this kingdom, and we will be cast out and others will take our
place. We need not flatter ourselves that we are going to prosper
in anything that is evil, and have the Lord still own us. It is
very true that he is merciful to us and bears with us. "Wait
another day," he says; "Wait another year, wait a little longer,
and see if my people will not be righteous;" and those who will
not, will be gathered to their own place; but those who will
sanctify themselves before the Lord will inherit everlasting
life. God bless you, Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Daniel
H. Wells, June 8, 1872
Daniel H. Wells, June 8, 1872
DISCOURSE BY PRESIDENT DANIEL H. WELLS,
Delivered in the Bowery, Brigham City, Saturday, June 8, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE GOSPEL PLAN--IT MUST BE OBEYED IF ITS BLESSINGS BE
SECURED--GOOD'S KINGDOM HAS COME.
84
I feel glad of the opportunity of bearing my testimony once again
to the principles of salvation that have been revealed in the day
in which we live, to the children of men. There is an impression
resting upon the people of every nation on the face of the earth,
that some great events in human history are about to take place.
In the Christian world there is a general belief that the time is
approaching when the God of heaven will assume the reins of
power. They talk about the reign of Christ, the great millennial
day, when the kingdoms of this world will become the kingdoms of
our Lord and his Christ.
84
It is hardly possible for any person to live to the years of
maturity without having some impression, some anxiety concerning
his future state; all persons, at some period of their existence,
have such impressions. They come from the Lord, and their effect
on the mind is as plain as the mark of the type on the paper; and
the reason we experience them is because we are the children of
God. There is a link existing between God and his children here
on the earth, and that draws them towards him, and enables all
who listen to the promptings of his good Spirit to increase in
good, and to overcome that which is evil. This is natural, and
exists to a greater or less extent in the hearts of all the
children of men.
85
There is evil in the world--evil influences that strive against
and destroy that which is good. Men's names are written in the
Book of Life, and will forever remain written there unless they
do something to cut the thread and to blot them out. Men are
naturally religious in their feelings, and it is a perversion of
their nature to go into wicked and by and forbidden paths. The
practice of evil brings with it no peace or true happiness. It
destroys the vital thread of life that reaches into the eternal
bowers of peace and salvation. The Lord our God has never given a
commandment to the children of men but that would, if observed,
be for their happiness and well-being here on the earth, and it
is for ourselves that we serve God and keep his commandments. All
that he has done, all the commandments he has given, are for our
benefit, not for his. It would be well for us, as the President
has just observed, if we would walk in the channels of truth and
virtue, and in strict obedience to the commands of God, for
thereby we promote our own welfare and secure to ourselves an
eternal inheritance in the realms of joy and happiness. The
kingdom is ours if we will live for it. We may come to an
inheritance of all that is worth desiring or possessing, of all
that will be of any benefit to us either here or hereafter, if we
will live for it.
85
God, our heavenly Father, has restored the authority of the Holy
Priesthood, through the channel of which a communication has been
opened up between the heavens and the earth; and through that
channel we can learn to know God, whom to know is life eternal.
The way to this is opened to all the children of men, and the
invitation has gone forth unto all people to repent of their
sins, and return to God and receive the blessings. There is no
true enjoyment but what can be obtained through this channel, and
it is within the purview of the kingdom of God here upon the
earth. The people should not be afraid of the government of God;
it is only calculated for their benefit, and it will be a blessed
day when it can take the place of the wicked governments that now
exist on the face of the earth, and its establishment should be
hailed as the grandest and best event that could take place among
the children of men. In the kingdom and government of God is
every blessing that is enduring, and it will confer upon those
who abide its laws all the peace, joy and happiness they can
conceive of. Outside of it there is nothing worth having; all
real true happiness, all that can serve our best interests comes
within its purview.
86
Are we obliged, in order to secure present happiness and
enjoyment, to go outside the kingdom of God? By no manner of
means, although it is so esteemed in the religious world. A great
many so-called religious people feel that they are restrained of
their liberty and enjoyment by being members of their churches.
This is a wrong view. Our Father in heaven does not wish to
restrain his children in anything that is right, and it is right
for people to enjoy themselves, and the very acme of happiness is
to be obtained by obeying the behests and commands of our Father
in heaven. Men may indulge in things they call happiness, but
there is often no real happiness in them, for they bring
punishment along in the sting they leave behind. It is not so
with proper enjoyments--enjoyments within the scope of reason and
right, where there is no infringement upon each other. The great
law of demarcation between that which is wrong and that which is
right is not to infringe upon the rights of another. No man has a
right to infringe upon another. We serve ourselves, then, by
serving God and keeping his commandments, and the way is so plain
that no person can err therein. Our boys who have been properly
raised and tutored in the Church and kingdom of God, who have
attended Sunday school, learned the catechism and become
conversant with the principles set forth in the Scriptures, in
the Book of Mormon, and in the book of Doctrine and Covenants,
and have been endowed with the authority of the Holy Priesthood,
can teach men the way of life and salvation; and if they will
follow their teachings they will bring them back into the
celestial kingdom of God, they are so simple and so easy to be
comprehended.
86
There are a good many ways pointed out by the children of men,
which they call the ways of life and salvation, but the end
thereof is death. The Lord is not the author of the confusion
that exists in the religious world. Satan stands there, ready,
and has religion at his fingers' ends, already manufactured, to
suit the notions of men. Men get notions and ideas foreign to the
truth, and they find religion manufactured to their order, and
can get any kind that they have a mind to order, just as one who
goes to a huckster's shop can purchase anything he has a mind to
pay for. They have their manufactured religion to pay for, for
Satan does not work for nothing.
87
There is but one way, one faith, one baptism, one God, one Lord
and Savior Jesus Christ, the mediator between God and man; he has
made it manifest unto the children of men in the day and age in
which we live. It has been told to us here, to-day, and is
frequently reiterated in our hearing, that God is full of mercy,
and would rather that all men should turn from evil and live. He
begs people to turn from their evil ways. He says "Take upon you
my yoke, for it is easy, and my burden, for it is light; and
come, partake of the waters of life freely, without money and
without price." These words are sounded in our ears continually,
for the Lord would rather that all men would turn and live and
come to him. Why so? He is merciful, and the invitation is as
widespread as the vast domains of the world: it reaches every
human being, every son and daughter of Adam upon the face of the
whole earth. Holy messengers of salvation are sent forth by the
direction of the God of heaven, through the channel of the holy
priesthood that he has revealed and instituted again among men,
warning the people to turn from their evil ways, and to become
partakers of this great happiness and glory and to sustain his
government upon the earth. It is true the impression has gone
forth in the midst of the nations, and it is a true impression,
that he will establish his government upon the earth. This earth
belongs to God, he has a right to rule and govern it, and it is
his intention to do so. Prophets, in ages gone by, have disclosed
this, and modern prophets have done the same in our day through
the channel of the Holy Priesthood. That Priesthood has been
organized according to the ancient pattern, for God set in his
Church, first Apostles, second Prophets, and so on. It has been
reorganized according to this pattern, and the proclamation has
gone forth--"Repent and give glory to God." The Gospel has been
restored by the angel which John saw flying through the midst of
heaven having the everlasting gospel to preach to those who dwell
on the earth, saying, "Fear God and give glory to him, for the
hour of his judgment is come." This message has been sounded in
the midst of the nations, and the greater portion of the people
who have gathered to these valleys have listened to this
proclamation. It reached their ears and made an impression upon
them, and they gathered up from the midst of the nations of the
earth to these valleys of the mount to be taught in the ways of
the Lord, that they might walk in his paths, instead of walking
in the vain imaginations of their own hearts and in ways of
error, because, as the ancient prophet says, "They have inherited
error and lies from their fathers." Behold, this has been
fulfilled in the day in which the angel has brought forth and
revealed the Gospel. Now we can see wherein we and our fathers
have been in error. We have been taught the precepts of men
instead of the commandments of God; but in our day we have been
touched with the light of truth and with the Spirit of the living
God, through obedience to the principles of the Gospel. The
Saints of the Most High, having heard these principles proclaimed
in their ears, had faith in them and in God, and they repented of
their sins and went forth into the waters of baptism, according
to the words of our Savior--"Except a man be born of water and of
the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God."
87
Having ben obedient to these principles and having had hands laid
upon them for the reception of the Holy Ghost, it has been given
unto us, and we know, ourselves, concerning these things, and
bear testimony this day that they are true. It has come from God,
it is not any "guess so;" it is not a hope within a hope, that we
have a hope, but we bear testimony that we verily do know that
God has spoken, and we warn all people to repent and turn to God,
and partake of the waters of life freely, without money and
without price.
87
This is what has brought this people together in the valleys of
the mountains; and they are laboring now to bring forth and
establish the Zion of God upon the earth, according to the words
of his Holy Prophets, whose prophecies have been and are being
fulfilled in the history of this people. The kingdom of God is
actually transpiring right before our face and eyes, but the
world cannot see it, because they are not born again. They can
not enter this kingdom, because they are not born of the water
and of the Spirit, and because they do not comply with the
requirements of the Gospel and render obedience to the great plan
of salvation devised in the heavens before the foundation of the
world. This plan was understood and was in the programme before
the morning stars together sang for joy, and who can better it?
Puny men undertake to do so, but their efforts are vain, and they
only betray their own folly and presumption. Our Father in heaven
knew better than any of us what was for our best interests, and
he has condescended to make it manifest to his children here, and
if they would walk in accordance therewith they would lay the
foundation for eternal power, dominion and glory.
87
It is the duty of the Latter-day Saints to live by every word
proceeding from the mouth of God.
88
He has told us to keep the words of wisdom, and has said that
they are adapted to the capacity of all who can be called Saints,
even the weakest. But, see the frailty of humanity! We think we
know and understand better than the Lord, what is best for us. We
say this by our acts a great many times; but we might as well
learn, first as last, that the Lord knows best, and that his way
is better than ours, as much so as the heavens are higher than
the earth. He has trodden the path, and has had the experience
that we have not had, and has kindly condescended to make known a
little of his experience in regard to these things. He has told
us that it is not good for us to take spirituous liquors; but a
great many of us think a little will do us no harm, and it is
better for us to have it than not to have it. He has told us not
to swear, not to take the name of the Lord in vain, not to give
way to our evil passions. Our passions are good, and planted
within us for a good and wise purpose, to give us strength and
energy of character; but they should be governed and controlled
by that heaven-inspired intellect and reason with which every
person is endowed; in other words, our passions should be our
servants and not our masters.
88
If we are thus governed and influenced kindness, love and charity
will fill every heart; but depart from that, let passion bear
sway, then the evil influences that attend us take possession and
cause us to go astray into by and forbidden paths. When passion
rules it dethrones reason and intellect, and makes a beast of a
man; and he who has no more command of himself that to be
governed by passion has fallen far beneath the dignity of true
manhood, and the end of such a course is death.
88
These are some of the things that we have to be told of so often,
because we are so forgetful, and we oftentimes let the cares of
the world choke the word of life. The latter is sown in the
hearts of the children of men, and sometimes it takes rot and
grows fairly for a little while, and then withers and dries up.
Sometimes if falls into good ground, takes root downward and
bears fruit upward; and where it does not do this it is owing to
the frailties of human nature, and to its proneness to wander
from the way of life and to disregard the truths of heaven.
89
One of the greatest boons that could be conferred upon the
children of men would be to have the government of God
established on the earth. Can they see it? No, they stand in fear
of it. What makes men fear it? What makes them afraid of the
Lord, or of his government being established on the earth? Its it
not because their deeds are evil, and because they are afraid of
receiving the punishment due for the same? The word has gone
forth, and most men believe it, that every man will be judged
according to the deeds done in the body, whether they be good or
evil. And when men are conscious of evil deeds, and know they do
not pay allegiance to the kingdom and government of God, they
have reason to fear and dread the future; and let me say here,
the time will come when they will call upon the rocks and
mountains to fall upon them to hide them from his presence. But
it should not be so. We need not be afraid of the rule and
government of God, it is only calculated to benefit the children
of men, and it will be a glorious happy day when it shall be
established on the earth in its fulness. Men should fear to do
wrong, to commit iniquity; they should to themselves the kindness
to honor the principles that pertain to their well-being, and to
eternal life and exaltation. Such principles should be hailed
with joy, gladness and delight by all the children of men. The
time will come when the government of God will prevail over the
whole face of the earth, notwithstanding all that mankind, and
all that the powers of evil can do against it. The principles
which underlie the kingdom and government of God are those of
truth and virtue, and they will endure; while sin, iniquity,
disobedience and unbelief will be swept away, and the man who
builds his house or castle on such a foundation will find that it
will not stand in the day of the Lord Almighty. When the storms
come and the winds beat upon that house it will be swept away; in
that day too, men will be stripped of all their hypocrisy and
iniquity, and they will stand forth in all their naked deformity,
then they will call upon the rocks to fall upon and hide them
from the presence of the Lord. Men should live so that they can
bear the scrutinizing eye of the Almighty. Persons may think they
can commit this or that evil, and no one will know it; they may
be very secretive in doing wrong, and think they will never be
found out. But if I commit evil I know it, and when I know it,
one too many knows it; and the Lord knows it as well as I know
it. We can not hide it from him, and we had better not commit
ourselves in any such a way, for in the great day of the Lord
these things will be revealed; man will stand forth in his naked
deformity, and the wickedness of wicked men will be made to
appear, and it will be written where it can be read by all people
when the vail shall be taken from before the eyes. Then let us
repent and turn to God with full purpose of heart, and the
promise to every one who will do this in sincerity is that their
sins shall be forgiven, and that they shall receive the testimony
which we bear this day--namely that the Gospel we preach, is the
Gospel of the Son of God and has been revealed for the salvation
of the human family.
89
This promise is certain and sure, there need be no doubt about
it; it will be fulfilled to all whom the Lord our God shall
call--to every one who repents of his evil ways and renders
obedience to its mandates. The minister in the pulpit needs it as
much as anybody else. Why? because he has taught error; he has
assumed to himself the authority of high heaven, which has never
been given to him. He has run before he was sent, and has taught
the traditions of the fathers instead of the commandments of God.
He needs to repent of his evil ways, and not only to repent of
but to turn from them.
89
No man can get a greater testimony of the forgiveness of his sins
by the Lord, than a knowledge within himself that he has turned
away from his evil deeds. He knows it then, for God has promised
to forgive every one who will comply with the requirements of the
Gospel and turn from evil; and the man who forsakes evil knows
it, and if he has no other testimony of his forgiveness, this is
as great a one as he can possess.
90
I know that this is different kind of preaching from what people
get in the world, but that makes no difference. We are a
different people from any other, God has made us so by the
instructions that he has imparted unto us through his servants.
He has taught us another and a better way--the true way, the way
that leads back to him, the way of life, truth and salvation. The
Scriptures--the history of God's dealings with his children in
past ages when the authority of the Holy Priesthood was on the
earth, also bear testimony that this is the work of God, and that
all who receive it, and remain true and faithful, may become
coworkers with our heavenly Father in bringing to pass his
purposes and establishing his kingdom upon the earth, if we will
only let him work with us; but we must do this. He will establish
his work any how, independent of us, if we do not see proper to
aid him in this great enterprise. If we do not do it, he will
find somebody who will, for the day of redemption, the set time
has come for the commencement of this great work. An impression
has gone forth among all the children of men that the time is
rapidly approaching to prepare the way for the coming of the
Lord, and the establishment of his kingdom on the earth. No
matter whether it be Gentile, Jew, bond or free, heathen or
Christian, this impression has been made on the minds of all
classes of the children of men in all the nations of the earth,
and it is true. The set time has come when God will put forth his
hand to establish his kingdom, and every body knows it. We
proclaim in the ears of the people that the angel has come and
brought again the everlasting Gospel to preach to all the
inhabitants of the earth--to every nation, kindred, tongue and
people. Let those, then, who have not received it, make some
inquiry concerning this work. It is not a thing done up in a
corner, but it is like a city set on a hill, that can not be hid.
The kingdom of God is transpiring before the eyes of the children
of men. Let them take heed and not raise their heel against it,
because if they do, it will only redound to their own
discomfiture. Then they had better not do it, they had better
receive it, or at least investigate, and then, if they do not
receive it, they had better withhold their hands instead of
seeking to destroy and overthrow the work and kingdom of God. All
efforts to do so will be futile, they will do the kingdom no
harm, for nothing can prevent its increase and triumph in the
earth. God will not be thwarted in his purposes and designs. The
set time has come for him to favor his people, and to establish
his kingdom, and the puny arm of man will be powerless to prevent
it. Have they not been trying for forty years? Are the lessons of
the past of no benefit to the world? It would seem so, indeed.
They are slow to learn this lesson, peradventure they may learn
it after awhile, but not so long as evil predominates as it does
at present in the hearts of the great majority of the children of
men. We may be scattered and driven and have many afflictions to
endure, but will that stay the work of God? No. How has it been?
Let our past experience teach us and the world at the same time.
It has only increased and given greater velocity to the work of
God. Phoenix like, it has risen from its ashes and, if there is
anything about it formidable, it has presented a more formidable
face than ever before, notwithstanding the most strenuous
exertions of its adversaries. My testimony is that the experience
of the past will be renewed in the future, if the enemies of Zion
work for its overthrow. They may succeed in taking the lives of
some of the servants of God; they have done that in the past, but
it never obstructed the work, and all their efforts in the future
will be as powerless as in the past.
91
It is for the Saints to ponder these things in their hearts, and
with renewed confidence and greater faith to press forward in
their high calling. Their past observation and experience have
proved to them the necessity of continual diligence. Many who
have borne faithful testimonies to the truth of this work have
apostatized and forsaken the truth because they have neglected
some duty and have gradually given way to evil, and the counsels
of their mind have become darkened to the principles of truth,
and they have finally forgotten that they ever knew them to be
true.
91
Then let us take heed to our steps. "Let him who standeth take
heed lest he fall," is a very good exhortation. We are none of us
independent, and none have got so far along but we find it
necessary to live humbly before the Lord. We should pray without
ceasing, and let our hearts be drawn towards the Lord
continually, never forgetting him, or the principles that he has
revealed unto us; but we should be actuated by them in all we say
and all we do. If we do this, the Spirit of the Lord will be
within us like a well of water springing up unto everlasting
life. It is necessary that every one should live thus humbly
before the Lord, in order to have full possession of this Spirit.
This will bring peace, joy and comfort under all difficulties
that may assail us and seek to prevent our progress in the
kingdom of God.
91
What is a man good for who flies the track the very moment
obstruction or difficulty presents itself before him? Nothing. He
has not proven his integrity, and he cannot prove it in this way.
We have undertaken to follow the Lord through evils well as good
report; and the Lord, and his ways, his teachings and government
are in evil report in the world; and he who has independence and
courage enough to strip himself of his surroundings in the world,
and seeks to establish the kingdom of God, has to meet these
difficulties which present themselves before him. He has to stem
his ear to the popular stream. It is easy to float with the
stream; but it requires more courage, and independence of
character and greater nerve to stem the tide of corruption in the
world than to go down with the current; and the man who takes
this course is far more independent than he who has not the
courage to do so.
91
Then let us take courage and press onward if we have received the
truth, as we know we have; if we have received the testimony of
Jesus--the spirit of prophecy, as we know we have, let us take
heed to our steps and continue faithful, never swerving to the
right hand or to the left, for of all people in the world, the
Latter-day Saints are the people who cannot afford to lay off the
armor of righteousness for a moment. The tempter the evil one, is
at our elbow, ready to enter in and take possession and blind our
understandings and cause us to make shipwreck of our faith if
possible.
92
The Saints should live humble, be courteous, be civil and live
for God and his kingdom. That is the only job we have on hand.
Let us work on that job as long as we live on the earth. Our
religion is not a matter of enthusiasm, to last a day or a week,
and then evaporate into thin air, like the religions of the
world; but every hour, every day, every week, every year, as long
as we live on the earth, it should be first with us, for it is
only he who endures faithful and true to the end that will be
saved, and will inherit everlasting habitations. We need not lay
to our souls the flattering unction that we can go hand in hand
with the devil all our lives and inherit celestial glory. That is
not in the programme. We can do as we please about receiving or
rejecting the principles of life and salvation as they have been
revealed. We have this power, because we are free agents, to act
as we please in this matter; but we can not go back into
celestial abodes and inherit celestial glory unless we keep the
law pertaining to that kingdom. And so with every other kingdom,
even a telestial kingdom; we must abide a telestial law or we can
not participate in the glory appertaining to it.
92
I do not wish to continue. I feel thankful for the privilege of
bearing my testimony, although I do not count myself a preacher.
But the principles of the Gospel make preachers of us all, for
they make us bear testimony of the same to the children of men.
They impel every heart to say something, to bear testimony, if
nothing more, to the truth of the principles we have received.
This life-giving power, the Holy Ghost, I say, impels every
person who has received it to bear this testimony according to
the sphere and position he fills, and the duties he is called
upon to perform. A person may be called to plough, sow, reap,
build a railroad, work in the canyon or to go and preach to the
nations of the earth, and one calling is as legitimate as
another, inasmuch as he who is filling it is working in the
legitimate channel, and aiding to build up the kingdom of God.
92
Every person who has obeyed the Gospel has a share of
responsibility to bring forth and establish this work upon the
earth. None can shirk this responsibility, but it is shared by
all according to their spheres and positions. Those engaged in
raising families are doing their part to establish the Zion of
God, just as much as in the performance of any other labor.
92
Let us ponder these things in our hearts, receive the impressions
made from the heavens above. This will exalt us above the
grovelling things of earth and cause us to attain those which are
before us with cheerful hearts and willing minds.
92
May God preserve us in the purity of our most holy faith, and
enable us to endure to the end, that we may inherit everlasting
habitations prepared for the righteous, is my prayer for Jesus'
sake. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / George
Albert Smith, July 7, 1872
George Albert Smith, July 7, 1872
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT GEORGE A. SMITH,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday, July 7, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
SACRAMENT--SELF-EXAMINATION--RECOLLECTIONS OF EARLY
LIFE--REFLECTIONS
ON SCENES OF CHILDHOOD, AFTER AN ABSENCE OF FORTY YEARS.
93
The administration of the Sacrament is an occasion which calls
us, one and all, to reflection, to inquire of ourselves in
relation to our course of conduct in life--whether the journey we
have pursued, the paths that we are traveling, are in accordance
with the holy principles of that religion which has been revealed
for our salvation, and which we have received. While I have
visited the cities of the East, I have observed that a great
amount of means has been expended in the construction and
ornamenting of churches and edifices for public worship. Every
city, every village is beautified with magnificent buildings,
stately domes, elegant spires, erected in honor and for the
purpose of religion, and I have reflected upon the influence of
this religion upon the minds of a community. In visiting friends
I found many who are professors of religion, who seem to have an
utter disregard for any forms of worship whatever, and who
totally neglect prayer in the family and grace at the table. I am
not aware, of course, whether or not this is general among
Christians; but I notice among the Latter-day Saints, that it
seems to be very natural to be slothful and negligent and
careless in relation to our every-day, simple duties. We may
build temples, erect stately domes, magnificent spires, grand
towers, in honor of our religion, but if we fail to live the
principles of that religion at home, and to acknowledge God in
all our thoughts, we shall fall short of the blessings which its
practical exercise would ensure.
93
While the Sacrament is passed around, and we take the emblems of
our Savior's death and suffering, and realize the sacrifice which
he made for our salvation, we should ask ourselves, Do we
remember him in all things? Do we acknowledge his hand in the
providences with which we are surrounded? Do we call upon him in
our families and in secret? Or do we neglect our duties, do we
miss praying with our families in the morning, and have not time
to do so in the evening, and are in such a hurry that we cannot
even ask his blessing upon our food, and cannot take time to
attend meeting on the Sabbath, nor afford to devote the day to
rest, meditation and study? Let us also ask these questions of
ourselves, Are we honorable in our relations with each other? Do
we do by our neighbor as we would that he should do unto us? Are
we just in our dealings? Are we honoring those principles of
morality which alone can prepare us to inherit celestial glory?
Brethren and sisters, if we ask ourselves these questions, and,
after examining our conduct and career, can answer them honestly
and truthfully in the affirmative, then we may partake of the
bread and water in the presence of our heavenly father worthily.
If, on the other hand, we have been negligent and careless, we
should repent, for repentance is our first duty.
94
Since I last saw you, I have visited the scenes of my childhood,
and the place of my birth, after an absence of about forty years.
My ideas of right and wrong were formed there; my associations
with the people, up to fifteen years of age, were such as to give
deep and strong impressions of their character, and of the
principles by which they were governed. I cannot say that my
visit was without its painful character. Forty years sweep from
the face of the earth more than a generation. I understand
statisticians to estimate that thirty-three years carry as many
souls from the earth as dwell on it at one time. I went into my
native town after forty years' absence, and inquired for those
who were the business men in my boyhood, for the magistrates,
ministers, merchants, farmers and mechanics with whom I was
acquainted then. Where were they? Nearly all dead; a very few of
the old faces, like ancient oaks, remain. On my father's farm
there was a beautiful grove of maple--some two hundred trees,
standing when I was there before, with no other timber among
them, the ground sown with white clover--it was one of the most
beautiful lawns I ever saw when I left it. I drove up before the
house in which I was born, and said to the man who was residing
there, "Is that grove standing?" "Not a maple tree on the farm,"
was the reply. "Not a single one?" said I. "No," said he, "not a
maple on the farm." I had not even the curiosity to drive across
the farm, for in my mind that grove was the feature of all
others, it was the place of my dreams.
94
Many of you know that in 1853 we had difficulty with the Indians
in Southern Utah. At that time I was military commander of the
Southern Department. Previous to every attack on the settlement,
my dreams would carry me back to that grove, and there I would
see, or get some intimation of, the coming trouble with the
Indians. Now there is not a tree left. It would have been about
so with the people if I had staid away a few years longer.
94
I went into the school district where I had resided some six
years, and visited Mr. Porter Patterson, with whom I was well
acquainted in my boyhood, and began inquiring for the neighbors.
"Why," said he, "they are all gone but four: myself and wife, and
Mr. John Stafford and Mrs. Garfield are all the married people
that remain that lived here when you went away, thirty-nine years
and two months ago." "Then," said I, "I must go to the
graveyard."
94
These reflections would bring to my mind the sermons that I had
heard in my youth. I went to the cemetery, and saw the graves of
a great many of my old comrades. There were headstones with
inscriptions to many whom, I had known, and some whose funerals I
had attended, and I could recite texts, and a portion of the
sermons preached at those funerals. They were generally passages
like this--"Be ye also ready, for in such an hour as ye think not
the Son of Man cometh." Passages of this kind were generally
selected as warnings to all to be ready for death.
94
From the monuments in the graveyard I found that a good many had
been summoned in their youth, for there were the graves of boys
and girls with whom I had associated, some of them my relatives.
I visited three cemeteries with a like result--the one in our own
neighborhood, one in Colton and the other in Potsdam village, in
all of which I had been more or less acquainted.
95
Latter-day Saints, in their preaching, call on men and women to
prepare to live, and they teach them how to live, believing that
if any person is prepared to live as he ought to, he will
certainly be prepared to die whenever the summons shall come. It
was never a part or portion of our teaching to attempt to scare
men to heaven. I went to the meeting house, or rather to the site
of the meeting house, for the old frame building had been
replaced by another of bricks, and it converted into a lecture
room for the normal school. In that old frame building I had been
most solemnly sentenced to eternal damnation, nine times, by a
Congregationalist minister forty years ago. He had gone to his
grave, and nearly all the persons present in the congregation at
the time, had followed, or preceded, him. The object of this
sentence, in the eloquent and solemn language in which it was
pronounced, and so oft-repeated, was, no doubt, to stir in the
minds of impenitent sinners, and of me particularly, a conviction
that would secure conversion to Christianity, as I was considered
impenitent; and I do not know but the proper phrase would be, to
scare me to heaven. But it did not have that effect with me, I
never could understand nor realize certain portions of the
teachings which I there heard. That I must become so thoroughly
in love with the justice of God as to be perfectly willing to be
damned to all eternity for his glory, and suffer all the miseries
which they so eloquently described, was to me an impossibility, I
could see no justice in such doctrines. But those were times of
great religious excitement, when revivals and protracted meetings
were common all over the country, and the souls of many were
stirred to the very core, as it were, by the idea, then so
strongly advocated, of the punishment and misery which were to be
eternally inflicted upon all those who were finally impenitent.
Those sermons divided the Christian world into two classes, one
was made celestial, inheriting all the blessings and glory which
a God could bestow; the other was banished to eternal misery.
95
When the doctrines of the Latter-day Saints were preached to me I
could understand them. I could believe in faith and repentance,
in the principle of obedience, and in the doctrines of baptism
for the remission of sins, and the laying on of hands for the
gift of the Holy Ghost, and that God had provided for all beings
that he ever created, a glory, honor and immortality in
accordance with their works, whether good or evil, giving, as a
matter of course, to the faithful Latter-day Saints, the reserved
seats; or to use the language of the Apostle Paul, I could
believe that there was a glory of the sun, a glory of the moon,
and a glory of the stars, and that the glory of the stars
differed as much as the stars differ in brilliancy; and that all
sects, denominations and classes of people would receive
punishments and rewards in accordance with his divine justice.
Every Latter-day Saint that abides in the truth, faithful to the
end, may expect the glory of the sun; and every man that acts in
accordance with the light that he possesses lays a foundation for
greater glory and honor than eye has seen, or than it has entered
into the heart of mortal man to conceive.
95
I did not visit these graves with the feeling that some of the
ministers of orthodox churches sought to impress upon my mind in
my youth--I did not believe that they were consigned to eternal
punishment because they believed differently from what I did. I
went there feeling a confidence that honorable men and women
would receive honorable treatment from a just God. In speaking on
this subject, I designed simply to wake up the hearts of my
brethren and sisters to the necessity of maintaining this honor,
and to the fact that, as we advance in the things of the kingdom,
greater sacrifices and more faith and diligence are required on
our part.
96
I visited, in the course of my journey, the place where Joseph
Smith's father was born--Topsfield, Massachusetts. I was in the
house he was born in, and upon the farm where the family had
resided three generations previous, they having resided in that
county--Essex--as early as 1666. One object of my visit was to
obtain some historical information in relation to the family of
Joseph Smith. It was about eighty-one years since my grandfather
moved away from that place, at which time my father was eleven
years old, and Joseph's father twenty-one, they being brothers.
It would seem strange that, after the lapse of eighty-one years,
I should find any one who knew my grandfather, yet I saw several
persons who stated that they were personally acquainted with him,
although they could not remember when he moved away; but after
doing so, he returned to that neighborhood, and visited his
relatives and acquaintances, and they had distinct recollections
of him, and gave me reminiscences of his history.
96
The graveyard at Topsfield contained no monuments over about
eighty years old. I do not recollect the exact date. Among the
oldest were the names of my great aunts and other relatives.
Being a firm believer in the doctrine of baptism for the dead, I
was anxious to procure the names of those departed persons
wherever our records might be deficient, and I have, I believe, a
prospect of obtaining the names of about nine hundred of the
kindred of my great grandmother--Priscilla Gould.
96
The old portion of the burying ground at Topsfield, used by the
early inhabitants, is totally without monuments--no gravestones
whatever, so that I presume they simply used headboards or
monuments of wood; and the place is now reserved as a sacred
precinct in which, we were told that any of the kindred of those
ancient worthies of the town might plant gravestones if they
choose, but no person is allowed to be buried there. The cemetery
had been enlarged, and from eighty years ago down to the present
time there had been placed there many gravestones and handsome
obelisks, some manifesting the pride and aristocracy of those who
placed them there. I noticed one particularly, on which was
inscribed a notice to the effect that the person buried there was
a millionaire. It did not say whether he obtained money honestly
or by some other means.
96
In visiting the office of the town clerk, I examined the record
kept by my great grandfather in 1776-8, at which time he was the
clerk of that town. I also found, by examining the records ten
years before then, that he had represented the town in the
Legislature of the Colony of Massachusetts, and was a very firm
supporter of the Revolution. Just as I was about leaving the
office to go to the railway station, I was told by the clerk that
he had a list of the names of the children of Robert Smith in the
town record. Robert Smith was supposed by us to be the first of
our family who settled in Massachusetts, sometime previous to the
year 1665. I there ascertained what our family records fail to
show. Our records show that he had a son Samuel, and that Samuel
had a son Samuel, and that Samuel had a son Samuel and a son
Asael, and Asael was our grandfather; but I ascertained that this
Robert Smith had a large family, and their names are contained in
that old town record.
97
The Genealogical Society of Massachusetts has got out books
containing the records of some hundreds of the families of the
oldest settlers of the colony. If our friends here, whose
ancestors were buried in New England, would unite in purchasing
an entire set of these works, they would be enabled to find
collateral, if not direct, branches of their kindred; and so
obtain a key to help them in making the necessary records to
attend to the ordinances for their dead. But our faith is,
brethren and sisters, that when we have exhausted all the powers
within our natural reason and reach to obtain a knowledge of our
dead, and the Lord is satisfied with us, revelations will be
opened to our understandings by which we will be able to trace
back our genealogy to the time when men were within the pale of
the principles and laws of the Priesthood, before these
ordinances were changed and the everlasting covenant broken.
97
In conversing with Mr. Zaccheus Gould and his wife, of Topsfield,
over eighty years old, and Dr. Humphrey Gould, of Rowe, who were
cousins of my father, I was enabled to pick up many very
satisfactory items of information. I am also under obligation to
Mr. John H. Gould, of Topsfield, and to the town clerk of that
place, Mr. Towne, for valuable letters and papers relating to the
history of our family, all of which, as they relate to the
ancestry of Joseph Smith, will form an interesting page in
connection with his history when it shall be published.
97
I do not design, in conversing with you at the present time, to
enumerate the visits I made, though they remind me of a remark
made concerning me by my grandfather on the last day of his life.
He died in his eighty-eighth year, I being then in my fourteenth
year. Said he, "George A. is a rather singular boy. When he comes
here, instead of going to play as the rest of my grandchildren
do, he comes into my room and asks me questions about what
occurred seventy or eighty years ago." It seemed to me, while I
was absent, that I was pursuing the same course yet, for although
I had got pretty well along in years, I still wanted to talk with
the old folks.
97
At Woonsocket, R. I., I visited Mrs. Tryphena Lyman, a cousin of
my mother, in her 94th year, who was living with her unmarried
daughter, an agreeable young lady in her 70th year. I had a very
pleasant visit with them, and from them I learned some
interesting incidents of my mother's ancestors. From my cousins,
Mr. and Mrs. Simon D. Butler, of South Colton, N. Y., I obtained
a copy of the family record of my great-grandfather, Deacon John
Lyman, written by his own hand in his family Bible--now 200 years
old. Mrs. Butler has been my most faithful correspondent among
all my relatives, and my meeting with her and her husband was
more like meeting a brother and sister than cousins.
98
It is very well known that, by the election of a convention of
delegates from all the counties of this Territory, held in this
city, Ex-Governor Fuller and myself went to attend the Republican
Convention at Philadelphia. Persons appeared there and objected
to me because I was a "Mormon," and the committee on credentials
did not think proper to allow the representatives of the people
of Utah a seat in that convention, consequently we retired,
believing, fully, that the time would come in our country when
men will not be questioned in relation to their religious faith
or practice, when called upon to perform the duties of citizens,
but that if they are firm and upright supporters of the
Constitution and laws of their country, that will be all that
will be required of them. I then took the opportunity to make
these visits, which I had designed doing years before, and which
I believe will result in good, I did not seek to be publicly
known; I made no attempts to preach, though invited at different
times to do so; and I must say for the credit of New England,
that I had the offer of a Christian church to preach in. I say
this to show that New England is improving in its religious
faith, that is, there is less bigotry there now than there has
been at certain periods. I could have had numerous opportunities
to preach, but I wished to make my journey one of rest, and
addressed but one public congregation, and that was last Sabbath
in the Latter-day Saints' Hall, Brooklyn.
98
While at Philadelphia I met Mr. E. W. Foster, Supervisor of
Potsdam, my native town, he being a member of the convention, and
one of the committee on credentials before whom our claim to a
seat was contested. After leaving philadelphia I visited Potsdam,
and an incident occurred there which I will name. On landing at
the railway station, Mr. Foster happened to be there, and
recognizing me, he called me by name, and bid me welcome to the
town. A very respectable-looking aged lady, hearing the name,
stepped up to him and inquired if I was George A. Smith, and
being answered in the affirmative, she seized my hand and said,
"I want to thank you, your father saved my life." "Why, when?" "A
good many years ago." "How?" "We were broken through the ice into
the lake, and at the risk of his own life he saved mine." The
cars were about starting, and she rushed from me and said, "My
name was Eliza Courier." I really thought the incident worth
naming, as occurring in the place of my birth, and from which I
had gone nearly forty years before.
98
By the courtesy of General N. S. Elderkin, I had the privilege of
visiting the State Normal School at Potsdam, and was very much
pleased with the institution. The visit improvements which have
been made in buildings, machinery, roads, transportation, and
telegraphs, have certainly not been altogether inapplicable to
the progress of education. When I received my education, an
ordinary school master received nine dollars a month, and twelve
if he was a first class teacher; and he could cut blue beech
switches enough in a day, and perhaps less, to thrash the
scholars the entire winter, and they were applied very freely. I
used to think I got more than my share. I thought I could not
watch the schoolmaster as well as some others, my eyes were not
quite so good. But I noticed on my visit a very desirable change
in their school government; the cultivation of the mind is the
object sought now, and the teacher has become the friend as well
as the preceptor of the pupil. The blue beech seems to be pretty
well banished, and there is a marked improvement in the whole
system of education, as well as in telegraphing, railroading,
machinery, and architectural works generally.
98
I met several of my old schoolfellows, who were glad to see me,
and treated me with courtesy. Among these I should mention
General Elderkin, a man of influence and who never, in the
darkest hour of our persecutions, has failed to recognize me as
an old schoolfellow and friend, notwithstanding he had high
religious notions. I met other gentlemen of this kind.
99
We are all passing to the tomb, and we want to leave a good
record, that is, one that will be pleasing to the Lord. It is not
a very lofty ambition for a man to spend his life so as to have
it recorded on his tombstone that he died worth a million
dollars; but if he spend his life in doing good, that will be a
record that will be to his everlasting honor, and will prove to
him treasure in heaven. People say, "you Mormons believe all will
be damned except yourselves." We know for ourselves that this is
the work of God, and we know that every Latter-day Saint that is
faithful to his profession and calling will attain to celestial
glory. We also further know that God has extended, in his order,
to all the human race, glory, honor, immortality and blessings in
accordance with their works, whether good or evil. Read the
vision in the Book of Covenants, and the 15th chapter of Paul's
epistle to the Corinthians, and judge for yourselves; and while
we should struggle to obtain the greater blessings, we should
never disparage those who may fall short of attaining the highest
glory. There is a glory of the sun, the Apostle informs us, also
a glory of the moon, and a glory of the stars, and as one star
differeth from another, so do these different degrees of glory
differ. But in these various glories will be found all
denominations and all honorable men--every one in accordance with
those things which he has done in this life; and, says the
Savior, "Suffer little children to come unto me, for of such is
the kingdom of heaven."
99
As I passed by the site of the old academy, I said to General
Elderkin, "There I received my Presbyterian baptism." "So did I,"
said he. I did not wish to raise a question in relation to the
subject with him at all. He is now, I believe, a member of the
Episcopal Church, and I, of course, am a Latter-day Saint; but
the man who sprinkled the water on our foreheads, taught that
hell was full of infants not a span long. The idea was horrible
to me from the time I first heard it. "Suffer little children to
come unto me, for of such is the kingdom of heaven," says the
Savior; and if we live in the sight of God as innocent, pure and
holy as little children, we shall attain to the glory of the sun.
May God enable us to do so through Jesus our Redeemer. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, August 4, 1872
Orson Pratt, August 4, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, Sunday Afternoon,
August 4, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
REVELATION FROM HEAVEN AND ITS CONTINUANCE NECESSARY.
100
Sometimes I am in the habit of taking a text, but at present
there is no passage of Scripture which presents itself to my
mind; I therefore, commence speaking and, through your faith and
prayers before the Lord, I trust that something may be given to
me that will edify, and benefit the congregation. The subjects
pertaining to the kingdom of God are so numerous that, sometimes
the great difficulty in the mind of a servant of God who attempts
to address the people is to know the mind and will of the Spirit
in regard to what shall be said. If I know my own heart, I have
no desire to speak my own words or to impart unto you my own
natural wisdom; but it is the earnest desire of my heart that I
may impart instruction according to the mind and the will of the
living God. This I can not do unless God shall grant unto me the
inspiration of his Spirit at the very moment, and this will
depend in a great measure upon the hearers as well as upon the
speaker. If the people have faith in God, and pray unto him,
exercising that faith, he may give them something that will be
instructive to their minds; but if they have not faith the Lord
may not see proper thus to impart.
100
We are permitted, Latter-day Saints, to live in a very peculiar
fulness of times. Many dispensations have been revealed to the
inhabitants of the earth in past ages, and God has given, from
time to time, since the creation, much instruction to the people.
What I mean by a dispensation, is power, authority and revelation
given from Heaven to direct and counsel men here on the earth.
This has been given at different ages of the world, and the
instruction which God has given has been in accordance with the
circumstances of the people, the revelations and instructions
which he has given being different at one period from those given
at another. When I say different, do not misunderstand me. Many
of the revelations of God are unchangeable in their nature, and
are adapted to all dispensations; but many commandments have been
given that were adapted only to the dispensations in which they
were revealed. I will name some of these.
100
For instance, when some sixteen hundred or two thousand years had
passed away, from the creation, the world had become very much
corrupted in the sight of God, so much so that what little
history we have on the subject informs us that all flesh had
corrupted its way upon the face of the earth. God gave a new
commandment in that period, differing entirely from all former
commandments. It was not adapted to any dispensation that had
preceded it, neither would it be suitable for any future
dispensation: it was intended for that particular period only.
The Lord commanded his servant Noah to build an ark, according to
certain rules and dimensions that he gave unto him, for, said the
Lord, "I intend to destroy all flesh with a flood, except those
who shall gather together into the ark which you shall build."
101
This was a new commandment. If there had been any sectarian
preachers who then lived, and perhaps there were-for preachers
who have not been sent of God seem to have been numerous in all
dispensations--they would perhaps have reasoned with Noah in
relation to this new revelation and commandment, and said to him,
"What is the use now, of getting new revelation from God? You
will not dispute, Noah, but what Enoch was saved and translated
to heaven. He had enough revelation to save him, and can not we
be saved in the same manner that he was, without having any new
revelation communicated to us?" I mention this, because such
arguments are used at the present day in reference to the new
revelations which the Latter-day Saints carry forth to the world.
The people say, "You believe in the Book of Mormon as a new
revelation, and that God has given new commandments. Have we not
enough? Were not the people who lived in the days of Enoch,
Abraham, Moses and the Prophets, in the days of Jesus and the
Apostles, saved? And if they had enough to save them, if we
follow the instructions which they received, what is the use of
obtaining another book, called the Book of Mormon, or new
commandments and revelations?" This has been brought forth as an
argument ever since my youth to my certain knowledge, in all
countries where I have traveled and attempted to communicate to
the world our ideas about new revelation. The same arguments
might have been used in the days of the flood--"Enough has been
given; Enoch has been saved and translated, and if we follow the
revelations given to him, why may we not be saved without having
any thing new?" But Noah would have answered, and very properly
too, "God designs to accomplish something now that he did not
accomplish in the days of Enoch, nor in the days of Abel and
Seth, nor in the days of any of those ancient worthies--he
intends to bring destruction on all flesh that will not repent,
by overwhelming this world of ours in a flood of water. He
intends to pour out his indignation and just wrath upon those who
corrupt themselves in his sight; and he has provided a particular
way of escape therefrom, by which you may, if you will, be saved
from this judgment, and that way has to be made known by new
revelation." We will pass on, however.
101
Soon after the days of Noah, we find that certain men lived upon
the earth, whose names are recorded in this sacred history (the
Bible), who were called to be the chosen servants of God, and
whom the Lord blessed in a peculiar manner. I refer now to the
Patriarchs, and more especially to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
three very worthy men, so worthy that the Lord chose them as
representatives of the faithful in all future ages, and declared
that all who should be saved in future ages should become their
seed, either springing directly from their loins, or being
adopted, through the Gospel, into the family of Abraham, who was
to be called the father of the faithful: that is the father not
only of the faithful who lived from his day until the coming of
Christ, but of all who should live after Christ who followed in
the footsteps of this ancient Patriarch and embraced the same
Gospel that he taught, and they should have a claim on the
promises that were made to him.
102
Now, did the Patriarch Abraham receive anything new from God, or
was there enough already given? Perhaps many may cry, "Enough to
save Noah, Enoch, Abel, and all persons who would walk before the
Lord according to ancient revelation, without anything new." But
there was not enough adapted to the circumstances by which
Abraham was surrounded. Why? Because the Lord designed to call
Abraham out from his father's house, from his friends and
country, and to lead him into a strange land. Abraham might have
searched all former records and revelations, but here was a duty
he never could have learned therefrom--"Depart from thy father's
house!" it could not be found written in former revelations,
hence the circumstances required new revelation, and God gave it
by commanding this great man--the father of the faithful--to
leave the land of Chaldea and to go forth into a country where he
never had been. Abraham was obedient, he went forth and traveled
to the country that we call Palestine--a small territory east of
the Mediterranean Sea. And having arrived in that land, he might
have searched all former revelations in vain to have learned what
his duty was then, for there were certain duties required of him
then in regard to which the revelation given to him in his native
land did not enlighten him. One of these duties was to go forth
upon a certain eminence or mountain in Canaan. He did as he was
taught. It was a peculiar commandment. I have never been
commanded to do so, neither has any other person in this
congregation; neither was any person who lived before Abraham;
but he, and he alone needed new revelation to find out that he
was to go to the top of a certain mountain. When he got there
another new revelation was given to him, commanding him to look
to the east, then to the west; and then to cast his eyes to the
north, and to the south, and then, behold, a great promise was
made to him by new revelation, namely, "All the land which thou
seest shall be given to thee and thy seed after thee for an
everlasting possession." No such promise could he have found in
any former revelation: this promise was adapted to that peculiar
individual, and to the circumstances in which he was placed.
102
We would imagine that Isaac, having his father's revelations
right before his eyes, and knowing all about them, would say in
his heart, "I need not trouble myself about inquiring from God
and receiving anything new from the heavens. My father was a good
man; he was saved, and I shall content myself by giving heed to
the old revelations." But Isaac did not reason in this way; and
the Lord had some new revelation to communicate to the son of
Abraham, and one of them was to confirm the promise that had been
made to his father. One might naturally suppose that the
revelation made to his father was broad enough and covered the
case without being confirmed, for it declared that the land
promised to Abraham should be given to him and to his seed after
him, and we might suppose that that included Isaac, and that
there was no need of a new revelation to him on the subject; but
if it did include him, Isaac was not fully satisfied, he would
not place his dependence on something that had been said to some
other man, but wanted to know for himself whether God intended
him to possess that land, and there was no way for him to obtain
this knowledge except by direct communication with the heavens.
He obtained it, God renewing the promise to him that he had made
to his father Abraham.
102
By and by comes along the grandson of Abraham--Jacob, who, not
satisfied with the promises made to his grandfather and his
father--Abraham and Isaac, and not considering himself safe to
depend on promises made to somebody else, came before the Lord
and plead with him, and the angels of God came and visited this
lad, and he saw a ladder reaching from the ground on which he
slept to the very heavens, upon which the angels were ascending
and descending; and he, on that occasion, obtained a confirmation
of the promise made to his father and grandfather.
103
It is unnecessary for me to trace the history of these
patriarchs, or to mention the various times when God thought fit
to communicate a new revelation unto them, according to the
circumstances in which they were placed. We might relate the
revelations given to Jacob after he went down into the country of
Laban, where he married his four wives. We might relate to you
the various revelations God gave to him during his sojourn in
that land. We might also relate to you the revelations he
received after he left that country with his four wives and his
children. When he came to the brook Jabbok, sending over all his
family before him, he stopped back, and the Lord condescended to
give him a new revelation. An angel came down, and Jacob and this
person laid hold of each other, the same as men do occasionally
now, to try each other's strength, in what is termed wrestling.
These two persons wrestled together all night long. The angel did
not see proper to take any advantage of Jacob by miracle, but he
wrestled with him as one man would another; and it seems that
neither of them overcame the other. The angel did not succeed in
throwing Jacob to the ground, neither did Jacob succeed in
throwing the angel to the ground; but after contending together
all night, the angel at last put forth his finger and touched the
hollow of Jacob's thigh and lamed him a little, and by this means
was enabled to overcome him. After being thus lamed, Jacob found
that he had been wrestling with an angel of God, and, said he, "I
will not let thee go unless thou bless me," and God, through the
mouth of that angel, gave to him the same great and glorious
promises that he had given to his father, and also blessed him as
a prince, because he had power to wrestle with an angel all night
and prevailed with him.
103
Some suppose that this was the first conversion of Jacob; but, be
this as it may, Jacob, prior to this time, had many great
revelations from God. After wrestling in this manner on one side
of the brook Jabbok, he started the next day to overtake his
family, and he placed his four wives and their children in a
certain order, preparatory to meeting his brother Esau. By and by
Esau comes along with quite an army of men, and he meets the
forward company, consisting of Bilhah and Zilpah and their
children--two of Jacob's wives and their polygamous offspring. He
continues on until he meets Jacob's third wife, and finally he
comes to the fourth and her children, with whom Jacob was, and
turning to Jacob he says, "Who are all these women and children?"
Jacob answered, "These are they whom God hath given thy servant."
What! God give to Jacob more than one wife, and a number of
polygamous children! Is that so? Well, Jacob says so, and we are
informed that he was then converted, that this meeting between
Jacob and Esau took place, and this declaration of Jacob was made
after his conversion at the book Jabbok. Now, would you suppose
that a converted man would make such a declaration about his
wives and children as Jacob made to Esau, if it had not been
true? If a man now-a-days declares that God has given him more
wives than one, and a host of polygamous children, he is accused
of blasphemy, yet Jacob, after wrestling with an angel, declared
that such was the case with him: he knew it was so and he
acknowledged the hand of God. After he reached the land of Canaan
we find that God continued to give to this man revelation after
revelation, suited to the circumstances; and thus we may trace
the history of the dispensations of God to man.
104
I will now tough, in short, upon the history of Moses, who lived
several hundred years after Jacob--at a period when circumstances
called for commandments and revelations different to any that had
ever been given before. After having slain the Egyptian, Moses
fled from the house of Pharaoh, and went down into the land of
Midian, and dwelt there forty years. At a certain time, when he
was herding the flocks of his father-in-law, Jethro, he saw a
bush burning with a very brilliant flame. This excited his
curiosity, and he drew near, and saw the bush apparently burning,
and yet not consumed. As he drew nearer God spoke to him out of
the burning bush, and told him to take the shoes from his feet
for the place on which he stood was holy ground. He never could
have found out by former revelation that the ground whereon he
stood was holy. This God, who appeared in the burning bush, or
the angel, as the case may be, had something for Moses to do that
he could not possibly learn from former revelation, and that
something was to arise and go down into Egypt and deliver God's
people--the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob--from the
hands of their enemies. Do you not see that it required new
revelation to inform him of this fact? He was obedient to the
commandment, for taking Aaron with him, he went down into Egypt
and stood before the king, and then commenced a series of new
revelations that were wonderful and marvelous in their nature.
The revelations of to-day, however, would not suit to-morrow, and
those of to-morrow would not suit the next day. Why? Because God
had something new to perform every day, and that which was given
yesterday would not be adapted to the work God saw fit to perform
to-day or to-morrow, hence, as often as the day rolled round new
revelation had to be given to Moses to make known to him what the
Lord required at his hand, what his mission was, what he was to
do in the house of Pharaoh and before all the Egyptians. Having
accomplished these wonders, by new revelation, Moses and the
whole house of Israel, some twenty-five hundred thousand in
number, left the land of Egypt and came forth to the eastern
border of the Red Sea.
105
If there had been sectarians in that large company, they would
doubtless have reasoned with Moses on this wise: "Moses, what an
abundance of revelation God has given in former times, and have
we not enough for our guidance now?" I say if there had been
Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, members of the Church of
England, or of any of the several hundred different sects into
which Christendom is now separated, this would have been their
argument, for their argument now is--"We have enough, and do not
need any more." But Moses and the children of Israel were not
influenced by such considerations, for they were placed in
circumstances that required something new. The Red Sea was before
them, and there were mountains on the south and on the north, an
on the west the Egyptians were pursuing them, and the inquiry
with them was "What shall we do?" God gave them revelation. He
did not tell them to search previous revelations for that was all
that was necessary, but he gave them revelation telling them what
to do, and that revelation was, "Stand still, and see the
salvation of God?" If they had not got this new revelation they
might have been so confused that, instead of standing still, some
would have run for one mountain, and some for another, some this
way and some that; but a new revelation made them understand that
their duty, instead of fleeing, was to stand still and see the
salvation that God would work out for them. Moses was commanded
to smite the waters of the Red Sea, and he did so, and they were
parted asunder by the power of the Almighty and, as we are
informed in another place, they stood up like walls on either
side of the path on which the children of Israel traveled through
the midst of the sea. We would naturally suppose that water would
not do this, but it was a miracle wrought by the power of the
Almighty. He placed the waters, like solid walls on each side of
his people, and they walked through dry shod, while the Egyptian
army, in trying to pursue them, were overthrown in the midst of
the sea.
106
Then comes another new revelation--given by inspiration--to sing
how the Lord had overthrown the enemies of his people, how the
Lord had magnified his great power and preserved his people from
the Egyptian nation, and delivered them from bondage. The hosts
of Israel traveled along from the shores of the Red Sea until
they came to the foot of Mount Sinai, where, by new revelation,
they camped; and at a certain time, the Lord, by new revelation,
called Moses up into the mount; and when he got there the Lord
saw fit to write a certain code of laws on tables of stone, and,
after keeping Moses in the mount forty days and forty nights, he
sent him down, and when he got down he found that the children of
Israel had corrupted themselves in the sight of the Most High,
for they had made unto themselves gods, certain golden calves,
and they were worshipping them. Aaron had caused the people to
strip themselves naked, and they were dancing around the calves.
Moses was very angry, not with that kind of anger which fills the
bosoms of foolish men and women; but that principle of justice
which burns in the bosom of the Almighty, burned in the bosom of
Moses, and he threw down the tables of the covenant which he had
brought from Mount Sinai, and they were smashed to pieces. He
called for those on the Lord's side to come out from the midst of
that company and stand with him, at the same time commanding them
to gird on their swords and put to death those who were not for
the Lord. That was a new revelation, and a curious one, was it
not? After all this had taken place, the Lord called Moses a
second time up into the mount by new revelation, and again gave
him tables of stone and laws written thereon. He kept him there
the second time forty days and forty nights, without eating or
drinking anything. One would suppose that he could not have stood
so long a period of fasting--eighty days and eighty nights, forty
each time. When he had obtained the tables the second time he
came down and stood before the children of Israel, and his
countenance shone with such brightness that they were filled with
fear, and fled from before the presence of Moses. They could not
endure the glory of his countenance, and they besought Moses that
the presence of the Lord might not be made manifest in their
midst. "Do you, Moses, go and talk with the Lord. You can
converse with him, and let us know what the Lord says, but do not
let the Lord come and converse with us, lest we be destroyed." We
find that they had so corrupted themselves in the sight of God
that he, who would have delighted to converse with all the
people, as one man talks with another, was obliged to hide his
presence from them, and to send Moses to teach them. Moreover
their corruptions had become so great that the Lord, in his
wrath, swore that they should not enter into his rest. This was
made known to them by new revelation while in the wilderness, or
they never could have learned it. The Lord also informed them
that he would not go up in the midst of their camps. Said he, "I
will not go up in the midst of this people, because they have
corrupted themselves in my sight, lest I break forth and consume
them in a moment;" "but," said he, "I will send an angel before
you, and you must hearken to his voice, but my presence shall not
go with you, you are too corrupt." By and by we find that an
angel was left with them, and a cloud by day, and the shining of
a flaming fire by night, guided all their camps. The voice and
presence of the Lord wore made manifest to Moses, and Moses
conversed with the Lord as one man talks with another, and during
forty years in the wilderness he from time to time received
revelations and communications to guide the people. Do you not
see that under these circumstances, during the whole of that
forty years, there was not one year--probably not one month, and
it may be, not one day but what new revelation was necessary? The
code of laws given on Mount Sinai was not sufficient without new
revelation.
106
We might trace the history of the people of God, in we had time,
but I see we have not, from the days of Moses to the days of
Joshua, Gideon, Samuel, Barak and various other ancient worthies,
all of whom received revelation. If we come to the days of Gideon
we find that he was a man who had seventy sons, and how many
daughters, I do not know. The Lord conversed with Gideon and sent
an angel to him to tell him that he would raise him up as a
mighty man of valor, to go forth in his might and in his strength
to deliver his people Israel from bondage. We might relate all
these things to show forth that the bondage of the children of
Israel called forth new revelation from heaven, and that because
of it the Lord spoke to and commanded his servants what to do for
the deliverance of that people; and if he called upon a man who
had so many wives and children, he did not consider that that man
was a criminal and unworthy of receiving communication from him,
but on the contrary, it is clear that the Lord considered him the
most worthy man in all Israel, and on that account he sent his
angel to him. And this noted polygamist, of all the thousands of
Israel was entrusted with the mission of delivering that people
from their enemies. God wrought special miracles by his hand in
order to accomplish this great work, though he was a polygamist.
107
But we will pass on, and come down for some two thousand years to
the days of our Savior. One would naturally suppose that when the
Son of God himself came from his father's glory to dwell here on
the earth in the flesh, and began to teach by the power of the
Holy Ghost, the things of his father, that during the three and a
half years of his ministry among the people, they, of course,
could say, "Now we do not need any more revelation we have
enough; the Son of God, of whom our law, its ordinances and
sacrifices were typical, has at last come and has offered himself
on the cross, and having finished the work given him to do, is
there any more need for new revelation?" The conduct of the
Apostles is the best answer that can be given to this, for we
find them, like all their predecessors, from the days of Adam
until their day, seeking from time to time for guidance by new
revelation. We read of Philip going to the city of Samaria,
preaching there awhile and baptizing men and women; but not
having the authority to administer in the higher ordinance of the
laying on of hands, the Christians at Jerusalem, hearing that
Samaria had received the word of God, sent Peter and John to
administer the ordinance of the laying on of hands for the higher
baptism of fire and the Holy Ghost. When Peter and John reached
Samaria they found there was great joy among the people, for many
of them had been converted; but their joy was not because of the
baptism of the Holy Ghost, for the next verse says, "For as yet
he was fallen on none of them," only they had been baptized in
the name of the Lord Jesus, but neither man nor woman had
received the baptism of fire and the Holy Ghost. But the Apostles
laid their hands on them and the Holy Ghost fell on them.
107
Now, here was Philip in the city of Samaria. He had preached the
Gospel there, where should he go next? He had probably fulfilled
all the duties required of him there. He was not hired to preach
in that city for so much a year, and to stay there to the end of
his days. No, he needed a new revelation. All the revelations
that Jesus had given were not sufficient to guide Philip in
regard to his next duty, the Lord, therefore sent an angel to him
to tell him to go down into the south country. He never would
have learned this fact by any former revelation. While Philip was
on his way to the south he saw a chariot before him, and here
again a new revelation was given to him--"Draw thyself near to
that chariot." He did so, and having taught the Gospel to its
occupant, as they rode along, they came to some water and, the
man having believed what Philip had said, wanted to be baptized.
The chariot stood still, and Philip and the eunuch both went down
into the water, and the eunuch was baptized, and they came forth
out of the water. Now then, how could Philip know but what it was
his duty on that occasion to still speak with the eunuch, get
into the carriage and ride along with him and give him further
instructions? But no, the Lord had something else for him to do,
and the Spirit of the Lord caught away Philip, and he found
himself at Azotus. I do not know whether or not this Spirit
actually caught up Philip, body and spirit, and wafted him
quickly from the place where the eunuch was baptized to the city
of Azotus. I should not be surprised, however, if this was the
case, for we have something very similar in the Old Testament
Scriptures, and the promise is that they who wait on the Lord
shall mount as it were on eagle's wings, and they shall run and
not be weary, and walk and not faint. I do not know but this was
the case with Philip. At any rate, the Spirit of the Lord carries
people, by new revelation, whithersoever he will.
108
On another occasion we find that Barnabas and Saul, not having
inquired of the Lord concerning their duties, but they probably
had been reading the Old Scriptures, which were sufficient for
instruction for righteousness, and to make the man of God
thoroughly perfect to every good work. I say that probably
Barnabas and Saul had been reading these, and having failed to
inquire of the Lord, and to get new revelation, they started out
with the design of going to a certain city, but the Lord checked
them. Said he, "Do not go there!" How important it was to get new
revelation! "Do not you go to that city, I have another work for
you to perform;" and they were then told where to go. Talk to the
Christian ministers to-day, or to any that have lived for
centuries past, and if they had made up their minds to go to any
place, they would never think of the Lord checking them, or
forbidding them to go, by new revelation, for they all say that
the canon of Scripture is full, and that no more new revelation
is needed.
108
Many other instances of a similar character might be named, but
time will not permit. We find, however, that, after all that God
revealed through Jesus, and to the Apostles, for ninety-six years
in the first century of the Christian era, they had not enough,
and the Lord then gave the book of John's prophecy on the Isle of
Patmos. John was commanded to write it on parchment, and in this
book a great many new revelations were promised to be given in
the latter times. One of these was that an angel should come from
heaven having the everlasting Gospel to preach to all people,
nations, kindreds and tongues, declaring that the hour of God's
judgment had come. Here was a promise or prediction that a new
revelation should be given by an angel from heaven, and so
important should it be that it should be proclaimed to a every
creature under heaven. A great many people say, "We have the
everlasting Gospel in this book--the Bible--called the canon of
Scripture, collected together by the monks, cardinals, bishops
and great men of the Roman Catholic Church, some four centuries
after Christ. They bound together in this volume all the books
they had that they did not condemn, and they declared that this
was enough, and there was no need of the Lord saying anything
more. But these very Scriptures themselves contradict their
compilers--those wicked men who sat in judgment on the word of
God, setting aside this book and that book, this manuscript and
that manuscript, and binding the remainder together. I say that
they put some things into this very book, which prove that God
would again make known his will to the children of men in latter
times; that he would again give new revelation, not for the
benefit of one or two individuals, but for the benefit of his
creatures universally.
109
Notwithstanding we have the Gospel written here in this book, yet
that Gospel, without the power and authority to administer its
ordinances, is a dead letter. We might believe the Gospel, we
might believe that Jesus is the Christ by reading this book, we
could repent of our sins by reading the proclamation of
repentance here recorded; but we could not be baptized for the
remission of our sins, neither could we have hands laid upon us
for the baptism of the Holy Ghost by reading, and that is part
and portion of the Gospel of the Son of God, just as much as the
written word that proclaims these things to the children of men.
Take away the power and authority to administer that word, and
you at once leave the dead letter of the Gospel, and it would
benefit none of the children of men, so far as obeying it is
concerned. They might be benefited by repenting and believing,
and so on, but they could not embrace the Gospel, they could not
get into the kingdom of God, for "except a man is born of the
water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God." You
could not be born of the water unless there was a man authorized
by new revelation to administer the baptism of water, neither
could you receive the baptism of the Holy Ghost only by the
ordinance God has instituted; hence the necessity of the
restoration of the authority to administer the ordinances of the
Gospel, and this is why God has restored it after the earth has
been without it for seventeen hundred years. No man among all the
nations, kindreds and tongues of the earth, during that time, has
had this authority, neither the authority to administer the
Lord's supper, which is a part of the Gospel, neither in any
other ordinance.
109
God having foreseen this long period of darkness, foretold by the
mouth of the revelator, St. John, that he would send an angel
from heaven with the everlasting Gospel, and when that angel came
and committed that Gospel to man on the earth, it should be
proclaimed to all people under heaven, the same as the Elders of
this Church are now doing it. The book of Mormon, containing the
everlasting Gospel as it was published to the ancient inhabitants
of America, has been brought forth by the power of God, and his
servants have been sent forth to preach it, and, not only to
preach it, but, having authority to administer its ordinances;
yet the world tell us we need no more revelation, we have enough
if we only follow the Scriptures, which Paul said to Timothy were
sufficient to save him. But in the Christian world you can not be
saved by following the Scriptures, from the fact that you cannot
follow them without authority from God to administer the
ordinances. You be baptized by a man having no authority by new
revelation from heaven, and your baptism is illegal, and your
pretended adoption into the kingdom of God is not acknowledged in
heaven, for God has not authorized the administrator, and what he
has done in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, cannot
be sealed and recorded in heaven for your benefit. No wonder,
then, that the world has dwelt in darkness for so many centuries,
for the earth has become so corrupt, and the heavens have
apparently become as brass over the heads of the nations. No
Prophet, no angel, no inspiration, no Revelator, no man of God to
say, "thus saith the Lord God" unto the people. No wonder, then,
that the Lord, before the great day of the coming of his beloved
Son from the heavens, should send an angel to prepare the way
before his face! This he has done, and the proclamation is going
forth, saying to all people, nations and tongues, "God has sent
an angel, and he has sent him to prepare you and us for the great
day of the coming of the Son of Man, wherein there will be more
revelations given than have ever been given in all former
dispensations."
110
Tell about the canon of Scripture being complete, what nonsense!
What absurdity! Where is there any proof of any such thing? God
has yet to give revelation enough to fill the earth with his
knowledge as the waters cover the great deep. He has yet to pour
out his spirit upon all flesh that dwells on the face of the
earth, and make a revelator, prophet, or prophetess of every man
and woman living, and if all their revelations are written, this
book, the Bible, will be like a primer compared with them. "In
the last days, " saith God, by the mouth of the Prophet Joel, "I
will pour out my spirit upon all flesh. Your sons and your
daughters shall prophecy, and upon my servants and my handmaidens
in those days will I pour out of my Spirit, and they shall
prophecy. Your old men shall dream dreams and your young men
shall see visions." Supposing they write their dreams as Daniel
wrote his, and suppose they write their visions as Isaiah wrote
his, and suppose they write their prophecies as all the Prophets
have written theirs, would they not be just as sacred as this
canon of Scripture? I say they would. I would be bound just as
much to receive the revelations of each man and woman among all
flesh as I would those of a person who lived two or three
thousand years ago. A revelation given to a living man in my day
is just as sacred as one given to a man who has been dead some
three thousand years. God is a consistent being, and he reveals
himself according to his own mind and will, and in the last
dispensation he will continue to reveal line upon line, precept
upon precept, here a little and there a little, bringing forth a
record here, unfolding the history of another people there,
bringing to light the bible of the ten tribes who have been
absent from the land of Canaan for almost three thousand years.
Their bible has got to be brought to light, and when they return
they will bring their written revelations, prophecies, visions
and dreams with them, and we shall have the bible of the ten
tribes, as well as the bible of the ancient Israelites who lived
on this continent, and the bible of the Jews on the eastern
continent, and these bibles will be united in one, and even then
the people will not have enough revelation. No, every man and
every woman will have to be a revelator and prophet, and the
knowledge and glory of God will cover the earth as the waters
cover the bosom of the great deep. And by and by, as a kind of
climax to all this, the revelation of the Lord Jesus himself will
take place from heaven in flaming fire, to take vengeance on them
that know not God, and that obey not the Gospel. That will be a
revelation that the wicked can not abide, a revelation too great
for them, and that will pierce them to their inmost soul. That
will be a revelation that will consume them in their wickedness,
as stumble is consumed before the devouring flame, and he will
reign here, king of kings and lord of lords for a thousand years.
110
Do you suppose that he will give no new revelation during that
time, but that he will sit on his throne like the idols in some
of the heathen nations? Do you suppose that the Lord Jesus, that
intelligent being, by whom the Father made the worlds, is coming
here to reign king of kings, and to sit down on his throne in the
temple at Jerusalem, and upon his throne in his temple in Zion,
and abide there as a statue from generation to generation, for a
thousand years, and when the people come up to ask him a question
that he will not say a word, only to tell them they have enough?
Do you suppose this will be the case? Oh no, my friends, the Lord
Jesus will converse the whole thousand years with his people, and
give them instruction. He will reign over the house of David,
over the children of Israel, over the twelve tribes, over Zion
and over all the inhabitants of the earth, that is over all who
are spared in that day, giving counsel here, instructions yonder,
revealing something there, and so on, and the amount of
revelation that will be given during the thousand years will no
doubt be ten thousand times more than is contained in this Bible,
and yet say the world "No more revelation!"
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / George
Q. Cannon, July 14, 1872
George Q. Cannon, July 14, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER GEORGE Q. CANNON,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, July 14, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THOSE WHO HEAR THE GOSPEL MUST OBEY IT, OR THEY CANNOT BE SAVED
BY IT.
111
I will read a portion of the 3rd chapter of St. John:--
111
"There was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of
the Jews;
111
The same came to Jesus by night, and said unto him, Rabbi, we
know that thou art a teacher come from God: for no man can do
these miracles that thou doest, except God be with him.
111
Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto
thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of
God.
111
Nicodemus saith unto him, How can a man be born when he is old?
can he enter the second time into his mother's womb, and be born?
111
Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be
born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God.
111
That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born
of the Spirit is spirit.
111
Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again.
111
The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound
thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh and whither it
goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit.
111
Nicodemus answered and said unto him, How can these things be?
111
Jesus answered and said unto him, Art thou a master of Israel,
and knowest not these things?
111
Verily, verily, I say unto thee, We speak that we do know, and
testify that we have seen; and ye receive not our witness.
111
If I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall
ye believe if I tell you of heavenly things?"
111
In listening this morning to the remarks of Elder Schonfeldt, on
the everlasting Gospel as preached by the Elders of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he stated in substance that
none could receive salvation outside this Church, and outside the
Priesthood which God had restored to the Church. He did not
explain--had not time, probably, or his mind was carried away on
some other points, how, or why it is that salvation can only be
obtained in the way that God, our heavenly Father, has
prescribed. Many, doubtless, who listen to the Elders of this
Church, when speaking upon the principles of life and salvation,
have come to the conclusion, when they have not thoroughly
understood the principles and the system as they are set forth,
that we are an exceedingly exclusive and uncharitable people for
believing that only a very few out of the large mass of human
beings who have peopled the earth will be saved, while the great
majority--those who are outside the pale of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints--will go down to an endless hell.
112
The reason, probably, that these ideas are entertained by many
who have heard our Elders preach, is because they have drawn
deductions from the preaching they have heard, imagining that our
views of the sayings of the Scriptures corresponded with theirs,
and that it necessarily followed that all who failed to render
obedience to the ordinances of the Gospel, as we preach them,
would go down to that endless hell in which so many of the sects
believe. But any person entertaining such ideas does us, or
rather the Gospel that we preach, great injustice. We believe
that God, our heavenly Father, is a God of perfect justice, a God
of mercy, a God filled with long-suffering and tender compassion
towards all the works of his hands. We could not, with our views
respecting the character of God, believe as our friends imagine
with regard to the destiny of those who die outside of this
Church, for that would be incompatible with and contrary to all
that we understand concerning the character of our God--the God
who is revealed in the Bible, and the Father of our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ.
112
We believe, as Jesus said, that "this is condemnation,
that light has come into the world, and men love darkness rather
than light because their deeds are evil." This is the
condemnation under which mankind will suffer--the condemnation
will follow the rejection of light by those to whom it may be
sent in every nation and age of the world; in other words, we
believe that where there is no law, there is no
transgression--where men and women haven not had the Gospel, or
the principles of salvation, communicated unto them, they cannot
be held accountable for disobeying the same. It is a truth that
has been enforced by all who have understood the Gospel, that
those to whom the Gospel is revealed must obey it, or
condemnation follows. Condemnation did not fall upon the
inhabitants of the antediluvian world until Noah had taught unto
them the will of God. Noah, commanded of God, went forth as a
preacher, of righteousness, declaring to the people the judgments
that were about to come upon them; and God so inspired, directed
and strengthened him that he was enabled to warn the people to
such an extent that they were left without excuse, so much so
that God felt justified in sending the flood upon the earth.
113
This has been the course the Almighty has pursued in every age
when his judgments have been poured out upon the people--he has
sent Prophets to warn them and to tell them how they might escape
the calamities threatened. This was so with the Jews, unto whom
the Son of God came. He proclaimed the Gospel unto them, and
warned them of coming judgments, had he sent his disciples
through all Jewry, doing the same. You all remember the Savior's
pathetic lament over Jerusalem, when he said he would have
gathered her people as a hen gathereth her chickens under her
wing, but they would not receive him as a messenger of salvation,
as the heir and Son of God, empowered to impart unto them
principles, obedience to which would have secured them life her
and hereafter. He also pronounced a woe upon many cities of that
land, and said that if the mighty works which had been done in
them had been done in Sodom and Gomorrah, their people would have
repented. But the Jews hardened their hearts, and not only
rejected his testimony, but they shed his blood, and invoked
condemnation on their own heads for doing so. History tells us
that the judgments which Christ and his Apostles had declared did
descend upon the Jewish nation. Jerusalem was taken, the temple
thrown down, and the people carried into captivity, and the
desolation and dreadful woes that had been predicted by the Son
of God were all fulfilled upon that generation of Jews.
113
In these instances we see that God sent messengers to warn the
people before his judgments were poured out upon them; and we
also learn that when the Gospel is proclaimed by those having
authority, if the people reject it they are held to a strict
accountability therefor, and condemnation inevitably
follows--there is no escape from it, but it falls in all its
severity upon those who reject the message of life and salvation
when proclaimed by those having authority to proclaim it. A
perusal of this book (the Bible) will convince all who believe in
it, that it is a most dangerous thing, and attended with the most
terrible consequences, to reject the message that God gives to
his authorized servants to proclaim to their fellow-creatures.
There is no instance of which we read, from the beginning of the
book to the close thereof, where judgments did not fall upon a
people if they did not repent of their sins and obey the message
sent unto them by God. When I say repent, I mean a complete
forsaking of sin, and turning from it truly and sincerely; in no
other way can mankind escape the judgments and calamities
threatened, and of which they are warned.
113
In the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ there were certain
conditions revealed. Mankind were required to obey a certain form
of doctrine declared unto them, and when they did obey they
received the blessings. But I have often thought when traveling
abroad in the nations, how different it is in our day from what
it was anciently. In our day we see countless numbers of elegant
spires pointing to heaven, and legions of men preaching what they
call the Gospel, but the wickedness of the people is unchecked.
Anciently, when God sent his authorized servants to proclaim his
Gospel to the people, salvation, on the one hand, followed
obedience, or, on the other, condemnation followed rejection. And
these effects did not linger, they were not deferred for
centuries, but if the people did not repent after hearing the
message of the servants of God, great calamities quickly
followed. They could not listen to the authorized servants of God
for any length of time, and harden their hearts against their
testimony and warnings, without speedy judgment following. This
was the case from the days of Noah to the days of John the
Revelator, and it will be the case in every generation when the
Gospel of the Son of God, in its purity and fullness, is
proclaimed to the people, and when God has a Church and
Priesthood upon the earth which he recognizes. He is the King of
the earth, he is the Creator of all its inhabitants, and when he
calls upon the people, and requires them to do anything, they
must promptly comply, or suffer the terrible consequences of
their disobedience.
113
In the Gospel of Jesus Christ, as I have already remarked, there
are certain conditions with which the people are expected to
comply; if they do they receive the blessings, if they do not
they receive condemnation. Jesus and his Apostles taught that it
was essential that mankind should believe in him as the Son of
God--as the only name given under heaven by which men could be
saved. All mankind were therefore required to believe and to have
faith in him, and to approach the Father in his name. That was
the first condition of the gospel as taught by Jesus and his
Apostles.
114
The next condition was repentance. All who had committed sin and
were guilty of wrong of any kind, were required to repent of that
wrong and to live pure and holy lives. They were not only
required to be sorry--to have compunctions of conscience for the
commission of evil, but they were required to forsake it entirely
and to become new creatures. If they had been dishonest,
untruthful, unvirtuous, profane; if they had taken advantage of
their neighbor, borne false witness against him, or encroached
upon his rights; if, in fact, they had done anything contrary to
the dictates of the Holy Spirit, or of their consciences when
enlightened by that Spirit, they were required to repent of and
forsake the same.
114
The third condition of the Gospel was, that parties who had
believed in Jesus, and had repented of their sins, should take
some step for the remission of them. Now the penalty of the sin
that our father Adam committed was death--"In the day that thou
eatest thereof thou shalt surely die" was the proclamation of the
Creator; and when Adam sinned he paid the penalty and died, and
entailed death upon every generation of his posterity, and that
sleep of death would have been eternal had it not been for the
death of the Son of God. He came as the Redeemer of the world, he
died for the sin that had been committed by Adam, he atoned for
it, and thus ensured to all the family of man redemption from the
grave or a resurrection of their mortal bodies. But he gave unto
his disciples a commandment that they should preach remission of
sins, and that they should administer an ordinance by which all
obedient believers could obtain remission of sins, and that
ordinance was baptism. "Not the putting away," as the Apostle
Paul says, "of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good
conscience towards God." They were required to submit to this
ordinance. Jesus taught it, and he, himself, although admittedly
a pure being, set the example of obedience to it. When John was
baptizing in the river Jordan, Jesus went to him and requested
baptism at his hand. John remonstrated with him, saying, "I have
need to be baptized of thee, and comest thou to me?" But Jesus
said, "Suffer it to be so now, for thus it becometh us to fulfil
all righteousness," and he went down into the water and was
baptized by John, and the first evidence that we have in the
Scriptures of his recognition by the Father was on that occasion,
for after he had been baptized the Holy Spirit descended upon
him, and a voice was heard bearing testimony to the assembled
multitude that Jesus was the beloved Son of the Father. He
therefore set the example himself, so that it could not be said,
though sinless, that he had not complied with the ordinance which
he required all the inhabitants of the earth to submit to, and
which the disciples administered to all repentant believers.
115
This prepared them for another ordinance which, we find in the
scriptures, was administered to all who had complied with the
conditions of the Gospel which I have named--namely, the laying
on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost. I have been told
repeatedly that this ordinance was to be administered only to
those who were intended for the ministry--it was not designed for
the members of the Church called laymen. A careful perusal of the
Scriptures, however, does not sustain this idea; but on the
contrary, it very clearly sustains the idea that this ordinance
had to be administered to every one who joined the Church, and
that without it the Holy Ghost was not bestowed as a gift. To
prove that this is correct, you have only to read the 8th chapter
of the Acts of the Apostles, where you will find an account of
the labors of Philip in the city of Samaria. It seems that Philip
had power and authority to preach the Gospel and to baptize men
and women, but not to administer all the ordinances. I have the
idea that he had the same authority as John the Baptist--the
authority to baptize, but not to confer the Holy Ghost. We find
that when John was preaching, he said that there would one come
after him, whose shoes he was not worthy to bear, who would
baptize them with the Holy Ghost and with fire. John baptized
with water, but he did not confer any further gift or
blessing--he had not the authority so to do. Philip seemed to
have the same authority, for the sacred writer says that when the
Apostles of Jerusalem heard that Samaria had received the Gospel
at the hands of Philip, they sent not them two Apostles, for as
yet, although the Samaritans had been baptized with water, the
Holy Ghost had not descended upon any of them; and we are told
that when the Apostles came unto them, they prayed with them, and
laid their hands upon them, and they received the Holy Ghost.
Nothing is said about the hands of the Apostles being laid upon
those only who were intended for the ministry, but the ordinance
was administered to all who had received baptism at the hands of
Philip, without distinction of sex or station.
115
Another instance in support of this view we find in the 19th of
the Acts. We read there that when Paul was passing through the
upper coasts he came to Ephesus and he found there certain
disciples who said they had been baptized unto John's baptism,
but when he asked them if they had received the Holy Ghost they
said they had not so much as heard of it. Then, we are informed,
they were baptized in the name of the Lord, and when Paul, who
had the necessary authority, had laid his hands upon them they
received the Holy Ghost, and spake with tongues and prophesied.
Many other proofs on this point might be adduced, but these are
sufficient. From what has been said we learn that the first
principle of the Gospel is belief in Jesus Christ; the second
principle is repentance of sin, and the third, baptism for the
remission of sins.
115
"Ah!" says one, "Cannot I come to the foot of the cross and,
through the atoning blood of Jesus, have my sins washed away
without baptism?" I doubt not that hundreds, in various nations
and generations, who have been in ignorance of the true Gospel,
and far removed from those who had authority to administer its
ordinances, have had their sins blotted out. God has looked in
mercy upon them, and on account of their sincerity has witnessed
unto them that he accepted the broken spirits and contrite hearts
which they offered unto him. I cannot doubt this; but wherever
the Gospel of Jesus Christ is preached in its fullness, none can
obtain the remission of sins only in the way that God has pointed
out, and that is by baptism by one having the authority from God
to administer that ordinance.
116
Supposing that I, with the views which I have of the Gospel of
Jesus Christ, were to-day outside of the church of God, and I
were to say, "I will not be baptized for the remissions of sins.
My father or my grandfather was a good Methodist, or a good
Presbyterian or Baptist, or a good sectarian of some other
denomination, and he told me that he had experienced a change of
heart and I believe that he had his sins washed away through the
atoning blood of Jesus Christ, and on this account I will not
submit to the ordinance of baptism which is preached to me as
necessary to salvation, but I will seek for the remission of my
sins the way my father or grandfather did," how do you think it
would be with me? Should I obtain the remission of my sins at the
hands of God? There would be no remission of sins for such an
individual in this life. Light has come into the world, God has
revealed to men the true principle by which remission of sins can
be obtained, namely, baptism, and when that is taught to them and
they refuse to obey it, condemnation follows, and the blessings
will be withheld which were granted in days when, in ignorance,
men taught the Lord in faith and humility and with broken and
contrite spirits.
116
We now come to the fourth and last initiatory principle of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ--the laying on of hands for the reception
of the Holy Ghost. "Is it not possible," says one, "for a man to
receive the Holy Ghost without being baptized for the remission
of sins, and having hands laid upon him?" Says the reader of
Scripture, "I recollect that Cornelius, the history of whose
conversion is contained in the 10th chapter of the Acts, received
the Holy Ghost, and yet he was not baptized; and if he did, is it
not possible for others to do the same?" Let those who think so
read the history very carefully, and they will find that in
bestowing the Holy Ghost upon Cornelius without baptism, God had
a purpose in view. Cornelius was the first Gentile unto whom the
Gospel was preached. The prevalent belief among the disciples,
and one which they being Jews, had inherited through the
traditions of their fathers, was that the Gentiles were not to
have the privilege of enjoying the blessings of the Gospel, they
were not for them, and the disciples were not disposed to
administer its ordinances to them. You recollect what Peter said
when the Holy Ghost descended upon Cornelius--this uncircumcised
man--and his house, whom they had supposed were without the pale
of the Gospel--"Who can forbid water, seeing that they have
received the Holy Ghost as well as we?" Peter cited this bestowal
of the Holy Ghost upon Cornelius and his house, as a proof that
the ordinance of baptism should be administered to them, and to
all believing repentant Gentiles as well as to the house of
Israel. This, in connection with the vision which Peter had, you
recollect it, wherein he saw a sheet let down from heaven,
containing all manner of beasts, clean and unclean, he being
commanded to arise, kill and eat thereof, had dispossessed his
mind of the prejudice which he had entertained, in common with
his fellow believers, that the Gospel was for the Jews only. And
when he saw Cornelius and his house thus blessed, he inquired of
his brethren what there was to prevent the ordinance of baptism
being administered to them, and they were baptized by Peter.
117
Cornelius did not say, as many, doubtless, would say to-day, "We
have received the Holy Ghost, and having obtained this evidence
of our acceptance with God, what is the use of our being
baptized? Is it likely that God would have given us the Holy
Ghost if he had not forgiven our sins? These inquiries, I think,
would be made by hundreds in our day under such circumstances.
But not so with Cornelius: he had heard the Gospel preached to
him by Peter, and though he had received the Holy Ghost, he
believed it was still necessary for him to be baptized in water
for the remission of his sins, and he complied with that
ordinance, and then doubtless the hands of the servants of God
were laid upon him to confirm him a member of the Church and to
seal upon him the blessing of the Holy Ghost, that he might be
led and guided by it into all truth.
117
This, my brethren and sisters, is the only plan of salvation
taught in the Scriptures. There is no other way given by which
men can be saved. It is the way that Jesus trod, the way that his
Apostles walked in, it is the doctrine they taught, and when it
is taught by those having authority from God to teach it, the
Holy Ghost will follow the administration of these ordinances.
The ancient gifts and blessings will be bestowed, and men will be
led into all truth, the power of God will be with them, and they
will know God for themselves, for he is the same God now that he
was yesterday, the same in the year 1872 that he was in the year
33, or fifteen or eighteen hundred years before the birth of
Christ, and if we obey the same form of doctrine obeyed by those
who lived anciently, and it is administered by those who hold
authority from God, the gifts and powers will most assuredly
follow, for God loves his children now as much as he loved them
in any past age of the world.
117
Says Jesus, when speaking to Nicodemus, in the words I have
quoted, "Except a man be born again he can not see the kingdom of
God." This puzzled Nicodemus, he could not understand it, and he
asked the Savior another question, to which Jesus answered,
"Verily, verily I say unto thee, except a man be born of water
and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." Now,
my brethren and sisters, how can a man be born of water? We know
a birth to be a passage from one element into another; hence if
he be born of the water he must be completely immersed therein,
and pass from that element into another. The same with the birth
of the Spirit--he or she who is born of it must be completely
enveloped in it. Jesus says a man can not see the kingdom of God
unless he is born again, and he further says, a man cannot enter
the kingdom of God unless he is born of the water and of the
Spirit, not only of the Spirit, but also of the water.
117
What does this birth of the water and of the Spirit consist of?
of that which I have been endeavoring to describe to you--baptism
for the remission of sins, being buried with Christ by baptism,
whereby we are resurrected, as it were, from the dead, in the
likeness of his burial and resurrection, entombed in the water,
and being born of, or coming forth from the bosom of the water;
and then receiving the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands,
which is the birth of the Spirit. And let me say unto you, as
Brother Schonfeldt said this morning, that unless a man does obey
this form of doctrine he can not enter into the kingdom of God.
117
This is strong language, and men may say it is uncharitable. I
can not help that. These words are the words of the Savior--the
Son of God. They are the words of truth and righteousness, they
can not fail. I have not the right to say that a man can enter
into the kingdom of God by any other means than this; on the
contrary, I must affirm and reaffirm, and I must bear testimony
to the words of Jesus, when he says, "Except a man be born of the
water and of the Spirit he can not enter into the kingdom of
God."
119
The inquiry then arises in the mind, What is to become of the
millions who have died without ever hearing the name of Christ?
Says one, "What is to become of my ancestors and ancestresses who
have not been born of the water and of the Spirit?" I know how
this inquiry enters the hearts of men and women, and when they
become acquainted with this Gospel, how strongly it appeals to
their affections. They think, then, of beloved relatives and
friends who have died without a knowledge of the Gospel, and they
would do a great deal for their salvation; in fact it would
embitter all their lives to think that they could not be saved.
Could we be happy, my brethren and sisters, in thinking that we
had received a form of doctrine which would exalt us into the
presence of God and the Lamb, there to bask for ever in happiness
and bliss so great that the Apostle says, "Eye hath not seen, ear
hath not heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of man to
conceive?" Do you think we could be happy in the contemplation
and assurance of such a future, if no means were provided whereby
our parents and relatives, who had died in ignorance of the
Gospel, could be made partakers of the same blessing and glory,
but because they had not had the privilege of being born of the
water and of the Spirit they must be consigned to endless
perdition? I could not be happy under such circumstances. I would
rather, it seems to me, have much less happiness and have them
share it with me, than to be eternally separated, and them
condemned to that never ending hell about which the sectarian
world preach so much. But we are happy in the knowledge that this
is no part of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. That teaches that all
will be judged according to the law that has been taught unto
them. As I have already said, I again repeat, "This is
condemnation, that light has come into the world, and men loved
darkness rather than light." "Where there is no law," the Apostle
says, "there is no transgression." Men cannot be held accountable
for that which they never knew. God will never consign his
creatures to a never-ending misery for not obeying the Gospel of
his Son, when they never had it taught unto them, and it is as
great a fallacy, and as great a libel on our God, as ever was
propagated about any being to make such an assertion. To say that
these heathen, who roamed over these mountains and through these
valleys, before we came here, who never heard the name of Jesus
christ, and countless myriads of heathen in other lands who have
died in ignorance of the Gospel, will be consigned to eternal
damnation, to a never-ending hell, there to welter in and to
suffer unspeakable and indescribable misery throughout the
countless ages of eternity, because they did not obey the Gospel
they never heard, is one of the greatest libels on the character
of our God that ever was enunciated by man. I do not believe in
such a God; he is not the God of the Bible; he is not the God I
worship. I worship a God of mercy and of love, whose heart is
full of compassion. The Bible teaches that God is love, and I can
not conceive that a God would be possessed of the attributes of
love and mercy who would take such a course with his own ignorant
offspring. No, there is something different from this taught in
the Gospel. We are taught there that God's salvation is not
confined to this brief space which we call time, but that, as he
is eternal, so are his mercy, love and compassion eternal towards
his creatures. I have not time this afternoon to explain our
views on this point. Suffice it to say that, in the Scriptures is
found, plainly written, the plan of salvation which God has
devised.
119
Who are they who are under condemnation, and who need fear at the
prospect of the same? Men and women who, living in the day when
the Gospel is preached in its fullness and purity, hear it and
reject it. Against such the anger of God is enkindled, and they
are in a far worse condition that those who die and never hear
it. Says Jesus, "It would be better for a man to have a millstone
tied to his neck, and for him to be thrown into the depths of the
sea," than to do such an such things; and in another place he
says, "It would be better for a man never to be born." Why?
Because light having been presented to him, and truth proclaimed
in his hearing, he rejects the same.
119
The Latter-day Saints, I hold, will be held to stricter
accountability than any other people on the face of the earth.
Men wonder why we have suffered and been persecuted so much in
the past. I think it was partly because of our hardness of heart.
Not that the men who persecuted us were justified in so doing.
They were tested and tried, the Lord left them their agency and
they brought themselves under condemnation because of their
conduct. But we never had anything descend upon us as a
persecution or scourge that has not been intended for our good;
and we are held to a stricter accountability than any other
people because we have the Gospel taught unto us. The thousands
who live throughout these valleys testify that they have received
the Holy Ghost; they testify that they received it in the lands
where they embraced the Gospel; they say that this love which
they have for one another, and the disposition they have to dwell
together in peace and unity are the fruits of this Holy Spirit
that they have received. They testify that the Lord has revealed
unto them that this is the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. I do
not know but there are thousands here to-day who, if they had
time and opportunity, would arise and testify that this is the
truth, and that God has taught it unto them, and they know it by
the power of the Holy Ghost. When a people reach this condition
they are held to stricter accountability than they are who have
not this knowledge. On this account we must walk circumspectly,
with the fear of God before our eyes. We must be a pure people or
we will be scourged; we must be a holy people, or God's anger
will be kindled against us. We must not be guilty of dishonesty
or take advantage one of another; we must not bear false witness;
we must not neglect our duties one to another or towards God, for
we can not do these things with impunity, for God's anger will be
kindled against us; and in proportion to the light which men have
will they be judged, and God will reward them according to the
deeds done in the body. An enlightened American will be held to
stricter accountability than an ignorant Indian; and the man who
has heard the sound of the everlasting Gospel and the testimony
of the servants of God is held to stricter accountability than he
who has never heard them.
120
I said that time would not permit me to dwell on points connected
with the salvation of the ignorant dead; but there is a way
provided in the Gospel of the Son of God by which even they can
have its ordinances administered unto them. I will just refer to
one passage, which you can read at your leisure. In the 15th
chapter of the first of Corinthians, Paul, in reasoning upon the
resurrection of the dead, says, among other things, "Else what
shall they do who are baptized for the dead? If the dead rise not
at all, why then are they baptized for the dead?" This is a
little key given to a very important principle. Paul evidently
understood a principle by which vicarious baptism could be
performed, that is, one person could be baptized for another, the
same as Jesus made a vicarious offering for us. He died on the
cross for us--he was our Savior. Paul, substantiating the idea
that there is a resurrection, referred to this ordinance, which
seemed to exist in the Church and to be understood by the Saints
in ancient days. There would have been no need to be baptized for
the dead if the dead rise not at all. This is the gist of his
argument; and there are other passages which go to prove that the
Gospel of Jesus is all sufficient to reach and save those who
have died without hearing and obeying it. Peter says, referring
to Jesus, "He went to preach to the spirits in prison who were
disobedient when once the long-suffering of God waited in the
days of Noah." I will give you another passage to show that he
did not go direct to his Father after his death on the cross. You
Latter-day Saints understand, or ought to understand, that he did
not go immediately to his Father after his death on the cross.
You Latter-day Saints understand, or ought to understand, that he
did not go immediately to his Father, as many suppose, because,
after his resurrection, when Mary had been seeking for the body
of her Lord, and supposed that somebody had stolen it, she saw a
personage in the garden who she imagined was the gardener. She
went to him and asked who had taken away the body of her Lord.
This personage spoke to her, calling her by name. She immediately
recognized the Lord Jesus, and in her eagerness, anxiety and love
she rushed forward as if to grasp him. But he forbade her, told
her not to do so, saying, "Touch me not, for I am not yet
ascended to my Father, but go to my brethren and say unto them, I
ascend unto my Father and your Father, and to my God and your
God." This was on the sunday, after his body had lain in the tomb
from the preceding Friday--the third day, and he said he had not
yet ascended to his Father. This is explained by Peter, in the
passage I have already quoted wherein the Apostle says, "By which
also he went to preach to the spirits in prison, who were
disobedient when once the long-suffering of God waited in the
days of Noah." There is another passage in Peter, which goes to
prove the same thing, but I will not touch upon it. I have said
sufficient to relieve, or it ought to relieve, us Latter-day
Saints from any fears for those who have died in ignorance of the
Gospel. But we can say, truly, that salvation can only be
obtained in the way God has prescribed--by obeying the Gospel of
the Lord Jesus Christ; and this is the way that he marked and the
way we must walk in to obtain it.
120
That God may help us to be faithful and to cleave to the truth
all our days, regardless of all consequences, and eventually save
us in his kingdom, is my prayer in the name of Jesus. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, August 11, 1872
Brigham Young, August 11, 1872
DISCOURSE BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, August 11, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE FULNESS OF THE GOSPEL--ITS POWER TO UNITE--ITS
COMPREHENSIVENESS--DEFINITION OF ITS PRIESTHOOD--CONDITION OF
APOSTATES.
121
I have an anxiety to bear testimony to the truth, though it is
well known to many of my friends and acquaintances that it is not
prudent for me to exercise myself in this large hall, as I have
in days past. But I feel very anxious to speak to by brethren and
sisters and to their families, to my friends and neighbors, and
the inhabitants of the earth, concerning the Christian religion.
I feel thus many times when I am not able to do so, but I desire
at this time to bear testimony to the Gospel--the plan of
salvation, to the holy Priesthood, that the Lord has revealed in
the latter days. I admit at once, without any argument at all,
that the whole human family are possessed more or less of truth;
they have a great many very excellent and pure ideas, beliefs,
faiths and sentiments, the adoption of which in their lives would
promote truth and overcome error, sin and iniquity in their
midst, and cause joy and peace to fill the hearts of individuals,
families, neighborhoods, cities and nations.
121
Sometimes we take the liberty of defining the religions of the
day, known under the general name of Christianity. We have heard
something of this, this afternoon; and with regard to the
philosophy of that religion, we admit the truth of it. All have
truth, all have good desires--that is to say, as people and as
communities. There may be individuals who do not possess these
principles, but there are many in all communities of the earth
professing Christianity who wish, in reality, to know the truth,
and to embrace it in their creeds, and most of them desire most
fervently that the professors of this Christianity should live
according to pure and holy principles. This we admit, and a few
of this number have received the Gospel.
122
When I speak of the Gospel in this sense, I mean the fullness of
the Gospel of the Son of God as it has been revealed in our day.
I do not refer to the Gospel as a mere historical knowledge of
the Savior and his Apostles, and their doings upon the earth, but
of the power of God unto salvation. And when I contemplate the
human family in their present condition, and especially
Christendom, I think what a pity it is that we Christians cannot
see far enough and understand enough to be willing that every
truth should take effect on the minds of the people, for every
truth that is taught, believed and practiced, is good for
mankind. It is good for the living, good for the dying, good for
the dead; and if we Christians would accept and embrace all truth
in our lives, instead of contending so much about what are called
"non-essentials," it would be much more to our advantage, and
would vastly increase peace and union in our midst.
122
When we take up the religion that has been revealed--the Gospel
in its fullness, we find that it is simply a code of laws,
ordinances, gifts and graces which are the power of God unto
salvation. The laws and ordinances which the Lord has revealed in
these latter days, are calculated to save all the sons and
daughters of Adam and Eve who have not sinned against the Holy
Ghost, for all will be saved in a kingdom of glory, though it may
not be in the celestial kingdom, for there are many mansions.
These ordinances reach after every one of the children of our
Father in heaven, and not only them, but after all the earth, the
fullness of the earth, all things that dwell upon it, to bring
them back into the presence of God, or into some kingdom or place
prepared for them, that they may be exalted to a higher state of
intelligence than they now dwell in.
122
This may seem strange to many, but these are the ordinances and
laws that the Lord has instituted for the salvation of the
children of men; and when we compare the doctrines that we have
preached to the Christian world, with the doctrines of the
Christian world, we find that ours incorporate every truth, no
matter what it is. If it belong to the arts and sciences of the
day, all the same, for every truth in existence is embraced in
that system of laws and ordinances taught by the Later-day
Saints--the Gospel that God has revealed for the salvation of the
human family.
122
We want a little proof, a little evidence, a little testimony.
This is the testimony that we are in possession of this Gospel.
Our witness is upon the stand, before God and the people,
testifying that the Latter-day Saints have got something that no
other people on earth have. What is it? The oneness which we
possess, according to the prayer of the Savior.
123
We sent an Elder from here to the East Indies; we send one or two
to Africa, and to the Asiatic continent, and distribute them to
the different nations, to Japan, to China, and so on. They preach
the Gospel to the Pagans, say to the Chinese. We will suppose
that these Elders learn the Chinese language so far as to be able
to make themselves understood by the people, and they preach to
them the same doctrines as are believed in by the Latter-day
Saints, and they are received into the hearts of honest
Chinese--God reveals and manifests to them that these doctrines
and principles, this plan of salvation, is true, and these
Chinese would not differ with us on any point of doctrine. They
would say, "The proper mode of baptism is by immersion, the
Scriptures are plain upon this point." Here let me take the
liberty of saying, that if the whole Christian world were to
adopt the method of baptism by immersion, you would never hear a
person raise an argument about sprinkling or pouring. But leaving
my witness, I say these latter ideas are the cisterns which men
hew out to themselves, which will hold no water, for somebody or
other is eternally scuttling their vessels, and they are sinking.
If every Christian denomination would come to the house of
worship on the Sabbath, and break bread and partake of the bread
and wine in testimony of their faith in Jesus Christ, there would
be no differences, contentions or arguments, and no person could
sink their vessel; but now, comparatively speaking, they are
sinking each other's vessels continually. But again to my
testimony, to my witness.
123
When the Chinese receives the Gospel he is one with us. He does
not want six months' teaching or trial; he does not need to go to
an academy or a seminary five or seven years to learn that this
mode of baptism is correct; but taking the Bible he reads it,
and, says he, "The Holy Ghost bears witness to me that baptism by
immersion is the correct mode, and that it is right to break
bread and drink wine in remembrance of, and to testify our faith
in him whose body was broken and whose blood was shed for the
salvation of the human family." There is no contention, and
though only one Elder may have gone there, and he has baptized
but one, or ten, a hundred, a thousand, or thousands, they are
all of one heart and one mind; and if we were to charge this
Elder not to tell these Chinese that they must gather to America,
for that was the land of Zion--and America is the land of
Zion--the first this Elder would know, somebody or other would be
up in a meeting and telling that Zion was in america, and they
had got to emigrate there. The Elder might inquire why, and he
would be told, "It is revealed to me, and I do know by the
manifestations of the Spirit within me, through your preaching,
that we are to assemble on the continent of America, for that is
the land of Zion." And if they come here, they will not ask how
many methods of baptism we have, or how many of administering the
Sacrament, or of dispensing the ordinances of the house of God,
for the Spirit makes them of one heart and one mind with those on
this continent, and from whatever nation they come, they all see
alike in reference to the ordinances of the house of God.
123
From China let us go directly to the Cape of Good Hope, and there
an Elder is preaching and baptizing people into the kingdom of
God, and when they get into this kingdom they begin to read and
understand, and to prophesy, and if they are not checked in the
gifts, you will hear them speak in tongues. Let me say here, to
the Latter-day Saints, it is frequently asked by our brethren,
"Why do not the people speak with tongues?" We do, and we speak
with tongues that you can understand, and Paul says he would
rather speak five or ten words in a language that can be
understood, than many in a language that can not be. This is what
he conveyed. We speak with tongues that can be understood; but
the reason that we do not encourage this little, particular,
peculiar gift, which is for the edifying of some few in the
Church, I have not time to explain. But to my witness again, who
is on the stand.
123
You take men, women and families from the cape of Good Hope, from
the northern seas, China, the East Indies, or the islands of the
sea, and let them receive the Gospel and come here, and, just as
long as they live so as to enjoy the Spirit of the holy Gospel
they have obeyed, there are no questions asked with regard to
doctrine. We will now go a step further.
124
Here is a great bone of contention with regard to political
affairs. The world say "Why do not these Latter-day Saints get up
their mass meetings, and sustain this, that or the other one, and
be like other people in a political point of view?" Why do we not
sustain these advocates who are now in the field, and join, and
be one with, some one or other of the political parties of the
country? We have no desire to do so, that is the reason. If we
had the privilege of voting in, independent of all other people
on this land of America, or in the United States, the man who
should serve as president, we should cast about to find the most
suitable man, and he would be the nominee, and when his name came
before the people, every man and woman who had the privilege of
putting their vote in the ballot box would vote for that man,
asking no questions. Our friends in the political world say, "We
do not like this oneness." The ministers in the pulpit, the
politicians in the bar room, on the steam boat, in the rail cars,
in the halls of Congress or in the legislatures, say, "We do not
like this oneness," and still the priest and the deacon are
praying continually, according to the Scripture testimony, that
the Saints may be one. Well, where will you have them one? Just
name those particular points wherein and how this people who
profess to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ shall be one. How far
shall we go? If we had the privilege of voting for the
presidential nominees to-day, General grant would solicit the
vote of every "Mormon" man and woman, and the cry would be, "Vote
for me. Be one and vote unitedly. Do not be divided in your
votes, but vote for me." Mr. Greeley would preach the same
doctrine--"Do not vote for Grant, vote for me." And when a
governor, member of Congress, or any other officer was in the
field they would all contend for this oneness, but each one would
say, "I want you should be one with me." "Well, but your
neighbor, your competitor, is perhaps quite as good a man as you
are." "That is no difference, he is my enemy, my opponent, and I
wish to beat him if I possibly can, I want this place." But when
you come to the Latter-day Saints, if they can get the right man,
the best man they can find, they unitedly cast their ballots into
the ballot-box to make that man president, governor,
representative, or any other officer; and if we learn that he is
not as talented as some other man, perhaps not so capable of
filling the office as his neighbor, better be united on and with
him, and give him your faith and your prayers, and he will answer
every purpose, and will fulfil his mission to your satisfaction,
and far better than if you were to quarrel, contend and argue
over the matter, for where they do this the inhabitants of the
earth, if they did but know it, have an internal influence to
contend against. Take for instance, the financial circles, the
commerce of the world, those business men, where they have their
opponents they have an internal influence to contend against,
whether they know it or not; and that power, with all the secrecy
of the grave, I might say, will seek to carry out their schemes
unknown to their opponents, in order that they may win. Like the
man at the table with the cards in his hands, unseen by any but
himself, he will take the advantage as far as he can. So says the
politician. So say the world of Christendom, so say the world of
the heathens, and it is party upon party, sect after sect,
division upon division, and we are all for ourselves, and each
one is willing that we should be one in our faith, feelings and
actions, if we will be one with him.
125
Well, this witness that is on the stand can not be set aside or
overcome; it is a witness that the world of mankind can not
impeach, neither the testimony which it imparts. Take people from
China, India, Africa, Europe, the North Pole or the South Pole,
give them the Gospel and they are one. It was not Joseph Smith,
neither is it Brigham Young that makes them one; it is neither
the high council nor the First Presidency that makes them one,
but it is the power of God unto salvation that makes the
Later-day Saints one in heart, in spirit, in action, in their
religious faith and ordinances, and in their dealings, where they
are honest and live their religion. That makes them one, no
matter who they are, where they are, or upon what subject, if it
be a subject worthy the attention of the people. Our religion
descends to the whole life of man, although some, sometimes, say,
there is divine law, there is human law, and there are principles
which pertain to our religion and there are principles which
pertain to the philosophy of the world. But let me here say to
you, that the philosophy of the religion of heaven incorporates
every truth that there is in heaven, on earth, or in hell.
125
Now, we wish to be one and to understand the Gospel. Receive the
Gospel and the spirit of it and we will be one. All Christendom
would say, 'Come go with us, come go with us and we will do you
good." We can say the same--"Come go with us, and we will do you
good." We will tell you how to be saved. How far does the
Christian religion go? Let every man look at it, read, pray
meditate, call upon the Lord, and judge for himself. I say that
that which is commonly called the Christian religion is far from
civilizing the world, and far from making the Christian world
one, far from bringing the disciples to be of one heart and one
mind. They say that there are a great many of these nonessentials
that we differ about. Very true, they are non-essentials, and
they are pretty much all of them non-essentials. Believing in the
Lord Jesus Christ is very essential; believing in God, his
Father, and our Father, is very essential; having faith in the
name of Jesus is very essential. On these points they all agree,
and we agree with them, and they with us; but it is very
different when we come to the laws and ordinances of the kingdom
of God.
125
It has been read to you here what Jesus said to his disciples--"I
will drink no more with you of this wine--the juice of the
vine--until I drink with you anew in my Father's kingdom." Jesus
undertook to establish the kingdom of God upon the earth. He
introduced the laws and ordinances of the kingdom. What was the
result? After killing the Son of God, they could not even let the
Apostles live; they could not let Paul live, who was not a
believer in the days of Jesus, but an opposer, and who, after the
death of the Savior, hunted and sought all who believed on him,
for the purpose of imprisoning and punishing them, and he was the
very man who held the clothes of the young men who stoned Stephen
to death.
127
What did they do with the rest of them? Crucified them, stoned
them, mangled them, and so on, with the exception, I suppose, of
John. As long as any of the disciples of the Savior was on the
earth they were hunted and persecuted, and the cry of their
enemies was, "Do not leave their track until they are
exterminated," just as it is now with regard to the Latter-day
Saints--"Do not leave their track, go where they go, introduce
every iniquity you can, and do as they did in ancient days." How
did they do then? You can read the account given of our first
parents. Along came a certain character and said to Eve--you know
women are of tender heart, and he could operate on this tender
heart--"The Lord knows that in the day thou eatest thereof thou
shalt not surely die, but if thou wilt take of this fruit and eat
thereof thine eyes will be opened and thou wilt see as the Gods
see;" and he worked upon the tender heart of mother Eve until she
partook of the fruit, and her eyes were opened. He told the
truth. And they say now, "Do this that your eyes may be opened,
that you may see; do this that you may know thus and so." In the
days of Jesus and his Apostles the same power was operating, and,
actuated by that, men hunted them until the last one was banished
from human society, and until the Christian religion was so
perverted that the people received it with open hands, arms,
mouth and heart. It was adulterated until it was congenial to the
wicked heart, and they received the Gospel as they supposed. But
that was the time they commenced little by little to transgress
the laws, change the ordinances, and break the everlasting
covenant, and the Gospel of the kingdom that Jesus undertook to
establish in his day and the priesthood were taken from the
earth. But the Lord has again set his hand to gather Israel, to
redeem his people and to establish his kingdom on the earth, and
the enemy of all righteousness says, "We have got plenty of
religion, we have got plenty of followers, we have plenty of
money, we have plenty of influence, never leave the track of the
Latter-day Saints until they are used up." Well, it is God and
them for it, as far as that is concerned; that is not for me to
say anything about. We are here, and the Gospel we have got makes
us of one heart and mind in all the affairs of life; and the
philosophy of our religion embraces all the true philosophy,
every art and every science there is on the face of the whole
earth, and when they step outside the pale of the Christian
religion, the power of God and the priesthood of the Son of God,
they step out of the kingdom of heaven, and they then have
cisterns that will hold no water, systems that will not bear
scrutinizing. I know that a great many of the scientific men of
the world philosophize upon this, that and the other thing.
Geologists will tell us the earth has stood so many millions of
years. Why? Because the Valley of Western Colorado, here, could
not have washed out without taking such a length of time. What do
they know about it? Nothing in comparison. They also reason about
the age of the world by the marvelous specimens of petrification
that are sometimes discovered. Now we can show them plenty of
places where there are trees, perfect stone, running into the
solid rock, and perhaps the rock is forty, fifty, or a hundred
feet above the tree. Yet it is a perfect tree. There is the bark,
there is the heart, and there is the outer-coating between the
heart and the bark, all perfect rock. How long did it take to
make this tree into rock? We do not know. I can tell them, simply
this--when the Lord Almighty brings forth the power of his
chemistry he can combine the elements and make a tree into rock
in one night or one day, if he chooses, or he can let it lie
until it pulverises and blows to the four winds, without
petrifying, just as he pleases. He brings together these elements
as he sees proper, for he is the greatest chemist there is. He
knows more about chemistry and about the formation of the earth
and about dividing the earth, and more about the mountains,
valleys, rocks, hills, plains, and the sands than all the
scientific men that we have. This we can say of a truth. Well, if
it takes a million years to make a perfect rock of one kind of a
tree, say a cedar tree, how long would it take to make a perfect
rock of a cottonwood tree? Let the chemists tell this, if they
can, but they can not tell it.
127
Our religion embraces chemistry; it embraces all the knowledge of
the geologist, and then it goes a little further than their
systems of argument, for the Lord almighty, its author, is the
greatest chemist there is. Will any of the chemists tell us what
the Lord did with the elements in Wisconsin, and in Chicago,
Illinois, last Fall? They made a flaming fire of the heavens, the
elements were melted with fervent heat. This was a chemical
process, but can any of our chemists tell how it was brought
about? I think not. But there were certain elements which lost
their cohesive properties, and a change occurred, and the result
was this terrible fire. So it will be when, as the Scriptures
foretell, "the elements shall melt with fervent heat." The Lord
Almighty will send forth his angeles, who are well instructed in
chemistry, and they will separate the elements and make new
combinations thereof, and the whole heavens will be a sheet of
fire. Well, our religion embraces this; and we know of no laws,
no ordinances, no gifts, no principles, no arts, no sciences that
are true, but what are embraced in the religion of Jesus Christ,
in this Priesthood, which is a perfect system of government.
128
If anybody wants to know what the priesthood of the Son of God
is, it is the law by which the worlds are, were, and will
continue for ever and ever. It is that system which brings worlds
into existence and peoples them, gives them their
revolutions--their days, weeks, months, years, their seasons and
times and by which they are rolled up as a scroll, as it were,
and go into a higher state of existence; and they who believe in
the Lord Jesus Christ--the maker, framer, governor, dictator and
controller of this earth--they who live according to his law and
priesthood will be prepared to dwell on this earth when it is
brought into the presence of the Father and the Son. This is the
habitation of the Saints; this is the earth that will be given to
the Saints, when they and it are sanctified and glorified, and
brought back into the presence of the Father and the Son. This is
our religion, and I bear testimony to it; and this oneness which
the Latter-day Saints possess, which is now so much contended
against and hated by the christian world, in a political,
financial, philosophical, and every other respect and capacity,
is the power of God unto salvation, and is not produced by the
influence or power of man, and this witness cannot be
impeached--it is impossible to impeach it. This is our testimony,
and this is one witness, one testimony that the Gospel which we
preach is the Gospel that God has revealed for the salvation of
the children of men, and it will bring all the sons and daughters
of Adam and Eve into a state of glory and happiness that is far
beyond their conception, or any ideas that thy have ever received
while in this wicked world; and this glory the Lord has prepared
in his mansion for his children. "Well," says one, if I am pretty
sure to get a state of glory better than this, I guess I will not
take the trouble to inherit anything more." Well, run the risk of
it, every man on the earth has that privilege. The Gospel is
preached, sin revives, some die and some contend against it--some
receive it and some do not; but this is the sin of the
people--truth is told them and they reject it. This is the sin of
the world, "Light has come into the world, but men love darkness
rather than light, because their deeds are evil." So said Jesus
in his day. We say, Here is the Gospel of life and salvation, and
every one that will receive it, glory, honor, immortality and
eternal life are theirs; if they reject it, they take their
chance. I hope and pray that we may all be wise and receive the
good part, that we may have the benefit thereof.
129
I say to the Latter-day Saints, Will you live your religion? You
can see people apostatizing from the Church, but what is the
result? Ask every apostate who ever received the spirit of this
work, "Can you go and enjoy any other religion?" Not one of them.
Have you never known persons leave the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, and join any other church? Certainly I have,
and pretty good people. I recollect one old lady that we left in
the States. She said she was too old to gather up with the
Saints. Her friends were Baptists, she lived in the midst of them
and joined their church. Sit down and talk with her--"Sister, how
do you feel?" "Just as I have always felt." "Are you satisfied
with this religion you have joined?" "I believe in the work I
embraced years ago. 'Mormonism' is true, and I believe it just as
I always have. But here are my home and my friends, and I
fellowship them as far as they do right--as far as they believe
on the Lord Jesus Christ. They want I should be a member of their
church and I do not know that it hurts me to be so." "Are you
satisfied to accept their religion and none else?" Says she, "I
care no more about it than I did while in the midst of the
Latter-day Saints; but here are my friends and home. By and by I
shall sleep in the grave;" and there she is today, sleeping with
those who have laid their bodies down to rest. This is one
instance. But you take men and women with youth and vigor, who
apostatize from the truth, and are they satisfied with anything
else? No, and they are not satisfied with themselves. They are
not beloved by God nor by Angels, nor by their families. Are they
beloved by the enemy of all righteousness and his fellow
associates? No. They say to the apostate, "You are a hypocrite, a
traitor, a deceiver, and if you are not a false witness we ask
who is, for you have testified hundreds and thousands of times,
that, by the power of God and the revelations of Jesus Christ,
you knew Joseph Smith was a Prophet, and that this latter-day
work was true, and now you say it is not true." "When did you
tell the truth?" says Mr. Devil, "then or now?" Says he, "I
despise you;" and they hate themselves and everybody else. They
have no fellowship for their neighbors, for the Latter-day Saints
nor for any Christian denomination, and I do not know where in
the world they can be placed. This is the condition of an
apostate. But while this is the condition of those who apostatize
from our Church how is it with those who leave any of the
sectarian churches, after having been a Methodist, Presbyterian,
Baptist, or Congregationalist? Why they go from church to church,
and feel just the same as before? Is not this true? Yes, I know
it is; not that I have passed from one to another myself, but I
have been acquainted with those who have. Did I fellowship them?
I fellowshipped them no more than I do now. I fellowship
everything that is good and virtuous, everything that is truthful
and good; but sin I do not fellowship in them, nor in a
Latter-day Saint, or one who professes to be so. I fellowship all
good, and we have it. It is all right, and if we have error, it
is because we do not live according to the Gospel that we have
embraced. If we have embraced error in our faith, it is because
we do not understand our own doctrine; if we have error in our
lives, it is because we deviate from the path of rectitude that
God has marked out for us to walk in.
129
May the Lord help us to do right. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, August 18, 1872
Brigham Young, August 18, 1872
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered in the Bowery, Logan City, Sunday Morning,
August 18, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
FAULT FINDING--ADVICE--WHOLESALE CO-OPERATIVE STORE FOR
LOGAN--DRESS--MARITAL RELATION--ESTABLISHING ZION.
130
There is just about time for a ten minutes' sermon. I have
several little sermons for the people, and I will begin by taking
up the case of brother Samuel Roskelly, Bishop up here in
Smithfield. I have been hearing for a year or two about brother
Roskelly being wonderfully dishonest, oppressing the people,
overbearing with his brethren, treating them with contempt and
abusing them, taking their means and so on. Last Friday, about
five o'clock, we assembled in this hall, that is, all who were
disposed to come together, to have these matters brought before
us. We sat and heard them as patiently as we could. We had not
time to hear all speak and say all they wanted to. We found, as
we generally find these complaints--they have their origin in
selfishness, in greediness, in a complaining heart, destitute of
the Spirit of the Lord, imagining to themselves that they know
just what is right, and they want to get everybody in the world
to feel as they feel. But we find that almost all complaints that
arise are sown by the enemy; they grow in this soil, they take
root, spring up and bear seed, and when the stalk is shaken then
the seed makes its appearance. We examined these matters far
enough. I think there were eight complaints against Bishop
Roskelly, and when we had got through I did not stop to ask the
brethren how they felt, for I did not see anything to talk about.
I did not learn that there was anything of sufficient importance
to spend time about, or to ask my counselor, or to ask any of the
Twelve, any of the Bishops, or any of the brethren present, to
give their opinion on the subject. I did not see that there was
any opinion to be formed. I learned nothing, only that these
little roots--this seed of bitterness--had grown up and borne
fruit.
130
Just about the same complaints came to me year after year against
brother Maughan and brother Benson, and of other Bishops in this
valley very few have been excused. If we were to hear them all
and trace them to their origin, we would find they all are the
fruits of jealousy, covetousness--which is idolatry, discontent
and greediness. Those with whom they originate are very anxious
to have everybody look through the glasses they look through, to
feel as they feel, and to be dictated by them. I want to say this
to the brethren and to the sisters, that they may know how we
feel about this matter. We did not chasten Bishop Roskelly nor
any of the brethren of his ward, but we talked to them a little,
and gave them some good counsel; and we do not feel like
chastening them, but just say to them, Try and live so that the
Spirit of the Lord will live within you, and you will do well
enough.
131
I gave brother Roskelly some counsel with regard to keeping
accounts. I learned, years and years ago, the benefit of having
my business transactions well written out in black and white, and
when I have any dealings with a man, put that down. If I have
paid him, say I have paid him, how much and what for, which makes
a proper account and history. I learned this by experience, and I
got this little item when I first started in business in my
youth. We were building up a little town. A few merchants, a few
mechanics, and a few others had come in, and we were together one
evening talking about keeping account books, and bringing up the
different authors. One gentleman in the company, named David
Smith, said--"Gentlemen, I have studied every author in America
on book-keeping, and some of the European issues, and I have
learned that there is no rule or method so good as to write down
facts just as they occur. That is the best book-keeping I have
learned yet." This I have observed in my life; I adopted this
principle as soon as I heard it. I say, then, to brother
Roskelly, instead of keeping his own books, have somebody or
other that will know his accounts and understand his dealings to
keep a faithful record of the same; and I say this to all the
Bishops and to men of business, not only to those in the tithing
department, but merchants, mechanics and farmers. Most of our
farmers that I have been acquainted with never keep any books at
all; they depend on memory, and I have known some men to do quite
a business in this way. We have a considerable number of
tradesmen in our community, some of whom never keep any books or
accounts. This class are liable at any time to be imposed upon. A
person comes up, and, says he, "You owe me, and I want my pay."
The man knows he has paid him, but he forgets when, where and
how, but it is settled in his feelings that he does not owe him
anything. This brings contention, discord and strife, even among
pretty good Elders; but if we keep a strict account of
everything, we can tell a man then whether we have paid him or
not, or whether we owe him or not. This is the way for brother
Samuel Roskelly and all the Bishops to do. I wanted to say this,
and also that there is no particular fault to be found with
brother Roskelly, and no particular fault to be found with the
people, only they do not live their religion quite as they
should, and the spirit of contention creeps in instead of the
spirit of prayer. My counsel, brethren and sisters, is to pray,
keep the law of God, observe the Sabbath day, partake of the
Sacrament, observe your tithes and offerings, and fill up your
lives with doing good. This accomplishes my ten minutes, and now
I leave the ground. we will close our meeting until 2 o'clock,
then I have a few other discourses to deliver.
131
[When the congregation re-assembled, after singing and prayer,
President Young again took the stand, and spoke as follows:--]
131
Now for my second lecture. This is upon financial affairs
entirely. It is merely a question I am going to propound to the
people, and I desire an answer from them. Suppose that the
Wholesale Co-operative Store in Salt Lake City should be pleased
to extend its operations to this valley and establish a wholesale
store here, I want to know what the disposition and action of the
people would be with regard to sustaining it? I see there is a
necessity for it, for there are a good many settlement in this
valley and Bear Lake Valley that now go to Salt Lake City to do
their trading. We have proposed placing a wholesale store here,
and whatever is kept in Salt Lake City in the wholesale
department, duplicate the same for this place, and keep a perfect
assortment here the same as is done in the city--farming
implements wagons, carriages and everything necessary to supply
the wants of the people. This will be a short lecture. Suppose
that we undertake this, what will be the action of the people? I
expect every settlement is represented here to-day, probably by
the Bishops and leading men, who know the feelings of the people
and who, more or less, control the business portions of their
settlements. Perhaps a good many have not thought of it, then
again a good many have, and they have matured this pretty well in
their feelings and understandings. If we do this, our plan will
be to supply the people with everything they want, and all their
products that can be disposed of to buy them. We will take the
products of the country that we can sell, ship them off and
dispose of them, and in return supply you with goods. Will the
Bishops, High Priests, Seventies, Elders, Priests, Teachers,
Deacons, and their fathers, mothers, sons, daughters and the
brothers sustain this institution if we place one here? We shall
give you the goods just about as cheap as we can sell them in
Salt Lake City, very little difference, so little you would not
know; for the additional expense in bringing them from Ogden to
this place, over conveying them from there to Salt Lake City,
would be very trifling. If this would be the feelings of the
different settlements, I would like to have you manifest it by
showing your right hands. (Hands up.) Now let us have the
opposition vote. (No opposition.)
132
While I am on this subject let me say a few words with regard to
dress, though I have not as much reason to do so here as I have
in Salt Lake City and Ogden. You know that we are creatures
subject to all the vanities of the world, and very subject to
admiring its fashions. We have left Babylon, and instead of
introducing it here we want it to stay yonder, and just as much
as we can, no, that is the wrong word--just as much as we will,
we want to make our own head dresses here, especially for the
ladies, and for the gentlemen through the summer season. We would
like to see all through our country what we see here in a
measure--a decent dress on a lady. Instead of having four, five
or six yards of cloth drawing through the street to raise dust on
the people, that she can go along decently and you would not
think there was a six horse team traveling there, with a dozen
dogs under the wagon. This is what we would like, but when we
come to the ornaments, I feel like blackguarding. I am going to
speak about a little ornament they get up, I believe it is called
a "bender," and I do not know but there is a Grecian or a Greek
to it--a "Grecian bend." You have seen this ridiculed enough
without my doing it. I want to say to you, ladies, just take off
this ornament. If my sisters will take the hint, they will leave
off these little articles. Some of them, after they have got half
a dozen yards on it are not satisfied until they go and get a
dozen yards of ribbon several inches wide to make bows to put on
the top of that. It is ridiculous! I do not see much of it in
this place, to what I do in some others. I would really like to
see the ladies dress decent and comely. This will do on this
subject, for a hint to the wise is sufficient, and enough has
been said if the sisters will take counsel.
133
I will now say a little with regard to our young people--a
subject introduced here yesterday, very modestly and very nicely.
Suppose the Latter-day Saints and the world at large were to
carry out the principles that are received in the faith of a
society called the Shaking quakers, how long do you suppose it
would be before there would not be a human being left on the
earth, unless there was some necromancy or stealthful conduct
going on? About one hundred and twenty years would take the last
man and woman from the earth. But this is not what is required of
us, it was not required of Adam and Eve. They were required to
multiply and replenish the earth, and I will here say a word to
the ladies--Do not marvel, do not wonder at it, do not complain
at Providence, do not find fault with mother Eve because your
desire is to your husbands. Bear this with patience and
fortitude! Be reconciled to it, meet your afflictions and these
little,--well, we might say, not very trifling, but still they
are wants, for if we desire only that that is necessary, and can
govern and control ourselves to be satisfied with that, it is a
great deal better than to want a thousand things that are
unnecessary, and especially to the female portion of the
inhabitants of the earth. But there is a curse upon them, and I
can not take it off, can you? No, you can not--it never will be
taken from the human family until the mission is fulfilled, and
our Master and our Lord is perfectly satisfied with our work. It
will then be taken from this portion of the community, and will
afflict them no more; but for the present it will afflict them.
And almost every lady I ever saw in my life is just as bad as a
certain lady lecturer who, after lecturing and extolling her sex,
and trying to impress upon them the idea that it would have been
much better for the world if there had never been a man upon the
earth, said, "Yet you know our weakness is such that we turn
round and grab the first man we come to." How natural it is!
Well, ladies, just be reconciled to your condition, and if there
is a principle here or elsewhere that wishes to override the
principle of celestial marriage, take heed to yourselves, for I
can promise you one thing--If you ever had any faith in the
Gospel and in celestial marriage, and you renounce or disbelieve
and deny this doctrine, you will be damned. I promise you that,
no matter who it is. Now take heed to yourselves! Look at the
world. We might show up this mater here, but we do not wish to do
so. Those who travel through the world can understand these
things, and see the millions of the human family who are trodden
under foot. I will refer you to the great cities of the world.
Get their statistics and see how many young females perish in
them yearly. Why? Because some good men have taken them and made
second wives of them? No. It is because wicked men have seduced
and ruined them, and have made them so reckless in their feelings
that rather than see father, mother, brother, sister or friends
again, they would die in a ditch. Those who are acquainted with
the world know these things are true, and they are trying to
introduce this practice into Salt Lake City. I will say no more
on this subject, but let this little lecture or sermon suffice.
134
I will now ask a question of the Latter-day Saints, and I can ask
it of the aged, middle-aged and the youth, for it is a matter
that comes within the range of the understanding of the entire
community, even the children--How long will it take us to
establish Zion, the way we are going on now? You can answer this
question as the girl did the schoolmaster, I suppose, and say,
"If forty years has brought a large percentage of Babylon into
the midst of this people, how long will it take to get Babylon
out and actually to establish Zion? The schoolmaster boasted of
his aptness at figures and told the girl that no question in
mathematics could be asked him that he could not readily answer.
Said the girl, "I think I can ask you a question you cannot
answer?" "Well," said he, "let's have it." "Well," said she, "if
by eating one apple Mother Eve ruined the whole human family,
what would an orchard full of apples do?" You will be as puzzled
to answer my question as the schoolmaster was his pupil's
question. You can say, "I do not know," and it is true, you do
not know; but I can inform you on that subject--Until the father,
the mother, the son and the daughter take the counsel that is
given them by those who lead and direct them in building up the
kingdom of God, they will never establish Zion, no never, worlds
without end. When they learn to do this, I do not think there
will be much complaining or grumbling, or much of what we have
heard about to-day--improper language to man or beast. I do not
think there will be much pilfering, purloining, bad dealing,
covetousness or anything of the kind; not much of this unruly
spirit that wants everybody to sustain its possessor and let him
get rich, whether anybody else does or not. I think when we have
learned that lesson, we will be willing to take the counsel of
those who are set to direct us, the officers who are over us; and
if they are not just, true, holy, upright and men of God in every
respect, just have faith enough so that the Lord Almighty will
remove them out of the way and do not undertake to remove them
yourselves. This is the way we should live. There should be faith
enough in the midst of this people that if your humble servants
were to attempt to guide them in the ways of error, false
doctrine, wickedness or corruption of any kind, he would be
stopped in his career in twenty-four hours so that he would not
be able to speak to them, and if he were not laid in the grave,
he would have no power nor influence whatever. There ought to
faith enough in a Ward, if the Bishop is wicked, if he is doing
wrong and serving himself and the enemy instead of the Lord and
his kingdom, to stop him in his career, so that the Lord would
remove him out of the way. This has been the case in some few
instances, and it ought to be every time and in every place.
134
When shall we establish the principles of Zion? You can say, "I
do not know." If we had power to do it, we should do it; but we
are just in the position and condition, and upon precisely the
same ground that God our Father is--He cannot force his children
to do this, that or the other against their will--the eternal
laws by which he and all others exist in the eternities of the
Gods, decree that the consent of the creature must be obtained
before the Creator can rule perfectly. It is just as impossible
for the principles of heaven to rule in the hearts of the wicked
and ungodly as anything you can well imagine; you might as well
throw powder into a flaming fire and say it should not burn, or
burst a cask of water in the air and say it should not fall to
the ground. The consent of the creature must be had in these
things, and until you and I do consent in our feelings and
understand that it is a necessity that we establish Zion, we
shall have Babylon mixed with us.
134
I know the faith of the people, in a great measure, is, "We would
like to see Zion," "Would you?" "Yes, but I would like to see it
enjoyed by others. I do not want to be there myself, I want to
see how it looks." This is the feeling, these are the ideas that
pass through the minds of many. "We would just like to see the
people live according to the principles of heaven, to see how
they would look and act, to learn their ways; but we would not be
bound to live there until we had seen enough to be able to judge
whether we would like it or not. Maybe we would like it, maybe
not; it might deprive us of some little privileges we have now.
We might not be permitted to wear what we wear now, or to act,
think and feel as we do now. We might be crippled or curtailed in
our views or operations, consequently we do not want to enter
into this order ourselves, but we would like some others to do so
that we may see how it looks." This is the way they feel about
Zion.
135
Well, brethren, I have talked all I ought to, and perhaps more. I
say as I always do, God bless you! Peace be with you, and love be
multiplied upon the people. I pray for the good all over the
earth. My desire is to see the kingdom of God prosper. We are
prospering in many things, but we are not prospering in the grace
of God and in the spirit of our holy religion as much as we
should. Herein we come short. But if we will try and improve our
minds, school and train ourselves to overcome every evil within
us, every passion, every unruly thought, I do know by experience,
by a close application of any individual to himself in schooling
and training his mind, he can cease to think evil thoughts and he
will be able to think good, that is, his mind be filled with
pleasant reflections. This I know by experience. I heard Brother
Taylor preach a sermon once on the principle of revelation, which
contained the most pleasant ideas. Still it is in the Bible--all
this is taught there--but he illustrated the principle of living
for God perfectly day by day, showing that we could do so until
god lived within us, and until we, ourselves, became a fountain
of revelation; instead of having to ask, plead and pray the Lord
to give us a vision and to open our minds, we could live for God
until a fountain of light and intelligence was within us, from
morning until evening, and from evening until morning, week after
week, month after month and year after year. This is the fact.
Then let us live so that the spirit of our religion will live
within us, then we have peace, joy, happiness and contentment,
which makes such pleasant fathers, pleasant mothers, pleasant
children, pleasant households, neighbors, communities and cities.
That is worth living for, and I do think that the Latter-day
Saints ought to strive for this.
135
May God help us!
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, August 24, 1872
Brigham Young, August 24, 1872
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered at Farmington, Saturday Afternoon, August 24, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
INCREASE OF SAINTS SINCE JOSEPH SMITH'S DEATH--JOSEPH SMITH'S
SONS--RESURRECTION AND MILLENNIAL WORK.
136
There are a few minutes to spare before we dismiss, and there are
quite a number of items that could be talked about that would be
very interesting to the people, especially in regard to the first
experience of the Church. When I hear brethren relate their
experience of those days it brings to my mind many things
pertaining to the establishment of the kingdom in the beginning.
Not that I was a member of the Church at it organization, but I
was near by and knew something of the doings of the Saints. I
recollect very well the night that Joseph found the plates: the
recollection of that event is as vividly impressed on my mind as
though it were last night. But, to change my remarks to another
subject referred to, let me ask you, brethren and sisters, How
many do you suppose there are in the Church now who were in
twenty-eight years ago? Some are disposed to imagine that the
people we now call Latter-day Saints have been brought into the
Church through the labors of the Prophet Joseph Smith. If we were
to ask this congregation how many of them were in the Church
twenty-eight years ago, we should find only a small portion of
them. I will say that, probably, two-thirds, yes, three-fourths,
and even more than that, have come into the Church through the
administration of what is called the First Presidency at the
present time; consequently our work shows for itself. We need not
ask persons to give their opinion about the theory that we have
placed before them, but what do you think of the work itself?
What do you think of this great kingdom, this little empire, we
might say, as it now appears to the world? It is twenty-eight
years since Brother Joseph was killed, and the work has gone
forth steadily and rapidly, and through the providences of God we
have apparently advanced faster since then, than in the fourteen
years before, so far as bringing the people into note, and giving
them a name and fame in the eyes of the world. The work is still
onward and it is upward.
136
I simply ask the question about what the people think of these
things, I do not wish to dwell on the principle of parties
denying the faith, or remaining in the faith, they can do just as
they please about that; but while Brother Levi Hancock was
talking about sticking to the Church, and declaring that he meant
to hang on to it, I thought, and say now, what in the name of
common sense is there to hang on to, if he does not hang on to
the Church? I do not know of anything. You might as well take a
lone straw in the midst of the ocean to save yourselves as to
think of doing so by the knowledge, power, authority, faith and
priesthood of the Christian world, and the heathen world into the
bargain. There is nothing but the Gospel to hang on to! Those who
leave the Church are like a feather blown to and fro in the air.
They know not whither they are going; they do not understand
anything about their own existence; their faith, judgment and the
operations of their minds are as unstable as the movements of the
feather floating in the air. We have not anything to cling to
only faith in the Gospel.
136
As for the doctrine that is promulgated by the sons of Joseph, it
is nothing more than any other false religion. We would be very
glad to have the privilege of saying that the children of Joseph
Smith, Junior, the Prophet of God, were firm in the faith of the
Gospel, and following in the footsteps of their father. But what
are they doing? Trying to blot out every vestige of the work
their father performed on the earth. Their mission is to endeavor
to obliterate every particle of his doctrine, his faith and
doings. These boys are not following Joseph Smith, but Emma
Bideman. Every person who hearkens to what they say, hearkens to
the will and wishes of Emma Bideman. The boys, themselves, have
no will, no mind, no judgment independent of their mother. I do
not want to talk about them. I am sorry for them, and I have my
own faith in regard to them. I think the Lord will find them by
and by--not Joseph, I have told the people times enough, they
never may depend on Joseph Smith who is now living; but david,
who was born after the death of his father, I still look for the
day to come when the Lord will touch his eyes. But I do not look
for it while his mother lives. The Lord would do it now if David
were willing; but he is not, he places his mother first and
foremost, and would take her counsel sooner than be would the
counsel of the Almighty, consequently he can do nothing, he knows
nothing, he has no faith, and we have to let the matter rest in
the hands of God for the present.
137
Now a few words to the brethren and sisters upon the doctrine and
ordinances of the house of God. All who have lived on the earth
according to the best light they had, and would have received the
fullness of the Gospel had it been preached to them, are worthy
of a glorious resurrection, and will attain to this by being
administered for in the flesh by those who have the authority.
All others will have a resurrection, and receive a glory, except
those who have sinned against the Holy Ghost. It is supposed by
this people that we have all the ordinances in our possession for
life and salvation, and exaltation, and that we are administering
in these ordinances. This is not the case. We are in possession
of all the ordinances that can be administered in the flesh; but
there are other ordinances and administrations that must be
administered beyond this world. I know you would ask what they
are. I will mention one. We have not, neither can we receive
here, the ordinance and the keys of the resurrection. They will
be given to those who have passed off this state of action and
have received their bodies again, as many have already done and
many more will. They will be ordained, by those who hold the keys
of the resurrection, to go forth and resurrect the Saints, just
as we receive the ordinance of baptism, then the keys of
authority to baptize others for the remission of their sins. This
is one of the ordinances we can not receive here, and there are
many more. We hold the authority to dispose of, alter and change
the elements; but we have not received authority to organize
native element to even make a spear of grass grow. We have no
such ordinance here. We organize according to men in the flesh.
By combining the elements and planting the seed, we cause
vegetables, trees, grains, &c., to come forth. We are organizing
a kingdom here according to the pattern that the Lord has given
for people in the flesh, but not for those who have received the
resurrection, although it is a similitude. Another item: We have
not the power in the flesh to create and bring forth or produce a
spirit; but we have the power to produce a temporal body. The
germ of this, God has placed within us. And when our spirits
receive our bodies, and through our faithfulness we are worthy to
be crowned, we will then receive authority to produce both spirit
and body. But these keys we cannot receive in the flesh. Herein,
brethren, you can perceive that we have not finished, and cannot
finish our work, while we live here, no more than Jesus did while
he was in the flesh.
138
We can not receive, while in the flesh, the keys to form and
fashion kingdoms and to organize matter, for they are beyond our
capacity and calling, beyond this world. In the resurrection, men
who have been faithful and diligent in all things in the flesh,
have kept their first and second estate, and worthy to be crowned
Gods, even the sons of God, will be ordained to organize matter.
How much matter do you suppose there is between here and some of
the fixed stars which we can see? Enough to frame many, very many
millions of such earths as this, yet it is now so diffused, clear
and pure, that we look through it and behold the stars. Yet the
matter is there. Can you form any conception of this? Can you
form any idea of the minuteness of matter? Let me give you a
comparison, for instance, with regard to mathematics. You take a
child that is born to-day, say at twelve o'clock, precisely at
high noon. One year from to-day there is another child born. The
one born to-day will be just one year older than the other. The
second one is perhaps not a minute old, it has just commenced to
breathe the vital air. Now the one born first is a great many
times older than the second, we would have to get some of these
mathematicians to tell how many times. It would be over 31
millions of seconds, a great many minutes, many hours, three
hundred and sixty-five days, and one year. When these two
children have lived just one year longer the elder of the two is
two years old, the other one, the former, being just as old again
as the latter. In one year more the first one will be only
one-third older, the fourth year he will be one-fourth older, and
so on. Now then, how long must these two children live to be
exactly of an age? They never will be; never, no never, through
all the eternities there are, and that is for ever and ever. They
will always differ in age, and when countless millions and
myriads of ages have passed away there is still, do you not see,
a difference, these children are not yet of the same age. It is
just so with matter. Take, for instance, a grain of sand. You can
not divide it so small that it can not be divided again--it is
capable of infinite division. We know nothing about how many
times it can be divided, and it is just so with regard to the
lives in us, in animals, in vegetation, in shrubbery. They are
countless. To illustrate, you take a perfectly ripe kernel of
corn--you will have some here perhaps in a few days--and if you
get a glass, it does not require a very powerful one, and you
take the chit of this corn and open it, you behold distinctly a
stalk of corn, in that chit, a perfectly grown stalk of corn,
with ears and leaves on it, matured, out in blossom,--there is
the tassel, there are the ears and there is the corn! Well, you
get a stronger glass and divide again, and you can see that this
very chit is the grandfather of corn! We take the scientific
world for this. Well, how many lives are there in this grain of
corn? They are innumerable, and this same infinity is manifest
through all the creations of God.
138
We will operate here, in all the ordinances of the house of God
which pertain to this side the vail, and those who pass beyond
and secure to themselves a resurrection pertaining to the lives
will go on and receive more and more, more and more, and will
receive one after another until they are crowned Gods, even the
sons of God. This idea is very consoling. We are now baptizing
for the dead, and we are sealing for the dead, and if we had a
temple prepared we should be giving endowments for the dead--for
our fathers, mothers, grandfathers, grandmothers, uncles, aunts,
relatives, friends and old associates, the history of whom we are
now getting from our friends in the east. The Lord is stirring up
the hearts of many there, and there is a perfect mania with some
to trace their genealogies and to get up printed records of their
ancestors. They do not know what they are doing it for, but the
Lord is prompting them; and it will continue and run on from
father to father, father to father, until they get the genealogy
of their forefathers as far as they possibly can.
139
I am going to stop my talking by saying that, in the millennium,
when the kingdom of God is established on the earth in power,
glory and perfection, and the reign of wickedness that has so
long prevailed is subdued, the Saints of God will have the
privilege of building their temples, and of entering into them,
becoming, as it were, pillars in the temples of God, and they
will officiate for their dead. Then we will see our friends come
up, and perhaps come that we have been acquainted with here. If
we ask who will stand at the head of the resurrection in this
last dispensation, the answer is--Joseph Smith, Junior, the
Prophet of God. He is the man who will be resurrected and receive
the keys of the resurrection, and he will seal this authority
upon others, and they will hunt up their friends and resurrect
them when they shall have been officiated for, and bring them up.
And we will have revelations to know our forefathers clear back
to Father Adam and Mother Eve, and we will enter into the temples
of God and officiate for them. Then man will be sealed to man
until the chain is made perfect back to Adam, so that there will
be a perfect chain of priesthood from Adam to the winding-up
scene.
139
This will be the work of the Latter-day Saints in the millennium.
How much time do you suppose we have to attend to and foster
Babylon? I leave this question for you to answer at your
pleasure. I have no time at all for that, I say, and stop my
sayings.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, August 25, 1872
Brigham Young, August 25, 1872
REMARKS BY BRIGHAM YOUNG, JUN.,
Delivered at Farmington, Sunday Morning, August 25th, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
GOD'S WAYS NOT AS MAN'S WAYS.
139
I have a testimony, brethren and sisters, as to the truth of the
work of God, that it is a pleasure to me to bear to you, and to
strangers when opportunity offers. I have no particular text to
speak upon at the present time save the one that should be at all
times in the mind of every Latter-day Saint, and that is, the
kingdom of God, and its growth and development upon the earth.
This is a subject that should be ever present with us; and when
an individual whose interests are professedly identified with
that kingdom, forgets the duties devolving upon him in connection
with it, we may infer that he has ceased to be useful therein.
140
We know, brethren, that it is impossible to please the Lord by
following the counsels of our own minds, unless they are
enlightened by the Spirit of the Almighty. The wisdom of man is
not the wisdom of God, and to be successful in extending and
strengthening the cause of God on the earth, we must have his
Spirit to guide us. If our ways were as God's ways, we would do
as he would have us do; but it is evident to all who are
acquainted with the actions of the human family, not excluding
the Latter-day Saints, that the mind of man is not as God's mind.
A verse of Scripture, which now occurs to my mind, will
illustrate this. It will be found in the 11th verse of the 2nd
chapter of the 1st epistle to the Corinthians:--"For what man
knoweth the things of man, save the spirit of man which is in
him? even so the things of God knoweth no man, but, the Spirit of
God."
140
The experience that the Latter-day Saints have had has taught
them that this is true, and we know that when a man deems himself
capable of acting solely on his own intelligence, and neglects to
seek for the wisdom of Heaven to guide him, he is very apt to go
astray. This feeling of independence of the Almighty has caused
the apostacy of some, whom we, perhaps, have thought it would be
almost impossible to blind to the truths they once advocated so
well; but it is the case. Men do not look at things as God looks
at them, therefore it is indispensably necessary for each
individual Latter-day Saint to have the Spirit of God within him,
that he may do His will and not carry out his own views.
141
Look over the nations of the earth, and where is there a
government established on correct principles, that is, in
accordance with the commandments of God? There is not one, for
they are all established by the wisdom of men, and men's ways are
so different from the ways of God that it is impossible, with all
their intelligence and knowledge--and we know they possess a
great deal--for men to establish a government after the order of
God. In some minor particulars such a government might not be far
out of the way, but in all the essentials it would be dissimilar.
It is the same with us, the Latter-day Saints, without the
inspiration and wisdom of Heaven to guide us, we can not hope to
carry out and accomplish God's purposes. Many of us have not had
the educational advantages enjoyed by the wealthy in the outside
world, having belonged to the laboring classes--to what is termed
the down-trodden portions of the population of Europe and
America, and I say thank God for it, for as a general thing the
educated classes are fast becoming unbelievers in the Old and New
Testament. We, having been taken from the lowly walks of life,
have not, according to the ideas of the world, the intelligence
necessary to establish a form of government equal to that which
other men have established who have been more learned, better
educated than we are, and who have had more wisdom than we seem
to have, in a temporal point of view. But God, in his infinite
mercy, has inspired our leaders, he has endowed them with wisdom
and understanding to take the course and perform the work that he
desired. I have heard men of the world point out to President
Young and other leading men in this Church the course they should
pursue under certain circumstances, to ensure the approval and
friendship of, and to give satisfaction to, the leading men of
our nation and the nations abroad; and to my certain knowledge
their counsel was diametrically opposed to the course taken under
those circumstances. I have noticed these things, and I know it
is true that God's ways are not as men's ways; and for a man to
undertake to be a Latter-day Saint while groping in the dark by
trusting wholly to the intelligence of his own mind, is the
hardest work imaginable; it is the most laborious task that can
be, for any individual on the earth to try to be what he ought to
be before his God without the Holy Spirit to assist and guide
him. We know that naturally our hearts are far removed from God;
and, speaking to the ancient Saints, one of the Apostles told
them they were blinded in part, and saw through a glass darkly.
This is our condition, then how necessary it is for us to seek
continually for that Spirit which will enable us to live as
Saints of the Most High should live, and to labor so that we may
establish a kingdom on the earth which God will delight in, and
which, when the great men of the earth see, they will be willing
to acknowledge the wisdom manifested therein, and to glorify God
for the same. To-day, if a stranger were to come into this
congregation, for instance, he would be very likely to think,
"These are the Latter-day Saints--the people who have gathered
out from the nations of the earth to worship God! Well, I do not
see a great amount of intellect manifested, there is no great
intellectual ability, not so much as among the people of other
congregations where I have been." That may be true, and hence the
proof is more striking that the work we have done has been
directed and dictated by the wisdom of the Almighty, and in its
accomplishment the very spirit, energy and determination which
our leaders have exhibited were required. You might have
ransacked the world from one end to the other, and you could not
have found educated men--men brought up in colleges--who would
have come out and taken the axe and the plow, driven the teams,
made the roads, led the people and located them as our leaders
have done. They might have done these things if they had been
willing to bow in obedience to God; but they are too highly
educated, they are too full of the wisdom of the world to seek
unto God, in lowliness of heart, for his Spirit to guide them, as
our leaders have done. Such men as those I am referring to, could
not have trusted implicitly in the arm of Jehovah, when on the
plains, to protect them from the savages, the storms, and all the
dangers incident to such a journey; they could not understand and
comprehend the necessity of faith in god under such
circumstances, their education and worldly wisdom would have
rendered it next to impossible, and it required the very men who
have been our leaders to do the work that has been done, and it
needs them still. They are perfectly willing that God should
guide this great ship Zion, they are willing to act under his
direction; and no matter who the man is, nor where he comes from,
if he identifies himself with this people, he must be willing
that God should lead and guide him, and to obey every word that
proceeds from His mouth, or he is not the man to help to carry on
this work.
142
To say that we are a perfect people, I can not do it, neither can
I say that I am a perfect man. I am just as full of weaknesses as
any other man, and so are my brethren with whom I associate; but
the Elder of Israel, no matter how great his weaknesses, who
humbly trusts in God and continually strives to overcome evil and
to do only that which is right, will be enabled to triumph and be
faithful to the end. What matters it if a man likes whisky, if he
does not drink it? I do not care how much a man in this Church
likes it, if he does not drink it, it makes no difference. I do
not care how much he loves tobacco, or this, that or the other,
that is not good, if he brings his actions and feelings into
subjection to the dictates of the Spirit of God. I do not care
how much a man loves property, it will not harm him if he does
not set his heart upon it so that he could not sacrifice it, if
required to do so, to promote the interests of God's kingdom upon
the earth. I remember once, when a boy, Jedediah M. Grant saw me
chewing tobacco, and said he, "You chew tobacco, do you?" "Yes
sir." "Well, I never had any taste for it; it is no virtue in me
that I do not use it, I tried hard enough, but it made me sick."
The virtue, brethren, is in putting away or overcoming habits
which you know would impede your progress in the kingdom of God.
It was not a virtue in Bro. Grant that he did not chew tobacco,
he tried to learn how, but could not do it. I tried, and
succeeded. But, brethren and sisters, the idea is, to bring our
actions, thoughts and feelings into complete subjection to the
dictates of the Holy Spirit, and to be on hand at all times to
labor as we are directed for the building up of the kingdom of
God upon the earth; that should be the object with us. It is no
use for a man to say, "I am a Latter-day Saint, and they have not
cut me off yet. I have almost feared it sometimes, because I did
not do that which I knew to be right; but I am still within the
pale of the kingdom and I hope to slip along with the balance."
This is just as great folly as for a man to claim the right to go
a journey by railway when he has no ticket and no means to pay
his fare. He may hang around, and declare that he is one of the
crowd, and that he is going along with them on that train; but,
ignorant of the time it starts, and destitute of the means to pay
his way he strays off for a short time, and in the meanwhile the
train starts and leaves him behind. It is just so with an
unfaithful Elder in this kingdom--he is not prepared for events
as they transpire, and, lacking the spirit of the Gospel, is
liable to be left behind.
143
I am talking to people who understand me, to people who have the
word of God. The Elders testify that God has spoken from the
heavens, and, that he revealed principles to the Prophet Joseph
Smith and others, for the salvation of the human family; they
declare that the principles revealed to them will save the people
if they will practice them in their lives. I am talking to people
who have received a testimony of these things for themselves, who
have stood before, and lifted up their voices to, the nations of
the earth, and declared that they knew Jesus was the Christ, that
he had established his kingdom on the earth, that he had revealed
principles which would save us and return us back into the
presence of God, if we would practice them. These are the men and
women I am talking to; you know as well as I do that the Gospel
is true, and my talk is to inspire your hearts and my heart to be
more faithful to that which we know to be true. It is not
anything new to you and to me to be told that the kingdom of God
is on the earth, or to hear the principles of salvation
proclaimed by the Elders; but it is good to have our hearts
warmed and inspired, and our desires to be diligent and faithful
renewed and strengthened. I do not want the train to start
without me, I want to be on board the good ship Zion, with my
brethren. So does every soul present, I have no doubt of it. I
believe that the atheist--the man who has no belief in God, or
faith in any religion, would like the best berth to be had,
either on a sailing vessel or steamer, if he saw any chance to
obtain it. The Latter-day Saints have good berths in view. You
can testify with me that the Spirit of God has enlightened our
minds; you can testify with me that the power of God led us to
these valleys; that prophecies have been uttered in our hearing,
and we have seen them fulfilled, and we know that God has spoken
in our day.
143
Brethren and sisters, let us be faithful, let us be true to the
covenants we have made, for if we are, we insure to ourselves
life and salvation; but, on the other hand, if we are recreant,
we shall go to destruction. This is the testimony of modern as
well as ancient revelation; and we need not take our own works to
convince the people of the error of their ways; there is
principle enough bound within the lids of this book--the
Bible--to convince all mankind of the error of their ways, and to
lead them from darkness to the Lord Almighty, if they felt as
humble before God as I suppose my brethren and sisters do to-day.
But it seems that, in the providence of God, things have been
ordered as they are, that is, he has suffered the wickedness of
men to transpire in the nations of the earth, and he has suffered
priests to be raised up to blind the minds of men. Why? Because
men have their agency to do as their hearts prompt them, and
there is no power that can prevent them doing this, that or the
other; but their acts will be over-ruled by a superior power. We
have our free agency, to think and act just as men think and act,
independent of the promptings of the Spirit of God; but that is
not our object, our aim is to do the will of God; and brethren,
if we could only see the labor and toil that we have to perform
before we accomplish our salvation, we would bow in humility
before God and pray him to give us strength as our day.
143
Look at the immense number of people who have lived on the earth
since its creation! In what relationship do we stand to them? Who
are they? Our progenitors, and millions of them have died without
the Gospel. What an immense labor opens up before us when we
think of these things! Millions and hundreds of millions of men
and women, just as good as we are, according to the knowledge
they had, must be administered for by us, and we have to build
temples in which the work for their redemption may be performed.
We have not only to build temples, but cities; we have to redeem
the earth, and we have a vast amount of physical labor to do,
that our progenitors did not have the privilege of doing, it was
never offered to them, but it has been laid before us in
plainness and simplicity. We can understand the principle of
baptism for the dead, it has been made plain to us, and
administering it, and performing the various duties that will
arise in building up the kingdom of God, will give us labor for
centuries. Can we, in view of these duties and responsibilities,
be idle? Can we fail to seek after the Spirit of God to guide us,
that we may accomplish these labors? If we do, we shall not only
deprive ourselves of a great privilege and of great glory, but we
shall deprive others, perhaps, to some extent, of receiving that
which is theirs by right; they have lived for it, and they are
entitled to it at our hands.
144
What can injure the Later-day Saints? I will ask Brother Hulse
here. Does it injure a man to be tarred and feathered? I
understand that while he was east he was tarred and feathered, or
ducked, or something of that kind, and I have no doubt he feels
glad of the persecution. Still, I would not like it just now. Our
Elders have been tarred and feathered, and they have suffered a
good deal in their efforts to spread the Gospel of the kingdom;
but what have they suffered in comparison with the blessings they
have received? What is there that would induce a man to sacrifice
that feeling of joy which he experiences when preaching the
Gospel in the nations? I have heard Elders testify, and it is
their general experience, that when abroad preaching, depending
for their food upon strangers, unsustained and unsupported, save
as the providences of God opened the way before them that they
have had a feeling of peace and joy such as they never
experienced before in their lives, and which they would not lose
for all the wealth on the face of the earth. What is that feeling
and where does it come from? It is the peace of God, and when a
man possesses it, his thoughts are not as man's thoughts, and,
inspired from on high, he goes forth freely, ready to endure any
trial and to make any sacrifice to declare the principles of life
and salvation to the people. This is the way that all Latter-day
Saints should always feel, and they who take this course are
continually in possession of the spirit of peace; they are worthy
the name of Saints, and the Scriptures inform us, that from such
no good thing will be withheld, and if a man wants anything that
is bad he is not a Saint, he does not belong to that catalogue.
144
My exhortation to you is to be faithful. You know the truth,
honor it by walking uprightly; serve God and you will be the most
independent men and women on the face of the earth. People come
amongst us sometimes and declare that there is no independence of
character amongst the Latter-day Saints, because they do the
bidding of one man--do just as one man says; but I heard a remark
made last night, that the Latter-day Saints are the most
independent people on earth, and I believe it. If it does not
manifest independence of character for men and women, who have
been honest and upright all their days, to leave their relatives,
neighbors, friends and associates, by whom they have always been
respected, to join the Latter-day Saints and be called everything
that is mean, where will you find it on the face of the earth.
Such men have joined the church in the states, and Bishop Hunter
is an instance. He was respected and honored by his neighbors,
and was known to have been an honest, upright, God-fearing man
all his days; and when such men have joined the Church they have
been talked of in the most scandalous manner. Vituperation has
been heaped upon them, the papers have slandered them, their
neighbors have turned against them, and called them thieves,
robbers, murderers, and everything mean, contemptible and bad.
But this treatment never changed the character of Bishop Hunter.
He came to Nauvoo, and was a good Latter-day Saint, a good,
honest man, faithful and true to his covenants, and he has proved
so up to the present day. This has been the treatment and the
course of very many of the members of this Church, and in
enduring and pursuing it, they have shown an independence of
character that is rarely equalled. They have also shown
themselves possessed of inspiration from the Almighty, and when
men enjoy this, their ways are not as men's ways but as God's
ways and they are willing to come out and acknowledge God, and to
enter into covenant to do his will as he makes it known to them.
This is the position of the Latter-day Saints--when God's will is
made known to them, the spirit within them testifies to the truth
thereof, and they know it is their business to perform their part
of the contract. Who can blame them for doing it?
145
As far as independence is concerned, we are a little too
independent of God, sometimes. I know that this is the feeling I
have to contend with. Brethren, let our hearts be uplifted to the
Almighty! Remember the covenants you have made; they are pure.
Keep them so. They are holy; keep them so! Do not disgrace them!
Brethren and sisters, if we value our salvation, temporal and
spiritual, let us be true to our covenants, and to the God we
have engaged to serve.
145
May God bless you. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / George
Q. Cannon, September 8, 1872
George Q. Cannon, September 8, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER GEORGE Q. CANNON,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, September 8, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
TITHING.
145
"Moreover he commanded the people that dwelt in Jerusalem to give
the portion of the priests and the Levites, that they might be
encouraged in the law of the Lord.
145
"And as soon as the commandment came abroad, the children of
Israel brought in abundance the first fruits of corn, wine, and
oil, and honey, and of all the increase of the field; and the
tithe of all things brought they in abundantly.
145
"And concerning the children of Israel and Judah, that dwelt in
the cities of Judah, they also brought in the tithe of oxen and
sheep, and the tithe of holy things which were consecrated unto
the Lord their God, and laid them by heaps.
145
"In the third month they began to lay the foundation of the
heaps, and finished them in the seventh month.
145
"And when Hezekiah and the princes came and saw the heaps, they
blessed the Lord, and his people Israel.
145
"Then Hezekiah questioned with the priests and the Levites
concerning the heaps.
145
"And Azariah, the chief priest of the house of Zadok, answered
him, and said, Since the people began to bring the offerings into
the house of the Lord, we have had enough to eat, and have left
plenty: for the Lord hath blessed his people; and that which is
left is this great store."
146
I have read this portion of Scripture, it having suggested itself
to my mind in view of our condition, and the circumstances which
surround us as a people. The law of tithing is of very ancient
origin. How early it was observed by the people of God is not
clearly set forth in the Scriptures, but we have an account of
its observance as early as the days of Abraham and Melchizedek.
We have also, anterior to that, an account given us in the
Scriptures of the bringing forward of offerings by Cain and Abel,
one bringing the first fruits of the earth, and the other the
first fruits of his flocks, as offerings unto the Lord their God.
From the days of Abraham down to the days of Jesus the Law of
tithing was observed by the people of God. It was made a
perpetual ordinance; in fact, the Lord promised unto Aaron and
his children that it should be an ordinance forever. And there is
this remarkable fact connected with this law--whenever it was
strictly observed, the blessings of God rested upon the people,
and when it was neglected the anger of God was kindled against
them; and a careful perusal of the Bible reveals to us that
neglect on the part of the children of Israel to pay tithing was
one of the most fruitful causes of unbelief, darkness of mind,
departure from the ways of God, and falling into idolatrous
practices.
146
I may be asked, why was this the case? Had the Lord need of the
fruits of the earth? Had he need of the cattle? Had he need of
the firstborn children? Had he need of a tenth of their gold and
silver? Was there any necessity for these things to be devoted to
him because of any want on his part? Of course not. The fruits of
the earth are his, the cattle on a thousand hills are his, and
the gold and silver are his, he created them, and he can cover or
uncover them at his will. The heaven of heavens is his dwelling
place, and he has no need of a temple built with hands; yet in
the economy of heaven, in the dealings of God with his children,
he reveals unto them laws, ordinances and institutions which he
requires them to observe, and which, when observed, bring
blessings, but a disregard of which brings down his anger and
indignation upon them. There is nothing plainer in Scripture than
this.
146
God commands his children to believe in him, and to render
obedience to his laws; he commands them to call upon his Son
Jesus Christ, or rather, to call upon him in the name of his Son
Jesus Christ. He commands them to pray unto him; he commands them
to repent of their sins and to be baptized for their remission,
to have hands laid upon them for the reception of the Holy Ghost,
and to observe other ordinances that he has revealed. What for?
Does prayer to him advance him? Does belief in him contribute
particularly to his happiness? Does repentance of sin on the part
of the creature add anything particularly to God's glory? Does
baptism for the remission of sins have any saving effect upon
him? Does the laying on of hands for the reception of the Holy
Ghost have the effect to increase his light, knowledge, wisdom or
power? We all recognize the fact that these commandments are
given for man's benefit, to increase his happiness, and to
prepare him for salvation and exaltation in God's kingdom. So
also with the law of tithing: it does not, when obeyed by man,
add to God's comfort, contribute to his wealth, increase his
happiness, or furnish him with that of which he would be
destitute if it were not obeyed; but it is given to man and he is
required to obey it that he may receive the reward, and that he
may acknowledge by this act--by this payment of the tenth of his
increase--that all he obtains is the gift, and comes from the
beneficent hand of God, and that he is dependent upon God. Hence
Abraham, after returning from the conquest of the kings, when he
was met by Melchizedek, paid to him the tithes of all,
acknowledging by this act the divinity of the law, and the
necessity of obedience thereunto. So strict was the Lord upon
this point in his dealings with the children of Israel in the
wilderness, that he gave very strict commandment unto Moses and
Aaron, and to those who presided over and officiated among the
people that they were to be very careful to collect, and the
people were to be very careful to pay their tithing.
147
One object of enforcing this law among Israel in ancient days was
to sustain the service of the house of God. The tribe of Levi was
selected from amongst all the other tribes--as the Lord's
peculiar inheritance. In the division of the land of Canaan among
the different tribes, the tribe of Levi was left without an
inheritance. The eleven tribes had their portions of Canaan set
apart to them under the direction of the servant of God, but the
tribe of Levi had no inheritance given unto them. They were told
by the Lord that they were his inheritance, and that which they
should have as an inheritance should be the tenth of the product
of all Israel: the tenth of the labor, the tenth of the cattle,
the tenth of the gold and silver, the tenth of the fruits of the
earth, and of everything that was produced in the land. And so
strict was this law, that when an animal passed under the rod, to
use the expression of Scripture, and thereby became a proper
animal to be devoted to the service of God, though it were a
choice animal, and one which the owner of it desired to retain,
the law provided that it could not be retained: it was devoted to
the Lord, and was holy on that account. And if the owner of it
were to substitute another animal instead of it, they both became
holy unto the Lord, and both became tithing animals and had to be
dedicated unto him, so strict was the Lord in enforcing this law
of tithing upon Israel. I often think of the practice which
prevails among us in this respect, how differently we act to what
ancient Israel did, and how it would pinch some of us if the law
of tithing were enforced among us as strictly as it was among
them. Not only was this the law of tithing, as I have rehearsed
it, with regard to substitution; but if a man wanted to redeem
that which was devoted for tithing, a certain valuation was put
upon it, and in addition to this valuation a certain sum of money
had to be paid before it could be redeemed. In other words
tithing had to be paid in kind, and if a man wanted to redeem his
tithing he had to pay not only the money valuation of it, but an
additional sum besides, before the redemption could be effected.
147
You can readily see, with a little reflection, the object the
Lord had in being thus strict with his people: it was to prevent
violations of that law, and to enforce the strictness in
observing it which was necessary to secure the promised
blessings.
147
I have said that a tenth of all the produce of Israel went to the
tribe of Levi; the Levites also had to pay a tenth of that which
they received, and that tenth was given to the priests, those who
ministered in the priesthood in the midst of the people, so that
there was in Israel a standing ministry--a tribe chosen from all
the tribes of Israel, whose office it was to minister in the
things of God, having been called specially by God to this
service.
148
You doubtless recollect that the Lord also required his
children--the people of Israel--to set part the first-born male
in every family to be his. They had been redeemed in Egypt, or
rather they had been saved from the scourge which fell upon all
the families of Egypt. When God plead with Pharaoh, through
Mores, to let the people go, destruction fell on all the
households of Egypt, the firstborn in every one being slain. But
among the children of Israel the firstborn were spared, and the
Lord claimed them as his; but it was inconvenient for them to be
used in the service of the Lord and he, therefore, after Israel
had left Egypt, commanded that all their firstborn should be
numbered; and after all of a certain age had been numbered, he
commanded that the tribe of Levi should be numbered, and upon
numbering them it was found that the firstborn of Israel
outnumbered the Levites by two hundred and seventy-three, if I
remember aright. The Lord had already stated that it was his
intention to take the tribe of Levi instead of the firstborn of
Israel, and when it was found that the firstborn outnumbered the
Levites by two hundred and seventy-three he commanded that they
should be redeemed, and that the redemption money should be
handed over to the tribe of Levi.
148
These were very singular laws and ordinances, but God had a
design in view in enforcing them. Everything he does is dictated
by infinite wisdom, and when the people strictly complied with
these laws and ordinances I have mentioned the Lord blessed them
in all things, so much so that it became a proverb in the midst
of Israel--"Honor the Lord with thy substance and with the first
fruits of thy increase, so shall thy barns be filled with plenty,
and thy presses burst forth with new wine." When the people
honored the Lord with their substance his blessings rested upon
them and they were prospered. The palmer worm, blight,
grasshopper and other evils which afflicted the land under some
circumstances, were removed far from them. Their trees did not
cast their fruit untimely, and they produced in abundance, and
Israel prospered and waxed fat in the land. They spread abroad on
the right hand and on the left, and the land teemed with
fertility. There were times when Israel neglected this law, when
they fell into idolatry, became careless and indifferent
concerning the requirements of the Lord; when the tribe of Levi
forsook the service of God and became idolaters; when the priests
quit the service of Jehovah, and the temples became desecrated
and filled with rubbish. It was during one of these periods that
Hezekiah came to the throne of his father Ahaz, who had allowed
the ordinances of God to fall into disuse. He put aside the
service of God and instituted in its stead idolatrous service.
Tithing had been neglected, and when Hezekiah came to the throne,
his heart being set in him to do right, he commenced to cleanse
the temple, and to restore the ordinances of the house of God,
and the ministers who had been set apart to this service he
called back to its performance, and the people brought in their
cattle, wine, oil, honey, and in fact a tithe of all their
substance as well as freewill offerings unto the Lord; and when
the king looked upon it, we are told, in the words which I have
read, that he blessed the Lord and his people Israel, and upon
inquiry of the chief priest he was told that "since the people
began to bring in the offerings into the house of the Lord, we
have had enough to eat, and have left plenty, for the Lord hath
blessed his people." The Lord blessed them because they had
complied with his requirements, and they were prospered. The land
prospered under their cultivation, and it yielded its strength in
abundance.
148
In connection with this I would like to read to you, my brethren
and sisters, the remarks of Malachi. You are doubtless familiar
with them, but they are words which can be read and pondered on
time and time again, without any loss of interest in the subject.
Says Malachi--
149
"Even from the days of your fathers ye are gone away from mine
ordinances, and have not kept them. Return unto me, and I will
return unto you, saith the Lord of hosts. But ye said, wherein
shall we return? "Will a man rob God? Yet ye have robbed me. But
ye say, Wherein have we robbed thee? In tithes and offerings.
149
"Ye are cursed with a curse: for ye have robbed me, even this
whole nation.
149
"Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be
meat in mine house, and prove me now herewith, saith the Lord of
hosts, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you
out a blessing, that there will not be room enough to receive
them.
149
And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes, and he shall not
destroy the fruits of your ground, neither shall your vine cast
her fruit before the time in the field, saith the Lord of hosts.
149
"And all nations shall call you blessed: for ye shall be a
delightsome land, saith the Lord of hosts."
149
We see here portrayed, in the most graphic and striking language,
the blessings that God promised unto his people Israel when they
observed this law, which he had given them in the beginning; and
we can also understand from the statements of Malachi, the curses
that would descend upon Israel if they did not observe this law.
"Ye are cursed with a curse," says he, "for ye have robbed me,
even this whole people." Strange language for God to use to his
people, it may be thought, that they should be accused of
robbery, that he should look upon them as thieves, as
appropriating that which was no theirs, because they did not
render unto him that which he had commanded them. They had
refused their tithes, they had withheld their offerings, and
consequently they were cursed. "But," says she "bring in your
tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat in mine house,
and prove me now, herewith, saith the Lord of hosts, if I will
not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing,
that there shall not be room enough to receive it," etc. What
great promises are herein conveyed to God's people!
149
I have drawn your attention to this law, my brethren and sisters,
to show you what it was in the days of Israel, when God
communicated his mind and will unto his people. I wish to impress
upon you this fact, which you can all realize and understand for
yourselves if you will read, that when Israel served God, and
were strict in observing this law, he blessed and prospered them,
and his favor was shown towards them; but when they neglected
this law, his anger and indignation were kindled against them,
and one of the most fruitful causes of disaster to Israel was
their neglect in this particular. There were two things connected
with Israel's disasters: one was neglecting to observe the laws
of God, prominent among which was the law of tithing; and the
other was their intermarriages with the heathen nations--those
who were idolaters. This proved the destruction of the wisest
king that ever reigned in Israel. It proved the destruction of
the nation itself, for it brought disaster and ruin upon it.
150
There is something connected with the law of tithing that, when
men do not have faith in God, appeals to their selfishness; and
for a people to be wholehearted in its observance, they need
faith in God. When Israel began to decline in faith in God, their
selfishness increased, and their determination became stronger
and stronger to grasp everything within their reach and to retain
everything they gained possession of; and as this feeling grew,
tithing and freewill offerings were withheld from the house of
God, and in consequence of this the blessing of God was also
withheld. There is a passage in the book of Amos on this subject,
which shows the Lord pleading with Israel, to bring them back to
the consideration of this law, as well as others that he had
given them. The Lord says through the Prophet Amos--
150
"And also I have withholden the rain from you, when there were
yet three months to the harvest: and I caused it to rain upon one
city and caused it not to rain upon another city: one piece was
rained upon, and the piece whereupon it rained not withered.
150
"So two or three cities wandered into one city, to drink water;
but they were not satisfied: yet have ye not returned unto me,
saith the Lord.
150
"I have smitten you with blasting and mildew: when your gardens
and your vineyards and your fig trees and your olive trees
increased, the palmer-worn devoured them: yet have ye not
returned unto me, saith the Lord."
150
These are the calamities which God sent upon Israel with the
intention to have them return to him; but notwithstanding they
were poured out and pestilence visited the land, the people
hardened their hearts against him, broke his laws and violated
his ordinances, and his anger was enkindled against them, and
they were driven out from the face of the land.
150
This law of tithing has been revealed to the Latter-day Saints.
If I remember aright, the last revelation in the Book of Doctrine
and Covenants, given as a revelation, is one in which this people
are commanded to observe this law of tithing for ever. With the
restoration of the Gospel in its fullness and purity there has
also been restored this law, and I am thankful to God for its
revelation. I am thankful for the restoration of every principle
of truth, of every law that pertains unto salvation, for they are
all for the benefit of the human family; and as long as the
Latter-day Saints have observed this law they have been blessed;
and we know by our own experience with grasshoppers--the Lord's
great army--how easily he could collect his dues from ancient
Israel if they robbed him by neglecting or refusing to pay their
tithes.
151
When men have come to this desert land and have seen the changes
that have been wrought in such a brief space of time, they have
wondered what has been the reason of it. The promise of God has
been given to this people as it was to ancient Israel upon this
point, and when the Latter-day Saints have observed the law of
tithing they have been favored of God, and his Spirit has rested
upon them, and not only upon them but also upon the land, and
where it was once so barren, unfruitful and forbidding that it
looked as though no human being could live by cultivating it, it
has been converted into a fruitful field. Men say, "What
wonderful results water has produced!" "What a great system this
irrigation is which you practice!" True, it is a wonderful
system, it is productive of wonderful results; but to my way of
thinking, or according to my views, these results are due to the
blessing of God on the labors of the Latter-day Saints, because
they have honored him by observing the law of tithing. We have
looked upon this land as the Lord's, and have viewed ourselves as
his tenants. He could not come down here in person and receive
from us the first fruits of the soil, or take our cattle, our
gold and silver, or any of our manufactures. Hence there must be
somebody to do it for him. In ancient days the children of Levi
acted in this capacity: they received the tithes and offerings,
but in these last days, there being none of the descendants of
Aaron that we know of in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, to act in this capacity, we have been under the necessity
of choosing other men to hold the authority which his seed would
hold if they were here in our midst, and they have been set apart
for the purpose of looking after temporal things, and to take or
collect the tithing, and see that it is properly managed and
appropriated to the uses for which it is designed.
151
I know how quickly men, in looking at "Mormonism" come to the
conclusion that it is a system by which a certain class will be
benefited and built up. I have heard men say that the "Mormon"
Elders had a pretty good thing of it; that Brigham Young, as
President of the Church, had a very nice arrangement, and that
those who were leaders in the Church had every reason for
desiring to retain their position, imagining, of course--though I
do not know why such an imagination should be prompted unless it
was because they judged us as they judged one another--that all
the means that is devoted by the people for the payment of
tithing is appropriated by President Young and those associated
with him in conducting the affairs of the Church.
152
Now I would not, as a speculation, endure for one month, that
which President Young has to pass through--the care,
responsibility, obloquy, and the weight that rests upon him
continually, for the sake of the tithing alone, if I could have
it all. He would not, no other man who is connected with this
people would. Why do they endure that which they pass through?
Because, by the revelations of God, they know that God has
established his Church once more in its fullness upon the earth,
because they know that angels have come from heaven to earth,
because they know that the holy priesthood has been again
bestowed upon man, with the authority to administer in the
ordinances of Gods house, as in ancient days; and because this
work is established by the commandment of God, and they are
called by his command to labor in it. But there is one advantage
which this unbelieving generation have over those which have
preceded us, and I think, in view of the selfishness which
prevails to-day in the midst of mankind, it is a wise provision.
If there had been a tribe set apart in this generation to receive
the tithing, I do not know but what the people, universally
almost, would have rebelled against it. If there had been a
privileged class to receive the tithing, the unbelief and
selfishness of man would have prompted them to find great fault
with it. But there is this peculiarity about the work in these
days--not only do the people pay their tithing, but the ministers
of life and salvation pay theirs--if they do not they should do,
and I believe they do--as punctually as the humblest member of
the Church, from President Young down--his Counsellors, the
Quorum of the Twelve, the Bishops of the Church, every faithful
man pays his tithing, the highest in the Church as well as he
whose name is scarcely known beyond the narrow circle in which he
moves; and, instead of the tithing going to sustain a class, as
it did in ancient days the tribe of Levi, or the priests, it goes
to build up the work of God--to erect temples and in various
other ways. Thousands and thousands of dollars have been spent in
sustaining the poor, and there is no class of men sustained in
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by the tithing.
There is this difference between ministers in this Church and
ministers in other churches; ministers in this church have to
labor for their own support; but in other churches they are
supported wholly by the people. On this account--in
Massachusetts, if I remember aright--ministers are not allowed to
be elected to the legislature; they are regarded as men unfit for
the practical duties of life. Men who devote themselves
exclusively to the service of their churches go into their
studies, read and fix up their sermons, and, on the Sabbath day,
they deliver their written, prepared discourses to their
congregations, and they are the most impractical men connected
with their churches. The ministry of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints is in direct and striking contrast with
this. The leaders of this Church are the most practical men in
it. The President of this Church is the most practical man
connected with the body. His Counselors, the Twelve Apostles and
the leading Elders and Bishops are all distinguished for being
practical men--men perfectly capable of doing everything
connected with a life in these mountains--men who are able to
sustain themselves and to help to sustain others. Our theory is
that a man who can not sustain himself and also teach others how
to sustain themselves is unfit for a leading position, and he
becomes a drone in the great hive. On that account we compel or
require every minister in this Church to sustain himself. Jesus
said that he who is greatest among you let him be the servant of
all, and we have carried this into effect--the servant of the
whole people is the President of the Church. The man who is the
greatest servant in a settlement is the President of the
settlement, or the Bishop of a ward. He lives for the people, his
time is devoted to their service, looking after their interests,
that is, if he does right and magnifies his calling. Is there a
helpless man in a ward? He becomes the object of the Bishop's
solicitude and care. Is there a family in indigence? Then they
are the wards of the Bishop, and he looks after them, and visits
them or sees that his teachers do, and that their wants are
supplied. By this means the ministry in the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints is an active one, carrying the
blessings of spiritual and temporal salvation into the midst of
the people.
153
It has been by the labors of such men that this community has
been founded, and this once barren desert changed into a fruitful
field and made to blossom as the rose. Through the labors of the
Apostles, Elders and Bishops of this Church, settlements have
been extended to the remotest bounds of the Territory, north,
south, east and west. They have been the pioneers in all great
labors, not saying to the people, Give us of your wealth and
substance, we want to be sustained in idleness, that we may rule
over you;" but on the contrary they have said, Come, brethren,
let us go and accomplish this labor that God has laid upon us."
They have been the pioneers in all these labors--these Apostles,
Presidents, Bishops, Dignitaries, these men who are supposed to
fatten on the labors of the people. Instead of doing that, they
have been the creators of the wealth that the people now enjoy;
they have been the fathers of the people, the people have been
the objects of their paternal care from the beginning until
to-day. I would not give a fig for a leading man who would not
act in this capacity; he is worth nothing, and deserves no place
in the midst of the people of God. Men to save their fellow-men
and to be ministers of Jesus Christ must have the spirit of
Jesus. His spirit was one of self-sacrifice, one that prompted
him to go forth and save the people, not to be a burden upon
them, not to crush them. That is priestcraft; and wherever that
system prevails a system of despicable priestcraft prevails, and
God is angry with it and with those who practice it.
153
I have said that I thank God for the revelation of this
principle. I do, for this reason--it appeals directly to man's
selfishness. It makes men sacrifice their selfish feelings, and
causes them to show faith in God. If a man has not faith in God
he is not very likely to pay tithing, or make many offerings. To
use a common expression, he looks after "number one," and
self-interest rules him. Such a man is an unworthy member of the
Church of Christ. But when every man pays his tithing and
witnesses unto God that that law is honorable in his sight, what
is the result? Is anybody impoverished by it? No. Are we as
Latter-day Saints any poorer because of the tithing we have paid?
Not one cent. When that tithing is properly appropriated it is
expended in works which add to the wealth of the entire
community. It contributes to the erection of public edifices; it
adorns those edifices, and creates a fund that is exclusively
devoted to the work of God, and that helps to build up and to
make the community prosperous and respectable in the earth. It is
a mighty engine or would be if properly wielded, in establishing
righteousness and truth in the earth, for let me say, brethren
and sisters, that a warfare has been commenced in the earth, and
it has been waged for a long series of years, speaking according
to the length of a man's life; and that warfare or contest is for
this earth, and it is between God and Satan.
153
Men wonder why it is that the "Mormon" community, with their good
qualities, their love of temperance and good order, and whose
members conduct themselves with such propriety, are so hated. It
has been frequently remarked to our Elders--"you are a pretty
good man, I would not take you to be a 'Mormon,' I would think
you are a man of too much intelligence to be a Latter-day Saint,"
as though, to be a member of this Church a man must be an
ignoramus, stupid blockhead, knave or fool in the estimation of
those not of our faith. God has not chosen that kind of a people,
he has chosen intelligent people, and he will give them greater
intelligence. But the reason we are hated is this--and it is the
same reason that Jesus and his Apostles were hated--we have the
truth, because we have received the revelations of God, and
because, in singleness of purpose, we are endeavoring to build up
the kingdom of God. Let any other people do what we have done and
they would be lauded to the skies. Let any other man do what our
leader has done and his fame, as a benefactor of his race, would
be worldwide. But our labors are only an additional reason for
hating us and for warring against us. It is, as I have said,
because there is a warfare in the world, and it will not end
until God is victorious and the earth is redeemed from sin.
154
I will revert now to the contrast there is between our desert
land and the lands from which we came. Our people were organized
in the State of New York--a most fruitful State. From New York
they moved to Ohio, another most fruitful State. From Ohio they
moved to Missouri, the garden, it might be said, of the United
States; and from Missouri to Illinois--all rich and productive
States. What is the result of our removals? We came to a land
that was a barren, uninviting desert, and what are the remarks of
visitors who come here now from the lands we formerly lived in?
They wonder how it is that our fruit trees are so healthy, and
that our land is so inviting. I honestly believe, if the people
of the United States would observe this law of tithing, devoting
a tenth of their substance to the service of the Most High, that
instead of this land being in many respects so superior, the
fertility which formerly prevailed there would be restored. And
when the day shall come, as come it will, when we shall go
back--and we expect to go back to Jackson County, Missouri, and
to lay the foundation of a temple, and to build a great city to
be called the centre stake of Zion, as much as we expect to see
the sun rise to-morrow; I say when that day shall come it will be
found that that country will have its old fertility restored, and
that and all the lands that the people of God will occupy will be
healthy and fruitful; and the land of any people who will honor
God by obeying this law of tithing will be made fruitful to them,
God will bless their industry, and they will rejoice and prosper
therein.
155
There are many things connected with this subject that might be
touched upon. One thing I will mention before I sit down, and
that is the growing tendency among this people to look after
their own interests and to neglect the interests of the work of
God. This remark has often been made to us: "When you Latter-day
Saints increase in wealth, are surrounded by the fashions of the
world, and the waves of civilization surge against your walls of
barbarism, all your peculiarities will recede and melt away, and
you will become like other people. Your plural system will
disappear, for no man can sustain half a dozen wives if they are
fashionable women, and no more than one." I have heard this time
and time again; and it is true that young men in the east will
not marry because of the expense, they do not want to take a wife
because they can not sustain her according to the requirements of
modern society. Now, there is a good deal of truth in this
statement. If I thought we would become subject to the follies
that now prevail I would have fears concerning the work of God
and its perpetuity on the earth. If I thought that this people
would lust after wealth, and that they would allow their feelings
and their hearts to become set on the accumulation of money, and
that they would think more of that than they do of God and his
work, I would fear for its perpetuity. But God has said this work
shall stand for ever, and that it shall not be given into the
hands of another people, and on that account I do not entertain
any fears as to the result. But there are individuals in this
community who have given way to these feelings about tithing.
When men are poor, it is noticed that they are punctual in paying
it, but when they increase in wealth it is less so. For instance,
when a man has ten thousand dollars it looks a big pile to give
one thousand as tithing. If a man's tithing amounted to no more
than five, ten, twenty, or even a hundred dollars, says he, "I
can give that, but a thousand is a great amount," and when called
upon to give a thousand, no, I will not say "called upon," the
difficulty is we are not called upon enough, there has been
neglect in calling upon us; but when it comes to this, why a
thousand dollars looks like a very large sum, and the party whose
duty it is to pay it is apt to hesitate and feel reluctance, and
he perhaps says, "I can invest this thousand dollars in such and
such a way, and it will produce so much interest, and I will pay
it then;" and he allows himself to be satisfied with this course.
155
There is this remarkable fact connected with tithing in our
midst. You are all familiar with the apostacy of some of our
leading merchants--men who dealt in merchandize and who, for
years, by their exorbitant prices literally fleeced the people of
their means. This was before the construction of the railroads.
Well, it was predicted years before, that sooner or later they
would deny the faith and leave the Church. It was easily
understood that no man could remain in the Church, if it was a
pure Church, and practice a system of extortion on his brethren,
and the prediction was made, and strange as it may seem--though
it is not strange to those who understand the working of these
things--it was fulfilled to the very letter, and those men did
deny the faith, and they are now opponents of that work which
they once testified they knew to be true; and an examination of
the tithing records would show this remarkable fact--that some of
them did not pay their tithing as they should have done. Those
who have prospered most are they who paid their tithing honestly.
And I have noticed it, as an individual, that when men close up
their hearts in this direction, and neglect their tithing, and
their offerings on fast days for the benefit of the poor, they
lose their faith. This is one evidence of the loss of faith and
confidence in the work.
155
I will tell you how I feel now, if I were to be tempted in his
direction, I would say, "Mr. Devil, I have no lot or part with
you. I will pay my tithing, and if you say anything I will double
it. I know that there is a blessing attending this. I know God
prospers those who are strict and punctual in attending to this.
I know he blesses those who feed the poor, clothe the naked and
attend to the wants of their indigent brethren and sisters. I
should deplore the increase of wealth in our midst if it created
class distinctions, if it should create a feeling that, "I am
better than thou, because I wear a finer coat, dwell in a better
house, ride in a finer carriage and have finer horses, or because
my children are better schooled and better dressed than yours." I
should deplore the increase of wealth among us if such results
were witnessed. I should expect the anger of God would be kindled
against us, and that we should be scourged as a people until we
repented in deep humility before him.
156
God has bestowed upon us the earth and the elements in and around
it, and he has given us them for our good. There is no sin in
taking the wool from the sheep's back and spinning and
manufacturing it into fine broadcloth. There is no sin in
planting mulberry trees and feeding silk-worms and making fine
dresses and ribbons with the silk which they produce. There is no
sin in spinning the flax and making fine linen of it. There is no
sin in taking the dyes that abound in nature and dying these
silks and other fabrics in the most beautiful manner. There is no
sin in digging gold and ornamenting our service with it, and in
covering our tables in the Lord's house therewith. There is no
sin in taking silver and making furniture for the Lord's house.
There is no sin in making fine carriages, and in painting and
fitting them up in the most exquisite manner. There is no sin in
having a noble race of horses, or a fine breed of cattle. There
is no sin in building houses and decorating them, having fine
furniture, carpets, mirrors, baths, heating apparatus and every
appliance and convenience of modern civilization therein. There
is no sin in all this, or in any blessing God has given us, but
there is sin in abusing these things. There is sin in being
lifted up in pride because God has bestowed them upon us. There
is sin in thinking, "I am better than another man who is created
out of the dust of the earth, as I am; who is a child of God, as
I am; who came from God, as I did, and who will go to God as I
hope to do." Brethren and sisters, there is no sin in having what
I have named. We may have fine houses, fine gardens or orchards,
glorious temples, a fine land, and we may make our homes heavenly
places, and fit for angels to visit, and there is nothing wrong
in all this, neither in adorning the bodies God has given unto
us, if our hearts are humble before him, and we glorify him in
our lives. But this is the great difficulty and has been from the
beginning. When wealth multiplies the people get lifted up in the
pride of their hearts, and they look down on their poor brethren
and despise them, because they are better educated, have better
manners, and speak better language--in a word, because they have
advantages which their poor brethren and sisters have not. There
is sin in this, and God is angry with a people who take this
course. He wants us to be equal in earthly things, as we are in
heavenly. He wants no poor among his people; he does not want the
cry of the oppressed to ascend from the midst of the Latter-day
Saints, and God forbid that it ever should! God forbid that the
cry of any should ever ascend from the midst of the Latter-day
Saints because of oppression or because of the lack of any
blessing necessary for comfort! God wants us to feed the hungry,
clothe the naked, and impart our substance for their support. But
he does not want the poor to envy the rich. That is just as great
a sin on their part as for the rich to oppress them. They must
not envy the rich; they must not look on their brethren and
sisters and envy them that which they have. That is sinful, that
is wrong, and the man or woman who indulges in it, indulges in a
wrong spirit. God wants us to build each other up in
righteousness. He wants us to love one another and to seek one
another's benefit. This is the spirit of the Gospel of Jesus
Christ. He has revealed it unto us, and we must cultivate it.
156
I look upon this law of tithing as an equitable law: it comes
alike upon the rich and the poor. The poor person who pays his
ten dollars tithing gives as much in proportion as the richest
man in the community. The rich gives no more than a tenth, and
the poorest gives no less. We are all alike, then, in this
respect when we observe this law of tithing; and it should be
strictly observed by us, if we want the blessings of God to rest
upon us.
157
I have thought, I do not know how truly, that of late there has
been a disposition among the Latter-day Saints to be penurious in
this respect. it has seemed to me that with the increase of God's
blessings around us, a disposition has been manifest to be
stingy, to withhold our substance, and to tie up the hands of
those who have the great work to perform. We want to build this
temple, and other temples in other parts of our land. We want to
fill the land with temples--houses that shall be dedicated to the
Most High God. At the present time people in St. George and other
settlements in that region--from 350 to 400 miles from this city
who wish to be married according to the order and ordinances that
we believe in and view as necessary, have to make this long
journey one way, and the same the other, making 700 or 800 miles
travel, to have the ordinances of God's house solemnized as we
believe they ought to be. What a labor this is! This has to be
obviated.
157
We are building a temple in Salt Lake City; but this is only one.
There will be doubtless a temple built in St. George, and
probably others in the north, east, west, and throughout the
land. Do you think the tithing is all going to be spent in Salt
Lake City? Do you think that the remote settlements are all going
to contribute of their strength and their increase to build up
this city alone? No, this would not be right: this would be
filling the heart and letting the extremities suffer. The
extremities must be sustained. Tithing must be devoted to the
building of temples and places of worship, so that the Latter-day
Saints in every section of the Territory may go and attend to the
ordinances for the living and the dead. We have a mighty work to
do in this connection. God has revealed this law, and, as I have
said, it is a law that works alike upon all. It is not oppressive
on any class, but it is distributed equally upon all classes. Let
us observe it, and all the laws of God, that we may become a
blessed people; that we may increase in wealth, and use that
wealth to the glory of God; that there may be neither pauperism,
want, nor ignorance throughout our entire land, and that the
grateful prayers of a blessed and happy people may ascend from
every habitation throughout all these valleys unto the Lord of
hosts, praising his holy name for the numerous blessings which he
has bestowed upon us, for the peace, good order, union and every
other blessing we have received from him.
157
That this may be the case is my prayer in the name of Jesus,
Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, October 9, 1872
righam Young, October 9, 1872
DISCOURSE BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered at the 42nd Semi-Annual Conference, Salt Lake City,
October 9, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
SAINTS SHOULD SUSTAIN THEMSELVES--KEEP THE
COMMANDMENTS--ABUSES--POWER
OF RIGHTEOUS COMBINATION OF LABOR.
158
I want to express my feelings to the Latter-day Saints upon
certain points of business which pertain to our welfare, and I
wish to do it without being obliged to raise my voice so high and
so loud as to infringe upon the organs of speech to that degree
that I shall have to stop. If the people will be still, they can
hear me in my common voice perfectly easy. I will not go into all
the details with regard to the duties of the Latter-day Saints,
and their desires, as they have manifested them by gathering out
from the world, and assembling themselves together. They
generally understand them, and they can read for themselves the
doctrines of the Church, and the reasons why we are gathered
together. But I wish now to impress on the minds of the people
the necessity of our taking a course to be able to exist and to
sustain ourselves--to have something to eat and wear--hats to put
on our heads, and coats, mantles, blankets, vests, shirts,
garments and other things suitable to wear and to make our bodies
comfortable, provided that the Lord should knock the underpinning
from under Babylon. The time will come when Babylon will fall. If
it should fall now, it would leave us pretty destitute. We would
soon wear out our head dresses and fine clothing, and what should
we do? Why, we should be as badly off as the Saints were when
they came into this valley, twenty-five years ago. They picked up
a few buckskins, antelope skins, sheepskins, buffalo skins, and
made leggings and moccasins of them, and wrapped the buffalo
robes around them. Some had blankets and some had not; some had
shirts, and I guess some had not. One man told me that he had not
a shirt for himself or family. If Babylon should happen to tip
over, so that we could not reach out and gather the necessaries
of life, we should be in a bad condition. I want to put you in
mind of these things, and it is my duty to say to the Latter-day
Saints that they should take measures to sustain themselves--they
should lay a foundation for feeding and clothing themselves.
159
You are well aware that there has been a great deal of money
spent in this Territory to get machinery for the purpose of
working up the wool and cotton, and I think you are pretty well
aware that there have been a great many thousand words spoken to
the Latter-day Saints in these valleys, upon the necessity of
raising sheep, though we have had a tide of opposition against
this. Still, wool-raising is now proven to be a success in these
mountains, any and all of the Bishops to the contrary
notwithstanding. This is a fine wool growing country, no better
in the world. We have proved this; and we have got a great deal
of machinery here to work up the wool, most of which is now
standing still for the want of wool. Many of those who have been
prevailed upon to raise sheep, have got so covetous and love
money so well that they must sell their wool for money, and send
it out of the country, in consequence of which the factories are
now standing still. I think there are a few who will recollect
that, in the excitement of purchasing wool here last May, June
and July, in many instances I refused to buy their wool. If I
would have paid a little more than agents from the east, I could
have got it; in some instances I got it for a little less. I
bought some and let a good deal go, and told the people with whom
I conversed upon the subject, that I would let the buying of wool
alone until fall, then I thought I could send east, buy my wool
and ship it back here, and I believe I could get it cheaper than
I could get it then. And it is now verily so, for I can send to
Philadelphia, New York, Boston, or anywhere in the eastern
country, and buy wool and ship it back here from 10 to 30 percent
cheaper than I could buy it here last spring. I can send west and
buy wool and ship it here and save a still higher per centage.
This is the difference in the price of wool last spring and the
fore part of the summer, and now what our friends and brethren
who own factories will do with regard to purchasing wool, I am
not able to say. Some of them, probably, are able to buy wool,
and quite a number are not, and they who are not will, in all
probability, let their factories stand still.
160
I want the brethren and sisters to take an interest in sustaining
ourselves here in these mountains. It is the duty of the Bishops
to see that the members of their Wards take a course that will
build up the kingdom of God, not only in providing food and
raiment, but see that the people do their duty with regard to the
law of God in preserving themselves in purity. My mind is now
upon those things which some people call temporal, and I wish to
urge them upon the Latter-day Saints. I want them to save their
wool and to keep it in this Territory. If we have not factories
sufficient to work up all the wool that grows in this Territory,
and in these mountains, we will send and get more machinery, and
build more factories, and work up the wool for the people. It is
the duty of those who grow wool to keep it here. It is the duty
of the wife of the man who owns sheep to look to it, and see that
that wool is not sold and carried out of the country. It is the
duty of the Bishops to see these men, and urge upon them the
necessity of keeping the wool in the mountains where it can be
worked up; and the Bishops should set the example themselves. We
expect they do; if they do not, they are not fit for Bishops. It
is the duty of the Bishops to see the wives of these men and
their children, that they may prevail on their greedy, covetous
fathers or husbands, who would sacrifice the prosperity of the
kingdom of God for a little worldly wealth, and see that they do
not run distracted or go crazy over a little money. I say the
Bishops should see to it, that these men who have sheep act like
rational, reasonable men. What are you here for? What did you
come for? Virtually you all say you left Babylon and came here to
build up the kingdom of God; but our acts speak as loud, and
little louder than our words can. We witness to one another and
to the Heavens, and to all people, that we believe in building up
the kingdom of God on the earth. There is an item that ought to
be before the Latter-day Saints with regard to the kingdom as it
will be built up. They ought to teach themselves--read the
Scriptures, the Old and New Testament, the prophecies, what the
Savior and his Apostles have said, and what has been delivered to
us in the latter days, and compare them, and then draw their own
conclusions, and see if they are under the necessity of working
temporally, literally, manually, physically for the building up
of the kingdom of heaven. I say that we are or it never will be
built up. With regard to the fundamental facts of our doctrines,
we can not show to any person that we have faith therein, except
by our works. If I were now in the world, and an Elder was to
come along and preach, and I were to go and hear him, the act of
walking to the meeting house or to the private dwelling house,
would be manual labor. I might believe every word such an Elder
said in preaching the Gospel, but if I never took any steps
towards fulfilling his requirements who would know anything about
it? Nobody on the face of the earth. Would there be any
manifestation that I had faith? Not the least in the world, and
if it started to grow in my heart while listening to the Elder,
without works on my part it would soon die out and cease to
exist. If I do believe, it is a manual labor to get up and say to
the people, "I believe that what this man has said is true." That
is an exercise of the body, and a temporal labor. Well, this
Elder says, we should repent of our sins. I do repent. He says we
should obey the Gospel, and the first thing after having faith or
believing it, is to go down into the waters of baptism, and to do
that is a temporal act, physical labor; and the act of baptism by
him is also a temporal act or labor. And so in everything else
with regard to the Gospel and the building up of the kingdom of
God on the earth--we must have works or we can not have faith. I
can not divide between the two. The Elder is preaching, I
believe, I confess and obey, and I can not, for my soul, divide
the temporal, the manual, the physical labor form the internal
faith and hope and joy which the spirit gives, and which cause
obedience in my acts.
161
I wish to make this application right here to the Latter-day
Saints. If we believe that God is about to establish his kingdom
upon the earth, we believe firmly that we have got to perform a
manual, temporal labor to bring this about. If the kingdom of
this world ever become the kingdoms of our God and his Christ, it
will be by his people conforming to the plans instituted for the
establishment of a kingdom here on the earth. You may call it
temporal, no matter what it is called, it is territory, it is
dominion. In the first place we must have territory, then we must
have people; and in order to organize this kingdom, we must have
officers and laws to govern or control the subjects. To make the
organization of a kingdom perfect, we must have every appendage
necessary and proper, so that the Savior can come and reign king
of nations as he does king of Saints. We shall be under the
necessity of raising breadstuff and then we shall want to eat it.
We shall have to raise our fruit as well as eat it; we shall have
to raise our vegetables as well as eat them. We shall be under
the necessity then of making hats or of going without them; we
shall be under the necessity of making clothing--coats, vests,
pants, shirts and so on, or else go without them. We shall be
under the necessity of having courts organized, unless all are in
the Lord and all walk in his way; if that were the case I do not
know that we should want any sheriff, marshals, constables
magistrates, jurors, judges or governors, because the word of the
Lord would govern and control every person; but until that time
arrives we shall want officers, so that we will be prepared to
reckon with the transgressor, and we shall have transgressors in
building this kingdom, for it will be some time yet before all
are in the Lord. The law is for the transgressor, consequently we
must have officers, and we already have in this kingdom as now
organized all the officers necessary, every quorum, every
organization, every court and authority necessary to rule all the
nations that ever were or ever will be upon the earth, if they
serve God, or try to do so. But if we must have an organization
after the order and wishes of those who are ignorant of the
things of God, we must have political and municipal
organizations. Kingdoms are organized to suit the conditions of
the people, whether the government is that of the people, in the
hands of a few individuals, or centred in one. But the kingdom of
heaven, when organized upon the earth, will have every officer,
law and ordinance necessary for the managing of those who are
unruly, or who transgress its laws, and to govern those who
desire to do right, but can not quite walk to the line; and all
these powers and authorities are in existence in the midst of
this people.
162
Now, we have this kingdom organized here upon the earth, and we
shall be under the necessity, by and by, of understanding this,
or we will be left in a very destitute condition. It is my duty
to say to the people that it is their duty to make their
clothing; and permit me to say, still further, upon the subject
of the fashion of cutting cloth and putting it together again,
that it is most useless, unbecoming and ridiculous. The present
custom of many is such that I would as soon see a squaw go
through the streets with a very little on, as to see clothing
piled up until it reaches, perhaps, the top of the hedge or fence
its wearer is passing. If I do not say much about such customs
and fashions, I shall probably skip over some naughty words. In
my feelings they are positively ridiculous, they are so useless
and unbecoming. Do you recollect a fashion there was a few years
ago, that has now nearly ceased when a woman could not walk
through the streets without holding her clothes two feet in front
of her if her arm was long enough? I shall not say what I thought
of those who followed this fashion. Now it is on the other side,
and I do not know but they will get two humps on their backs,
they have one now, and if they get to be dromedaries it will be
no wonder, not the least in the world. I recollect a fashion of
cutting up cloth some forty years ago, that was very peculiar. A
lady would go into a store and say to a merchant, "I would like
to get a dress pattern this morning." "Very well, what will you
have?" "Oh, bring down your goods and show them. This suits
pretty well! I think I will take this." "Madame," says the
merchant, "If you will buy the sleeves, I will give you the
dress." This, of course, is jocosely said. I refer now to what
was called the "mutton-legged" sleeve--by comparison it took
seven yards for the sleeves, and three for the dress. That was
the way they dressed then. How unbecoming! How unbecoming it is
to see ladies dress as they do in some places at the present day.
Then another fashion is to wear their dresses short in front,
walking through the streets, and a long train dragging in the
dirt behind. How unbecoming! This is not modesty, gentility, or
good taste; it does not belong to a lady at all, but to an
ignorant, extravagant, or vain-minded person, who knows not true
principle. I take the liberty of saying that these fashions are
displeasing in the sight of truth, mercy and justice. It is
displeasing to the Spirit of the Lord for persons to array
themselves in any way whatever that is disgusting to the eye of
the pure and the prudent. There is not a Latter-day Saint nor a
Former-day Saint that ever did, or ever will expect to see any
such customs or fashions when they get into heaven. If they were
to see an angel, they would see a being beautifully but modestly
dressed, white, comely and nice to look upon.
162
I would like to advise the Latter-day Saints to avoid these
foolish customs and habits. Let them pass by and not follow them;
they do not belong to us. I would like to repeat to the ladies
what we have said hundreds and thousands of times--they should
make their own head-dresses and fashions, independent of all the
rest of the inhabitants of the earth. Pay no attention to what
others do, it is no matter what they do, or how they dress.
Latter-day Saints should dress in that plain, neat, comely manner
that will be pleasing and prudent, in every sense of the word,
before the Lord, and try and please him that we serve the Being
that we acknowledge as our God. Not flaunting, flirting and
gossiping, as a great many are, and thinking continually of their
dresses, and of this, that and the other that will minister to
and gratify their vanity. Such women seldom think of their
prayers.
162
I am extending my remarks much longer than I intended. But how is
it about the Word of Wisdom? Do we observe it? We should do, and
preserve ourselves in all things holy before the Lord. How is it
about keeping the Sabbath day? We have some articles that we
would like to read here, but the people have them to read at
their leisure. We should observe the Ten Commandments, for
instance, that were given to Moses. If we do that, we shall be a
pretty good people. But there is nothing in those commandments
about building factories and raising wool, for the children of
Israel, at the time they were given, were in a condition that
they did not need factories, they did not need to raise wool. If
they had goats and sheep with them, they made mutton, and tanned
the skins probably, but I do no know what they did with them. It
appears that their clothing did now wax old, and they probably
had no need to spin or weave. But we have need to, we have got to
make our own clothing, or to get it some other way--buy it or
else go without it; and we ought to keep the Word of Wisdom, and
keep the Sabbath day holy, and preserve ourselves in the
integrity of our hearts before God.
163
I want to ask if the people pay their tithing? Bishops, do the
people of your wards pay their tithing? I will answer the
question for you and say, No, they do not. Some people in modern
times shudder at the word tithing--it is a term they are not used
to. They are used to sustaining Priests, to donating for building
meeting houses, and administering to those who wait at the table
of the Lord, or that do their preaching and praying for them. And
this is done by subscription donation, and passing the plate, hat
or basket, but the word "tithing" is frightful to them. I like
the term, because it is scriptural, and I would rather use it
than any other. The Lord instituted tithing, it was practiced in
the days of Abraham, and Enoch and Adam and his children did not
forget their tithes and offerings. You can read for yourselves
with regard to what the Lord requires. Now do the Latter-day
Saints pay their tithing? They do not. I want to say this much to
those who profess to be Latter-day Saints--if we neglect our
tithes and offerings we will receive the chastening hand of the
Lord. We may just as well count on this first as last. If we
neglect to pay our tithes and offerings we will neglect other
things, and this will grow upon us until the Spirit of the Gospel
is entirely gone from us, and we are in the dark, and know not
whither we are going.
163
It is the duty of the Bishops to see that their wards pay
tithing. But we have Bishops who are not reliable--men, for
instance, who will take tithing grain when it brings a good price
in cash, and when good beef is bringing cash they are so kind to
their wards, and especially to their sons, that if a son has got
a parcel of wild horses on the prairies that are not worth a
yearling calf a head, they will say to him, "Drive up your wild
horses, my boy, I will trade with you, and let you have neat
stock, yearlings, or two years or three years old, or wheat that
is in the tithing bin, I will take your horses. I will send down
word to the General Tithing office, that there are so many horses
here belonging to the tithing office." Such horses are a curse to
us, or I can say they have been to me as an individual. I have
raised stock enough to supply this whole Territory, if they had
been taken care of. But they were like the Indian's boy. The
missionary had been telling him that if he brought up a child in
the way he should go, when he was old he would not depart from
it. But the old chief has got it, just about as it is, and said
he, "Yes, bring up a child, and away he goes;" and this is the
way the horses go. And as far the neat stock, if any of it ever
gets out of my sight that I do no know where it is, and can not
send and get it, I always calculate that a thief will have it. I
never trouble myself to look after it, there are too many men
riding on the prairies with their blankets behind them, and their
dinner in their blanket, and their lassoes with them to hunt up
all the stock there is. This wild stock that is turned in on
tithing is a curse to us. And where does the wheat go to? I am
not disposed to, but I could tell names of Bishops who have taken
our tithing wheat out of the bins and it has been sold by them or
their families, And they have taken our stock that we wanted here
for beef to feed the public lands, and traded it off for wild
horses. This is a pretty hard saying, but it is true, and I could
tell their names if I were obliged to.
164
If the people will pay their tithing, we will go and do the work
that is required of us. It is very true that the poor pay their
tithing better than the rich do. If the rich would pay their
tithing we should have plenty. The poor are faithful and prompt
in paying their tithing, but the rich can hardly afford to pay
theirs--they have too much. If a man is worth enough that he
would have a thousand dollars to pay, it pinches him. If he has
only ten dollars he can pay one; if he has only one dollar he can
pay ten cents; it does not hurt him at all. If he has a hundred
dollars he can possibly pay ten. If he has a thousand dollars he
looks over it a little and says, "I guess I will pay it; it ought
to be paid any how;" and he manages to pay his ten dollars or his
hundred dollars. But suppose a man is wealthy enough to pay ten
thousand, he looks that over a good many times, and says, "I
guess I will wait until I get a little more, and then I will pay
a good deal." And they wait and wait, like an old gentleman in
the east; he waited and waited and waited to pay his tithing
until he went down, I guess, to hell, I do not know exactly; but
he went to hades, which we call hell. He went out of the world,
and this is the way with a great many. They wait and continue
waiting, until, finally, the character comes along who is called
Death, and he slips up to them and takes away their breath, then
they are gone and cannot pay their tithing, they are too late,
and so it goes.
164
Now this is finding fault with the rich, and I am going to find
fault with the poor by and by. But if we will pay our tithing we
will be blessed; if we refuse to do so the chastening hand of the
Lord will be upon this people, just as sure as we are here. You
may say I am threatening you Take it just as you please. I do not
care. You may grease it and swallow it, or swallow it without
greasing, just as you have a mind to. It is true, and we will
find it so.
165
Will the Latter-day Saints pay their tithing? Will they keep the
Sabbath day holy? Will they deal justly with their neighbors? In
my own feelings I excuse a great many naughty things that are
done in our midst. I know that men and women brought up in
different countries come here with their prejudices and with the
instincts which they have had bred in and born with them, and
which have grown up with them; and many of these traits of
character are obnoxious to others brought up under other
circumstances. These traditions cling to the people, and cause
them to do many things which they would not do if they had been
differently taught. Their morals have not been looked after in
their youth and as prudently preserved as they should have been.
Children should be taught honesty, and they should grow up with
the feeling within them that they should never take a pin that is
not their own; never displace anything, but always put everything
in its place. If they find anything seek for the owner. If there
is anything of their neighbor's going to waste, put it where it
will not waste, and be perfectly honest one with another. Take
the world of mankind and they are not overstocked with honesty. I
have proved that. In my youth I have seen men, who were
considered good, clever, honest men, who would take the advantage
of their neighbors or workmen if they could. I have seen deacons,
Baptists, Presbyterians, members of the Methodist church, with
long, solid, sturdy faces and a poor brother would come along and
say to one of them, "brother, such-a-one, I have come to see if I
could get a bushel of wheat, rye or corn of you. I have no money,
but I will come and work for you in harvest," and their faces
would be drawn down so mournful, and they would say, "I have none
to spare. "Well, deacon, if you can let me have one bushel, I
understand you have considerable, I will come and work for you
just as long as you say, until you are satisfied, in your harvest
field, or haying or anything you want done." After much talk this
longfaced character would get it out, "If you will come and work
for me two days in harvest, I do not know but I will spare you a
bushel of rye."
165
When the harvest time comes the man could have got two bushels of
rye for one day's work; but the deacon sticks him to his bargain,
and makes him work two days for a bushel of wheat or rye. I used
to think a good deal, but seldom spoke about any such thing, for
I was brought up to treat everybody with that respect and
courtesy that I could hardly allow myself to think aloud, and
consequently very seldom did so. I thought enough of such
religion, at any rate, that such Christians called me an infidel,
because I could not swallow such things but I could not if they
had been greased over with fresh butter. I did not read the Bible
as they read it; and as for there being Bible Christians, I knew
there were none; and if their religion was the religion they
liked, said I, "Just go your own way, I want none of it." I
wanted no religion that produced such morals.
165
If we pay our tithing, and begin to live a little stricter than
we have heretofore, in our faith, cease to break the Sabbath,
cease to spend our time in idleness, cease to be dishonest and to
meddle with that which is not our own, cease to deceive and to
speak evil of one another, and learn the commandments of the
Lord, and do them, we shall be blessed.
166
Suppose we should say to a few of the Latter-day Saints, if we
could find those who would answer the purpose, "how would you
like to build up a stake of Zion, a little city of Enoch? How
would you like this? Would you like to enter into a covenant, and
into bonds, according to the law of our land, and let us bind
ourselves together to go into a systematic co-operative system,
not only in merchandizing, but in farming and in all mechanical
work, and in every trade and business there is; and we will
classify the business throughout, and we will gather together a
few hundred families, and commence and keep the law of God, and
preserve ourselves in purity. How would the Latter-day Saints
like it? Do you think there could any be found who would be
willing to do this?" Let me say to you, my brethren, I have a
very fine place to start such a society as this that would
probably sustain from five to ten thousand persons. I would like
to make a deed of this property to such a society, and enter into
a covenant with men of God and women of God that we would go to
and show the world and show the Latter-day Saints how to build up
a city of Zion, and how to increase intelligence among the
people, how to walk circumspectly before our God and before one
another, and classify every branch of labor, taking advantage of
every improvement, and of all the learning in the world, and
direct the labor of men and women, and see what it would produce;
follow it out for ten years, and then look at the result. Our
friends who visit us here say that we have done a good work, and
we bear testimony that we have been greatly prospered. It is true
that most of the people in this house came here like myself,
comparatively naked and barefoot. I left all I had in the States.
I say all--no. I had some wives and children whom I brought along
with me. Some of them had shoes to their feet, some had not; some
had bonnets, some had none. Some of my children had clothing, and
some had very little; and we took up our line of march and left
all. I believe for some four pretty nice brick houses, and a nice
large farm, timber land and so on, I got one span of little
horses and a carriage worth about a hundred dollars, the horses
were worth about sixty dollars apiece, the harness about twenty.
I think that was everything I got for my property. We came here
and we have been prospered and blessed. If I had the privilege of
living with a community that would do as I say for ten years, I
would show them that our blessings now, in a temporal point of
view, have been but as a drop to the bucketful. But would we bear
this? Would our feelings submit to this? Would we not want to go
and serve the devil if the Lord were to heap riches upon us? We
see that what he does now makes men covetous, they can not even
pay their tithing. Well, do we get all that we want? No, each man
wants it all, and as long as this is the case with us, I think
the saying common among the boys in my youth will be good--"Every
man for himself, the devil for us all." Just as long as every man
works for himself we are not the Lord's; we are not Christ's, we
are not his disciples in this point of view, at any rate. If we
had faith to be baptized, we do not carry out the principles of
the salvation that he has wrought out for us. He is going to set
up his kingdom--a literal, temporal kingdom. It will be a kingdom
of priests by and by. If we had been willing to fully carry out
the rules of the kingdom, followed counsel, and worked together,
for twenty-five years past, the blessings we have received are
not a drop in the bucket to what we would have received.
166
Some twelve or fifteen years I labored faithfully with our
merchants here, before I could get them to break through that
everlasting covetous crust that was over them, and consent to
operate together in merchandizing so as to give the people a
chance with us. And it was the design and the feeling of men
here, belonging to the Church, to aggrandize themselves and to
monopolise to themselves the wealth of the community. And if
another one sprang up and had good luck they would take him into
the corps, into their fellowship, and he would belong to the
order, and that was to make a few rich, and grind down and make
every other man poor. That was the design, no question of it. But
I determined with God and the good to help me that I would break
that everlasting covetous crust and I succeeded at last. Are we
making enough in our mercantile business here now? Yes, we are
making all we should make. I suppose a great many would like to
know how we are doing. It would be no harm for me to tell you
perhaps that, the last six months, the Board of Directors of
Zion's Co-operative Mercantile Institution are able to declare a
dividend of ten per cent, with five per cent in reserve, which is
added to the capital stock, and is as good as money. That is good
enough for me, it yields some thirty per cent per annum.
167
If we would work together in our farming, in our mechanism, be
obedient and work as a family for the good of all, it would be
almost impossible for anybody to guess the success we would have.
But we have got to do it in the Lord. We must not do it with a
covetous heart. Always be ready and willing that the Lord should
have it all, and do what he pleases with it. I have asked a favor
of the Lord in this thing, and that is not to place me in such
circumstances that what he has given me shall go into the hands
of our enemies. God forbid that! But let it go for the preaching
of the Gospel, to sustain and to gather the poor, to build
factories, make farms, and set the poor to work, as I have
hundreds and thousands that had not anything to do. I have fed
and clothed them and taken care of them until they have become
comparatively independent. I have made no man poor, but thousands
and thousands rich, that is, the Lord has, through your humble
servant.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / John
Taylor, May 26, 1872
John Taylor, May 26, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER JOHN TAYLOR,
Delivered in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, Sunday, May 26,
1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THINGS OF GOD REVEALED ONLY BY THE SPIRIT OF GOD--DEVELOPMENT
OF THE WORK OF GOD, ETC.
168
I am pleased to have the privilege of meeting with the Saints in
this place, and of speaking to them such things as the Lord may
place in my mind to communicate. I am well aware that I do not
know how to speak, and that you do not know how to hear, unless
we are all under the influence and guidance of the Spirit of the
living God. We are spiritual beings, and literal and temporal
beings; we have to do with time and eternity, and, as we can know
nothing about eternity and nothing about God only as he shall
reveal it unto us, it follows as a necessary consequence that all
the theories, ideas and dogmas of men can be of no avail in
instructing the human family in things pertaining to God and
eternity. This holds good in regard to all of our affairs in
life, whether it be the life that now is or the life that is to
come. We know very little about the world we live in. We know
very little about ourselves, about our own bodies, about the
spirit and mind of man, or the operation of the Spirit of God
upon that spirit and mind, and much less about eternity, about
God and heaven, and about the designs and purposes of the
Almighty; and it is folly for man, unaided and undirected by the
Almighty, to attempt to teach things pertaining to the kingdom of
God or to the welfare and happiness of the human family. We, as
human beings, and especially as Latter-day Saints, who have given
some attention to these matters, and feel ourselves identified
with the Church and kingdom of God upon the earth, have ideas
that differ very materially from those of the world, and that
difference may be traced to the influence and operation of the
Spirit of God upon our minds through obedience to the first
principles of the Gospel of Christ; for, while the world of
mankind generally have repudiated the order of God and the
institutions of his house, we, as believers in him and in the
establishment of his kingdom upon the earth in these latter days,
occupy a very different position from that of the rest of the
world.
168
The Scriptures definitely inform us that no man knoweth the
things of God but by the Spirit of God. The Gospel teaches us how
we may obtain a knowledge of that Spirit, and that is, by
repenting of our sins, being baptized in the name of Jesus for
their remission, and having hands laid upon us for the reception
of the Holy Ghost. And as we have complied with the first
principles of the Gospel of Christ and partaken of the Holy
Ghost, we have had some slight manifestations of the will,
designs and purposes of the Almighty in relation to us, to those
who have lived before us, and those who shall come after us; in
relation to the worlds that are and that are to come. I say that
we have had some slight idea of these things, and that it has
originated from the peculiar position that we occupy through our
obedience to the first principles of the Gospel of Christ. Other
men do not--can not--comprehend things as we do; they have not
the means of demonstrating the truth of the Gospel as we have,
not having complied with its first principles. That which is
light, intelligence, intelligent, happifying and glorious to us,
is confusion and darkness to them. They can not conceive of it;
they can not comprehend the laws of life, nor understand anything
pertaining to the kingdom of God. I do not care what intelligence
they may possess in regard to other matters; I do not care how
profoundly learned they may be in the arts and sciences of the
world; they may have studied mathematics, examined the physiology
of the human system, and may have made themselves acquainted with
geology, mineralogy, and the structure of the earth on which we
live, and of the planetary system and the motion of worlds with
which we are surrounded; they may have made themselves acquainted
with history, geology, botany, law, physics, literature and
theology, and all this knowledge, and much more than this, and if
they are not in possession of the Holy Ghost, the principle of
revelation, the light of eternal truth, they can not comprehend
the kingdom of God.
169
You have all read about Nicodemus coming to Jesus by night.
Nicodemus thought there was something good about Jesus, but there
was not enough manhood about himself. He was something of a
sneak, the same as you sometimes see some men now. He wanted to
come to Jesus, but he had not manhood to do so by daylight, so he
came by night--under cover of darkness, and said he, "Rabbi, we
know that thou art a teacher come from God, for no man can do
these miracles that thou doest, except God be with him. Jesus
answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee,
Except a man be born again, he can not see the kingdom of God."
Nicodemus did not understand this, and he said unto Jesus, "How
can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter the second time
into his mother's womb and be born? Jesus answered, Verily,
verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the
Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." He could not
even see the kingdom of God unless he was born of water, and he
could not enter into it unless he was born of water and of the
Spirit. This was the statement of Jesus, and it may account for
the singular feeling we see manifested among the children of men
towards us as a people. Men of ability and learning will come
into our midst and say, "You have a remarkably fine country here,
and you have exhibited a large amount of intelligence, industry
and perseverance. We do not know anything about your religion,
nor about its principles. We were inclined to think unfavorably
of it from the many reports we heard abroad concerning you; but
now that we see your order, diligence, perseverance,
improvements, your beautiful cities and villages, your railroads
and the various enterprises you have engaged in; when we see your
freedom from the vices which generally prevail in the world, we
think there is something peculiar about it, but what it is we do
not know." They can not see the kingdom of God--they have not
been born of water, that is the trouble with them. I frequently
talk with ministers of various denominations on these subjects,
but they are as blind as bats--they do not know anything about
them. They can talk about politics and history, and they can
discourse philosophically on various branches of art and science,
but when you come to the kingdom of God they are egregiously
ignorant, and they fulfill the words of Jesus, that no man can
see that kingdom unless he is born again.
169
Take a retrospective view of the history of this people. See
their position and the position of the Church and kingdom of God,
years ago and now, and then look at the things to come; talk of
the kingdom as it was, as it is, and as it will be. There is
something great, magnificent, and glorious to reflect
upon--something which every Latter-day Saint, who has his mind
lit up with the Spirit, intelligence and revelation which flow
from God, admires; and he feels to say in his heart, as one said
in former days: Let this people be my people, let their God be my
God; where they live let me live also, and where they die let me
be buried; and let me be their associate and mingle with them in
time and in eternity. This is the kind of feeling that the Spirit
of God imparts to every Latter-day Saint who lives his religion
and keeps the commandments of God.
170
We are engaged in a work that God has set his hand to accomplish,
and he has made use of us as instruments, and he will also use
others who shall yet be gathered, to build up his kingdom, and to
introduce correct principles of every kind--principles of
morality social principles, good political principles; principles
relative to the government of the earth we live in; principles of
salvation pertaining to ourselves and our progenitors and to our
posterity, and pertaining to the world that was, that is and that
is to come; and as I said, he is using us as instruments. it is
true that we blunder and stumble; it is true that we are
surrounded with all the weaknesses and infirmities of human
nature, but with all our weaknesses and foibles clinging to us
the Lord has called us from the nations of the earth to be his
co-adjutors and co-laborers, his fellow-workmen and assistants,
in rolling forth his purposes and bringing to pass those things
that he designed before the world was. It is true that the Lord
made man perfect, but man has found out many inventions, and he
is very much degenerated, and is all the time prone to weakness,
corruption, folly and vanity, and God knows it, and he knew it
when he selected us. But what could he do? He could not select
angels to associate with him in regenerating the earth and its
inhabitants, for they were not very proper associates. He had to
select just such beings as there were, and in the first place he
revealed himself from the heavens to Joseph Smith. He made known
to him some of the first principles of the Gospel of Christ, and
then unfolded unto him certain things pertaining to the
organization of the Church of God upon the earth, the Church in
its organization, with Presidents, Apostles, High Priests,
Seventies, Bishops and their councils, high councils, for their
instruction and guidance, and with teachers, priests and deacons,
and so forth. He organized his Church here upon the earth, and
revealed unto these various quorums their several duties, and
placed upon them certain responsibilities, told them what they
were, and revealed unto Joseph Smith all things pertaining to the
first organization of his kingdom upon the earth. He told his
disciples, as Jesus told his, to go forth without purse or scrip,
to preach the Gospel to every nation and kindred and people and
tongue--to call upon them to repent of their sins, to be baptized
in the name of Jesus for the remission of their sins, to have
hands laid upon them for the reception of the Holy Ghost; to lay
hands upon the sick and to cast out devils, just as Jesus told
his disciples to do; and said he: "Freely you have received
freely give." "Go without purse or scrip, trust in me, I am your
father, I am the God and father of all the spirits of all flesh.
I have you under my special control, I will stand by, I will
sustain you, my spirit shall go with you, mine angels shall go
before you to prepare the way for you." This is what he told
Joseph Smith, and the Elders went forth, according to the word
that God had given them, and they told you and told others to
repent of your sins and be baptized in the name of Jesus for the
remission of them. And what then? You should receive the gift of
the Holy Ghost, which should take of the things of God and show
them unto you; it should unveil the heavens to one, give the
spirit of prophecy to another, the gift of interpretation to
another, the gift of healing to another, and so forth, the Spirit
dividing to each man severally as he saw fit.
170
These Elders went forth and preached to you Latter-day Saints now
before me, this very Gospel I have been laying before you, and
there was something in your spirit ready to receive it. You could
not tell why or wherefore, but you believed it to be a message
sent from God, and you went forth into the waters of baptism and
were baptized, and you received the gift of the Holy Ghost, and
you then knew for yourselves of the truth of that doctrine which
God had committed unto them; and you, in turn, were ordained, and
you also went forth to preach the same Gospel, with the same
results, for you saw the power of God manifested, You saw the
sick healed, and the power of God attend your ministrations. You
saw the same leap for joy, those who were downcast, inspired and
led to rejoice through the principles of eternal life, and thus
the Lord has perpetuated the same thing until the present day.
Mixed up with that have been other things. We have been gathered
here. What for? What did we come here for? Who knows? We came
here because God said he would build up his Zion in the latter
days.
171
Under the teachings of Joseph Smith and President Young, the
Elders of the Church have preached the gathering, and this is a
gathering dispensation. But there is something else to be done
besides simply being introduced into the spiritual ordinances of
the Church of God: there is a kingdom to be established. We have
gathered from the east and the west, from the north and the
south, for a spirit rested upon the people to gather together,
and no man could prevent them. All of you know how this feeling
operated upon you, just as much as when it operated upon you by
baptism--when you had the Spirit of God upon you could not resist
it. I remember a circumstance that transpired in Liverpool some
thirty years ago. We were told at that time by Joseph Smith not
to preach the gathering, for we had been driven from Missouri,
and as there was no particular specific place, he thought it was
not well to say anything about gathering until a place should be
prepared, then we should have instructions and could teach it.
That was all well enough, but we could not keep it from the
people. Why? they had received the Holy Ghost, and that took of
the things of God and showed them to the people, and you could
not hide the gathering from them. I remember a sister coming to
me on one occasion and saying, "brother Taylor, I had a curious
kind of a dream the other night." "What was it?" "Well," said
she, "I dreamed there was a whole lot of Saints standing at the
pier head down below here, in Liverpool; and there was a vessel
there and it was going off to America, and we were going to some
place they called Zion. I was going, you were going, and the
Saints were all going. I thought I would ask you the meaning of
it." I told her I would tell her one of these times. We could not
keep it away from the people. If we had been told not to baptize
and lay hands on them we could have kept it from them, but when
they had been baptized and had hands laid upon them they received
the Holy Ghost, and that Spirit showed the things of God to them
and we could not hide them from them, hence from the time the
people in the nations began to obey the Gospel to the present
there has been a feeling in their hearts to gather up to Zion.
The Saints abroad have desired to come here, and the Saints here
have desired that they should come, and this is why we have sent
as many as five hundred teams in a year to fetch our brethren
from the Missouri river who were unable to come without
assistance. What have we done this for? Well, some people may say
it is a grand emigration scheme; but we say it is a scheme of the
Lord to build up his kingdom and to gather the people together,
according to the saying of the old prophets--"I will take one of
a city and two of a family and bring them to Zion." "What will
you do with them?" "I will give them pastors after my own heart,
who shall feed them with knowledge and understanding," that is
what I will do with them when I get them to Zion.
172
Well, we have gathered from the nations year after year, until
to-day we find ourselves a large people, actually occupying a
Territory some five hundred miles in length. What is the result
of this? Why we have got to have a political organization--we
cannot avoid it. The Church has gathered us together, the Spirit
of God has operated on our minds, and we are here an integral
part of the United States of America, and we cannot help
ourselves. If we wished to do so we could not annihilate
ourselves or blot ourselves out of existence, and we do not want
to if we could. But the necessities of the case have forced us
into the very position that we now occupy--namely, a Territory in
the United States of America; and as we are here, we like other
people, have to eat, drink, wear clothing, build houses, make
farms, and so on. God has ordained all these things before, and
we, as part of his creatures, have to do our part towards
beautifying his footstool.
172
Finding ourselves in this capacity, we must have our courts. It
is true that, formerly, our individual matters were regulated by
our High Councils, Bishops' Councils, teachers, and so forth: but
in some of the revelations it says, "Let him that steals be
delivered up to the laws of the land." Well, here we are, and we
occupy a political position, and we cannot help it, and nobody
else can help it. You who live here, form a city, and you must
have city regulations. You want police to guard you from the
inroads of wicked men, either among ourselves or outsiders, no
mater who, to protect the peaceable, industrious, honest and
virtuous, and you must have some kind of government to do it. In
a church capacity, whether here or abroad, we could cut the thief
or drunkard form the Church if we had a mind to, but here, if we
cut a man from the Church, we can not cut him from the State, he
is still a citizen of the United States, and in the United
States. In other places they make laws to punish theft,
licentiousness and other crimes. It is true they do not carry
them out; they do not care to do it, but they have such laws, and
a variety of others to regulate property matters, and so forth.
And we are compelled to enact such laws for safeguards around the
whole community, for among other things we are beginning to
possess property. We have farms, and they are in the United
States, and we have to apply for patents for them, just as they
do anywhere else, and we have to inform to the processes of law
in all these matters, the same as any other people have. We have
also to plow the ground, and to fence it, and to have our
neighborhood, city and county regulations in Utah among the
Saints, just as the people do elsewhere, for, as I have already
said, we are part of the body politic of the United States.
172
It has been thought good to apply for a State government for us.
Here is Brother George A. Smith going down for that purpose. Why
so? Why do you do that? Is not that of the world? Yes, and we are
of the world and in the world, and we can not get out of it until
we are called out of it by old age or some accidental death. We
are here and we have got to act, and we live, move and have our
being, like other people. We are not here to interfere with the
rights of any body. People may want to rob us, but we do not want
to rob anybody. We want to protect ourselves in every legal and
equitable way from the aggressions of those who would seek our
overthrow, and the overthrow of the kingdom of God on the earth.
173
Well, finding ourselves thus organized, what have we to do? Why,
we have our bodies and our spirits, we are temporal beings, we
are immortal beings; we have to do with time and with eternity.
We had very little to do with coming here, we came by some manner
of means, we hardly know how, and we have to leave when the time
comes, and we can not help ourselves. then the only thing we
ought to do is to act as wise, intelligent beings before God. The
world have no idea of God, and they do not acknowledge him. He
may develop, through one person, the principle of electricity,
but the world will say it is some wise man that did it. He may,
through another, develop the power of steam, but they say, Some
wise man did it. Through another, God may make known the
light-giving power of gas, to another the tapping of the earth to
bring forth oils for illuminating purposes; but the world say,
"Some wise man has done this." Men do not like to acknowledge
God; it is just as the Scriptures say: they will not acknowledge
him in all their thoughts. They want to get rid of him, and they
give the glory to men for doing this, that and the other. Fools
that they are! What do they know about these principles? Who
organized the principles which they found out? Did man? Did he
organize the principle of electricity or give it its vitality and
power? Did any of our savans? No, they could not. Who placed the
principle of power in steam? Did man? No, he could not do it.
They want to throw off God where they can, while we want to bring
him in and have him one of our crowd; that is the difference
between us and them. They find out something which God has made,
just as the little child when it discovers its fingers for the
first time. It had them long before, but when they first
attracted its attention it seemed to fancy it had made a great
discovery. God organized the child and placed its spirit within
its body, and it at last found out that it had a hand. And the
scientific babies of the world just discover some of the
properties of matter, some of nature's laws created by God long
before, and like Nebuchadnezzar they cry, in the pride of their
hearts, "Is not this great Babylon which I have built? Yes it is,
and it is as much of a Babylon or Babel as the other was.
173
Well, God has commenced to do a work, and he began, in the first
place, with the very first principles of the Gospel, and he has
led us on gradually, until we find ourselves in our present
position, and we have got a beautiful land here, haven't we? And
yet they call our leader a murderer, and those who are his
co-laborers the most infamous blackhearted scoundrels that ever
existed. Are these the works of murderers that you see around
here? Excuse me for referring to these things, but I do it to
contrast between one thing and another. We always knew they were
liars, and do to-day.
174
What are we after? What are the world after? Say they, "Is not
this great Babylon that we have built?" They tell us what
magnificent stripes and stars, and what glorious freedom we have
got here in this land of liberty; and in our Fourth of July
orations we talk about the great blessings that we enjoy, and how
we have got bigger flags, higher mountains, taller trees and
deeper rivers than anybody else, and we are the most magnificent
people in existence. All over the land this is the kind of talk
and feeling that prevails, and men boast of their wisdom,
intelligence and prowess. But they are in the hands of God--this
nation and all others are in his hand, and he will deal with them
just as he sees proper. By and by he will cause the nations to
tremble to their foundations. Empires will be overthrown,
kingdoms destroyed, and the powers that be will fade away like
"the baseless fabric of a vision;" and he will exalt and ennoble
those who put their trust in him, and work the works of
righteousness. We are here to do a work; not a small one, but a
large one. We are here to help the Lord to build up his kingdom,
and if we have any knowledge of electricity, we thank God for it.
If we have any knowledge of the power of steam, we will say it
came from God. If we possess any other scientific information
about the earth whereon we stand, or of the elements with which
we are surrounded, we will thank God for the information, and say
he has inspired men from time to time to understand them, and we
will go on and grasp more intelligence, light and information,
until we comprehend as we are comprehended of God. This is what
we are after. We are here to introduce correct principles upon
the earth on which we live; but we cannot do it any more than any
of these men can understand the laws of nature, unless God
reveals them to us. The world is all confusion, and men need the
illuminating influence of the Spirit of God.
174
We talk sometimes about our political status, and think that we
have been dreadfully oppressed and crowded here. Why, there are
millions and millions worse off in the United States than we are
to-day. We need not grunt much. Besides, we expect that the
wicked will grow worse, deceiving and being deceived. You Elders
of Israel, have you not prophecied about it? And if you have, are
you surprised that men begin to expose themselves, and to
manifest the works of the devil in every form--religiously,
socially and politically, trampling under foot every principle of
honor and integrity? Are you surprised at it? I am not, I expect
it, and I expect it to grow worse and worse. But don't you think
we have got over all our difficulties. Not quite; not by a long
way. I expect things will grow worse and worse. As we increase in
power, the power of Satan and his emissaries will increase also.
I expect that all the time; but in the future God will put the
opposers of his cause and people to shame, as he has done the
wretches now in our midst. I expect that he will stand by Israel,
maintain his kingdom, uphold his people, and lead them on from
victory to victory, from strength to strength, from power to
power, form intelligence to intelligence, until "the kingdoms of
this world shall become the kingdoms of our God and his Christ,
and he shall feign forever and ever," until a universal hosannah
shall go up from the nations of the earth, and "blessing, and
glory, and honor, and power, and might, majesty and dominion
shall be ascribed to him who sits on the throne and unto the Lamb
forever."
174
We are associated with these principles to-day. God is our God
and our Father. We approach him and we say: "We thank thee, O
God, our Father, for the mercies thou hast vouchsafed to thy
people. We humble ourselves before thee, because thou art our
Father, and thy mercy endures forever." This is the kind of
feeling we have when we feel right.
175
Well, we are here, and God is going to build up his kingdom. He
will do it, and we need not trouble ourselves about outsiders and
their notions, or about foolish men or their thoughts, practices
and calculations. It is a matter of very little difference to us.
God is at the helm--he manages, he guides, he directs and
controls, he influences his people, and he will continue to
influence them. Well, we are here, in the capacity, say, of a
kingdom, and people tell us that we are different from anybody
else. Of course we are; we do not expect to be like others. It is
true that smoke goes out of our chimneys, as out of the chimneys
of others, because it is a law of nature. It is true that
potatoes, wheat and corn grow here as elsewhere. It is true we
have to attend to the common affairs of life--eat, drink, sustain
ourselves, clothe and keep ourselves warm, as others do, and we
have to take care of and protect ourselves from the incursions
and machinations of those who seek to destroy us. In all these
respects we have to take the same course that other people do;
but the difference between us is--we have an organization, a
Church organization, given by revelation from God, and which does
not exist anywhere else in this little world.
175
But what about other things relative to temporal affairs? If God
can organize us as a Church, if he can unveil the heavens to us,
draw aside the curtain of futurity, and enable us to penetrate
the veil and gain a certain knowledge in regard to the future,
certainly he can make known or reveal something about a few
temporal things, such as plowing, sowing, building, planting,
trading, manufacturing, making railroads, and a thousand other
little things that have to be attended to in this world. If he
can do the bigger things, I think he can do the less.
175
"Well, we are capable of doing that ourselves," say some people,
some of these philosophers I have referred to--they are all wise
men, and you would think wisdom would die with them, but it will
not be entirely extinguished when they are gone, not quite. God
will still lead, govern and direct his people. "But," say they,
"We think we could do things so much better than somebody else.
Well then, go at it and try; there is plenty of room in the world
for you to exhibit your intelligence.
175
We are in the hands of God. We have come here. What for? The Lord
says, "I will take them one of a city and two of a family, and
bring them to Zion." What will you do with them? "Give them
pastors after my own heart, who shall feed them with knowledge
and understanding." It is a fact, to-day, that the wise men and
great men, and statesmen, and men in position in various parts of
the world, as they come here to visit us with all our failings
and infirmities, tell us that we are the best and most orderly
people they have ever seen. And they say we have a beautiful
country, and that we are governed by wisdom, by sage counsels,
and by a high order of intelligence. That is the opinion of the
leading statesmen of this day who pass through our midst, and
many of them come through here. The question naturally arises,
Where does this wisdom come from? Why, God inspired Joseph Smith;
then he inspired President Young with the same kind of spirit and
feeling. Then he inspired the devil, or the devil inspired his
imps--one of the two--and drove us from our former possessions,
and it all worked together, the Lord inspired on the one hand,
and the devil on the other, and by hook or by crook, we got here,
just as we are to-day.
176
We commenced to build a temple in Kirtland, and we built it. We
built another in Nauvoo, and we are building another here. We are
attending to the ordinances pertaining to the Church of God,
temporal and spiritual, ordinances pertaining to the body, and
ordinances pertaining to the spirit. And then, as men having to
do with the world on which we live, with the Territory that we
possess, we have to enact laws, and we have to conduct ourselves
properly, and seek the assistance of the Almighty to direct us in
all our affairs, and the Lord has promised if we would do that,
he would show us that the wisdom of God is greater than the
cunning of the devil. Well, he does keep showing that from time
to time, and if we do right he will keep on doing it. But to
ensure this there is something devolving upon us.
176
Says one, "If I could have so much money, such a farm, or this,
that, and the other, I would feel satisfied." I say, get the
Spirit of God in your hearts! Let the light of revelation burn in
your bosoms like living fire, then you will know something about
God, something about the blessings of salvation, something about
the benefits that will accrue to Zion. "But, sometimes, I have to
make a little sacrifice if I carry out the counsel given." Well,
make it then, If it is a sacrifice, it ought to be a pleasure to
help build up the kingdom of God, establish righteousness, plant
the standard of truth, and to be on the side of God, angels and
eternal realities, to be saviors of men. To be thus situated is
the most honorable position in this world or the world to come.
Now, God could not get the world to do anything towards building
up his kingdom, they would not do it, they could not see it, and
he had to get you baptized before you could see it; and seeing it
now, will you barter it away for the follies of this world, for
the smiles and promises of the ungodly? Or are you going to
cleave to the truth, live by it, and, if necessary, die by it?
What are you going to do?
176
I am glad we have come here. I am pleased that these meetings
have been instituted, that the people get together, and that we
have a chance to talk with them, in their assemblies, about the
things of God. We are God's people, God is our Father, and we
should spend a little time in these things. This is our duty, and
we should feel and interest in them. That is what we set out for,
and we mean to go forward, and we will go on and on, for our
motto is eternal progress. This kingdom will advance, the
purposes of God will roll forward, and no power on this side of
hell, or the other either, can stop it. God will sustain his
people, and Israel will rejoice and be triumphant.
177
Now then, we come to the management of our affairs. Talking of
the wise men of the world, why we have had many of them ever
since the world was. And what have they accomplished in the
nations of the earth? They have built cities, and some have
raised themselves to fame by trampling under foot thousands of
others. They have waded through seas of blood sometimes to get
upon the throne of power. What to do? That they might trample
still lower poor humanity, and bring men down, as it were, to the
dust of death, and make serfs of them. What else have they done?
They have established every kind of government, as they have
every kind of religion. Do you not think that we need revelation
about government as much as anything else? I think we do. I think
we need God to dictate to us as much in our national and social
affairs as in church matters. Some people are willing to have
their souls looked after, but they think they are smart enough to
look after temporal affairs themselves. In the world they want a
doctor to look after their bodies, a parson to look after their
souls, and a lawyer to take care of their property. In these
respects we differ from them. We begin with God. Our light comes
from him, our religion is from him, and we need his guidance and
instruction in all these other matters. Is not that simple, plain
and reasonable? They are in confusion in the world about their
religion, because there is no God in it. That is what's the
matter. The Scriptures say, "There is one Lord, one faith, one
baptism, one God, who is in all and through you all." They have a
religion without God, and they are going to heaven without God,
and when they get there they will find no God, and they will
still have a chance to have their own way inasmuch as the Lord
will let them.
178
Well, as I said, we begin first with God, religiously,
spiritually if you please--teaching first, the first principles
of the Gospel. Then we go on to other matters--to temporal
matters. A Bishop, you know, in the world, is a kind of being who
has nothing to do but to attend to spiritual matters, and he does
very little of that. Our Bishops have to take care of the poor,
and see that they are provided for, that is, see they have
something to eat, and they have also to attend to many secular
affairs that are naturally connected with common humanity. Well,
what then? We build churches and temples, and we administer in
those temples, according to the revelations which God has given
to us. And they would like to know something about that, but they
can not, for that belongs to the Saints only. Then, what next? We
find ourselves, as I said before, in a governmental capacity, and
perform our duties as good citizens and attend to all the duties
and responsibilities thereof. But then it is no trouble for us to
keep the laws of the land. What difficulty is there for other
people? Can they live then? I am sure we can. No law of any land
will interfere with or molest the man who does not cheat or
defraud his neighbor, but pursues and honorable, honest, upright
course. Laws are made for the unruly and turbulent, for
lawbreakers and for men who violate right. Then there are many
other things besides these in which we differ from the world, in
their social, political and religious affairs. I will refer to
one--their method of treating the acknowledged head of the
Government, the President of the United States. At one time it
was "Hurrah for General Grant," he was almost a demi-god. What do
they say now? If you can believe the papers, he is one of the
biggest rascals that was ever unhung. I do not know whether they
told the truth before or now, but they do talk these things, and
who would stand by him if he were thrown out? Very few. Here is
President Young, whom his enemies have been calling a murderer;
did anybody forsake him? No, oh no! Did any of your knees
tremble? Perhaps a little, not much; but still you had faith in
him, and you would as soon see him to-day as any other man on
God's footstool, wouldn't you? (Congregation answered "Yes.")
There is the difference. There is a principle implanted in the
hearts of men, that no man can tear therefrom; the Spirit of God
plants it there, and there it dwells and will remain, and it can
not be rooted out. It is true you act foolishly about here,
sometimes. I know you do, because we do among us yonder, and you
are just as we are, and you act very foolishly sometimes; but
when we let the Spirit of God operate upon our minds, it is
"Hurrah for Brigham Young," "Hurrah for the Twelve," "Hurrah for
the kingdom of God!" That is the feeling, isn't it? Well, now let
us carry it out, and live it, and do what is right and God will
bless us. Don't be particular about having your own way, for it
is not always the right way, and that which seems pleasing in our
eyes is not always right, and that which looks the most
profitable is not always right. It is the most profitable and
right for the Saints of God to keep the commandments and be
governed by the counsels of God; and if you are governed by that
he will lead you on from light to light, from strength to
strength, from intelligence to intelligence until you will be
exalted among the Gods, there to rejoice for ever and ever. We
have commenced the race and we will go on and win it; we have
commenced a battle, and we shall triumph, for the kingdom of God
will go on, and no power can stop it.
178
May God help us to be faithful in the name of Jesus, Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, September 22, 1872
Orson Pratt, September 22, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, September 22, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
REVIEW OF GOD'S DEALINGS WITH THE PROPHET JOSEPH--COMING
FORTH OF THE BOOK OF MORMON--GATHERING, ETC.
178
Having been requested to address the congregation this afternoon,
I do so with the greatest cheerfulness. There is one passage of
Scripture I would like very much to take as a text, if I knew
where to find it. It is somewhere in the book of Jeremiah or
Ezekiel. I have not time now to look it up, and perhaps it would
be better to take some other text having a bearing on the same
subject. The text to which I would like to direct the attention
of the people has reference to the colonization of this country
by one of the descendants of Zedekiah, king of Judah. It reads
something like this: "thus saith the Lord God, I will also take
of the highest branch of the high cedar, and will set it; I will
crop off from the top of his young twigs a tender one, and will
plant it upon an high mountain and eminent: in the mountain of
the height of Israel, will I plant it: and it shall bring forth
boughs, and bear fruit, and be a goodly cedar; and under it shall
dwell all fowl of every wing; in the shadow of the branches
thereof shall they dwell."
178
We read of the fulfillment of this prophecy in the Book of
Mormon; but because I cannot direct your attention to the
passage, I will read another text, which will be found in the
11th verse of the 85th Psalm: "Truth shall spring out of the
earth, and righteousness shall look down from heaven."
179
Forty-five years ago this morning this prophecy, so far as it
relates to "truth springing out of the earth," was fulfilled.
Forty-five years ago, early this morning, plates resembling gold
were taken from the earth, the morning, if I recollect right, of
the 22nd of September, 1827. Owing to that great event the
Territory of Utah is now settled by the people called Latter-day
Saints. Owing to the fulfillment of this prophecy this Tabernacle
has been built here in these mountains; and had it not been for
that event, it is probable that Utah Territory would still have
been a desert, a barren, solitary, uninhabited district of
country. Sometimes great things are accomplished and grow out of
things that appear very small in their nature. It has been so in
relation to this prophecy--"Truth shall spring out of the earth."
179
In order that the meaning of these words may be more fully
understood, it may not be amiss to read the context or the
passages preceding. The Psalmist commences:--
179
Lord, thou hast been favorable unto thy land: thou hast brought
back the captivity of Jacob.
179
Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people: thou hast covered
all their sin. Selah.
179
Thou hast taken away all thy wrath: thou hast turned thyself from
the fierceness of thine anger.
179
Turn us, O God of our salvation, and cause thine anger toward us
to cease.
179
Wilt thou be angry with us for ever? wilt thou draw out
thine anger to all generations?
179
Wilt thou not revive us again, that thy people may rejoice in
thee?
179
Shew us thy mercy, O Lord, and grant us thy salvation.
179
I will hear what God the Lord will speak: for he will speak peace
unto his people, and to his saints; but let them not turn again
to folly.
179
Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear him; that glory may
dwell in our land.
179
Mercy and truth are met together; righteousness and peace have
kissed each other.
179
Truth shall spring out of the earth; and righteousness shall look
down from heaven.
179
Yea, the Lord shall give that which is good; and our land shall
yield her increase.
179
Righteousness shall go before him, and shall set us in the way of
his steps.
180
Thus reads the 85th Psalm. It is very evident that the Psalmist
David, being filled with the spirit of prophecy, saw the
condition of the people of Israel, saw also that they would be
under the displeasure of the Almighty for many generations, and
he prays that the Lord would look upon them in compassion, and
turn himself from the fierceness of his anger, that it might not
be drawn out towards them to all generations, and he utters this
prayer: "Turn us, O God of our salvation, and show unto us thy
mercy," etc. The Lord, in answer to this prayer, promised to
speak peace to his people, but said he. "Let them not turn again
unto folly." And then he informs them how he would speak peace
unto them, and how he would turn himself from the fierceness of
his anger, that his anger might not be drawn out unto them to all
generations. He informs them that he would commence this great
work, that should result in peace and salvation to Israel, by
causing truth to spring out of the earth, at which time
righteousness should look down from heaven. Righteousness and
truth and peace should kiss one another, and the Lord should
cause the land of Israel again to yield its increase. We know how
barren, sterile and uninhabitable is the land that was once
promised to that chosen people. The Lord has not only cursed the
people and made them a hiss and a byword among all the nations
whither they have been driven, but his anger has also been upon
their land. He has withheld the rains of heaven, and has cursed
it with barrenness and sterility; and the cities which once
covered its face and reared their lofty spires to heaven, now lie
in ruins, and scarcely a vestige of some of them can be found.
But when the Lord should cause truth to spring forth out of the
earth, he would speak peace to his people and to their land, and
it should yield its increase; and truth should go before him and
should set them in the way of his steps.
180
We have been proclaiming for forty-two years this Book of Mormon,
which we have declared has sprung forth from the earth by the
power of the Almighty, for the benefit, first of the Gentile
nations. The proclamation, according to the words of the book,
must go forth to all people, nations and tongues under the whole
heavens, called the Gentile nations, after which the Lord has
promised in numerous places in this record that it should go to
the remnants of the house of Israel. But that which the Lord
intends to accomplish first by the bringing forth of this book,
is the redemption of as many as will hearken to its words in all
the Gentile nations of the earth, and to gather them together in
one; for not only are the house of Israel and the house of Judah
to be gathered back to their own lands, but all Christians
throughout the whole earth are to be gathered in one in the
latter days, according to a prophecy which you will find in the
43rd chapter of Isaiah: "I will bring them from the east, and
gather them from the west. I will say to the north, Give up; and
to the south, Keep not back: bring my sons from far, and my
daughters from the ends of the earth; even every one that is
called by my name." This has reference to the sons and daughters
of the living God, to the people called Saints; not particularly
to the literal seed of the house of Israel, but to all those who
believe in him, and who are called by his name. All must be
gathered; all must come from the ends of the earth. No Christians
will be left, scattered abroad over the nations, as many suppose
will be the case so long as time lasts. A complete and full
gathering together of the people of God must take place in the
latter days, called, by Paul, the dispensation of the fullness of
times. You will find this prediction in the first chapter of his
epistle to the Ephesians. Paul there declares that a new
dispensation must come in, and he denominates it the dispensation
of the fullness of times. He tells us that in that dispensation
the Lord will gather together in one all things in Christ. Every
person that believes in, and has put on Christ by baptism and by
repentance of sin, must be gathered in one in that dispensation;
not only those on earth, but those in heaven--all the
congregations who are in Christ, who have dwelt on the earth in
former ages, are to be united with those who are in the flesh on
the earth. One great, vast, general assembly of all that are in
Christ--the dead as well as the living--from the days of Adam
down until the work is completed.
180
In order to commence this great work the Lord has brought forth
truth out of the earth. He will speak peace to his people, and
they are requested by the Psalmist, when the Lord undertakes to
do this work, never to turn again unto folly.
182
Now I will attempt to give a brief account to my hearers of how
Joseph Smith obtained the plates of the Book of Mormon from the
earth. He was but a lad, a farmer's boy, when the Lord began to
speak to him and send his angels to him, being not quite fifteen
years of age. He was almost too young to be a brazen-faced
impostor, was he not? Cast your eyes around on this congregation
for the youth of fifteen, and see if you think it would be
possible for one of that early age to become one of the most
barefaced impostors that the world ever heard of, for Joseph
Smith was thus regarded by the world at large with few
exceptions; and he must have been so, at a very early age, if
this work be not true, for he could not be deceived, himself, in
relation to it. There was no possible chance for any deception,
so far as he himself was concerned. Why? Because the
circumstances were of such a nature that he could not be
deceived. God revealed to him that there were certain plates
deposited about three miles from his father's house. He saw, in
vision, the place of their deposit. He heard the holy angel
declare to him in relation to these records. But first, about
four years prior to this, the first vision that he had was in
answer to prayer. Being but a youth, and anxious for the
salvation of his soul, he secretly prayed, in the wilderness,
that the Lord would show unto him what he should do, what church
he should join. The Lord heard and answered this prayer. Do not
be astonished, good Christians, because the Lord hears prayer in
the 19th century. I know it is very popular to pray to the Lord
in Christendom; but when you talk about the Lord answering
prayers, by giving revelations, visions, or sending angels, it is
very unpopular. But unpopular as it was, this youth ventured to
go and ask the Lord for wisdom, having, in the first place, read
a passage in the New testament, which says, "If any man lack
wisdom let him ask of God, who giveth to all liberally and
upbraideth not, and it shall be given unto him." Joseph Smith was
not so full of tradition that he could not lay hold of this
promise. I do not know that he had been taught long enough, the
idea that the Lord would not hear prayer. At any rate, having
read this passage, he prayed, really believing in his heart that
the Lord would answer him, for he wanted wisdom, he wanted to
know which was the true Christian Church, that he might be united
with it; and while pleading with and praying to the Lord for this
information, which was a matter of great concern to him, the
heavens were opened, and two personages clothed in light or fire
descended and stood before him. As soon as this light surrounded
him, and he was enclosed or enveloped in it, his mind was caught
away from earthly objects and things, and he saw these two
glorious personages, their countenances shining with exceeding
great brilliancy. One of them, while pointing to the other,
addressed him in this language, "Behold my beloved son, hear ye
him." All fear was taken from this boy during the progress of
this wonderful event, and he felt happy, but anxious to know
concerning the things about which he had been praying, and he
repeated his request, that he might be told which was the true
Christian church. He was informed that there was no true
Christian church on the earth, that there was no people
established or organized according to the Apostolic order; that
all had gone out of the way and had departed from the ancient
order of things; that they had denied the power of Godliness, the
gifts, miracles, the spirit of revelation and prophecy, visions,
that all these things had been done away with by the unbelief of
the children of men, and that there were no prophets or inspired
men on the earth, as there always had been when there was a true
Church upon the earth. He was strictly commanded to join none of
them. The Lord also informed him that, at some future period of
time, if he would be faithful in giving heed to the instructions
which were then imparted to him, and in his prayers to the Lord,
he would impart to him his own doctrine in plainness and
simplicity.
183
Some four years passed away from this time, making this boy not
quite nineteen years of age, and on one Sunday evening he
returned to his bed-room, pondering upon the promise that had
been given to him, and he began praying earnestly again that the
Lord would show him the true Gospel of his son, according to the
promise; and while he was thus praying in his father's house in
his chamber, a light burst into the room, becoming brighter by
degrees, shining and then partially withdrawing, so that fear did
not take possession of his bosom to any great degree. As he
continued praying the light became brighter and brighter, and
finally a personage clothed in a white robe stood before him.
This personage was a little above the size of common men at the
present day, and his arms and feet were partially bare. His feet
did not stand on the floor of the room, but a certain distance
above, and his countenance shone like lightning. This Angel
appeared so pleasant, beautiful and glorious, and his countenance
radiated such happiness on the mind of this young lad that all
fear was taken from him as on the former occasion. This personage
told him that he was an Angel of God, and that he had been sent,
in answer to his prayer, with a very important message to deliver
to him; that God designed to accomplish a great work on the
earth, and that he was to be a chosen instrument in laying the
foundation of, and establishing this work. He commenced telling
him about the ancient inhabitants of this continent. He told him
that the present American Indians were the descendants of Israel;
that their forefathers were brought here from Jerusalem about six
centuries before Christ; that when they came they were a
righteous people and had Prophets among them; that when they
landed on this continent they commenced, by the commandment of
the Lord, keeping a record of their history, their prophecies and
sacred doings upon metallic plates; that that nation, after
having dwelt here about a thousand years, fell into great
wickedness; that they divided themselves into two great nations;
that the portion that had these plates, the Nephites, had so far
apostatized from the Lord, that he threatened their overthrown,
and to destroy them if they did not repent; that the Prophets
went forth among them prophesying that if they did not repent,
the other nation, called Lamanites, would destroy them from the
face of the land. But they would not repent, and Mormon, a
Prophet who lived at that time, was commanded of the Lord to take
all the plates that were kept of the records of his fathers, and
make an abridgment of them upon a new set of plates. So he
commenced and abridged their history, from the time they left
Jerusalem until that period, incorporating therein many of the
prophesies and revelations given during that thousand years.
After having made this abridgment he committed it into the hands
of his son Moroni, knowing that his nation would be destroyed,
and that Moroni, according to the revelations God had given him,
would be spared to keep the records, and to behold the downfall
of his nation Mormon hid the records from which he made this
abridgment in a hill, called the hill Cumorah, that being its
ancient name, and this hill was about three miles from where this
young man resided, in the town of Manchester, Ontario County,
State of New York. There all the records were deposited, and
according to the Book of Mormon they must have been very numerous
indeed. The history of the ancient inhabitants of this land was
kept by their kings, and the records became very voluminous; and
they were all deposited by the Prophet Mormon in that hill; but
the abridgment from which the Book of Mormon was taken was given
into the hands of his son Moroni, to finish out the record. The
last date given on these records was 420 years after Christ.
183
You may inquire how the people on this land know about the birth
of Christ. I will say that they understood Christianity on this
western hemisphere as well as on the eastern hemisphere. They
were not left in darkness here concerning the Savior of the world
and his atonement. They knew all about it. How? Jesus, who is the
God of the whole earth, appeared to them after his crucifixion,
and resurrection from the dead. He showed them the wounds in his
hands, feet and side, and delivered to them his Gospel in its
plainness and fullness, and they were commanded to write it on
plates. They knew also, of his birth, in the land of their
forefathers, by the signs which God gave to them on this land.
They were told that at the time of the birth of Jesus there
should be two days and one night without any darkness at all;
they should see the sun go down at night and rise in the morning,
and that during the whole of that time it should be light as day.
They commenced the reckoning of their time from that period.
Previous to that time they had reckoned their time from the date
of their leaving Jerusalem, precisely six hundred years before
the birth of Christ. Four hundred and twenty years after that
great event the Prophet Moroni informs us that he also was
commanded to hide up this abridgment in the same hill, but in
another part of it, in which his father Mormon hid up the sacred
records. And the Lord made a promise to Moroni, also to Mormon,
and to many other Prophets who dwelt on this land in previous
generations, that these plates should never be destroyed, but
that they should be preserved by his hand, and that they should
be brought forth-out of the earth in the latter days, for the
purpose of bringing about the gathering of his people from the
ends of the earth, and the bringing in of the fullness of the
Gentiles and fulfilling their times, after which the translation
of these records should go to all the remnants of the house of
Israel, scattered abroad on the face of the whole earth; and that
these records should be instrumental in the hands of God in
gathering Israel from the four quarters of the earth.
184
These were the promises of God to the ancient Prophets of this
continent, and the angel told Joseph Smith concerning these
plates, and where they were deposited. At the same time, the
vision of the Almighty was open to the mind of Joseph, and he saw
the very spot. After the angel had conversed with him sometime on
this subject, and had opened up to him the prophecies of the holy
Prophets concerning the great work that was to be accomplished in
the latter days, he withdrew, and Joseph continued praying. Some,
perhaps, might think that this was a dream; but it was not, he
was wide awake. As he continued praying, the angel came again the
second time, and gave him still further information concerning
the rise of the latter-day kingdom of God upon the earth, and the
great work the Almighty intended to accomplish preparatory to the
coming of his Son from the heavens with all his Saints. The angel
then again withdrew, but in answer to Joseph's prayers he came
the third time, and imparted to him still more information. After
his withdrawal the third time Joseph arose, and it was early in
the morning, he having been awake all night receiving instruction
from the angel of God. In the morning he went out into the field
to work with his father. He had not yet told his father of the
remarkable things that he had seen during the night; but this
father noticed that he looked weak and feeble, and advised him to
go to the house. He started to do so, and while on the way, the
angel again appeared to him, and commanded him to return to his
father and tell him all about it. He did so, and his father, on
hearing it, burst into tears, and said, "My son, be not
disobedient to this heavenly vision!" The angel, when he appeared
to him in daylight, told him not only to tell his father, but
also to go to the place shown him in vision the night precious,
and see the plates. His father told him by all means to be
obedient and faithful. He went according to the instruction of
the angel and visited this hill. The hill runs north and south
some three quarters of a mile, and on one end of it, or near the
end of it, was where he saw the plates. The surface of the stone
which covered the plates was bare; around its edges was a thick
greensward of grass or turf. He knew the place as soon as he saw
it, and procuring a lever he lifted off this principal or
crowning stone, and found that it was cemented on the top of four
stones that sat on edge, forming a stone box. After having lifted
off the stone he saw the plates, just as he had seen them in
vision the night before. These plates rested upon three little
cement pillars that ran up from the bottom, and the stones that
formed the sides of the box were cemented together at the
corners.
186
With the plates was an instrument, called the Urim and Thummim,
used by seers in ancient times, and which enabled them to
understand the things of God. The great High Priest used such an
instrument in the midst of Israel on the other continent, and
inquired of the Lord to receive sentence of judgment in difficult
cases that were brought before him to be judged. Aaron had a Urim
and Thummim in the centre of his breastplate; and when the cases
were brought before him, the breastplate of judgment, containing
the Urim and Thummim, was consulted, and whatever sentence the
Lord gave, Aaron gave to the people of Israel. The Prophets who
deposited these plates in the hill Cumorah were commanded of the
Lord to deposit the Urim and Thummim with them, so that when the
time came for them to be brought forth, the individual who was
entrusted with them might be able to translate them by the gift
and power of God. Joseph put forth his hands to take the plates,
but upon doing so the angel immediately appeared to him and said,
"Joseph, the time has not yet come for you to take the plates;
you must be taught and instructed, and you must give heed to my
commandments and to the commandments of the Lord until you are
fully prepared to be entrusted with them, for the Lord promised
his ancient servants on this land that no one should have them
for the purpose of speculation, and that they should be brought
forth with an eye single to the glory of God; and now, if you
will keep the commandments of God in all things and prepare
yourself, you will in due time be permitted to take these plates
from their place of deposit." He would not suffer him to take
them at that time. Four years from that day--on the morning of
the 22nd of September, 1827--having been commanded of the Lord to
come to that place at that special time, he went and was met by
the angel. I will state, however, that during these four years he
was often ministered to by the angels of God, and received
instruction concerning the work that was to be performed in the
later days. But when the time had fully arrived he went to the
hill Cumorah, according to appointment, and took the plates, and
the Urim and Thummim with them, and took them to his father's
house in a wagon, which he had brought near to the hill for that
purpose. He was then nearly twenty-two years old--twenty-two the
following December.
186
Soon after this a certain portion of the characters on these
plates were copied off by the Prophet, and the manuscript sent,
by the hands of Martin Harris, a farmer who lived in that
neighborhood, to the city of New York, to show them to the
learned, to see if they could translate them. Among those to whom
they were presented was Professor Anthon--a man noted for his
learning in languages--but he could not translate them.
186
You may here inquire, What was the particular character in which
these plates were written? They inform us that they wrote in two
separate characters. Some of their plates were written in hebrew
and some in the Egyptian; but both the Hebrew and the Egyptian,
after they came from Jerusalem, were reformed by them. I mean the
alphabets were altered or changed. If they had not done this by
design, we know that in the course of a thousand years languages
will greatly change, and sometimes new characters will be added
to alphabets. We know that none of them, at the present time, are
precisely as they were anciently; they have been added to from
time to time. The Hebrew, on the eastern continent, had the
points representing the vowels added to it after the Nephites
left Jerusalem; and no doubt the Egyptian, understood when they
left, has been greatly changed since. They wrote, therefore, in
the reformed Egyptian--a language that the learned Professor
Anthon did not understand. He requested Martin Harris, however,
to bring the plates to him, telling him, if he would, that he
could perhaps assist him in the translation. Joseph translated
the few characters that were sent to Professor Anthon, and when
the translation and the original were shown to him and he had
compared them, he expressed the opinion that the translation was
correct, and he gave a paper to that effect to Martin Harris. As
Mr. Harris was leaving the room, Mr. Anthon said, "How did this
young lad obtain the plates?" Said Martin Harris, "He obtained
them by the ministration of an holy angel." Professor Anthon
immediately requested him to return the paper that he had given
him, and as soon as Mr. Harris had done so, he tore it to pieces,
saying, "Angels do not appear in our day."
187
I do not know that Joseph Smith, at the time that he sent these
words to the learned, knew anything about the prophecy that is
contained in the 29th chapter of Isaiah, a few words of which I
will read; but at any rate, whether he knew it or not, it was a
literal fulfillment of it. Isaiah speaks of a time when deep
sleep should be poured out upon the nations of the earth, and
they should be drunken, but not with wine; they should stagger,
but not with strong drink; and the Prophets and the Seers, &c.,
should be covered; in other words, they would not have any
Prophets or Seers. Every one will bear me witness that that was
the case at the time these plates were brought forth. Where was
there a people who received revelation? Where were their Prophets
and Seers? Gone, covered, "and the vision of all has become to
you as the words of a book that is sealed, which men deliver to
one that is learned, saying, 'Read this I pray you;' and he
saith, 'I can not, for the book is sealed' And the book is
delivered to him that is not learned, saying, 'Read this I pray
thee,' and he saith, 'I am not learned.' Wherefore the Lord says,
'Inasmuch as this people'--the people to whom these words should
be delivered--'draw near to me with their mouths and with their
lips do honor me, but remove their hearts far from me, and their
fear towards me is taught by the precepts of men, therefore I
will proceed to do a marvelous work among this people, even a
marvelous work and a wonder. For the wisdom of their wise men
shall perish, and the understanding of their prudent men shall be
hid.'"
187
This prophecy was fulfilled in the transaction I have already
related. The words of the book, Isaiah says, are to be delivered
to the learned, not the book itself. I have had people rise up
and say, "Why did not Joseph Smith send the plates to the
learned?" Because that would have been a violation of this
prophecy. The words of the book, not the book itself, were to be
delivered to the learned, requesting him to read them--"Read this
I pray thee." But he says, "I can not, for it is sealed." Martin
Harris told him a portion of these plates were sealed and were
not to be translated during the present generation; but the
portion that were unsealed were to be translated. He replied, "I
can not read a sealed book," thus fulfilling the words of Isaiah.
187
The book itself, we are informed in the next verse, is to be
delivered to him that is not learned. Now in regard to Joseph
Smith's qualifications or attainments in learning, they were very
ordinary. He had received a little education in the common
country schools in the vicinity in which he had lived. He could
read a little, and could write, but it was in such an ordinary
hand that he did not venture to at as his own scribe, but had to
employ sometimes one and sometimes another to write as he
translated. This unlearned man did not make the same reply that
the learned man did. For when the book was delivered to this
unlearned youth and he was requested to read it, he replied, "I
am not learned." I suppose he felt his weakness when the Lord
told him to read this book; for he thought it was a great work.
But the Lord replied to Joseph in the very language of this
prophecy--"Inasmuch as this people"--meaning the present
generation--"draw near to me with their lips, &c, therefore I
will proceed to do a marvelous work, even a marvelous work and a
wonder."
188
Now, did the unlearned man read the book? Some might suppose, if
they were to read no further, that the book was not read at all.
Let us read what is prophesied in the 18th verse: "And in that
day shall the deaf hear the words of the book." Indeed! Then it
seems that the book must have been read, or they could not have
heard its words. "And the eyes of the blind shall see out of
obscurity and out of darkness." Does this mean those who are
spiritually deaf, and those who are spiritually blind? Or does it
mean literally, those who are blind and can not see, and those
who are deaf and can not hear? It may mean either way, for it is
well known by thousands and tens of thousands now on the earth
that the eyes of the blind--those who have been born blind--have
been opened, and that the ears of the deaf have been opened by
the power of God, through the preaching of this book, so that the
prophecy has had a literal fulfillment, for those who were
physically and spiritually blind and deaf have been made to see
and hear by the power of God, and they have gathered themselves
from the nations.
188
Now let us read a little further in this prophecy, and see
whether this corresponds with the words of our text. You
recollect it refers particularly to the ingathering of the house
of Israel, and when the Lord would cause the land of Palestine to
yield its increase, that he would cause truth to spring out of
the earth," and so on. Does this prophecy of Isaiah correspond
with David; so far as the events predicted to transpire in the
days when the book comes forth? We will see. "Therefore thus
saith the Lord, who redeemed Abraham, concerning the house of
Jacob; Jacob shall not now be ashamed, neither shall his face now
wax pale." Why should they no longer be ashamed? Why should not
their faces still wax pale? The reply is, "But when he seeth his
children, the work of my hands in the midst of him, they shall
sanctify the Holy One of Jacob, and fear the God of Israel."
188
Do you not see how these two Prophets harmonize in their
prophecies? One says, "Wilt thou not turn to us again, O Lord,
and bring back again the captivity of thy people, Jacob, that we
may rejoice in thee? How long, O Lord, will the fierceness of thy
wrath continue? Will it continue to all generations?" And the
answer is that he will bring truth out of the earth, that it
should set them in the way of his steps; and the land of Israel
or Jacob should again yield its increase. While the other says
Jacob shall not be ashamed, neither shall his face wax pale. It
seems then, that both these Prophets beheld that truth out of the
earth, or a certain book, would bring about the gathering of that
long-dispersed people.
188
We find also, other events described, of a very remarkable
character. One is that the meek should increase their joy in the
Lord. There have been a great many meek people among all the
religious denominations, who have no doubt lived, with all the
desire of faithfulness that we Latter-day Saints have, and some
perhaps have been more faithful than some of us. "The meek, also,
shall increase their joy in the Lord." When will they do this? In
the day that the deaf should hear the worlds of the book. For
what reason? Because of the instructions, counsel perfect
doctrine, and prophecies contained therein; because of the
knowledge it gives to the children of men concerning the great
work which is to be accomplished before the coming of the Son of
Man. All this knowledge would cause the meek of the earth to have
their joy increased.
189
"The poor among men shall rejoice in the Holy One of Israel."
This is a very important item. When we wander over the nations of
the earth, at the present day, what do we behold? Millions on
millions groaning in worse than African slavery. Our American
slavery here, never compared with the slavery of those millions
in the old countries. They were very pointed there, against what
they termed African slavery, but they did not look at the slaves
at home--the millions of people who were obliged to work fourteen
or sixteen hours a day for a sixpence, their bones sticking out
of their skin, as it were, and they having the appearance as if
famine had been gnawing at their vitals. This is the condition of
millions now. But here is a book, the coming forth of which
should make the poor among men rejoice in the Holy One of Israel.
189
I would call upon this congregation, and upon the inhabitants of
Utah Territory, I mean that portion called Latter-day Saints, and
ask of them, Have you experienced the fulfillment of this
prophecy, in the deliverance of yourselves and children from the
oppression that you endured in the mother country? If a response
were given to this it would be a united affirmative from scores
of thousands that this prophecy has been fulfilled to the very
letter in their deliverance form the bondage which they and their
fathers before them had been compelled to endure by the cruel
hand of the oppressor.
189
Another event is spoken of in connection with the bringing forth
of this book--"For the terrible one is brought to naught, the
scorner is consumed, and all that watch for iniquity are cut
off." Has that ever been fulfilled? No, but it will be in its
time and in its season; but not until they have heard the words
of the book, and have been thoroughly warned by the coming forth
of truth out of the earth. When that has been sounded in their
ears, if they hardened their hearts against it the decree of the
Almighty is that all that watch for iniquity shall be cut off.
All who persecute the Saints of the living God, all who would
make a man an offender for a word, that will lay a snare for him
that reproveth in the gate, that will turn aside the just for a
thing of naught, are to be consumed.
189
Another very pleasing thing is mentioned, which you can bear me
witness has been fulfilled. "They also who erred in spirit shall
come to understanding, and they that murmured shall learn
doctrine." Oh, how my heart has been pained within me when I have
seen the blindness of the Christian world, and I knew that many
of them were sincere! I knew they desired to know the truth, but
they scarcely knew whether to turn to the right or to the left,
so great were the errors that were taught in their midst, and so
strong the traditions which they had imbibed, the fear of the
Lord being taught them by the precepts of men instead of by
inspiration and the power of the Holy Ghost. "They also that
erred in spirit shall come to understanding" when this book comes
forth, and "They that murmur shall learn doctrine."
190
I would seem, then, that there is something connected with
doctrine in the contents of this book, or the people could not
learn doctrine therefrom and have their errors done away. But
those who have read this book will bear me record that their
minds have been forever set at rest in regard to doctrine, so far
as the ordinances of the kingdom of God are concerned. Those who
erred, and did not know whether sprinkling, pouring or immersion
was the true method of baptism, now know? Why? Because the Book
of Mormon reveals the mode as it was given to the ancient
Nephites on this continent. So in regard to every other principle
of the doctrine of Christ--it is set forth in such great
plainness that it is impossible for any two persons to form
different ideas in relation to it, after reading the Book of
Mormon.
190
You may ask, Why this plainness? Because it was translated by
the power and gift of God; because it came from a proper
source--from him who is truth itself. God has brought it forth
from the earth, and as the Psalmist David says, "it will set us
in the way of his steps." if we have murmured because we did not
understand doctrine, we now have a revelation that will show us
the true Gospel, with all its ordinances, principles, gifts and
blessings, and we may enjoy them inasmuch as we will seek them
according to the promises of the Almighty.
190
I know that I am sometimes lengthy in my teachings, and may be
tedious to some, but bear with me a few moments longer, for there
are some other prophecies connected with the coming forth of this
book that it seems to me should be understood by the people. I
will refer you to one now, which will be found in the 37th
chapter of the prophecies of Ezekiel. We there have a declaration
of the means that God will use to gather the house of Israel from
the four quarters of the earth I have not time to turn to it, but
I will repeat it. Speaking to the Prophet, the Lord
says--'Therefore, son of man, take one stick and write upon it
for Joseph, the stick of Ephraim; and then take another stick and
write upon it for Judah, and join these two sticks together in
thine hand, and hold them up before the Children of Israel in
thine hands." Now here were two sticks. I have no doubt that they
were literal sticks in Ezekiel's hands. The question is what did
they mean? Two sticks written upon, one for Judah, and the other
for Joseph, the stick of Ephraim. And after they were written
upon, Ezekiel was to take the two sticks and join them into one,
and then hold them up before the children of Israel as one stick.
Then the Lord proceeds, "And when the children of thy people
shall speak unto thee, saying, What doest thou mean by this?"
Now, notice the interpretation--"What dost thou mean by these two
sticks that are written upon for Judah and for Joseph? "Say unto
them, Thus saith the Lord God, behold I will take the stick of
Joseph, written upon for Joseph, and I will put it with the stick
of Judah, written upon for Judah, and they shall be one in mine
hand." The two sticks in Ezekiel's hands were a representation of
what the Lord was going to do, when he would do it and what
events should follow the joining of these two sticks together. In
reading the next verse we see how it harmonizes with what David
and Isaiah have said on the subject. 'The sticks whereon thou
writest shall be in thine hand before their eyes; and say unto
them, Thus saith the Lord God, Behold I will take the children of
Israel from among the heathen whither they be gone. I will gather
them on every side, and bring them into their own land upon the
mountains of Israel. They shall no more be two nations, neither
shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all. But they
shall dwell in the land which I have given to Jacob my servant,
wherein your fathers have dwelt, and they shall dwell therein,
even they and their children and their children's children for
ever, saith the Lord."
191
Has that been fulfilled? No. When will the work commence that
will bring it about? When the Lord takes the stick of Joseph,
written upon for Joseph, and puts it with the Jewish record,
written upon for Judah, and makes them one in his own hand, and
not until then. You might raise millions of dollars, and form
missionary societies for the amelioration of the condition of the
Jews; you might form Christian societies and raise funds until
they are ever so great, and go to the nations of the earth and
try to convert Israel, but you can not do it. Why? Because God
Almighty has decreed that that work shall be brought about after
the union of the two records, and not till then. When he brings
forth the record of the tribe of Joseph--his sacred writing and
puts it with the record of the jews--the Bible then and not till
then may we look for the restitution of the house of Israel; and
not even then, until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled.
191
Now let me say a few words about the times of the Gentiles. You
know that Jesus predicted, in the 21st chapter of Luke, that
Jerusalem should be trodden down by the Gentiles until the times
of the Gentiles should be fulfilled, and from the day of the
dispersion of the Jews, seventy years after Christ, until the
present year--1872--that land has been trodden down by the
Gentiles, and the house of Israel have not enjoyed their former
location, their beautiful city nor their land of promise, and
they can not enjoy it--God will not permit them until the times
of the Gentiles are fulfilled.
191
The question is, How will he bring about the fulfillment of the
times of the Gentiles? I answered, by sending forth to them the
stick of Joseph, written upon for Joseph, in connection with the
Bible, by his servants who go forth to the nations of the earth.
They will proclaim to all people, nations and tongues, to the
Gentiles first, the fullness of the Gospel of the Son of God,
contained in these two records. The testimony of two nations
running together and growing into one is stronger than the
testimony of one nation; and when the Lord makes the ancient
continent of America bear record to the same great truths; when
he unites the Bible of the Western hemisphere, with the Bible of
the East, and sends it forth to the nations of the earth, it will
be a witness, and evidence and a testimony sufficient to bring
about what is termed the fullness of the Gentiles, or to fulfill
their times.
191
This is the reason why, during forty-two years, God has
restricted us to the Gentile nations, and would not suffer us to
go with the Book of Mormon to the house of Israel until the times
of the Gentiles were fulfilled. How much longer the Lord will
bear with the Gentile nations I know not; but I do know that when
they count themselves unworthy of eternal life, when the servants
of God have thoroughly warned them by preaching to them the
fullness of the Gospel of his Son, then the commandment will go
forth from the Almighty to his servants--'turn from the Gentile
nations and go to the dispersed of Israel. Go, ye fishers and ye
hunters, and fulfill that which I spake by the mouth of mine
ancient Prophets, that Jacob may no longer be made ashamed, that
his face may no longer wax pale. Go and say to the house of
Israel in the four quarters of the earth that the God of Jacob
has again spoken. Go and tell them that that which he spake by
the mouths their ancient Prophets is being fulfilled." And they
will go, and their proclamation will be to Israel the same as to
the Gentiles, with the exception of gathering the Jews to old
Jerusalem, instead of to the land of Zion.
191
I might quote many other passages that have a bearing on this
subject, but let this suffice. The work is before the nations,
and they can examine it. It has received its foundation and
start, and there is no power beneath the heavens that can stay
the hand of the Almighty. His work will roll forth, whatever the
conduct of the unfaithful may be. The work of the Almighty is
onward, and will progress in its majesty and power until every
prophecy is fulfilled that has been spoken by the mouth of his
ancient servants. It will come to pass, and the people will be
gathered, for the powers of the earth can not stay the hand of
the Almighty. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, October 8, 1872
Brigham Young, October 8, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER BRIGHAM YOUNG, JUN.,
Delivered at the 42nd Semi-Annual Conference, Salt Lake City,
October 8, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
TESTIMONY--SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES--WORD OF WISDOM.
192
I believe it is pleasing, generally, for an Elder in this Church
to have the privilege of bearing his testimony, though it may be
done with fear and trembling, before the people; yet the
knowledge which God has given to the Elders of Israel inspires
them to declare it unto the world. Although I am considerably
afflicted, as well as my brethren, with this manfearing spirit,
yet it is a pleasure to me, and I hope it ever will be, to stand
before the congregations, and tell them that I know, by the
revelations of Jesus Christ, that this is the people of God. I
may not be able to instruct the people to that extent which
others might, but with the help of the Spirit of the Lord I can
testify to that which I do know, which I have experienced in my
life, and which has been brought home to my understanding. I
think that it strengthens me in the principles of the everlasting
Gospel every time I have the privilege of testifying to their
truth.
193
It is almost impossible for this people to realize that they are
called by the power and authority of the Almighty, and that they
are the Saints of God, nevertheless it is true if we are living
that religion which we profess to believe in. Let those who have
not received a testimony to that effect go before their Maker,
seek him in all diligence, be faithful to that which they know,
and he will reveal it unto their minds. We have not come to this
earth to idle away our time, or to throw away that precious gift
which is within the reach of all whom God has created. Eternal
life is extended unto us by a merciful Creator, and we have the
opportunity of gaining an exaltation in the kingdom of God if we
have a mind to improve it. We have come here without a knowledge
of a former existence, we are like strangers in a strange land.
The knowledge that we have acquired guides us to some extent,
enables us to gain a living, and in part to understand the things
of the kingdom of God. Brethren and sisters, we are here as
strangers in a strange land, and a guide is what we want--a guide
for our actions on the earth. God has given us one--he revealed a
guide through Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and others who have
lived in modern times, and they have revealed the will of the
Almighty unto the people. We are not left destitute, so that we
can be led away by every manner of doctrine; when we hear people
say, "Lo! here is Christ, lo! there is Christ," we are not left
to ourselves, neither have we to seek the advice of men to know
whether these expressions are true or not, because the Spirit of
the Almighty has testified unto us that the revelations contained
in those books--the Book of Doctrine and Covenants and the Book
of Mormon, which we received through Joseph Smith, are true, and
they are given unto us for our guidance.
193
Is it necessary to ask this people if they are acquainted with
the revelations contained in these books, which have been given
unto us as a guide to eternal life in the presence of God? Do we
understand the revelations contained within the lids of these
books? They contain blessings and truths inestimable, for they
point the way back into the presence of our God. Do we study and
understand them, or are our minds taken up with such light
reading as naturally tends to distract the attention from the
principles of the Gospel? There is too much fault-finding and
confusion, and too much of the world in the midst of this people,
and especially in the midst of the Latter-day Saints who dwell in
Salt Lake City. It is true that temptations are broadcast in our
midst, and we meet them on every hand. But is that any reason
that we should give way to them? Is it any reason that we should
adopt the follies and fashions of the world because they have
been introduced into our midst? Well do I remember the time when,
in this city, it was customary for the Saints to retire to rest
without locking their doors. There was no necessity to lock
granaries, or stables, or to guard property as we are compelled
to do now. But times have changed, the temptations which the Lord
said should overtake his people have come, and they have come for
our salvation, for without them it would be impossible for us to
show to God that we are for him and his kingdom and that, under
any and all circumstances, we are determined to work
righteousness upon the earth. I do not complain because these
temptations have been introduced into our midst, for they are
necessary. If the Lord sees fit to permit them, I have nothing to
say only by way of counsel, and to exhort the Saints not to
indulge in those things which would have a tendency to grieve the
Spirit of the Lord. I am aware that these evils are not pleasant,
and probably if we could understand and comprehend evil without
coming in contact with it, God would never have placed us on this
earth, so far from our home, so far from those with whom we dwelt
in the eternal worlds. He never would have placed us here but for
our own good.
195
Here are the books--the Bible, Book of Mormon, and the Book of
Doctrine and Covenants--which are given for a guide to the people
of all the earth, if they will but listen to them; but they will
not listen to the Book of Mormon and the Book of Doctrine and
Covenants, and yet I have failed to discover a learned man who
could take those books and tell where they differed in doctrine
in the least. They can not do this, because the doctrines of all
are the same, for they all proceed from God, and they contain his
plan for the salvation of his children upon the earth. Shall we
obey the revelations which have been given? If I could have an
answer from each individual here to-day, professing to be a
Saint, I have no doubt it would be "Yes." And if strangers, and
the nations of the earth knew that we believe in them as firmly
as we believe in anything on the earth, they would say, "If you
believe in them, practice and obey them in every particular, and
live according to your conscience and the law which God has given
you." I, by the revelations of the Almighty, understand these
books to be true. I know that Jesus is the Christ. Not because I
have read it in the books which I have named, or because I have
heard Joseph Smith or others testify to it, but I know it by the
revelations of God, just as others have known it in former
dispensations of the Gospel, and just as others know it in this
dispensation. Saints should live their religion; they should obey
the principles which have been revealed and which are contained
in these books. But there is too much ignorance concerning these
revelations; they are not sufficiently studied; or if studied
they are not remembered, if I am to judge from what I see around
me. In traveling and preaching among the people, there is one
revelation which presses itself particularly on my mind, and
which I think the people would obey if they considered that it
came from the Almighty. But as they do not obey it, I suppose
they do not consider that it came from God. I refer to a
revelation given in the year 1833, called the Word of Wisdom. We
fail to obey it to-day, and we shall fail to-morrow unless we
make a short turn and determine in our own minds that we will
obey it. How many of us have disregarded that revelation, in
every particular? It is to be found on page 240 of the Doctrine
and Covenants, and it shadows to me that a time will come in the
midst of this people when a desolating scourge will pass through
our ranks, and the destroying angel will be in our midst as he
was in Egypt when he slew all the firstborn of the Egyptians. God
says "The destroying angel shall pass by" and shall not harm you
if you will observe to do these things. Now if we believe this
revelation, and I take it for granted that we do, though I may
choose to doubt in my own case and some others, yet I assume that
as a people we believe it; but what assurance have we that that
angel will pass us by unless we do observe it? No more than the
children of Israel would have had if they had failed to mark
their doors and lintels with the blood of a lamb, as Moses had
commanded them. What effect would a failure to comply with this
commandment have had on them? Would the Destroyer have passed by
the firstborn of Israel? I trow not; I think the firstborn of
Israel would have been slain as well as the first born of Egypt.
That was a revelation given by the Lord to Moses for the
salvation of Israel; the Word of Wisdom is a revelation given by
the Lord to Joseph Smith for the salvation of this people, and if
we disobey we have no more assurance than Israel had that the
destroying angel will pass through our ranks and leave us
unscathed. There is not a father or mother before me to-day who
would like to see a child borne away to the graveyard because of
their disobedience. Well, light is given, it has come to us, and
it is for us to obey it, and to put into practice the
commandments which God has given us. It is true that the word of
Wisdom does not say anything about drinking tea and coffee, but
our leaders--men inspired of the Almighty, in whom we have full
confidence, have told us that it includes these things, and that
should be sufficient for us. The Word of Wisdom says that in
those times, through the wickedness which is in the hearts of
men, they would seek to destroy this people, by introducing into
their midst something deleterious to health. If these are not the
exact words, they are tantamount. Now is it necessary for us to
observe the Word of Wisdom with regard to tea and coffee? Just as
much as with regard to tobacco and liquor, because it has been so
defined to us, and I so understand it.
195
When I think of these things, I think of what I have seen among
the men who have been called particularly to labor on our
railroads and in our co-operative institutions. What is the
situation of some of the young men who labor in these
institutions and upon our railroads? If they do not follow the
examples set by those who travel and labor on other roads, then I
do not understand it. I find that our young men are copying after
the young men who travel on other roads--they smoke and they
drink, with as much assurance as though they had followed it all
their lives; and I doubt not, if they continue in the pursuit of
such practices, they will become as proficient in other sins as
some I have seen elsewhere. If young men wish to continue habits
of this kind I have no objections, so far as I am concerned, but
I do not wish them to invade my household. I do not wish my
children to keep the company of men of this class. I do not wish
my daughters to go into the society of men, even though they
profess to belong to this Church, who will smoke, drink and
swear, and who are ready to commit all the other sins contained
in the catalogue if they had the opportunity, and were from under
the eye of those who would condemn them. I know these things
exist upon our railroads, and also in our co-operative
institutions more or less, throughout this country. Now what
course shall we pursue with regard to these things? Shall we
foster them? If you see a young man in a co-operative store he
dresses better and has a little more means and influence than
other young men of his own age in the community. He exercises
that influence for good or for evil over the minds of younger
members of the community. My sons see such young men smoking and
drinking, and they say "Why should not we?" And they will be
likely to, until they arrive at years of discretion, and get
sense to know better. Some may say, "Oh, they will turn round by
and by, and do better." We have no business to hope that, when
once these evil habits are acquired by our children, they will
turn round and do better when they arrive at years of maturity;
at least I have no right to hope it on behalf of my own children.
I hope to prevent it in their youth, I could not hope to stop it
after they had commenced and become confirmed in it, although in
some cases I might succeed. But I wish to prevent it, for I
believe that prevention is better than cure.
196
It is our business, brethren and sisters, to put our foot upon
these practices, and to discountenance and condemn them whenever
we see our youth practicing them. This people are not gathered
here to practice the sins which are prevalent in Babylon, at
least I do not so understand it. The Scriptures teach me, and the
Spirit of the Lord bears testimony, to cry unto the people to
come out of Babylon, and not to drag Babylon or its sins into our
midst. They are not necessary for our happiness. It is
astonishing to me when I look over the people in this and other
countries, to see the immense number who use tobacco and liquor.
I sometimes wonder how the world lived so long without tobacco
before the discovery of America! Now nearly everybody smokes or
chews. They did without it before America was discovered, and
they could now if they were so disposed. This people could if
they would, and yet they are importing perhaps more tobacco, tea,
coffee and liquor than ever before during their existence as a
Church. I believe this is the case, from all I can hear and lean
on the subject. This is wrong. We can go into our settlements in
the north, south, east and west, and it is just as necessary to
have tea, coffee and tobacco now, as ever. I can also find that
where there is an almost boundless range, and the people can have
an unlimited number of stock, all their cheese is imported--they
eat States cheese there as they do in the city. Home manufacture
is neglected, and our cows are left to die on the range, and we
are expending the very bone and sinew of this community to get
means to import articles which we can raise in abundance here.
This will ruin us as a community if it is practiced long enough.
These things may not be quite so prevalent as my words may imply.
I do not mean to say that all the people disregard the Word of
Wisdom; but I fear that the great majority do. If the brethren
who have been called to occupy responsible positions in the midst
of the people fail to observe the Word of Wisdom, it will grieve
the Spirit of the Lord, and if they do not turn and repent they
will leave this Church. That is my faith--if they continue to use
these things, and to impress the minds of the people with the
idea that it is utterly unnecessary to observe the Word of
Wisdom, they will lose the spirit of this work and will
eventually turn from it. The presiding Elders of this Church are
called to observe the word of wisdom, and in all things to set a
good example before the people. That is their business, and that
is their mission, and as long as they live they will never have a
greater.
196
Brethren, let us seek to understand and practice these things,
and also endeavor to instruct the minds of our wives and children
with regard to the principles contained in these books. Endeavor,
brethren, to build up Zion, and not Babylon. I think very often,
when I am speaking to the people, of a remark to President Young.
He has been in the Church a great many years. On one occasion,
only a very few years after the Church was organized, the Prophet
Joseph counseled him and others never to do another day's work to
build up Babylon, and he has obeyed that counsel. I know he has
for twenty-five years past, and I am satisfied he has from the
time the counsel was given.
197
Do we need to go away from home to build up Babylon? Do we need
to leave this city to build up Babylon? No, continue to indulge
our fancies for fashion and for the practice of those habits and
customs which a corrupt civilization has introduced into our
midst, and we are building up Babylon in the most approved style.
That is my belief. Our outside friends have brought a great many
good things here; they have improved our city, they are building
fine buildings, and are expending their capital liberally. I do
not object to this, but I do not want it to lead us from the path
of truth and to bring us into bondage, to sin and iniquity. There
is no necessity for this if we wisely use that which God has
given us. You remember the time, brethren, after we had been in
this valley a year or so, we were, in a manner, naked and
barefooted, and were a thousand miles from any supply of
clothing, and it was impossible for us to manufacture it, for
there were no sheep in the country, nothing to manufacture cloth
with, and no means to obtain it. You remember the prophecy
delivered here upon this block by the late Heber C. Kimball, that
within a certain time--a very brief period--clothing would be as
cheap in Salt Lake City as in New York. What prospect had we at
that time that his prophecy would be fulfilled, for a journey to
the States and back again then required months to perform, and
there was seemingly no chance of a supply of clothing from
outside importation? Yet within the time specified, the prophecy
was literally fulfilled, and clothing was far cheaper in the
streets of this city than in the streets of New York. This is
only one among the many prophecies which have been delivered and
fulfilled. Some of you remember, and others of you have heard it
spoken of, when President Young, in July 1847, while walking on
this block, about where the Temple now stands, said to the
brethren who were around him, "if our enemies will let us alone
for ten years we will ask no odds of them." Ten years that day,
brethren, we got news that an army had left the confines of the
States at that time, for Utah. What for? Their boast was, to
destroy the "Mormons." Did we ask any odds of them? No. Did we
ask anything of them? No. We attempted to give them supplies, but
they would not receive them. Brethren, this is the Church and
kingdom of God, and we are led by holy men, men inspired by the
Almighty. They give us a little now and a little then; we receive
line upon line and precept upon precept, and if we give heed
thereto, God will strengthen us, and the kingdom will grow and
increase beneath our watchcare.
198
Is it necessary for us to remember the prophecies and the
revelations which have been given for our salvation? If we have
the truth--the Gospel of the Son of God-and we testify that we
have, it is just as necessary for us to remember these things as
it is for us to be saved in the kingdom of God. That is our
position to-day; and it is impossible for any human being who has
made covenant with the Almighty to be saved in his kingdom if he
disregards the revelations and counsels that are given by the
servants of God. I do not expect strangers to understand and
believe this as we do. Strangers have not come here for the
purpose of identifying themselves with the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, but the people to whom I am talking came
here for that express purpose. They came here for their souls'
salvation, they want to be saved in the kingdom of God. They had
the testimony in the old countries, in the States, or wherever
they received the Gospel, that God had revealed himself to the
children of men and that his kingdom was established on the
earth, and they received light and intelligence which they never
before possessed. They came here to build up the kingdom of God,
and that kingdom is rolling forth and increasing and will
continue to do. But are we giving way to folly and fashion to
such an extent as to blind our minds to the great purpose we had
in coming here? I hope not. I hope that we are living our
religion.
198
Brethren, I testify to you that this is the kingdom of God, and
that you are in a faith that will lead you back into the presence
of your Father and God. I also testify that if the people of the
nations of the earth will obey the Gospel they will receive
salvation at the hands of the Almighty, and if they reject it
they will receive condemnation at his hands at the last day.
198
May God bless you, Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Erastus Snow, October 7, 1872
Erastus Snow, October 7, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ERASTUS SNOW,
Delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, October 7, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
ZION--THE DUTY OF ITS CITIZENS--TESTIMONY.
199
God has said that Zion shall be as a city set upon a hill, whose
light can not be hid. We are called to be the children of Zion.
The Lord has declared that Zion consists of the pure in heart. He
has said, further, that the nations of the earth have corrupted
their way before him, and, referring to Babylon, his command to
his Saints is--"Come out of her, O my people, that ye be not
partakers of her sins, that ye receive not of her plagues." The
Bible is full of prophecies delivered by the Prophets and
Patriarchs, and by the Savior and his Apostles, concerning the
day and age in which we live. The end draweth nigh and the time
approacheth speedily when the Lord will make a full end of all
nations who fight against Zion, who reject his law and harden
their hearts against him, his precepts and his government. It is
our high privilege to bear this testimony, and the testimony we
have to bear unto the people of the 19th century is but a renewal
of that which was borne by Prophets and Saints in days past and
gone. They spoke of the time in which we live by the spirit of
prophecy and revelation, which was like one looking through a
glass darkly, yet it is our privilege to behold with our eyes and
to hear with our ears those things which Prophets and Patriarchs
long desired to see, but died without the sight. The duty
especially enjoined upon us today is to awake to righteousness,
and consider the calling wherewith God has called us. We should
consider that God has separated us by the preaching of his word
and by the testimony of Jesus; and has called us to be a distinct
people, distinct in this particular, that we separate ourselves
from sin and wickedness, and, as far as possible, from the
company of sinners and from all those customs and habits that
attend to darken, degrade and abase the human mind, and cultivate
those which will sanctify the affections, purify the heart and
ennoble the whole being of man, and fit us, as far as in us lies,
to regenerate ourselves and our race. In short, God desires, and
has put forth his hand, to exalt his people from their low
degree, and to lift them up and make of them a peculiar people, a
holy nation, a kingdom of Priests unto the Most High God and the
Lamb.
199
In all this, is there anything that can hurt, destroy or injure,
in any wise, any portion of our fellow-men who do not feel
disposed to join us in this glorious work, or engage with us in
this noble enterprise? Not at all. The salvation of God is
revealed for the good of all men who will receive it. The Gospel
is offered without money and without price to all flesh, and the
testimony that we bear to the world is that Jesus died for all,
and that through the shedding of his blood, salvation may come
unto all men who will believe and yield obedience unto the
requirements of his Gospel. The government which is inaugurated
and established among men by the preaching of the Gospel, and the
administration of its holy ordinances, is a government of peace,
love and goodwill to men, prompting those who receive it to do
good unto all, but especially unto the household of faith.
199
The duties which are enjoined upon us are, first, to our own
household--the household of God, those who have been baptized
into Christ by being born again of the water and of the Spirit,
and become the children of God by adoption. Next, to all men who
have not thus been translated from the kingdom of darkness into
the kingdom of God's dear Son; and that love which is wrought in
the Saints of God by the fire of the Holy Ghost through faith in
and obedience to the Gospel, prompts all who are brought under
its influence to yield obedience to its requirements and to labor
for the well-being of every creature that bears the form of God.
199
There is nothing in the constitution of the Gospel, or the
organization of the Church of Christ and the kingdom of God among
men, and the precepts that are taught of God and his servants,
that would in the least degree inflict injury or withhold
blessings from any member of the family of man, inasmuch as they
place themselves in a condition to receive them, and are willing
to accept them. But God has ordained certain everlasting
principles of truth by which his people may be exalted, and
without which they can not be exalted into his presence and to
the enjoyment of his glory. All things are governed by law, and
all good and wholesome laws, which are ordained and enacted by
men, designed for the peace, prosperity and wellbeing of their
fellow-creatures, should be respected, maintained and honored by
all people, and this is one of the duties enjoined upon all
Saints in all the commandments and revelations of God to his
people.
200
It is, further, the duty of all who are entrusted with the
administration of law, in any department whatever, to act in good
faith, in all purity and integrity, and in good conscience for
the wellbeing and happiness of their fellow-creatures in the
administration of justice, truth and judgment; and it should be
the aim of all law-makers to consult the best interest of the
people from whom they derive authority, or in whose behalf they
are called to act. It is the duty of Latter-day Saints, and of
all good people to honor all laws and regulations that are
ordered for the freedom of all flesh. And if there are people who
do not feel disposed to, or who can not, receive the testimony of
the Lord Jesus, they are left with as much freedom to enjoy the
rights and privileges which are accorded to them, as the children
of God on the earth, as though they did believe, taking and
suffering the consequences of their own unbelief, which
consequence will be a failure to attain to the blessings which
are revealed, and which God deigns to bestow upon the obedient
and faithful.
200
The word of the Lord unto all flesh is, "Come unto me, all ye
ends of the earth, and be ye saved. Take my yoke upon you, and
learn of me, for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find
rest to your souls, for my yoke is easy and my burden is light."
If any doubt the yoke of Christ being easy and his burden being
light, let them try the experiment, and demonstrate for
themselves. If there are any either, within or without the Church
of Christ, who feel his yoke to be heavy and galling, and his
burden not to be easy, I can inform them that they have not taken
upon themselves the yoke of Christ, they are not bearing his
burden, for they are not meek and lowly of heart, they have not
learned their lessons correctly--how to govern and control their
own spirits by the principles and spirit of the everlasting
Gospel. There is nothing in its nature that is oppressive,
galling or hard to bear. In saying this I give the experience of
my life, for it has been devoted from my childhood to the
contemplation of these glorious truths, with an earnest endeavor
to apply them practically unto myself, and I have demonstrated
them, and I speak that which I know and have experienced, and
most assuredly believe and testify of them. And many there are
who believe this testimony and are able to corroborate it; and
those who are not, and have not experienced it in their lives
have the privilege of doing so.
200
It is our duty to sanctify the Lord in this land that he has
given us for an inheritance, by observing, not only the law of
tithing, which is one means which he has given us for that
purpose, but by observing every precept that emanates from him,
and living by every word that proceeds from his mouth, not
forgetting the words of wisdom, which are designed to improve us
in a physical point of view, to add strength to our bodies,
lengthen our lives, to increase our powers of endurance, and to
increase the strength, efficiency and power of the rising
generation. Every institution which God has established in our
midst--social, political and religious--is designed for our
improvement, individually and collectively, as a people and as
families, to prolong our lives and to increase our usefulness and
our ability for good in the earth; and if we observe these
principles and apply them diligently in our lives, praying
earnestly with our families and in secret to the Lord for wisdom
in doing so, our light will continue to shine, our strength to
increase and our influence both at home and abroad, on the earth
and in the heavens, before God, angels and good men, and the
strength, union, faith, light and purity of the lives of the
Latter-day Saints will be a terror to evil-doers.
201
What can men do against the Lord, and against the people who fear
him and are united in good works? What can the arm of flesh
accomplish but its own discomfiture? The weapons of the people of
God are not carnal, but they are mighty through faith. We war not
against flesh and blood, but against spiritual wickedness in high
places, and against corruption wherever it is found, reproving
sin, folly, deception, dishonesty and wickedness of every kind.
And if there are those who profess to be Saints, and who do not
live the life of Saints, whose light is not shining, whose lamps
are not trimmed and burning, whose lives and characters, precepts
and examples do not correspond with the principles of the Gospel,
this only testifies to the weakness of men and is nothing against
the truth, the testimony of Jesus, or against the testimony of
those who do live their religion and magnify their calling as
Saints, and whose precepts and examples correspond. If some do
not believe, will that make the truth of God of none-effect or
less valuable? And what if some do not make their lives
correspond with their doctrines and precepts, it will but show
more vividly and clearly the character of those who are clean and
pure, and who do love the truth and delight to honor it.
201
I am a witness of the truth which God has revealed unto man
pertaining to the fullness of the Gospel: that Jesus is the Son
of God, the Savior of those who will receive him, and that he has
laid the foundation for a more glorious and extended salvation
than the majority of us are capable of conceiving and properly
comprehending; and his work is onward in the earth, and it will
continue onward and upward, until the nations of the earth shall
be warned, and all people who will hear may hear and receive the
Gospel, be numbered with his children, be gathered into his fold,
become the children of Zion, and prepared for his coming, for at
the appointed time which he has foretold, and which time is in
the bosom of the Father, the Son will surely come in the clouds
of heaven and the holy Angels with him, to assume the reins of
government on the earth, and to reign King of kings and Lord of
lords. Then, all those who will not bow to his scepter, yield
obedience to his rule, and accept of his government and of his
dominion will be cut off. Then comes the time spoken of when
every knee that remains shall bow, and every tongue confess, to
the glory of God the Father, that Jesus is the Christ.
202
It is to lay the foundation of this work, and to prepare a people
for this era that the Lord called his servant Joseph Smith, and
revealed unto him the fullness of the Gospel in this, the 19th
century. Elder rich testified that he knew, by the revelations of
God to himself, that Joseph Smith was a Prophet of God. The
question will arise in the minds of the unbelieving, How can this
be? They marvel, like Nicodemus marvelled when Jesus told him he
must be born again. He wondered within himself how a man could be
born again--how, when he was old, he could enter a second time
into his mother's womb and be born. The marvel rises in the minds
of man, How can a man know for himself that Joseph Smith was
truly called to be a Prophet, seer and revelator to this
generation? That God did reveal to him the fullness of the
Gospel? That the Book of Mormon contains the fullness of the
Gospel--the same that was taught and revealed by the Savior and
his disciples, as recorded in the New Testament? How can a man
know that Angels administered to him? That God opened the visions
of heaven to the Prophet Joseph Smith? I answer, They may know it
precisely as the Apostle Peter knew that Jesus was the Christ,
the Son of the living God. It is in this manner that Elder Rich
knows that Joseph Smith was a Prophet; it is in this manner that
I know he was a Prophet and a servant of God raised up to
commence this work in the earth, and to lay the foundation of the
Church and kingdom of God on the earth. When Jesus asked Peter
and the rest of the Apostles, "Whom do men say that I, the Son of
Man am?" They answered, "Some think thou art Elias; others that
thou art John the Baptist risen from the dead; others that thou
art Jeremiah or one of the Prophets." "But whom say ye that I
am?" Peter answered--"Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living
God." "Blessed art thou Simon Barjonah, flesh and blood hath not
revealed this unto thee, but my Father who is in heaven; and
verily I say unto thee, upon this rock I will build my Church,
and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." Not upon
Peter, not his person, for he was flesh, and must pass away like
the flower of the field. It was not on Peter, or his successors
in office, as is taught by the Romish church. Then who and what
was this rock Christ referred to? It was the rock of revelation,
revelation from the living God. "On this rock," said the Savior,
"I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it." And I repeat that I know the truth of the Gospel, as
Peter knew that Jesus was the Christ, by revelation unto me from
the Father who is in heaven, and I bear this testimony unto you.
202
I know that there are many, very many, whose testimony has been
proclaimed in the ears of this generation, and is recorded in
heaven. Their words are like the precious things that John saw in
the vials that were before the throne of God, and their testimony
will remain, and blessed are all those who receive it. Blessed be
the Lord God who revealed these things unto Peter and unto his
servant Joseph, and who has revealed it unto many more who have
sought him with an earnest desire to know his ways! Blessed are
those who fear him and keep his commandments!
202
May God help us to live as Saints, and let our light shine! May
God seal the testimony of the Twelve upon the hearts of those who
desire it, that they may come unto and walk in the light, be
saved through the truth, and inherit exaltation with the
sanctified, is my prayer, for Christ's sake. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / George
Q. Cannon, October 8, 1872
George Q. Cannon, October 8, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER GEORGE Q. CANNON,
Delivered at the 42nd Semi-Annual Conference, Salt Lake City,
October 8, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
GATHERING--ITS SPIRIT--ITS OBJECT--DUTIES OF THE GATHERED SAINTS.
203
Since the commencement of our Conference we have heard very much
valuable instruction, and testimonies which have been very
cheering to the hearts of those who have heard them; and no doubt
every person who has attended Conference from its commencement
until the present time, and who will continue until the
Conference shall terminate, will feel amply rewarded for the time
spent, and will go away feeling better prepared to perform the
duties which may devolve upon him or her.
204
There is so much to talk about connected with our circumstances
and condition, that it requires a portion of the Spirit of the
Lord to enable a person, in speaking, to dwell upon those points
which are best adapted to our present requirements. We are not
situated as any other people, that is, in many respects, and
instructions adapted to our circumstances would differ probably
from those which would be required by others. We have been, from
the commencement, a peculiar people; our religion is in many
respects at the present time a peculiar one; yet, if there be any
distinctive peculiarity about the religion of the Latter-day
Saints, it is that they believe and receive the Scriptures as
they are, and do not attempt to put double meanings to their
teachings. Our religion being peculiar, the effect of it is
somewhat peculiar. The message which the Elders of this Church
declare when they go forth to preach the Gospel has a different
effect, upon people who listen to it, to that which is declared
by any other denomination. Not because faith in Jesus Christ,
repentance of sin, baptism for the remission of sins, and laying
on of hands for the reception of the Holy Ghost are taught, but
because, following these principles, there is declared unto the
people the propriety and the necessity of gathering out from the
various nations where they dwell, from the midst of their kindred
and their former associates, and concentrating at the place which
God, as the Elders testify, had selected as the place for his
people to reside in. This is a strange doctrine, and one that is
peculiar to the Later-day Saints, and, as I have said, the
effects upon the people are peculiar. No sooner do they hear the
proclamation of this doctrine, and in some instances before, than
there springs up in the hearts of those who have received the
testimony of the Elders a desire to gather out, and be associated
with the people with whom they have joined, and whose faith they
have received. I suppose that among the thousands who live in
this Territory, who have been gathered from the various States of
this country, and from the various countries of Europe, of Asia
and the islands of the sea, there is scarcely one to be found who
did not, as soon as he or she embraced the Gospel, have an
intense desire to gather with the people of God, and to become
closely associated with them, to believe as they believed, to
live as they lived, to share their trials, to partake of their
prosperity or adversity, as the case might be; to receive
instructions from the man whom they believed God had chosen to
preside over his Church upon the earth. And the effect upon the
Latter-day Saints in every land is the same in this respect. You
may travel to the most inhospitable climate--to the bleak regions
of the north, or to the sunny climes of the south; to the lands
of sterility and barrenness, where hardship seems to be the lot
of the people, where privation is one of the incidents of their
existence; or to the lands o fertility, where the inhabitants
acquire a livelihood with ease; in fact, no matter where you go,
nor whatever the circumstances may be which surround the people,
when they hear the testimony of the servants of God, and receive
and at upon it, the same spirit takes possession of the people,
and they gladly forsake the lands of their nativity, and the
associations of life--of early life and mature age, the homes of
their childhood and the graves of their ancestors, and wend their
way with joy and gladness to this strange land, which God, as
they verily believe and know, by the testimony of his Holy
Spirit, has prepared as a resting place for them. This is the
universal effect wherever the Gospel has been preached, and in
this respect the Latter-day Saints are a peculiar people.
204
But though we have gathered together, as we have, in this
country, there seems to be in the minds of a great many people a
disposition to overlook the reasons which God our heavenly Father
has had in view in gathering us out, and collecting us together,
and making us one people. The prophecies which were recorded in
ancient days, as well as those which have been given us in the
day in which we live, all point forward to this great
dispensation, as a time when God should do a great and mighty
work in the midst of the earth, and when a great revolution
should be effected and a great reformation accomplished among the
children of men; when he should have a peculiar people--a people
who should be gathered out from all nations, a people upon whom
he should place his name, and whom he should recognize as his. We
are told by the Revelator John, that a time would come when the
people of God should be commanded to some out of Babylon, out of
confusion, when they should be gathered out from every nation,
from the remotest parts of the earth, and when he should make of
them a great and mighty people.
205
We see a partial fulfillment of this prediction in this
Territory--this people are gathered from various lands, and are
dwelling together in peace and in union, without litigation,
animosity or strife, all harmonizing together--their interests
blended in one. To my mind this is one of the most remarkable
phenomena to be witnessed on the face of the earth. It strikes me
as such, and although familiar with it from my childhood, I look
with wonder and astonishment at the great work that has been done
in gathering this people together. Visitors come here, and they
are full of admiration for the great labors that have been
accomplished by the Latter-day Saints in transforming this
wilderness land into a fruitful field in creating these gardens,
in erecting these houses, in adorning this land with beautiful
habitations and with groves, and making this soil, once so barren
and sterile, teem with fertility. They admire the physical works
which we have accomplished; but to my mind there is something
greater than this to be admired. There are works which far
surpass the work accomplished on the face of nature. When I
contemplate the work that has been accomplished in gathering the
people from the various nations; when I see men of various
languages and, originally, of various creeds, born under various
forms of government, spread throughout this land, dwelling
together in peace, union and love, worshiping together in the one
Tabernacle, or in the same places of worship throughout the
length and breadth of this Territory, I see something which to my
mind is far, far more surprising than anything wrought by our
physical labors. I see a power wonderful in its effect--a power
which has moulded the hearts and blended the feelings of the
children of men, and created a oneness in their midst, the
effects of which are witnessed all around us. God has done this,
and to his name the glory must be ascribed. Man cannot do these
things, he cannot thus effect and operate upon the minds of his
fellowmen. He may produce some effect, may accomplish some
results, but that union, love and harmony which we witness among
ourselves is beyond the power of man to bring about--it is the
power of God which he has manifested; and for wise and great ends
has this wonderful God-like power been restored, which binds the
hearts of men to their fellowmen, and causes them to co-operate,
as they have done in this land, in accomplishing the labors which
have devolved upon us.
205
But yet, though I can admire these things, brethren and sisters,
there are many things which we have neglected to do, which
devolve upon us. God has given unto us a great mission in the
earth, and whether we realize it or not it is a fact. He has
entrusted to us, as a people, a great and mighty work to perform.
We look around us in the various nations as well as in our own
nation, and we see a great many evils existing, we see these
evils increasing in magnitude, and becoming more formidable and
threatening every year that passes over our heads. Probably we
who reside in these mountains, and have done so for a quarter of
a century, can realize the evidence of these evils better than
they who live in the midst of them and witness their gradual
growth without noticing the great changes which have been
effected. But we see extravagance, corruption, and a lack of
virtue and public morality; we see the breaking down of those
barriers which formerly existed, and a sapping and demoralization
of public sentiment and of private morality throughout the nation
of which we form a part, as well as in other nations.
206
Now there is laid upon us, as a people, the labor of establishing
righteousness in the earth. There is laid upon us the duty of
building up in purity and power a system which God has revealed
unto us. Not a system of theocracy to be exclusive in its
effects, not to build up a class, a priesthood that should
domineer and wield unjust and oppressive power over the hearts
and minds of the children of men. Our mission is to lay the
foundation and to build up a system under which all the
inhabitants of the land can dwell in peace and safety. But I
notice a difficulty in our own midst, and that is that we yield,
to a great extent, to the tendencies of the age, to the
influences which surround us on every hand. We must refrain from
this, we must set our faces like flint against every species of
corruption, against every kind of wrong, in whatever form it may
approach us. We must seek with all the energy that we have, to
build up in truth and righteousness that which God has committed
unto us, and establish impregnably the system of reformation with
which we are entrusted. There can be no better way for us to
commence than by listening to the counsels that have been given
unto us in the past, and which have been the means of producing
the peace, happiness and prosperity which we witness among us.
206
There are tendencies to be witnessed in this city, and among our
own people here, that we have to guard against. We well know
that, of late, there has been an increase of wealth, and of the
means of acquiring luxuries and comforts. God has bestowed these
upon us, and the question now is with us, Will we use these,
means aright, with an eye single to his glory? Will we, with our
increased prosperity, devote ourselves in the future, as we have
in the past, to the building up of the kingdom of God, as our
paramount duty? Not for our own aggrandizement, but for the
benefit of our fellow-men in every land, as well as for the
benefit of those who reside in this Territory. If we do this, God
will bless us. But you know what the fate of all people has been
who have been similarly situated to us in the beginning. In their
early days they were pure, they were not extravagant, they were
simple in their tastes, habits and dress. They did not allow
their minds to go out after earthly things, or to be placed upon
them. But means and wealth will always increase among frugal,
economical, virtuous and industrious people, for it is one of the
natural consequences which follow industry and well-directed
labor, and we are no exceptions to this rule. We live in a land
that has been barren and sterile above all lands on this
continent, and by well-directed energy and industry, by
perseverance temperance and frugality, we have been blessed, and
now the fruits of our long-continued abstemiousness and industry
are beginning to flow in upon us, and we are becoming wealthy.
Our lands are becoming valuable, our surroundings are becoming,
if not luxurious, at least comfortable, wealth is pouring into
our laps, and the prospect is that ere long we will be as wealthy
a community, probably, as can be found between the two oceans.
This seems to be the natural tendency of events at the present
time.
207
Now the question arises--and I deem it an important one for this
Conference--it has rested on my mind, as I doubt not it has on
the minds of the brethren--will we as a people devote the means
that God is giving unto us, for the preservation and continuation
of that system that he has revealed unto us? Or will we scatter
it abroad, destroy ourselves, and spoil the future which God has
in store for us? We must be a different people from every other
that has preceded us, if we fulfill the predictions of the holy
Priesthood, for God has said, through the mouth of his prophet
Daniel, thousands of years ago, that this kingdom should not be
given into the hands of another people, but it should stand for
ever. It should not share the fate of previous attempts of the
same character, and be overthrown in consequence of the weakness
of the people, and the abandonment by them of the principles of
truth and righteousness. There is nothing plainer to my mind than
this, that if the Latter-day Saints become luxurious and
extravagant; if they love the world and forsake their former
purity; if they forsake their frugality and temperance, and the
principles which God has revealed unto them, and by the practice
of which they are to-day the people that they are; we shall be
overthrown as others have been overthrown. But I do not look for
any such result, for I believe firmly in the prediction of
Daniel, that this work, when established, shall not be given into
the hands of another people, but it shall stand for ever, and
there will be means and agencies used and brought to bear on the
minds of the people, to prevent such a catastrophe as that to
which I have alluded--to prevent the downfall of the system and
the overthrow of those connected with it, and to prevent the
victory of that which is evil over that which is good, holy and
pure.
207
These means have been indicated in revelations which have been
given unto us. We are not living as we should live. As a people
we follow the systems of our fathers in regard to the management
of wealth. We follow in the footsteps of those who have preceded
us. We are innovators so far as religious thought and doctrines
are concerned, and we have been bold innovators. We have not
hesitated to adopt great reforms, and to proclaim them, and we
have sought, with all the energies God has bestowed upon us, to
make them facts in the earth. We have proclaimed this doctrine of
gathering, and the people have been gathered together. This is a
great innovation, it is a bold step, and it has resulted in
success thus far. It is not now a novelty, or a new and untried
experiment, for the gathering of the people together has been
going on for forty years and upwards. But it was a great
innovation when introduced. It is so with other doctrines which
the Elders of this Church have taught. God inspired their hearts,
and they, regardless of all consequences, fearlessly proclaimed
the truth which he imparted unto them. We have made a great
revolution in our domestic relations, and in our social system.
We have taken a bold stand, and have been fearless of the
consequences, because God, as we testify, has revealed unto us a
principle that should be practiced, and which we should carry
out, and be the pioneers in inaugurating for the redemption of
men and women, and that should check, and, in fact, effectually
cure, the evils under which Christendom has groaned for
centuries. The Elders of this Church did this, and have risked
all the consequences, from the time the system was inaugurated
until the present time. The results of this we can all see, in
the purity and chastity of our community; for strange as it may
seem, in no other land are the chastity and virtue of women so
highly respected as in Utah. Throughout the length and breadth of
this Territory public sentiment is utterly opposed to anything
that would violate that chastity and virtue.
208
In these directions, then, we have been bold and fearless
innovators. But so far as financial matters are concerned, so far
a the accumulation and management of wealth are concerned, we
have not followed in the path which God has marked out. Yet the
time must come, and we may as well prepare our minds for it, when
we shall have to take a great step in this direction, and when we
shall have to follow the path indicated by God in order to escape
the evils that are inevitable, and that will otherwise most
assuredly come upon, and overwhelm us.
208
I have told you that others who have preceded us have fallen a
prey to evils. The increase of wealth in every nation has been
attended with fatal consequences. We have but to read the history
of our race from the beginning until the present time to rest
assured of that. Men have said, probably, to all of you who have
been out and mingled with the world, "It is very well for you
Latter-day Saints to talk about your condition now, because you
are a primitive people, you are a young community, you have not
been tempted and tried. Wait till you increase in wealth, and
until you become familiar with the sins which surround the
wealthy. Wait until you are brought in contact with luxury; wait
until the spirit of reform which animated your pioneers dies out,
and a generation rises up who will think more of the world, then
there will be a different feeling and spirit, and you will not be
persecuted, hated or despised. You will become more popular,
because the world will become familiarized with your ideas. Then
'Mormonism' and the Latter-day Saints will become like every
other people that have preceded them--overcome by the luxuries of
the world, and by the love of riches." Have you not heard remarks
of this kind time and time again? Doubtless they have been made
to you or in your hearing.
209
Now, how shall we avert these evils? It is very well to say that
God has established this kingdom; it is very well to say that
this is his Church. Did he never have a Church or kingdom on the
earth before? Did he never have a people on the earth before?
Why, most certainly he did. He had churches before this; he had
people before he chose the Latter-day Saints. He had communities
that he owned and recognized before we were organized. Yet they
went the way of all the earth, and the Church of God disappeared
from the midst of the inhabitants of the earth. Luxury,
corruption, vice, extravagance, the love of wealth and the
allurements of sin prevailed in all the earth, and the devil--his
satanic majesty--held high carnival throughout the earth because
of the influence and power of these things over the hearts of the
children of men. It is true that God established his work before;
we know it to be true; and because he has established it in our
day, we need not think that he is going to preserve it without
using means to do so. He has revealed, and will continue to
reveal, law, and that law must be obeyed by us, or we can not be
preserved. The time must come when we must obey that which has
been revealed to us as the Order of Enoch, when there shall be no
rich and no poor among the Latter-day Saints; when wealth will
not be a temptation; when every man will love his neighbor as he
does himself; when every man and woman will labor for the good of
all as much as for self. That day must come, and we may as well
prepare our hearts for it, brethren, for as wealth increases I
see more and more a necessity for the institution of such an
order. As wealth increases, luxury and extravagance have more
power over us. The necessity for such an order is very great, and
God, undoubtedly, in his own time and way, will inspire his
servant to introduce it among the people. I do not wish to
foreshadow when it will be done, or what the circumstances will
be that will call it forth, for this is not my province; but I
feel led to talk upon it, and to prepare my own heart, and to
seek, with all the faith and influence I have, to prepare the
hearts of my brethren and sisters for the introduction of this
order. It will doubtless be a time of trial, and will be attended
with many things that will test our feelings; but when we view
the great results that will follow its introduction and its
perfect establishment upon the earth, we should be filled with
thanksgiving and praise that God has devised a scheme of this
kind. You can see already the effects of the partial introduction
of something akin to it in co-operation. We have had that
established in our midst, and what are its effects? We witness a
gradual diffusion of means throughout the community, greatly
benefiting all its members. One of the effects of this which we
witness is that wealth does not increase so rapidly in the hands
of the few, and that the poor are not kept in poverty to much.
209
Before co-operation started, you doubtless saw and deplored the
increase of wealth in some few hands. There was rapidly growing
in our midst a class of monetary men composing an aristocracy of
wealth. Our community was menaced by serious dangers through
this, because if a community is separated into two classes, one
poor and the other rich, their interests are diverse. Poverty and
wealth do no work together well--one lords it over the other; one
becomes the prey of the other. This is apt to be the case in all
societies, in ours as well as others; probably not to so great an
extent, but still it was sufficiently serious to menace us as a
people with danger. God inspired his servant to counsel the
people to enter into co-operation, and it has now been practiced
for some years in our midst with the best results. Those who have
put in a little means have had that more than doubled since Z. C.
M. I. started--three years last March. And so it is with
co-operative herds, co-operative factories, and co-operative
institutions of all kinds which have been established in our
midst, and all the people can partake of the benefits of this
system. You can see the effect of co-operation on the people. But
this is only a limited system, it does not extend as far as
needed, although it required faith to enter into this; yet it
will require more to enter upon the other of which I have spoken.
210
While upon co-operation, let me here say that we can witness the
good effects of this to the Church, and we shall feel them in
days to come. President Young, the other day, paid into the
co-operative establishment--Zion's Co-operative Mercantile
Institution--a hundred thousand dollars tithing--the tithing of
his own personal means--and it is now where it will yield profits
for the benefit of the whole Church. Now, if this amount had been
used to pay the hands on the public works and those laboring for
the Church, how long do you think it would have lasted? It would
very soon have been used up. But I have admired the wisdom, and
have felt thankful that there was a sum placed where it could be
used for the benefit of the work, and at the same time yield a
handsome return for the investment. I do not think it will take
more than three years, if the Co-operative Institution prospers
as well in the future as in the past, for this sum to double
itself in the shape of dividends. I refer to this in passing,
because it is a testimony to-day, after three years and a half
have elapsed, to the wisdom that prompted the establishment of
this institution; but notwithstanding this you are aware that
many cried out against it, and denounced it as very unwise, and
likely to end disastrously, and several apostatized through its
inauguration because they wanted all the profits themselves, and
were unwilling the people should have any. But we have the facts
before us. The people who entered into it have been blessed
exceedingly, and they will continue to be so if they persevere.
210
But I have said that this is only a stepping stone to something
beyond that is more perfect, and that will result in the
diffusion of the blessings of God to a greater extent among us.
In other lands you see the people divided into classes. You see
beggars in the street, and men and women who are short of food,
dwelling in hovels and in the poorest of tenements. At the same
time, others revel in luxury, they have everything they need, and
more than they need to satisfy all their wants. Every
philanthropist who contemplates this, does so with sadness, and
measure after measure has been devised to remedy this state of
things. Our community is not a prey to these evils. Beggary and
want are unknown in this Territory; at the same time we have no
very rich men among us. Like other new communities we are more on
an equality than we would be if we were older, and if we were to
become an old community under the system which prevailed before
co-operation was established, then it is very probable that some
of the class distinctions to be seen in other communities would
be seen in ours. It is to avoid this that God has revealed that
which I have alluded to, and his design is to bring to pass a
better condition of affairs, by making men equal in earthly
things. He has given this earth to all his children; and he has
given to us air, light, water and soil; he has given to us the
animals that are upon the earth, and all the elements by which it
is surrounded. They are not given to one or to some, to the
exclusion of others; not to one class, or to one nation to the
exclusion of other classes or other nations. But he has given
them to his children in all nations alike. Man, however, abuses
the agency that God has given him, and he transgresses his laws
by oppressing his fellow-men. There is selfishness in the rich,
and there is covetousness in the poor. There is a clashing of
interest, and there is not that feeling among men which we are
told the Gospel should bring--a feeling to love our neighbor as
we love ourselves. This does not exist on the earth now, it is
reserved for God to restore it. We pray that God's will may be
done on earth as it is in heaven, and when it shall, then the
order which exists in heaven will be practiced and enjoyed by men
on the earth. I do not expect when we get to heaven, that we
shall see some riding in their chariots, enjoying every luxury,
and crowned with crown of glory, while the rest are in poverty.
211
I have spoken longer than I intended, but there are some few
thoughts on my mind to which I will allude in this connection
before I sit down, and that is, brethren and sisters, that we
should, to the extent of our ability, foster these institutions
that have been established among us. We should do all that we can
to sustain ourselves--sustain our own factories, do all in our
power to maintain these things that we have established, and seek
with all our energy to foster them. We have factories here that
can make as good cloth as any of their size, probably, in the
nation, they ought to be sustained by us. Brother Erastus Snow
related an incident a day or two ago in relation to their
operations at St. George. They received quite a quantity of cloth
from the factory of President Young. He told the store-keeper at
St. George not to say anything about where it was manufactured.
At the same time they received a consignment of eastern
manufactured goods. They were put side by side on the shelves of
the store and sold to the people. There were very few--some two
or three persons--who knew that any of these goods were
manufactured in the Territory. They sold very readily to the
people, who said they were the best goods they had bought. They
wore them, and they wore well. Several lots were received from
the President's factory, and sold in the same way, the people
remaining in ignorance a good while as to the place of their
manufacture, and imagining that they were brought from the east.
There is an idea prevailing among many of us that something
manufactured abroad is better than that manufactured at home.
President George A. Smith, Elder Woodruff and myself, on our
recent visit to California, examined the Oregon and California
goods. We went through a woolen factory there, where very
excellent goods were made. We saw some blankets and some other
things which were manufactured there, which can not be surpassed.
I recollected that I had heard parties here, who had purchased
Oregon cloth, praise it very highly; but in examining that class
of goods in california, I found that the cloth manufactured in
this Territory compared very favorably with it, and had they been
put side by side, bolt by bolt, it would have been very difficult
to tell which was Utah and which was Oregon manufacture. Indeed
if there was any preference I was inclined to give it to our own
cloth.
211
We have factories that can make straw hats, straw bonnets and
every thing of this kind. We have good tanners' and shoe shops,
and harness shops. We have a great many manufactories in our
Territory that should be fostered by us as a people. We should
guard against luxury and extravagance, and use that which is
manufactured at home.
211
That God may bless us, that he may pour out his Holy Spirit upon
this Conference; upon those who speak and those who hear, is my
prayer in the name of Jesus. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / John
Taylor, October 7, 1872
John Taylor, October 7, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER JOHN TAYLOR,
Delivered at the 42nd Semi-Annual Conference, Salt Lake City,
October 7, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
CHOICE OF RULERS--HEADSHIP--ONE MAN POWER--THE YOKE OF JESUS.
213
I am happy to have the privilege of meeting with and speaking to
the Saints on the present occasion. If I were inclined to take a
text I would repeat a passage made use of by Jesus, which is
something like this--"Take my yoke upon you and learn of me, for
I am meek and lowly of heart and you shall find rest to your
souls." Perhaps I may not have got it verbatim, however the
principle is there, and you can correct it from the written word.
The ideas contained in the saying of the Redeemer are rather
peculiar. The yoke that is there referred to would seem to imply
a degree of servitude of some kind or other, and men generally
look upon such expressions in that point of view. The nations of
the earth, generally, are under some kind of rule and government.
The religious portion of mankind are also under a species of
government and rule, and no matter where you go, you find a
influence of this kind more or less prevailing among men. We
stand here in rather an anomalous position. We have a church with
its government or laws, and we have also a government and laws
according to the organization of the United States. Hence our
obligations are twofold, one as subjects of the United States,
the other as subjects of the Church of God. And then, were we to
go a little further, we might also add, of the kingdom of God.
Now, in every government of men that exists anywhere on the face
of the earth, there is a species of rule associated with and
founded on authority voluntarily given by the people or usurped
by the rulers, according to circumstances; but all mankind,
everywhere, are under some form of dominion, government or rule.
The same thing applies also to churches and the worship of God.
There are various systems in existence on the earth, including
Judaism, Mahomedanism, Pantheism, and heathenism of many kinds,
as it has existed for generations in many parts of the earth; and
there is christianity with the multifarious ideas, rule, and
authority of the Christian churches as they exist, scattered
abroad in the earth, principally in Europe and America as well as
in some parts of Africa and Asia. But whether we refer to the
Pagan, Jewish, Christian, or any other form of religion, its
followers are expected to submit to some kind of authority; to
subscribe to certain articles of faith, and to submit to certain
forms, laws and ordinances, according to their several theories.
213
The same thing precisely, exists among the nations; they have
their various forms of rule, government and dominion, and they
exact certain conditions from their subjects. No matter what kind
of government, it requires a species of obedience from all
persons living under it; for government, of course, necessarily
implies rule, authority, dominion, governors and governed, or law
and the execution of that law. All these principles exist in one
form or another over all the face of the wide earth whereon we
live. We can not separate ourselves from that, go where we will.
In a despotic government the power to dictate and control all its
affairs is vested in the emperor, according to his own will and
pleasure, sometimes, perhaps, modified by counsel, which he can
receive or reject at pleasure. In other kinds of government, such
as are called limited monarchies, the people hold a certain part
of the power or authority in their own hands, and give a certain
part to the government. The government of England belongs to this
class. There they have a king or queen, as the case may be, at
the head of the government, and two houses called the Lords and
Commons, the latter are elected by and represent the people. It
is what is called a popular government, the people having a
voice, but at the same time they concede a certain amount of
their power to their legislators, who manage their affairs
according to their ideas of what would be most beneficial for the
nation.
213
The government of the United States is what is called a republic.
In a form of government of this kind the foundation of all law,
power and authority is the voice or will of the people; that is
the genius of the government. It is based upon a written
constitution granting unto the legislature power to do thus and
so, and to go no further; and while they who make and administer
the laws confine themselves within the limits of that
constitution, their acts are what is called constitutional. When
they go beyond that, their acts are called unconstitutional, that
is, they deprive the people of certain rights guaranteed to them
by the written compact that they have entered into. I speak of
these things simply to elucidate certain ideas that I wish to
communicate.
213
But to proceed further. If we--the people in this Territory, or
in other Territories or in the States, confer certain powers on
the General Government, we no longer retain them, they are ceded
away by us to others. If we give to our legislators certain
authority, they hold that authority, and it is for us to submit
to the laws which may be enacted by them. This is what is called
republicanism, and it is also in agreement with the theory of a
limited monarchy. Whenever a people give up certain rights they
ought to honor the parties into whose hands they place them. The
President of the United States ought to be sustained; so ought
the ministers of the government of England, by the people over
whom they preside, because they are acting for and on their
behalf and according to their dictates. If you go to some other
governments they ask no odds of the people. Say they, "We will be
sustained, if we have to sustain ourselves by the sword."
214
We come now to religious matters, and here in our own country are
Methodists, Presbyterians, Baptists, and a host of others. I need
not go to foreign countries and examine their religions. I wish
to arrive at certain conclusions, and to do so I have no need to
go beyond the confines of the United States. Here we have the
Methodists, Presbyterians, Baptists, Episcopalians, Roman
Catholics, Quakers, Shakers and so forth. Very well, all these
sects have their own peculiar ideas of church government. The
Methodist has his Discipline--a system got up by the ministers of
that church that all its members have to be governed by. They
must come within the purview and be under the influence thereof.
If you ask a Methodist to become a Latter-day Saint, he might
say, and truly, "I have not the privilege of being Methodist and
Latter-day Saint at the same time." A man can not be a Baptist
and a Methodist at the same time, neither can he be a Methodist
and a shaking Quaker. Why? Because he is bound by the articles of
the Discipline of his church, and he must submit to that. So it
is in regard to the Catholics. Many of you have no doubt read
recently of Pere Hyacinthe, who, a short time ago, was very
popular among the Roman Catholics. But he dissented from their
views; and among other things he took to himself a wife, which
was contrary to their ideas and creed, and probably his own
views, the result was that they excommunicated him, and they
treated him as if he had been dead, and had a funeral, following
him to this grave while he was yet living. This is according to
their ideas, and he, being a Catholic, had no right to expect
anything else. A Catholic priest must submit to the laws of the
priesthood, and they have excommunicated him for departing
therefrom, and he had no cause to complain. We may have our own
peculiar ideas about the propriety of this, that and the other
religious faith, ceremonies and forms of worship, but I am now
speaking of law, and of governments, and of the arrangements that
peoples, nations, churches, and the members of churches bind
themselves to be governed by.
215
The same thing applies to any of the various sects that exist in
Christendom. The Baptist commences a church, and he believes in
baptism by immersion, but he could not be a Latter-day Saint.
Why? Because he can be baptized by anybody not having authority
from God, and he does not believe that baptism is for the
remission of sins. According to his ideas he must have his sins
forgiven first, and then be baptized after a while. He could not
be a Latter-day Saint, because his ideas and ours are at
variance. If a man is a Baptist, as long as he remains so, he
must submit to their law. If he is a Methodist, and remains so,
he must submit to their discipline, be it right or wrong, the
question of their laws being Scriptural or not has to be decided
in and of itself. It is the same way with a nation. If I were in
Russia, and did not like the government, I might, if they would
allow me, go to England, come to the United States, or go to one
of the Southern republics, and become a citizen thereof, but I
could not be a republican in Russia. If I went to England, I
should have to be subject to the laws of England, and the same if
I came to the United States, hence the principle that I mentioned
before is applicable all the way through, no matter which way you
look at it. I am not saying at present which of these
governments, whether religious or political, is right, I am
merely trying to elucidate a principle that exists among and is
acknowledged by men. If I go to live in any country on the face
of the earth, I have to be subject to its laws, and if I am a
reasonable, intelligent man, I acknowledge the propriety of my
being so. If I join the Methodist church I have a right to be a
good Methodist, and to submit to their discipline. If I join the
Baptist church I have a right to be a good Baptist, and to submit
to their discipline, creed, laws and so on, for I join them
knowing that I ought to submit to them, and as an honorable man I
do so or leave it.
215
Well, we stand here in a peculiar position, as before stated. We
are here in a religious capacity, and we are here in a political
capacity. As religionists our faith is that God has spoken, and
that angels have ministered to men; that the everlasting Gospel
has been restored in its fullness, simplicity and purity, as it
existed in Jesus's day. We believe in Apostles and Prophets, and
in the principle of revelation--in God communicating with the
human family. These things were taught to us before we became
members of this Church, and we received them as part and parcel
of our faith, and having faith in this system we obeyed it. We
believed in being baptized for the remission of sins, and having
hands laid upon us for the reception of the Holy Ghost. That is
our faith, it has been communicated to us by revelation, by the
opening heavens, by the voice of God, by the ministering of holy
angels, and by the testimony of God's servants, as they have gone
forth through the world.
215
We also believe in having a Priesthood--a ruling power to
regulate and dictate, under the guidance of the Almighty, the
affairs of his Church and kingdom upon the earth. That is our
faith, and it was taught to us when we first listened to
"Mormonism." Before we were baptized into this Church we believed
the men whom we heard proclaim its principles were inspired by
the Almighty, and we pray to God for them daily now, that the
revelations of Heaven may be unfolded to their view, and that the
purposes of God may be made plain to their understanding, that
they may be able to instruct the people and lead them in the way
of life. This is our faith, and when we talk about these things
we do so understandingly, there is no halfway business about it.
215
We meet here to-day in Conference, believing in these principles.
When we talk about paying our tithing, we believe that it is the
duty of all who ever obeyed the Gospel of Jesus Christ to
contribute one-tenth of their increase to the Lord. As Latter-day
Saints we subscribe to this, and we believe it is right to be
honest, and to show integrity in this as in everything else. We
believe in being truthful, virtuous, pure and holy, and we
believe in keeping the commandments of God in all things. This is
part and parcel of our religious faith and belief, and we have,
from time to time, of our won free will, subscribed to these very
principles of which I have spoken; and we have held up our hands
time and time again to sustain the authorities of the Church and
kingdom of God upon the earth. Having said so much in regard to
these things, I desire, very briefly, to compare the position
that we occupy with that which others occupy.
216
I have already told you that there exists a variety of
governments on the earth, and that all men are expected to be in
subjection to the laws and usages of the governments under which
they live. I have told you that in England they have a limited
monarchy. At the present time a queen presides over their
destinies. How did she come to that office? She was born of
royalty, and inherited it by lineal descent. The people had no
choice in the matter. She has been, I believe, a very good,
virtuous, exemplary woman, and has ruled with mildness,
generosity and kindness among her people; but if she had done
otherwise, she was still their queen. Now I want to talk about
what people call equal rights, and to examine a certain principle
in relation to these things. What say had the people of England
in regard to their queen? None at all. The President of the
United States is elected by the people, therefore he is what may
be termed the people's candidate. How often do they elect a
President of the United States? Once every four years, and
consequently there is great excitement now on account of the
coming Presidential election. The people are ranging themselves
into parties, and each party using all the influence they possess
to elect their own special and peculiar favorites. Besides the
President, there are Legislators and Governors. Governors
generally hold their office for four years; Senators of the
United States from four to six years, according to circumstances;
members of the House of Representatives for two years. In many of
the States and Territories the Legislators are elected for two
years, and hence, during the time for which they are elected,
they have a perfect right to use their own judgment in enacting
laws for the benefit of the people, being sworn not to transcend
certain bounds laid down as their guide. If they should be ever
so bad during their term of office, and should enact oppressive
laws, the people have no right to change them until their time
expires, unless, from some flagrant violation of their trust,
they should be impeached.
216
How is it in the churches? With the Catholics it is once a priest
always a priest, except in such cases as that of Pere Hyacinthe,
and then they bury them. In some churches the bishops and other
authorities hold office during good behavior, or for lifetime; in
some churches they are voted for by a certain conclave according
to circumstances and their own peculiar notions and dogmas, and
in very many instances these officers hold their offices for life
without any counteraction whatever, unless they violate their own
constitutions, laws or discipline, when they are liable to be
dealt with according to the laws and regulations of their several
churches. Now nobody thinks they are very badly oppressed in all
this. They enter these churches voluntarily, they are not bound
to stay in them, and they leave them when they like.
217
Now let us contrast our position with that of other people in
these respects. We hear a good deal about one man power. I want
to examine that power a little, and see how it exists, and how
far it extends. We believe in two principles--one is the voice of
God, the other is the voice of the people. For instance, we
believe that nobody but God could set the religious world right,
we believe that none but God could have given any man correct
information in regard to doctrine and ordinances. We believe that
God did instruct Joseph Smith in relation to both, and also
pertaining to the government of his people here on the earth. How
are this people selected and set apart? Joseph Smith was selected
by the Lord, and set apart, and ordained by holy angels. How with
the others? By the authority which God conferred on Joseph he
selected, set apart, and ordained others to the various orders
and organizations of the Priesthood. We know that the Lord, in
former times, called some men who did not magnify their calling,
and who were set aside as unfit for the Master's use. Jesus, for
instance, called Judas to be one of the Twelve, and Judas
betrayed him, and he was cut off from the Twelve. We have had
many instances in our Church of a similar nature, men have been
found unfaithful, and they have been cut off. By whom? By the
authority of that Priesthood of which they formed a part. That
Priesthood has the same power now that it had formerly--to bind
on earth and it is bound in heaven, to loose on earth and it is
loosed in heaven. How does this Priesthood stand in relation to
the people? It is not thrust upon them as the queens of England,
the kings of France, the emperor of Austria, or as the former
king, but now emperor of Prussia, are; no, it is not thrust upon
the people in any such way. It is precisely in the same way that
the Israelites were organized in former times--God gave them
certain laws, and all the people said "Amen," then the laws
became binding upon Israel. The position we occupy is this: the
Holy Ghost, which has been given to all who have obeyed the
Gospel, and have lived faithful to its precepts, takes of the
things of God, and shows them forth through a living Priesthood
to a people enlightened and instructed by the Spirit of
revelation from God, and the people thus enlightened, instructed
and blessed by the spirit of light, voluntarily and gladly
sustain the Priesthood who minister unto them. When Joseph Smith
was upon the earth, he did not force himself upon the people as
these kings and emperors do, but he presented himself before them
every six months, at the Annual or Semi-Annual Conference, and
the people had a chance to lift up their hands to receive or
reject him. That was the position occupied by Joseph Smith, and
those associated with him, in guiding the affairs of the Church
and kingdom of God upon the earth, and it is precisely so with
President Young. He stands here as the representative of God to
the people, as the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints. He is, or ought to be, full of light, life,
revelation and the power of God, and he is, and bears testimony
to it. He ought to be able to lead the people in the paths of
life, and he is. He is the choice of God, and what more? He is
the choice of the people of God. Has he a right to say, "I am
chosen, I am elected, I am President, and I will do as I darned
please, and help yourselves?" No, he presents himself before you,
and if there is any man who has aught against him, he has the
privilege of holding up his hand to signify the same. That is the
position of our President--he is brought to a test every six
months, as it rolls around, before the assembled Conference of
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It is the same
with the Twelve, the President of the Stake, the High Council,
the Presidents of Seventies, and with all the leading officers of
the Church--they are all put to this test twice a year, and the
people have the privilege of voting for or against them, just as
they please.
218
Here then, on the one hand, there is the voice of God. Shall we
object to it? Who made us? Who organized us, and the elements
with which we are surrounded and that we inhale? Who organized
the planetary system that we see around us? Who provides
breakfast, dinner and supper for the millions that dwell on the
face of the earth? Who clothes them, as he does the lilies of the
field? Who imparts unto man his breath, life, health, his powers
of locomotion, thought, and all the godlike attributes with which
he is endowed? Where did they come from? Who has controlled and
managed the affairs of the world from its creation until the
present time? The Great I am, the Great Eloheim, the Great God
who is our Father. We bow before him. Is it a hardship to
reverence the Lord our God? Is it a hardship to have him for our
instructor? And shall we follow the notions, theories, ideas and
folly of men, who seek to supersede the wisdom, light and
paternal care of God our heavenly Father? No, we will not. God is
our God, "the Lord is our God, the Lord is our Judge, the Lord is
our King, and he shall rule over us." We do not object to bow the
knee to God and say, "Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be
thy name, thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is
done in heaven:" and we pray that it may be hastened. We
acknowledge, we bow before, we reverence the name of our heavenly
Father. That is one thing that we do for God, who causes
seed-time and harvest, summer and winter, day and night, the God
who has watched over us and all the myriads of the inhabitants of
the earth from the time of creation until the present time; the
God in whose hands are the destinies of the human family
pertaining to this world and the worlds to come. If God will
deign to teach, lead and dictate us, we bow with reverence before
him, and say, "It is the Lord, let him do as seems him good." We
ask the guidance of the Almighty, we reverentially present
ourselves before him and we submit to his authority; for his yoke
is easy and his burden is light.
218
What next? Then comes the freedom of man. On the one hand the
guidance of God, on the other the freedom of man. We ask God to
dictate us and he does. He has given us a President, Apostles,
Prophets, Bishops; he has organized his Church in the most
perfect and harmonious manner. We see these things before us. I
need not talk about the country that we inhabit, nor about the
blessings that have been shed abroad among us, rich in comparison
with those enjoyed by others by whom we are surrounded. These
things are patent to all intelligent men, and surprise is
frequently expressed at our improvements and at the wisdom and
intelligence that have governed, managed and controlled our
affairs; they do not know where they came from. We do--they come
from God through the medium of his servants.
219
What next? God having given us a President inspired by his Holy
Spirit, we are required to vote for him--will we have him or will
we reject him? We lift up our hands and say, "Yes, we will
receive him." The world say this is despotism, being governed by
one man. Is it despotism for every man and every woman to have a
voice in the selection of those who rule over them.? Is that
despotism, tyranny or oppression? If it is I do not know what the
terms mean. There are no people on the face of the earth to-day
who have to undergo so severe a criticism as the President and
Priesthood of this Church before the people, and why is it that
the people vote unanimously for them? "Well," say the world,
"there is a kind of influence, we hardly know what, we wish it
did not exist, for we do not like this one man power." I know you
do not, for it is one thousand men, ten thousand men power, it is
the power of the kingdom of God on the earth, and the power of
God united with it, that is what it is. As I have already said,
it is not only the President of the church who has to undergo
this test, but the Twelve, the Seventies, and all the presiding
officers of the Church have to go through the same ordeal.
219
I will now go back to my text. I have been a long way from it,
but you know it is usual to preach from the text. I have been
from mine awhile, now I am coming back to it. Jesus says, "Take
my yoke upon you and learn of me, for I am meek and lowly of
heart, and you shall find rest to your souls." What was the yoke
placed upon the followers of Jesus? Precisely the same as that
placed upon you. What did he tell his disciples to do? To go
forth and baptize the people in the name of the Father, Son and
Holy Ghost, and it was promised that certain signs should follow
them that believed. In his name they should cast out devils,
speak with new tongues if they drank any deadly thing it should
not hurt them, and if they laid hands on the sick they should
recover. The word was--"Go forth in my name and with my
authority, and my spirit shall accompany you. And it did, and the
people became one in faith, doctrine and principle, just as the
Scriptures say. "Take my yoke upon you." What was it? Said he,
"Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth; blessed
are the pure in heart for they shall see God; blessed are they
that hunger and thirst after righteousness for they shall be
filled." This was the kind of yoke Jesus put upon them, and this
is the kind that is put upon you--to love righteousness, keep the
commands of God, live your religion and obey the principles of
truth, is this a hard yoke? This is what is required of
Latter-day Saints. "Take my yoke upon you and learn of me!" And
how did he do it? He obeyed the will of his Father, and then he
expected his disciples to obey his will. Said he, "Father, I pray
for them, that they may be one?--a good deal of this one-man
power there, was there not? "I pray for them, that they may be
one, even as the Father and I are one, that they may be one in
us;" and in his mind, looking to the universal expansion of this
heavenly principle, said he, "Neither pray I for these alone, but
for all them that shall believe on me through their word, that
they all may be one, even as I and the Father are one, that the
world may know that thou hast sent me." This was the kind of
principle the Savior taught to his followers, and this is the
kind that is taught to us.
220
Now let me ask is it right for a Methodist to obey the Methodist
discipline? Yes, or else leave them, he has the privilege to do
which he pleases. Is it right for a Presbyterian to obey the
Presbyterian doctrine and principles? Yes, or leave them. Is it
right for a Roman Catholic to obey their principles? Yes, or
leave them. Is it right for a Latter-day Saint to obey their
principles? Yes, or leave them, one of the two. Do not try to
drag in something else, do not make Methodists of us for
instance, nor Presbyterians. Do not try to make Catholics of us,
if you do not like "Mormonism" leave it. That is honest,
straightforward and upright, and good doctrine, and according to
the principles which are acknowledged to be correct every where.
"Well," says one, "I think that things could be improved a
little." Well then, go out somewhere and make your improvements,
here is a big continent, go north or south, or where you please.
Get as many to follow you as you can, and teach them what
principles you please, and if you can build up a better system
than ours all right, but do not start it here. This is the kind
of faith that Paul spoke of when he said, "If thou hast faith
have it to thyself." If you do not have it to yourselves take as
many with you as you can get. That is right, the world is open,
plenty of room in every direction, go and try your hand and see
how you will succeed.
220
The same principle is true in relation to other things as well as
to religion. I might apply it to things political. Some people
say, "You folks always vote together," we would be poor coots if
we did not, and just as bad as the rest of you. Some folks here,
a short time ago, got up a little political operation, and tried
how it would answer to run one against another; but it did not
work well and they had to quit. We believe in oneness, and our
outside friends say, "We do not." Yes you do, y-e-s y-o-u d-o.
Now all you gentlemen who go in for General Grant would you not
like to elect him? Yes you would, and you will use all the
influence that you have to do so, and if he is not elected it
will be because you can not do it, because you have not influence
enough to elect him. On the other hand, you who are in favor of
Horace Greeley, how you would like to have him elected, would you
not? Yes, you would. And will you not get all to vote for him
that you possibly can? Yes, and if all do not vote for him it
will not be your fault. Well, if the people do not vote as we
want them it will not be our fault, and the only difference, in
this respect, between you and President Young is, that he has a
little more influence than you, therefore do not grunt about it,
these things are fair and straightforward. When men talk about
oppression they talk about what they do not understand, and the
same when they talk about the one-man power and the bondage of
the people. Is it not horrible bondage for the whole people to
have the privilege of voting for whom they please? Terrible, let
us get out of it, shall we not, and go somewhere where they will
not let us do as we please, and have some of that liberty that
would put shackles upon us, and bind us down? But we Latter-day
Saints do not want that, we want to be delivered from that, and
to walk according to the light of truth. Well, let us take the
yoke of Christ upon us, and learn of him, and keep the
commandments of God. And if we vote for a Bishop somewhere over
yonder, let us sustain him as long as he is in office, and if he
does not do what is right we will vote him out. And if we have
Presidents or Apostles or anybody that we do not like, let us
vote them out, and be free men, and cultivate and cherish in our
bosoms the principles of liberty. But let us be careful that we
do not grieve the Spirit of the Lord, and while we are looking at
these things let us look at our own eternal interests, and lean
upon God for wisdom and instruction, that his Spirit may lead us
in the paths of life, that we may comprehend true principles, and
be one as Jesus was and is one with the Father.
220
May God help us to be faithful, in the name of Jesus. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Brigham Young, October 9, 1872
Brigham Young, October 9, 1872
DISCOURSE BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM YOUNG,
Delivered at the 42nd Semi-Annual Conference, Salt Lake City,
October 9, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE ORDER OF ENOCH.
222
Suppose we should examine a city in a stake of Zion conducted
after the order of Enoch! We would like to look, for a few
moments, upon the facts as they would exist. If a people were
gathered together, were they many or few, who would follow out
the instructions given them in the Bible and in the other
revelations that we have, they would have to be very obedient,
and probably many would feel to say, "I wish to manage my own
affairs, I wish to dictate myself, I wish to govern and control
my labor, I can not submit to have anybody else dictate me. This
is servitude, and is nothing more nor less than slavery!" I
suppose there are some who would feel thus. When I look at the
Latter-day Saints I think how independent they are. They have
been very independent, there is no question of it. When they have
heard the Gospel, though, perhaps, in the flood of persecution,
and the finger of scorn pointed towards them, they have said,
"The Gospel is true, and if my friends will not believe it, it
makes no difference to me, I am independent enough to embrace the
truth, and to gather out from the midst of Babylon and to make my
home with the Saints." There are plenty of such people here in
this house--men and women, old and young. There are young people
here who have left their parents and every thing they had on the
face of the earth for the sake of the Gospel. Middle-aged men
have left their wives and their children, saying, "I am going to
live according to the plan that has been laid down in the
Scriptures for the salvation of the human family." This certainly
exhibits as much independence as mortal beings can manifest, and
yet we have said we will yield strict obedience to these
requirements, preparatory to enjoying the glory that the Lord has
for the Saints. I will ask, Is there liberty in this obedience?
Yes, and the only plan on the face of the earth for the people to
gain real liberty is to yield obedience to these simple
principles. Not but that we should find a great many who do not
exactly understand how to yield obedience, strictly, to the
requirements of heaven for their own salvation and exaltation;
but no person can be exalted in the kingdom of heaven without
first submitting himself to the rules, regulations, laws and
ordinances of that kingdom, and being perfectly subject to them
in every respect. Is this the fat? It is even so. Consequently,
no person is fit to be a ruler until he can be ruled; no one is
fit to be the Lord of all until he has submitted himself to be
servant of all. Does this give the people liberty? It is the only
thing in the heavens or on the earth that can do so. Where is the
liberty in subjecting ourselves strictly to the requirements of
heaven and becoming one in all our operations to build up the
kingdom of God upon the earth? By strict obedience to these
requirements, we prove ourselves faithful to our God; and when we
have passed through all the ordeals necessary, and have proved
perfectly submissive to all the rules and regulations which give
life eternal, he then sets us free and crowns us with glory,
immortality and eternal lives; and there is no other path that we
can walk in, no other system, no other laws or ordinances by
which we can gain exaltation, only by submitting ourselves
perfectly to the requirements of heaven.
222
Now suppose we had a little society organized on the plan I
mentioned at the commencement of my remarks--after the Order of
Enoch--would we build our houses all alike? No. How should we
live? I will tell you how I would arrange for a little family,
say about a thousand persons. I would build houses expressly for
their convenience in cooking, washing and every department of
their domestic arrangements. Instead of having every woman
getting up in the morning and fussing around a cookstove or over
the fire, cooking a little food for two or three or half a dozen
persons, or a dozen, as the case may be, she would have nothing
to do but to go to her work. Let me have my arrangement here, a
hall in which I can seat five hundred persons to eat; and I have
my cooking apparatus--ranges and ovens--all prepared. And suppose
we had a hall a hundred feet long with our cooking room attached
to this hall; and there is a person at the further end of the
table and he should telegraph that he wanted a warm beefsteak;
and this is conveyed to him by a little railway, perhaps under
the table, and he or she may take her beefsteak. "What do you
want to take with it?" "A cup of tea, a cup of coffee, a cup of
milk, piece of toast," or something or other, no matter what they
call for, it is conveyed to them and they take it, and we can
seat five hundred at once, and serve them all in a very few
minutes. And when they have all eaten, the dishes are piled
together, slipped under the table, and run back to the ones who
wash them. We could have a few Chinamen to do that if we did not
want to do it ourselves. Under such a system the women could go
to work making their bonnets, hats, and clothing, or in the
factories. I have not time to map it out before you as I wish to.
But here is our dining room, and adjoining this is our prayer
room, where we would assemble perhaps five hundred persons at one
time, and have our prayers in the evening and in the morning.
When we had our prayers and our breakfast, then each and every
one to his business. But the inquiry is, in a moment, How are you
going to get them together? Build your houses just the size you
want them, whether a hundred feet, fifty feet or five, and have
them so arranged that you can walk directly from work to dinner.
"Would you build the houses all alike?" Oh no, if there is any
one person who has better taste in building than others, and can
get up more tasteful houses, make your plans and we will put them
up, and have the greatest variety we can imagine.
223
What will we do through the day? Each one go to his work. Here
are the herdsmen--here are those who look after the sheep--here
are those who make the butter and the cheese, all at their work
by themselves. Some for the kanyon, perhaps, or for the plow or
harvest, no difference what, each and every class is organized,
and all labor and perform their part.
223
Will we have the cows in the city? No. Will we have the pig pens
in the city? No. Will we have any of our outhouses in the city?
No. We will have our railways to convey the food to the pig pens,
and somebody to take care of them. Somebody to gather up the
scraps at the table, and take them away. Somebody to take the
feed and feed the cows, and take care of them out of the city.
Allow any nuisance in the city? No, not any, but everything kept
as clean and as nice as it is in this tabernacle. Gravel our
streets, pave our walks, water them, keep them clean and nicely
swept, and everything neat, nice and sweet. Our houses built
high, sleep up stairs, have large lodging rooms, keep everybody
in fresh air, pure and healthy. Work through the day, and when it
comes evening, instead of going to a theatre, walking the
streets, riding, or reading novels--these falsehoods got up
expressly to excite the minds of youth, repair to our room, and
have our historians, and our different teachers to teach classes
of old and young, to read the Scriptures to them; to teach them
history, arithmetic, reading, writing and painting; and have the
best teachers that can be got to teach our day schools. Half the
labor necessary to make a people moderately comfortable now,
would make them independently rich under such a system. Now we
toil and work and labor, and some of us are so anxious that we
are sure to start after a load of wood on Saturday so as to
occupy Sunday in getting home. This would be stopped in our
community, and when Sunday morning came every child would be
required to go to the school room, and parents to go to meeting
or Sunday school; and not get into their wagons or carriages, or
on the railroads, or lounge around reading novels; they would be
required to go to meeting, to read the Scriptures, to pray and
cultivate their minds. The youth would have a good education,
they would receive all the learning that could be given to mortal
beings; and after they had studied the best books that could be
got hold of, they would still have the advantage of the rest of
the world, for they would be taught in and have a knowledge of
the things of God.
224
Bring up our children in this way and they would be trained to
love the truth. Teach them honesty, virtue and prudence, and we
should not see the waste around that now is witnessed. The
Latter-day Saints waste enough to make a poor people comfortable.
Shall I mention one or two instances? I will mention this one
thing any way, with regard to our paper mill. Can you get the
Latter-day Saints to save their rags? No, they will make them and
throw them out of doors. Is there a family in this community but
what are too well off in their own estimation to take care of
paper rags? I think a good many of them would rather steal their
beef and what they want than stoop to pick up paper rags to make
paper to print our paper on. Not all would do this, but a few;
and the majority are so well off that they have not that prudence
which belongs to Saints; and I feel sometimes a little irritated,
and inclined to scold about it, when I see women who were brought
up without a shoe to their foot, or a second frock to their back
perhaps, and who lived until they were young women in this style,
without ever stepping on to an inch of carpet in their lives, and
they know no more how to treat a carpet than pigs do. Do they
know how to treat fine furniture? No, they do not; but they will
waste, waste--their clothing, their carpets and their furniture.
I hear them say sometimes, "Why, I have had this three years, or
five years." If my grandmother could have got an article such as
you wear, she would have kept it for her daughters from
generation to generation, and it would have been good. But now,
our young women waste, waste.
224
This is finding fault, and I wish I could hurt your feelings
enough to make you think of it when you get home. If I could make
you a little mad, when you get home if you see a pretty good
piece of carpet thrown out of doors you will go, perhaps, and
shake it and lay it up, thinking that it may be serviceable to
somebody or other; and if you cannot do anything else with it,
give it to somebody who has not a bed to lie upon, to put under
them to help to make a bed.
224
If we could see such a society organized as I have mentioned, you
would see none of this waste. You would see a people all
attending to their business, having the most improved machinery
for making cloth, and doing every kind of housework, farming, all
mechanical operations, in our factories, dairies, orchards and
vineyards; and possessing every comfort and convenience of life.
A society like this would never have to buy anything; they would
make and raise all they would eat, drink and wear, and always
have something to sell and bring money, to help to increase their
comfort and independence.
224
"Well, but," one would say, "I shall never have the privilege of
riding again in a carriage in my life." Oh what a pity! Did you
ever ride in one when you had your own way? No, you never thought
of such a thing. Thousands and thousands of Latter-day Saints
never expect to own a carriage or to ride in one. Would we ride
in carriages? Yes, we would; we would have them suitable for the
community, and give them their proper exercise; and if I were
with you, I would be willing to give others just as much as I
have myself. And if we have sick, would they want a carriage to
ride in? Yes, and they would have it too, we would have nice ones
to carry out the sick, aged and infirm, and give them exercise,
and give them a good place to sleep in, good food to eat, good
company to be with them and take care of them.
225
Would not this be hard? Yes, I should hope so. If I had the
privilege and the power, I would not introduce a system for my
brethren and myself to live under unless it would try our faith.
I do not want to live without having my faith and patience tried.
They are pretty well tried. I do not know how many there are who
would endure what I endure with regard to faith and patience, and
then be persevering in the midst of it all. But I would not form
a society, nor ask and individual to go to heaven by breaking all
the bones in his body, and putting him in a silver basket, and
then, hitching him to a kite, send him up there. I would not do
it if I had the power, for if his bones were not broken he would
jump out of the basket, that is the idea. I see a great many who
profess to be Latter-day Saints, who would not be contented in
heaven unless their feelings undergo a great change, and if they
were there and you wanted to keep them there, you would have to
break their backs, or they would get out. But we want to see
nothing of this in this little society. If I had charge of such a
society as this to which I refer, I would not allow novel
reading; yet it is in my house, in the houses of my counselors,
in the houses of these Apostles, these Seventies and High
Priests, in the houses of the High Council in this city, and in
other cities, and in the houses of the Bishops, and we permit it;
yet it is ten thousand times worse than it is for men to come
here and teach our children the a b c, good morals, and how to
behave themselves, ten thousand times worse! You let your
children read novels until they run away, until they get so that
they do not care--they are reckless, and their mothers are
reckless, and some of their fathers are reckless, and if you do
not break their backs and tie them up they will go to hell. That
is rough, is it not? Well, it is a comparison. You have got to
check them some way or other, or they will go to destruction.
They are perfectly crazy. Their actions say, "I want Babylon
stuck on to me; I want to revel in Babylon; I want everything I
can think of or desire." If I had the power to do so, I would not
take such people to heaven. God will not take them there, that I
am sure of. He will try the faith and patience of this people. I
would not like to get into a society where there were no trials;
but I would like to see a society organized to show the
Latter-day Saints how to build up the kingdom of God.
226
Do you think we shall want any lawyers in our society? No, I
think not. Do you not think they will howl around? Yes, you will
hear their howls going up morning and evening, bewailing one
another. They will howl, "We can get no lawsuits here; we cannot
find anybody that will quarrel with his neighbor. What shall we
do?" I feel about them as Peter of Russia is said to have felt
when he was in England. He saw and heard the lawyers pleading at
a great trial there, and he was asked his opinion concerning
them. He replied that he had two lawyers in his empire, and when
he got home he intended to hang one of them. That is about the
love I have for some lawyers who are always stirring up strife.
Not but that lawyers are good in their place; but where is their
place? I cannot find it. It makes me think of what Bissel said to
Paine in Kirtland. In a lawsuit that had been got up, Bissell was
pleading for Joseph, and Paine was pleading for an apostate.
Paine had blackguarded Bissell a good deal. In his plea Bissell
stopped all at once, and, turning to Mr. Paine, said he: "Mr.
Paine, do you believe in a devil?" "Yes," said Mr. Paine, who was
a keen, smart lawyer. Said Bissell, "Where do you think he is?"
"I do not know." "Do you not think he is in hell?" said Bissel.
"I suppose he is." "Well," said Bissell, "do you not think he is
in pain [Paine]?" They almost act to me as if they were in pain.
They must excuse me if there are any of them here to-day. I
cannot see the least use on the face of the earth for these
wicked lawyers who stir up strife. If they would turn merchants,
cattle breeders, farmers or mechanics, or would build factories,
they would be useful; but to stir up strife and quarrels, to
alienate the feelings of neighbors, and to destroy the peace of
communities, seems to be their only business. For a man to
understand the law is very excellent, but who is there that
understands it? They that do and are peacemakers, they are
legitimate lawyers. There are many lawyers who are very excellent
men. What is the advice of an honorable gentlemen in the
profession of the law? "Do not go to law with your neighbor; do
not be coaxed into a lawsuit, for you will not be benefited by
it. If you do go to law, you will hate your neighbor, and you
will finally have to pick some of your neighbors who hoe potatoes
and corn, who work in the cabinet shop, at the carpenter's bench,
or at the blacksmith's forge, to settle it for you. You will have
to pick ten, twelve, eighteen or twenty-four of them, as the case
may be, to act as a jury, and your case goes before them to
decide. They are not lawyers, but they understand truth and
justice, and they have got to judge the case at last." Why not do
this at first, and say we will arbitrate this case, and we will
have no lawsuit, and no difficulty with our neighbor, to alienate
our feelings one from another? This is the way we should do as a
community.
227
Would you want doctors? Yes, to set bones. We should want a good
surgeon for that, or to cut off a limb. But do you want doctors?
For not much of anything else, let me tell you, only the
traditions of the people lead them to think so; and here is a
growing evil in our midst. It will be so in a little time that
not a woman in all Israel will dare to have a baby unless she can
have a doctor by her. I will tell you what to do, you ladies,
when you find your are going to have an increase, go off into
some country where you cannot call for a doctor, and see if you
can keep it. I guess you will have it, and I guess it will be all
right, too. Now the cry is, "Send for a doctor." If you have a
pain in the head, "Send for a doctor;" if your heel aches, "I
want a doctor;" "my back aches, and I want a doctor." The study
and practice of anatomy and surgery are very good; they are
mechanical, and are frequently needed. Do you not think it is
necessary to give medicine sometimes? Yes, but I would rather
have a wife of mine that knows what medicine to give me when I am
sick, than all the professional doctors in the world. Now let me
tell you about doctoring, because I am acquainted with it, and
know just exactly what constitutes a good doctor in physic. It is
that man or woman who, by revelation, or we may call it intuitive
inspiration, is capable of administering medicine to assist the
human system when it is besieged by the enemy called Disease; but
if they have not that manifestation, they had better let the sick
person alone. I will tell you why: I can see the faces of this
congregation, but I do not see two alike; and if I could look
into your nervous systems and behold the operations of disease,
from the crowns of your heads to the soles of your feet, I should
behold the same difference that I see in your physiognomy--there
would be no two precisely alike. Doctors make experiments, and if
they find a medicine that will have the desired effect on one
person, they set it down that it is good for everybody, but it is
not so, for upon the second person that medicine is administered
to, seemingly with the same disease, it might produce death. If
you do not know this, you have not had the experience that I
have. I say that unless a man or woman who administers medicine
to assist the human system to overcome disease, understands, and
has that intuitive knowledge, by the Spirit, that such an article
is good for that individual at that very time, they had better
let him alone. Let the sick do without eating, take a little of
something to cleanse the stomach, bowels and blood, and wait
patiently, and let Nature have time to gain the advantage over
the disease. Suppose, for illustration, we draw a line through
this congregation, and place those on this side where they cannot
get a doctor, without it is a surgeon, for thirty or fifty years
to come; and put the other side in a country full of doctors, and
they think they ought to have them, and this side of the house
that has no doctor will be able to buy the inheritance of those
who have doctors, and overrun them, outreach them, and buy them
up, and finally obliterate them, and they will be lost in the
masses of those who have no doctors. I know what some say when
they look at such things, but that is the fact. Ladies and
gentlemen, you may take any country in the world, I do not care
where you go, and if they do not employ doctors, you will find
they will beat communities that employ them, all the time. Who is
the real doctor? That man who knows by the Spirit of revelation
what ails an individual, and by the same Spirit knows what
medicine to administer. That is the real doctor, the others are
quacks.
227
But to the text. We want to see a community organized in which
every person will be industrious, faithful and prudent. What will
you do with the children? We will bring them up until they are of
legal age, then say, "Go where you please. We have given you a
splendid education, the advantage of all the learning of the day,
and if you do not wish to stay with the Saints, go where you
please." What will you do with those who apostatize after having
entered into covenant and agreement with others that their
property shall be one, and be in the hands of trustees, and shall
never be taken out? If any of these parties apostatize, and say
we wish to withdraw from this community, what will you do with
them? We will say to them, "Go, and welcome," and if we are
disposed to give them anything, it is all right.
228
Where are we going to find the greatest difficulty and
obstruction with regard to this organization? In the purse of the
rich? No, not by any means. I have got some brethren who are just
as close, tight and penurious as I am myself, but I would rather
take any moneyed man in this community, and undertake to manage
him, than some men who are not worth a dollar in the world. Some
of this class are too independent. They would say, "I'll go a
fishing," or "I guess I'll go a riding, where I please." Well, if
I were to give out word, and say to the community, Send in your
names, I want to see who are willing to go into an organization
of this kind, who do you suppose would write to me first? The
biggest thieves in the community. Do not be shocked at that, any
of you, whether you are strangers or not, for we have some of the
meanest men that ever disgraced God's footstool right in the
midst of the Latter-day Saints. Do not be startled at that,
because it is true. I have told the people many a time, if they
want anything done, no matter how mean, they can find men here
who can do it, if they are to be found on the earth. I can not
help this. You recollect that Jesus compared the kingdom of
heaven to a net which gathered all kinds. If our net has not
gathered all kinds, I wonder where the kinds are that we have not
got. I say that some of the worst men in the community would be
the first ones to proffer their names to go into such an
association. I do not want them there. Is this the fact? Yes it
is. I understand it exactly. But if such a community could be
organized, to show the Latter-day Saints how to build up the
kingdom of heaven on the earth, I would be glad to see it--would
not you? If this could be done I want to say to the Latter-day
Saints, that I have a splendid place, large enough for about five
hundred or a thousand persons to settle upon, and I would like to
be the one to make a donation of it, with a good deal more, to
start the business, to see if we can actually accomplish the
affair, and show the Latter-day Saints how to build up Zion. Not
to make a mock of it. Not go and preach the Gospel without purse
and scrip, and gather up the poor and needy, and have them bring
Babylon with them. Leave Babylon out of the question. Make our
own clothing, but do not put seventeen or twenty-one yards in a
single dress, neither be attired so as to look like a camel. It
is not comely, it does not belong to sensible people, nor to any
people who wish to carry themselves justly and correctly, before
the heavens and intelligent men.
228
If the ladies want silks, we have the mulberry here of
all kinds; we have the silkworm eggs here, and we have made the
silk. Go to work now and raise worms, and wind the silk, and
weave it and make all the satin ribbons you wish for. We have men
and women here, who did nothing all their lives before they came
here but weave satin ribbons and satin cloth. This is their
business, they know how to get it up. If you will raise the silk,
dress yourselves just as beautifully as you please.
228
By and by when this people learn the value of the mulberry and
the silkworm, you will see the women with their few trees in
their yards and around their lots, and for shade trees in the
streets; and the children will be picking the leaves and feeding
the worms, and they will get up silk dresses here like those in
the east Indies. The silk dresses they make there you can put
them on and wear them until you are tired of them, and almost
from generation to generation. We can make them here just as
good. And we can have coats and vests and pants made of our
home-grown material, which a man would wear for his best suit,
and hand down to his posterity. When we have learned the worth of
silk we will make it and use it instead of linen. We have a
splendid country for raising silk, but not a good country to
raise flax in; splendid for raising wool, grain, fruit,
vegetables, cattle, milk, butter and cheese, and here we are
importing our cheese. We ought to be making cheese by the
hundreds of tons. We ought to export it in quantities; but
instead of that we are sending to the States for it.
228
Where are your cows? Have you taken care of them? If you see a
community organized as they should be, they will take care of
their calves; they will have something to feed them on in the
winter, and they will take care of their stock and not let it
perish. What a sin it is to the Latter-day Saints, if they did
but know it, to abuse their stock--their cattle, milch cows and
horses! Through the summer they will work and use them, and in
the winter turn them out to live or die as they can, taking no
care of that which God has given them. Were it not for the
ignorance of the people, the Lord would curse them for such
things.
230
We ought to learn some of these facts, and try to shape our lives
so as to be useful. Let the men make their lives useful. Let the
women make their lives useful. Mothers, teach your daughters how
to keep house, and not how to spend everything they can get hold
of. I will just say a few words on this subject. We have hundreds
of young men here who dare not take girls for wives. Why? Because
the very first thing, they want a horse and buggy, and a piano;
they want somebody to come every day to give them lessons on the
piano; they want two hired girls and a mansion, so that they can
entertain company, and the boys are afraid to marry them. Now
mothers, teach your girls better things than these. What are the
facts in the case? If you had been brought up to know what
property--fine furniture, carpets, and so on, was worth, you
would take care of it, and be prudent in the use of it, and teach
your girls to take care, instead of wasting it. Do you believe
it? This does not hit all, but too many. I wish you would hearken
to these things. I am taking up the time, and not giving to
others the opportunity to address you. We have not said what we
want to say to the Latter-day Saints. We ought to have a house
four times as large as this, and we ought to fill it; and we
ought to sit together not only four days, but a week and perhaps
two weeks, and leave home at home, leave Babylon in
Babylon--leave everything and come here to worship the living
God, and learn of his ways, that we may walk in his paths. This
is our duty, and what we should do. But there are so many who can
hardly spend time to go to Conference. They have so much business
on hand, so many cattle to take care of; they have money to let
out, or money borrow; they have men to see to, or something or
other, and it seems as if the affections of the people are
hankering after the things of this world too much, too much!
Stop, Latter-day Saints, and reckon with yourselves, and find
whether you are actually in the path of obedience to the
requirements of heaven or not. Some suppose that they are serving
God and are on the road to eternal life, but many will find they
are mistaken if they are not careful. We had better reckon with
ourselves and look over our accounts, and see how we stand before
the lord. See if we are doing good, if we are bestowing our
substance on the poor, that they may have food to eat and
habitations to dwell in, and be made comfortable: see if we are
sending our means for the poor in foreign lands, and aiding to
send the Elders to preach to the nations and gather up the people
and make them happy and comfortable. Instead of doing this I fear
that many are wandering away from the commandments of the Lord.
"O fools, and slow of heart to believe!" We can get rich a great
deal quicker by serving God than by serving ourselves, do a great
deal better, and do a great deal more good. The earth is the
Lord's and the fullness thereof. He is anxious, and is waiting
with extended arms and hands, comparatively, to pour the wealth
of the world into the laps of the Latter-day Saints, if they will
not give it away to their enemies. But now, just as soon as
anything is given to the Latter-day Saints they are looking from
east to west, and from north to south, to see where they can
strew that that God gives them among their enemies--those who
spurn the things of God, and would destroy his kingdom from the
earth. I say, let the Lord keep us poor rather than forsake our
religion and turn away from it! Why can not a man serve God with
his pockets full of greenbacks, and not lust after them one
particle? If he can not do it, he is lacking in wisdom, faith,
and knowledge, and does not understand God an his ways. The
heavens and the earth are full of blessings for the people. To
whom do they belong? To our Father in heaven, and he wishes to
bestow them upon his children when they can receive and dispose
of them to his name's glory.
230
We shall have to stop here. We are going to adjourn our
Conference, though we have not said half what we wish to say to
you and to ourselves, for we want to be co-workers together. Now
let me say to the First Presidency, to the Apostles, to all the
Bishops in Israel, and to every quorum, and especially to those
who are presiding officers, Set that example before your wives
and your children, before your neighbors and this people, that
you can say: "Follow me, as I follow Christ." When we do this,
all is right, and our consciences are clear.
230
God bless you.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, November 24, 1972
Orson Pratt, November 24, 1972
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the 13th Ward Assembly Rooms, November 24, 1972.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
SPIRIT OF LIGHT AND TRUTH--ITS VALUE--ITS OPPOSITE
NECESSARY--FINAL
TRIUMPH OF LIGHT AND TRUTH.
231
I have, through upwards of forty years' experience in the public
ministry, learned some few lessons in regard to public speaking.
In the first place I know that the wisdom of man avails but very
little, and that our own judgment, thoughts and reflections are
not what the Lord requires; but he does require, and has
required, ever since the rise of this Church, that his servants
should speak by the power of the Holy Ghost. A revelation given
to the Elders of this Church in the year 1831, says, "My servants
shall be sent forth to the east and to the west, and to the north
and to the south, and they shall lift up their voices and speak
and prophecy, as seemeth me good; but if you receive not the
Spirit you shall not teach." This is a commandment that the Lord
gave to his servants over forty years ago. I have seen a few
times from the commencement of my ministry, when my mind seemed
to be entirely closed up, and when what few words I could stammer
forth before a congregation, were altogether unsatisfactory to my
own mind, and I presume to those who heard me. But I do feel
thankful to God that latterly, from year to year, he has favored
me with a liberty of utterance and with the power and gift of the
Holy Ghost. I acknowledge his hand in this, for I know it has
come from him, and having experienced the two conditions of mind
I know the difference. I know that, not only as public speakers,
but as individual members of the Church of the living God, there
are many things pertaining to our everyday duties, which if we
clearly understood by the light of the Spirit, we would escape
many things which cause unhappiness. It is the want of clearly
understanding the will of the Lord under all circumstances that
causes us to fall into many of the evils that we pass through in
life. I can look back on my past life and can speak from
experience in these matters. I can remember many times when, if I
had been guided by the Spirit of the Lord in regard to temporal
matters, it would have been well with me; but not altogether
understanding what the mind of the Spirit was, the course I have
taken at times has been very disadvantageous to me. I will relate
one circumstance of this kind as a sample. Some few years ago, I
had a few hundred dollars in goods and property, and I expended
all that I had in a store. Not one of these co-operative stores,
but in a store kept at Fillmore. Being requested by the merchants
in that place to purchase a bill of goods for them, and to give
my own note until they could settle it; and being anxious that
their business should go on and prosper, I was foolish enough to
do as they wished, by which I brought myself into great
difficulties, and lost over two thousand dollars by the
transaction. I had the bill of goods to pay for, and lost all I
put in besides. If I had understood the teachings of the
Spirit--and I did have some impressions in relation to the
matter, but if I had fully understood them I should not have
fallen into these unpleasant circumstances. I have no doubt that
there are many others among the people of God, who can see where
they have erred, because they did not have the Spirit of God upon
them at the time.
231
I can see, also, many times when the Spirit of the Lord whispered
to me, and I scarcely knew whether it was my own thoughts and
imaginations or whether it was the revelations of the Spirit; yet
it seemed to be the Spirit of the Lord, and I followed the
teachings, and was prospered in so doing.
231
If we, as a people, would lie up to our privileges, how many
difficulties might be avoided! How many Latter-day Saints would
constantly live in the light of revelation! This puts me in mind
of a text which I have often heard quoted, but I do not know that
I have said much in relation to it. Neither do I know where it is
recorded, but I think it is somewhere in the writings of Solomon.
The passage I refer to says that there is a spirit in man and the
Spirit or candle of the Lord, I do not remember which, giveth it
understanding. The idea is that in these tabernacles of ours we
have an intelligent spirit which God has placed there, and he has
ordained that the Spirit of the Lord shall light up these human
spirits of ours, that we may follow in the paths of light, truth
and righteousness and obtain eternal life.
232
This text also puts me in mind of one that is recorded somewhere
in the Book of Doctrine and Covenants, in which the Lord,
speaking directly to this people, says that the word of the Lord
is truth, and whatsoever is truth is light, and whatsoever is
light is Spirit, even the Spirit of Jesus Christ, and the spirit
giveth light to every man that cometh into the world; and the
Spirit enlighteneth every man through the world that hearkeneth
to the voice of the Spirit. I can not tell you on what page nor
in what section of the Book of Covenants this can be found; but
you who are in the habit of reading that book will find these
words, as I have quoted them. "Whatsoever is truth is light,
whatsoever is light is spirit," consequently, if we could always
follow in the light, instead of following in the channel of
darkness, we would always follow in the path that would lead to
peace and happiness, and we would avoid ten thousand difficulties
which beset our pathway.
232
Another revelation that agrees with this will be found in the
Book of Doctrine and Covenants, in a very lengthy communication
made by the Lord to this Church, which shows very plainly that
light is the principle and law by which everything is governed. I
will quote the revelation as near as I can remember it. Speaking
of his presence, he says, "As he is in the sun, and is the light
thereof, and the power thereof by which it is governed; and as he
is also in the moon, and is the light and the power thereof; and
in the stars; and the light which shineth is the same light which
quickeneth your eyes, which is the same light which quickeneth
your understandings, the light which is in all things, and which
giveth life to all things, and which is the law by which all
things are governed, even the power of God who sits upon his
throne, who is in the bosom of eternity, who is in the midst of
all things, which light proceedeth forth from his presence to
fill the immensity of space." When we put all these texts
together, we find that this great principle of light which should
enlighten the mind of man, and by which he should be led
continually, is something that is not confined to one little part
of space; it not only lights the sun, moon and stars and all the
heavenly bodies, but it is in and surrounds all things, and gives
life to all things.
232
Here is something that we do not perfectly understand. The
principle of life by which we are able to move, think and reason;
the principle of motion and of power is a principle of light. And
there seems to be a connection or relation between these
principles that govern the motion of living beings and the light
that proceeds forth from the sun. But we do not understand that
relation. God has told us that it is the law by which everything
is governed; and we can not find a law throughout universal
space, but what light has something to do with it. But we do not
know in all cases how it operates. We do not know, for instance,
how light operates in making a blade of grass grow out of the
earth. We can not understand how particle comes to its particle,
how it is organized in a certain form, and finally produces the
complete blade of grass. We do not know how this is carried on,
but the Lord has told us that it is done by the principle of
light. We do not know, either, how it is that we can communicate
with different and distinct parts of the earth almost
instantaneously through the medium of the electric wires. We
understand that this phenomenon exists, but we do not know the
cause of it; if we did we should find, according to the
revelation which God has given, that it is accomplished through
the medium of light. How that light operates we do not know, God
has not revealed that. He has only told us that light is the
cause and the power by which everything is governed.
233
We see a stone, and when we hold it in our hands and let go of
it, it does not stand still, neither does it fall upwards,
neither does it go horizontally, but it falls downwards to the
surface of the earth. We have named this gravitation. But what is
the cause? No one knows. No person can tell why that stone does
not stand still. We see it fall and we see all terrestrial bodies
fall to the surface of the earth, but we cannot tell why this is
so. The cause, however, is light, but how that light operates we
do not know.
233
We see the sun shine, and we know that it illuminates the face of
this world and of many other worlds. Its light proceeds forth
from that centre and radiates to immense distances. We see all
this, but what connection is there between this and the
understanding or light that is in man, that assist him in his
power of thought and motion? What connection is there between the
shining of that light and the light that is within us? We do not
know, and yet God has said that the light which proceeds forth
from these heavenly bodies is the same light that quickens the
understanding of man and that gives life to all things. We do not
understand all these things which God has spoken and given. For
instance we see a candle set on a table; we apply a match to
that, and immediately there is light where before existed
darkness. Chemists tell us that this is a chemical operation;
that the light proceeds not from the tallow, but from a principle
called oxygen--a certain portion of the atmospheric air which we
breathe; that that principle has a great tendency to unite with
the materials of the candle, and in so doing it gives out its
light. But how this light is produced and sustained by a
combination of the elements of the candle and the oxygen of the
atmosphere we do not know, only we know that it is the power of
God, we know that it is the light which is in all things. But
what I term knowledge, and what we should all term knowledge, is
to understand not only the phenomena but the cause of these
things. We endeavor to distinguish between the natural and the
spiritual light, but is there any such thing as drawing a line of
distinction between the two? Who can do it? Where is the man or
philosopher that can tell the distinction, and where one ends and
the other begins? They can not do it. If we take the revelation
which God has given we learn that there is no difference; it is
the same light that produces both effects, and the light which
darts along the electric wire is the same as that which comes
from the distant bodies of the universe, only it has a different
name, and operates a little differently. The time will come when
the Latter-day Saints, if faithful, will have an understanding of
all these things. We have made a commencement in the right
channel; we have placed ourselves in an attitude to learn the
first principles in this great divine university called the
kingdom of God. God has given us his Holy Spirit, which is the
commencement of knowledge, light and intelligence. But unless we
walk according to the light and the mind of that Spirit, wherein
are we benefited? We are not benefited at all. "If my words abide
in you," says Jesus, "you shall ask whatever you will, and it
shall be given unto you." This promise is given unto every
Latter-day Saint. The Book of Mormon, however, qualifies this
saying a little. It says, "Whatsoever we ask in faith, which is
right, believing that we shall receive, it shall be given unto
us." These words--"which is right"--greatly qualify the promise.
The Lord has not bound himself by promise to give to the children
of men whatsoever they ask for, unless it is absolutely right
that they should ask for that thing. If what we ask for in faith
is right, then he is bound.
234
This puts me in mind of a passage in the revelations contained in
the Book of Doctrine and Covenants in relation to prayer. He
says, "You shall receive whatever you ask for in prayer which it
is expedient for you to receive; but if any among you shall ask
for that which it is not expedient for him to receive it shall
turn to his condemnation." We must, in the first place, try to
have light enough to discern what is right or expedient for us;
in the second place, to ask God the Eternal Father in the name of
his son Jesus Christ, for the things which we know he is willing
to bestow upon us. Then we can ask in faith, for we have the
promise that we shall receive.
234
The great difficulty with me, and I presume it is also the
experience of almost every man and woman in the Church of the
living God, is, we are not so faithful as some of the servants of
God have been in former days. Some of them were so faithful that
they lived constantly in the light of revelation. Their minds
were opened to it, and scarcely a thing could transpire but what
they understood it beforehand. They did not need the news or
intelligence to be brought to them from a distance, but there was
a spirit within them and the candle of the Lord gave that spirit
understanding in regard to things that were transpiring thousands
of miles distant. They lived for this; they walked before the
Lord so faithfully that they were entitled to know, not only
things that were present with and that would benefit themselves
and the people among whom they dwelt, but also things in the
future--ages and ages to come were opened up to their minds, and
their minds comprehended them by permitting this candle of the
Lord to shine upon and illuminate them.
234
It is my most earnest desire to live so as to discern under every
condition and circumstance in life precisely what would be most
pleasing in the sight of God for me to do, and when I comprehend
this I can act as a person who does not grope in the dark, like
the blind man who gropes for the wall; but if I live for it, the
path in which I should walk will be plain, the Spirit of God
being as it were a lamp to my feet, and my guide and instructor
by day and by night. Do you not desire Latter-day Saints to be
instructed in this way? Every honest-hearted person will answer
yes. Every one who hungers and thirsts after righteousness, and
who desires eternal life will acknowledge that he does desire to
be thus guided and led.
235
But now having spoken so much about the benefits of this light,
and how good it would be to be continually guided and instructed
by the spirit of revelation, there is another thing connected
with it which we perhaps do not all fully understand. Supposing a
person were thus guided all the time, from waking in the morning
until they retired to rest at night; and then when asleep if his
dreams were given by the same spirit, and this should be the
uninterrupted condition of an individual, I ask, where would be
his trials? This would lead us to ask, Is it not absolutely
necessary that God should in some measure, withhold even from
those who walk before him in purity and integrity, a portion of
his Spirit, that they may prove to themselves, their families and
neighbors, and to the heavens whether they are full of integrity
even in times when they have not so much of the Spirit to guide
and influence them? I think that this is really necessary,
consequently I do not know that we have any reason to complain of
the darkness which occasionally hovers over the mind. I recollect
that Lehi had a very great and important dream communicated to
him, and his son Nephi had the same renewed to him. While Lehi
was on his way to this country he dreamed that he wandered many
hours in darkness; that there was a certain rod of iron,
notwithstanding this darkness that seemed to gather around him,
on which the old man leaned steadfastly. So great was the
darkness that he was fearful he should lose his way if he let go
the rod of iron; but he clung to it, and continued to wander on
until, by and by, he was brought out into a large and spacious
field, and he also was brought out to a place where it was
lighter, and he saw a certain tree which bore very precious
fruit. And he went forth and partook of the fruit of his tree,
which was the most precious and desirable of any fruit that he
had ever tasted; and it seemed to enlighten him and fill him with
joy and happiness. Lehi was a good old man--a man who had been
raised up as a great prophet in the midst of Jerusalem. He had
prophesied in the midst of all that wickedness which surrounded
the Jews; and they sought to take away his life, because of his
prophecy. But not withstanding this gift of prophecy, and the
gifts of the Spirit which he enjoyed, the Lord showed him by this
dream that there would be seasons of darkness through which he
would have to pass, and that even then there was a guide. If he
did not all the time have the Spirit of God upon him to any great
extent, there was the word of God, represented by an iron rod, to
guide him; and if he would hold fast to that in his hours of
darkness and trial, when everything seemed to go against him, and
not sever himself therefrom, it would finally bring him where he
could partake of the fruit of the precious tree--the Tree of
Life. Consequently I am not so sure, that it is intended for men
of God to enjoy all the time a great measure of his Spirit.
235
I will refer to another example--one that I have often quoted. It
will be found in the "Pearl of Great Price." It is a revelation
that was given renewedly to Joseph Smith, concerning what God
revealed to Moses, before he was permitted to go down and be a
deliverer to the children of Israel. The Lord severely tried
Moses, as well as enlightened him. He had to pass through both
conditions of experience--a condition of great light, truth,
knowledge and understanding in the ways of God, and a condition
of darkness and great temptation. Hence we find that on a certain
occasion God called Moses up into a very high mount, where he
bowed down before the Lord and cried mightily unto him, and the
Lord heard his prayer, and the glory of God descended and rested
upon him, and he beheld many great and wonderful things. His mind
was opened to things that he never had understood before--things
that were great and marvellous. Yet the Lord showed him but very
few of his works, for he told Moses on that occasion that no man
could behold all his works except he beheld all his glory; and no
man could behold all his glory and afterwards remain in the
flesh. To behold all the works of God was more than any mortal
man could endure.
237
Moses, after receiving this remarkable vision, had such great
knowledge and intelligence unfolded unto him that he marveled
exceedingly, and while gazing upon the works of God the Spirit of
God withdrew from him, and he was left unto himself, and he fell
to the earth, for his natural strength departed from him. "Now,"
said Moses, " I know for this once that man is nothing, which
thing I never had supposed." But he had learned by the contrast
that man, in and of himself, was as nothing, and comparatively
speaking, less than the dust of the earth, which moves hither and
thither by the command of the great God; but that man, being an
agent unto himself, and God not having a disposition to control
this agent contrary to certain laws and principles, when this
agent was left to himself he found that he was nothing. The Lord
then permitted Satan to appear in a personal form and visit this
great man of God. Here, now, was a contest. Satan came up before
Moses, not in all his ugliness and maliciousness, but assuming
the form of an angel of light. Satan said, "Moses, son of man,
worship me!" Moses looked upon Satan and said, "Who art thou,
that I should worship thee? For I could not look upon God except
his glory should come upon me, but I can look upon thee as a
natural man." Here was the difference. He could look upon this
individual who came to him pretending to be an angel of goodness
and light, and have none of the glorious feelings that he had
before. Hence said Moses, "I can discern the difference between
God and thee. Get thee hence, Satan!" Satan did not feel disposed
to give upon the attack, and he commanded him again to worship
him, and he exerted a great power and the earth shook and
trembled, and Moses was filled with fear and trembling, but he
nevertheless called upon God, for he was convinced in his own
mind that his visitor was one from the infernal regions, a
personage of darkness, and he felt to rebuke him, and in his fear
he saw, the bitterness of hell, that is, the fear and trembling
that came upon him, and the darkness that surrounded him, gave
him an experience of the bitterness and misery of those who are
in torment. After a certain period of time in which Satan tried
to overpower him, Moses gained strength from God, and commanded
Satan, in the name of Jesus Christ, to depart, and he departed.
Moses then received strength, and he continued to call upon God,
and the glory of God again rested upon him, so that he beheld the
works of the Creator, and he began to inquire very diligently
concerning the earth upon which he dwelt. The Lord saw proper on
that occasion, after severely testing Moses with the opposite
power, to show to him the whole earth. Not merely portions of its
surface, but he showed the whole of the inside as well as the
outside, for the revelation says, "There was not a particle of it
which he did not behold, discerning it by the Spirit of God." If
we go to the top of a very high mountain, we can only behold a
very limited landscape, for the most distant portions of our view
are generally obscured by the vapors of the earth or by smoke, so
that we only see a dim outline. But here was a man of God, having
the Spirit of God lighting up his mind to that degree that he
could see every particle of the earth. This was a wonderful
development of the mind and powers of man. I do not suppose that
the mind of Moses was constituted any different from the minds of
the congregation now before me; every one of us has the same kind
of human spirit that he had. Though not called with the same
calling, yet we have the same kind of spirit, and are the
children of the same Father. Now if Moses had within him a
certain undeveloped principle, which for the space of some eighty
years he did not know that he possessed, until God on that
occasion lighted it up and brought it forth, so that he was
capable not only of looking upon the surface of our globe, but of
looking into its interior, I do not know why each and every one
of those now present before me have not the same faculty and
gift, if it were only developed.
237
I bring up these things to show how God deals with his
children--his sons and daughters--by lighting up the mind, and
then leaving them awhile in darkness. It is not likely that many
of us, with the little experience that we have, could resist such
great temptations as Moses did. If such powers were brought to
bear on our minds they might overthrow and destroy us, but he was
prepared beforehand; he had beheld the glory of God, and had
received strength from the heavens, consequently when the
opposite powers assailed him, his previous experience
strengthened him, and he held fast to the rod of iron
notwithstanding the darkness he had to contend with.
237
When Moses received this great light and saw the whole earth, he
felt a very great anxiety to know how the earth was formed. It
would be very natural for a man suddenly endowed with the power
to behold every particle of the earth, to ask, "How was this
made?" and Moses said, "Be merciful unto thy servant, O God, and
show me concerning the heavens and the earth, and then thy
servant will be content." The Lord told Moses that there were
many heavens, and many worlds that had passed away by his power,
and that as one heaven and one earth should pass away, even so
should another come, and there was no end to his works and to his
words. Then Moses limited his desires.
238
Here we see something asked of the Lord by Moses that was no
expedient, it was not wisdom in the Lord to reveal it to him, he
could not know all about the many heavens. Then he asked the
Lord, saying, "Show unto thy servant concerning this earth and
this heaven, then will thy servant be content." The Lord then
gave him what we term the Book of Genesis, one of the first books
of Moses, telling him, in answer to his prayer, how he formed and
crated this earth and this heaven, and the various stages
thereof, as performed in the several days, until on the sixth and
seventh it was completed. This, according to new revelation
contained in the "Pearl of Great Price," is the way Moses
obtained a knowledge of the history of this creation. Other men,
before his day, also obtained it. Abraham, who lived several
hundred years before Moses, had the Urim and Thummim, which the
Lord God gave unto him in the land of Chaldea, and by the aid of
this instrument he also obtained a knowledge of the history of
this creation, and not only of this, but of many others, God also
giving the names of many of them, such as Kolob and others, which
it is not necessary for me to repeat. But The Lord, in various
ages, has manifested these great things to the children of men.
But all these great Prophets, Seers and Revelators had to
experience their seasons of darkness and trial, and had to show
their integrity before God in the midst of the difficulties they
had to encounter. Shall the Latter-day Saints despond, then,
because they may have seasons of darkness, and may be brought
into trials and difficulties? No! Let us be steadfast, holding
fast to the rod of iron--the word of God--and to our honesty,
integrity and uprightness, that God may be well pleased with us
whether we have much or little of the Spirit. I do not know how
we could have many trials, if we were all the time filled with
the Spirit and continually having revelations.
238
This puts me in mind of the experience of our Prophet Joseph, and
of David Whitmer, Oliver Cowdery and others. You are familiar
with many things contained in the history of Joseph, about his
hours of trial. He had some before the Lord permitted him to take
the plates from the Hill Cumorah. God showed him where those
plates were, and he was commanded by the angel to go and view
them. He did so, and when he first saw them he put forth his hand
to take them. But was he suffered to do so? No. What was the
reason? He had not had the trials necessary to prove his
integrity, and this must be proved before he could be entrusted
with so sacred a treasure. Hence he was told to go and be
obedient to the Lord, and to come there from time to time, as he
was commanded by the angel of the Lord; and when the time had
fully come he was permitted to take them.
238
Do you suppose, from the time he saw the plates first, to the day
when he was permitted to take them, being some four years, that
he had no temptations, trials, darkness or difficulties to
grapple with? We are told in his history that, besides the
glories of heaven that were opened to his mind, the powers of
darkness were also portrayed before him. The Lord showed him the
two powers. What for? To give him the experience necessary to
enable him to discern between that which came from God and that
which came from the opposite source. He saw, as Moses did, these
evil beings personally. They were manifested before him in their
rage, malice and wickedness. He had also many seasons of sorrow,
tribulation, difficulty and temptation; and when he had proved
himself before the Heavens, and before the Saints in Paradise who
once dwelt on this continent, and had shown that he was full of
integrity, God permitted him to take the plates, and he
translated the record thereon into the English language.
238
Perhaps I have spoken sufficient in relation to these two powers.
What I have said has been with the design to comfort and
encourage the Saints, that they may not think, because some are
tried this way, and some that way, and some another, that
something has befallen them different to what has taken place
upon the human family before, and that they are more tried than
any other individual that has ever been upon the earth. Do not
think this, Latter-day Saints, but strengthen yourselves in God,
and in the hour of your trial call upon him, and he will impart
strength and faith to you, light up your understandings, and
bring you through victoriously, and your blessings will be still
greater than before your temptations came upon you.
239
By and by the time will come when the vail, which hides this
earth, and shuts out its inhabitants from the presence of God,
will be removed. We read this in the Book of Covenants. The earth
is now shut out from the presence of God, and all the
inhabitants, and the animal creation, the fowls of the air and
the fishes of the sea, and everything wherein there is life, all
are shut out from the presence of God. Because of the fall of the
great head and being who was to have dominion over this creation,
it is banished, a vail is let down which hides us from the
presence of God. This vail or covering will soon be taken away,
and the earth will roll back again into the presence of God. When
I speak of the earth's rolling back again, I do not mean that the
Lord is going to translate it from its present orbit around the
sun; I do not mean that it is going to be moved from its present
position, which it has occupied for six thousand years; but I
mean that the vail which shuts us out from the presence of God
will be removed.
239
Those who are sufficiently pure to abide that day have great
promises made to them. You will find these promises recorded in
the Book of Doctrine and Covenants. We are told that when that
day arrives, God's people, whether those who have died and are
resurrected, or those who are living on the earth, shall know all
these things that I have spoken of. They shall know about the
earth, and all things in, under or around about it, and all the
power thereof and the materials that enter into its constitution.
All these things will be open to the mind of man, and it will be
one of his natural gifts apparently. I say natural, because it
will be so frequent. That which we call natural is something,
generally speaking, that takes place all the time, and the
frequency of the things makes it to us natural. Well, when this
covering of which I have spoken is removed, the knowledge that
the people will then have of the mysteries and wonders of
creation will be such that they will many times be in about the
same condition that Moses was in during the short interval of
light and glory that was manifested to him. If that man of God
could retain his existence as a mortal being after that great
manifestation of the power of God unto him on that occasion, I do
not know why the minds of all who are counted worthy to live,
when the Lord removes the vail, can not be developed the same as
the mind of Moses was, that they may grasp and comprehend the
things of God the same as he did. I can not, in my own mind, see
so much difference, as many people suppose, between the ancients
and the moderns. I believe that God is willing to bless all his
children, ancient or modern, if they lie before him worthily.
240
We read in Isaiah of a time when a certain people called Zion
should be clothed upon with the glory of God, and their city be
lighted up with a cloud by day and the light of a flaming fire by
night, and they should be so highly favored that, so far as light
was concerned, they should not need the light of the sun by day,
nor the moon by night, for the Lord their God would be their
everlasting light, and the days of their mourning would be ended.
We also read in the same connection that when that day comes,
"thy children," speaking of Zion "shall all be righteous;" that
is, they would be people upon whom and to whom God could manifest
himself as he did to Moses and others; that the knowledge of God
would cover the earth as the waters cover the great deep.
Jeremiah has said that the time would come when the new covenant
should take its full effect here upon the earth; that there would
be no more need of ministers and priests to teach the people,
although there would be need for ordinances to be administered,
and for the priesthood to administer in other capacities; but so
far as teaching the people to know the Lord was concerned it
would be unnecessary. In that day no man would need to say to his
neighbor, "Know ye the Lord." Why? Because all would know him,
from the least unto the greatest, for Isaiah says they should all
be taught of the Lord, all be righteous, all receive revelation
and visions, all prophecy and dream. That is, God would reveal by
his Spirit in different ways, at different times and by different
methods to his people those things that would comfort and build
them up in their most holy faith.
240
When we see the great necessity there is at the present time to
teach, and see how prone men are to forget that which they are
taught, we say, they are like him who beholds his natural face in
a glass and turns away, and straightway forgets what manner of
man he is. It is just so with regard to teaching the people; they
need to be stirred up continually, because of the weakness of
their minds and memories; and naturally viewing this weakness, it
seems almost impossible to believe that it will ever be
different, as long as men are in a mortal state. Yet I do not
look at it in this light. I look for a great change and
resolution among the inhabitants of our globe. I look for the
vail to be taken not only from the earth, but from every creature
of all flesh that dwells upon the face thereof; and all will be
in the presence of God. God himself will be their God, and they
will be his people. God himself will wipe away all tears from
their eyes, and there will be no more death, no more sorrow nor
crying, for all things will become new, and God will be with his
people from that time henceforth and forever.
240
Does this mean that God will all the time dwell upon the earth?
No. There will be a connection, and opening between man and God,
that will bring us into his presence, and whether he shall be far
distant or near it will make no difference. Here is a principle
that none of us fully comprehend. We speak oftentimes of going to
and returning from God, of going to heaven, and so on. I have no
doubt that many of us will be counted worthy to approach near to
him so far as distance is concerned. But then, when we come to
reflect that distance will be comparatively annihilated, between
God and the worlds he has made, so that it will make no
difference, as far as his presence is concerned, whether he is
close by or millions of miles distant--there will be a mutual
communication between the Creator and his children all the time,
consequently there will be union and fellowship with him, and
rejoicing in his presence, though he be in a world far beyond
Kolob, of which Abraham speaks.
241
As an illustration of this principle, let me bring up some
temporal phenomena here on the earth. A few years ago, when I was
a boy, no such thing was dreamed of as conversing with our
neighbors two or three hundred miles distant. And if such a thing
had been thought of and it had been mentioned, the dreamer would
have been at once set down as a fanatic or enthusiast, or as one
beside himself, crazy or weakminded. That was the idea our
fathers had, and the idea that some of us old men had when we
were boys. But since that period God has seen proper to inspire
certain individuals with information and knowledge, to erect
telegraph poles, and through the medium of wires attached to
these poles, placed upon non-conductors of electricity, we are
enabled to converse instantaneously, almost, with the most
distant parts of the earth; and if there is proper wire
connection we can send our message to the other side of the globe
in one or two seconds and get a return as quickly. Is not this
making neighbors of the nations? So far as this one means of
communication is concerned, it is quite neighborly. We in Salt
Lake City can sit down by the side of our warm fires and converse
with persons sitting by their fires. The people of these two
cities can talk together, though it is quite expensive as yet to
do so. Supposing now that it were possible to invent something
still further, by which we could see our neighbors in London, and
the people in London could see us in Salt Lake City, then we
could both converse and see. And if we could do this, do you not
see that, so far, distance would be almost annihilated?
241
Again, suppose that by some medium now unknown to us, we could
absolutely be able to hear, not by the vibrations of this coarse
atmosphere of ours, but by the vibrations of some fluid spread
through space, more refined, operating upon the organs of the
immortal ear, transferring sounds at an immense distance, say
millions and millions of miles, conveying them with the rapidity
of the electric fluid itself, and perhaps with a velocity a
thousand times greater, then we could both see and hear, and also
converse with our neighbors at long distances from us; and if
such means of communication were opened among the different
nations of the earth, they would all be neighbors.
241
Now extend this principle, and let us suppose that there was a
medium of communication by which immortal beings could see, hear
and communicate from the earth to the sun, and from the sun to
the earth; from the earth to Jupiter, and from Jupiter back again
to the earth; from the sun to the most distant planetary bodies
of our system, and back again from those bodies to the sun; and
then from the solar system itself to some of those starry
spheres, and from one sphere to another, taking in whole groups
of systems, until finally we had means of communication with all
the different worlds of the universe, as we have now between Salt
Lake and London, only through a more refined and perfect medium,
would it be necessary under these circumstances that our Father
and God should be directly here on the earth in order for us to
be with him? Not at all. He could be situated on a world as far
distant as some of the fixed stars from us, and there he could
sway his sceptre over millions of worlds and systems, and all of
them be in his presence, the vail having been removed; while
those powers that are latent, now as it were, in the mind of
fallen beings like man, being developed among all the inhabitants
of these worlds, they could communicate with him and he with
them. Would it not be said, under these circumstances, that they
were all in the presence of God? Yes, and it would obviate the
necessity of travelling and spending millions of years on long
journeys through space in order to get into his presence.
242
I expect that in future ages all these things will be made
manifest to the children of God. If we are to grow up in light,
intelligence and truth, and become gods, even the sons of God; if
we are to be filled with light, understanding and knowledge; if
we are to understand all things pertaining to our earth and to
other worlds, then it seems to me that we must approximate very
nearly to the fullness of the blessings that are now enjoyed by
him who is our Father and our God. I do not consider that man has
all of his senses developed here, and because we have not yet
exercised some of our senses that have slept unknown to us ever
since our birth, that is no argument that we do not possess such
senses, no evidence at all. You might take a man that had the
faculty of seeing in perfection, and if he was born where not a
glimmer of light ever entered his eye, he would not know that he
had such a faculty, and you could not by talking instill the idea
into his mind, he could not comprehend it. He would say, "I have
the sense of feeling, and the sense of smelling, and the sense of
hearing, but this sense of seeing that you talk about I have no
idea of, what is it?" He would have to experience it in order to
find out what was meant by seeing objects at a distance, defining
their colors, and so on. But when he looked on the surface of
nature by the aid of light, when it was once brought to bear upon
him, what a world of knowledge would rush into his mind, not all
at once, but by degrees. So it will be with the Saints of God,
when their latent faculties begin to be developed and brought
forth, so that they can gaze upon the works of God.
242
This great future reward is worth living for, and this is what we
should seek for, even for the enlightenment of the Spirit. This
is what we should endeavor to cultivate in all our business
transactions, and in all our concerns here in life. If we
cultivate this Spirit, it will increase upon us, and it will grow
brighter and brighter, until the perfect day, and we shall rise
by degrees into that high position that God intends for his
children, to make them gods, to dwell in his presence for ever
and ever. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, December 15, 1872
Orson Pratt, December 15, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the 14th Ward Assembly Rooms, Sunday Afternoon.
Dec. 15, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
PRE-EXISTENCE OF OUR SPIRITS.
243
It would have been my choice this afternoon to sit and listen to
others, but having been requested to address the congregation I
cheerfully comply, having a desire in my heart that God will pour
out his Holy Spirit upon me and upon the hearers, so that we may
be mutually edified. We call ourselves the children of the Most
High God. It is a term that is Scriptural in its nature, and that
has been applied to the people of God in all ages. In the hymn
that was sung, at the opening of this meeting, this subject was
more fully portrayed, according to the views of the Latter-day
Saints, than is generally expressed by religious people in the
world, for I believe that all religious people claim to be, and
term themselves, the children of God. It may not be amiss to
investigate, for a little while, the reality of this title, and
see if we can come to some kind of an understanding in regard to
our being the sons and daughters of the Most High God. It is said
by some that we are his sons and daughters only by adoption, or
through obedience to the Gospel; that we become his sons and his
daughters, through being born of the water and of the Spirit. Now
I admit that it is necessary for the human family to be thus
adopted; there would, however, have been no need of this adoption
if mankind had never become wicked and corrupt. If there had
never been any sin in the world, I do not think that adoption
would have been necessary. According to my views, and I believe,
according to the views of the Latter-day Saints, and also of the
ancient Saints, we were at one period legitimately his sons and
daughters independent of adoption, and this will carry us to the
first ideas manifested by revelation, in regard to the origin of
man. Many people suppose, when Adam was placed in the garden of
Eden, that then the first of the human family originated. I admit
that that was the origin as far as man's temporal existence here
on the earth is concerned; but had we no prior existence? Was
that the beginning of man? Was it, in reality, his origin? This
is a very important question, and a correct answer thereto would
certainly be calculated to cheer the hearts of the children of
men. That man had a secondary origin here on this earth, and was
place in the Garden of Eden, are Scriptural facts, which we all
believe; but did not our first parents, and all their descendants
have an existence, before there was any Garden of Eden on this
earth? I think it is admitted by the whole Christian world, that
man is a being compounded of body and spirit, at least all the
christian societies with which I am acquainted believe this. They
all believe that within man's body or tabernacle of flesh and
bones there dwells an immortal spirit. All Christian societies,
with perhaps very few exceptions, believe that this human spirit,
which dwells within the tabernacle, will exist after the
dissolution of the body. There may be some few Christians who
believe that the spirit is disorganized or dies between the time
of death and the resurrection. I think this view is entertained
by some few individuals, but the great mass of the human family
believe that when this body falls asleep and crumbles back again
to its mother earth, the spirit still survives as an organized
being or personage. Some, however, do not believe that the spirit
is a personage. They think it is something which can not be
defined, something that has neither the shape nor the properties
which we give to any kind of material substance. The views of the
immaterialist are that the spirit occupies no space, and has no
relation to matter, something entirely separate and distinct from
matter. There are however, but few in the Christian world who
have worked themselves so far into the depths of these mysteries,
as they term them, as to believe in such absurdities as these. I
could not believe it for one moment--I never did. To suppose that
there is a spirit in man and that that spirit has no shape, no
likeness and occupies no space, as the immaterialists inform us
in their writings, is something that I do not believe, and never
could believe, unless I became perfectly beside myself, and
deranged in my mind.
244
We, as Latter-day Saints, believe that the spirits that occupy
these tabernacles have form and likeness similar to the human
tabernacle. Of course there may be deformities existing in
connection with the outward tabernacle which do not exist in
connection with the spirit that inhabits it. These tabernacles
become deformed by accident in various ways, sometimes at birth,
but this may not altogether or in any degree deform the spirits
that dwell within them, therefore we believe that the spirits
which occupy the bodies of the human family are more or less in
the resemblance of the tabernacles.
244
Now a question arises, If this spirit can exist separate and
independent of the tabernacle, when the tabernacle dies is it
unreasonable to suppose that it could exist before the tabernacle
was formed? This is an important question and in my estimation
there is nothing absurd or unreasonable in the least degree, in
believing that that personage that we call the intelligent
spirit, which can exist between death and the resurrection,
separate and distinct from the body, could also have had an
existence before the body was formed, that is, a pre-existence.
This is a Scriptural doctrine, for there are many passages in
Scripture which, in my estimation, prove that man had a
pre-existence. If we turn to the first and second chapters of
Genesis, we shall find it clearly indicated that man had an
existence before he was placed in the Garden of Eden. In the
first chapter of Genesis we are told that God made the earth, and
the seas, and the grass, and the herbs and the trees in about six
days of time. We also read that on the fifth day of the creation
he made the fish and fowls; that on the sixth day he made the
animals, and last of all that he made man, male and female
created he them. This seems to have been the last work of
creation on the sixth day. Read on still further, in the second
chapter of Genesis, and we are informed that on the seventh day
there was not yet a man to till the ground. Now how are we going
to reconcile this with that which is stated in the preceding
chapter--on the fifth day he made the fowls and the fish, and on
the sixth day he made the animals before he made man, and on the
seventh day there was not yet a man to till the ground. And then
we are informed about man's being placed in the garden on the
seventh day; and also that on that day the beasts were formed and
brought to the man to see what he would call them. This seems to
have been another department of work that the Lord accomplished
on the morning of the seventh day. He planted a garden on the
seventh day in Eden, he placed the man in that garden on the
seventh day; and then we are informed that he brought the beasts
of the field and the various animals that he had made before the
man, and man gave names to them on the Sabbath day; but on the
sixth day they were made male and female. I reconcile this by
giving a pre-existence to man; such is my faith. I believe that
man had an existence before the Lord commenced the great temporal
work of creation, so far as this planet is concerned. How long he
had existed prior to the formation of this planet I do not know,
but it is certain God seems to have formed the spiritual part of
it in the six days, and when it comes to the temporal part that
seems to have been the work of the seventh day. On the seventh
day the Bible says that God ended his work. He did not altogether
end it on the sixth, but he ended it on the seventh day.
245
When we come to new revelation which God has vouchsafed to give
to his people in these latter times, this subject is made very
plain; and on these new revelations in connection with the old,
what little light we can gain through the hymn that was sung at
the opening of the meeting, was founded, "When shall I regain thy
presence," as expressed in the first verse, showing that we once
were in his presence and existed where he is, but for some reason
we have been banished therefrom, and that when we are redeemed we
shall return again, or as one of the inspired writers has
it--"the spirit shall return to God who gave it."
245
This returning of the spirit to God who gave it, clearly shows to
my mind that the spirit once existed with God and dwelt in his
presence, otherwise the word "return" would be inapplicable. If I
were going to China it would be inapplicable for me to say I am
returning to China. Why? Because I never have been there,
consequently the word "return" would be an improper word. So in
regard to the saying of the prophet, it would be entirely
improper to say that, after the body crumbles to dust the spirit
would "return" to God who gave it, if it never had been there.
246
Jesus seems to have been a pattern in all things pertaining to
his brethren, and we find that he had a previous existence--his
spirit existed before he came and tabernacled in the flesh. This
is abundantly proved in the Scriptures. In the prayer which he
offered to his heavenly Father beseeching him to make his
disciples one, he says, "Father, glorify thou me with that glory
which I had with thee before the world was." Now if Jesus dwelt
with the Father before the world was, why not the rest of the
family, or in other words, the rest of the spirits? It certainly
was not his tabernacle which dwelt there before the world was,
for he came in the meridian of time, and his spirit entered a
tabernacle of flesh and bones, and was born of a woman, just the
same as all the rest of the human family. What then is the
meaning of that Scripture which speaks of Jesus being the elder
brother? It certainly could not have reference to him being the
eldest so far as his natural birth on this earth was concerned,
for he certainly was not the eldest, for generation after
generation had preceded him during the four thousand years which
had passed away, from the time of creation until he was born; but
yet he is called the "elder brother." In another Scripture it is
said of him that he was "the first-born of every creature." This
would imply, then, that Jesus, so far as the great family of man
is concerned, was the first born of the whole of them. How and
when was he born? He was born in the eternal world, not his flesh
and bones, but that intelligent spirit which dwelt within his
tabernacle was born before this world was made, and he seems to
have been the first spirit that was born, and for this reason he
became the elder brother; and we are told in many Scriptures in
the New Testament, that we are his brethren, and that he is not
ashamed to call us his brethren. I look upon him as having the
same origin as we had, only he was the eldest; and if he was born
in the eternal world thousands of years ago, why not all the rest
of his brethren, so far as their spirits are concerned? I know
that the objection will immediately arise in the minds of
individuals who have not reflected on this subject, if we were
intelligent personages thousands of years ago, and dwelling in
the presence of God, and of Jesus, our elder brother, how is it
that we have no remembrance of anything that transpired in our
pre-existence? I answer this question by saying, that when we
came into this world from our former state of existence, and had
our spirits enclosed within these mortal tabernacles, it had a
tendency to take away our memories so far as the past was
concerned. It did so in relation to Jesus. He had great knowledge
before he was born into this world--sufficient to create the
heavens and the earth, hence we read in the Hebrews that God, by
his Son, made the worlds. This was before Jesus came here, and he
must then have been the possessor of great knowledge to have been
able to do that; but when he took upon himself flesh and bones
did he forget this knowledge? We read in the Scriptures, speaking
of Jesus coming here and taking a body of flesh and bones that
"in his humiliation his judgment was taken away." What
humiliation? His descending from the presence of God his Father
and descending below all things, his judgment was taken away,
that is, his remembrance of things that were past, and that
knowledge which, while in the presence of his Father, enabled him
to make worlds, and he had to begin at the first principles of
knowledge, just the same as all his brethren who came here in the
flesh. We read that Jesus, as he grew in stature, grew also in
wisdom and knowledge. If he had possessed all wisdom, and had not
forgotten that which he formerly possessed, how was it that he
could increase in wisdom as he increased in stature? It shows
clearly that the wisdom which he had possessed thousands of years
before, had for a wise purpose been taken from him. "His judgment
was taken away," and he left, as it were, in the very depth of
humility, beginning at the very first principles of knowledge and
growing up from grace to grace, as the Scriptures say, from one
degree to another, until he received a fullness from his Father.
Then when he did regain all his previous knowledge and wisdom, he
had the fullness of the Father within him, in other words, "in
him dwelt all the fullness of the Godhead bodily."
246
Now if his knowledge was forgotten, and his judgment taken away,
why not ours? We find this to be the case. What person among all
the human family can comprehend what took place in his first
existence? No one, it is blotted from the memory, and I think
there is great wisdom manifested in withholding the knowledge of
our previous existence. Why? Because we could not, if we had all
our pre-existent knowledge accompanying us into this world, show
to our Father in the heavens and to the heavenly host that we
would be in all things obedient; in other words, we could not be
tried as the Lord designs to try us here in this state of
existence, to qualify us for a higher state hereafter. In order
to try the children of men, there must be a degree of knowledge
withheld from them, for it would be no temptation to them if they
could understand from the beginning the consequences of their
acts, and the nature and results of this and that temptation. But
in order that we may prove ourselves before the heavens obedient
and faithful in all things, we have to begin at the very first
principles of knowledge, and be tried from knowledge to
knowledge, and from grace to grace, until, like our elder
brother, we finally overcome and triumph over all our
imperfections, and receive with him the same glory that he
inherits, which glory he had before the world was.
247
This is the way that we as a people look upon our previous
existence. There is something truly cheering in contemplating the
previous existence of man, much more so than in the old idea of
the sectarian world--that God is constantly creating, that he did
not finish his work some five or six thousand years ago, but that
he is creating all the time. They will tell you that they have
spirits in their bodies capable of existing after the bodies have
crumbled back to mother earth. Ask them the origin of these
spirits, and they will tell you they originated about the time
the infant tabernacles of flesh and bone originated. Hence,
according to their ideas, God has all the time been creating
about one person every twenty seconds, which I believe is about
the average rate that persons are born into the world; in other
words, about three a minute, and according to their ideas the
Lord is engaged in making spirits with this rapidity, and sending
them here to this world.
247
I cannot, for my part, see that there is any more absurdity in
believing that he made them thousands of years before they came
here, than to suppose that he made them just before they came
here, and entered into the tabernacle. One can certainly not be
more unreasonable than the other.
247
Because we can not recollect our former existence is no proof
whatever that we did not have one. I can prove this. In regard to
this present existence, what person is there in this congregation
who can remember the first six months of his or her infancy?
There is not a man nor a woman on the face of the earth, I
presume, who can remember this; but no person will argue, on that
account, that he did not exist at that time. Oh no, says the
objector, that would be an improper method of arguing. Our
memories have nothing to do with a previous existence. If we
remember it, all good; if we do not, it does not alter that
existence.
247
If we were born in heaven before this world was made, the
question might arise as to the nature of that birth. Was it by
command that the spiritual substance, scattered through space,
was miraculously brought together, and organized into a spiritual
form, and called a spirit? Is that the way that Jesus, the
firstborn of every creature, was brought into existence? Oh no;
we were all born there after the same manner that we are here,
that is to say, every person that had an existence before he came
here had a literal father and literal mother, a personal father
an a personal mother; hence the Apostle Paul, in speaking to the
heathen at Ephesus, says, "We are his offspring." Now I look upon
every man and woman that have ever come here on this globe, or
that ever will come, as having a father and mother in the heavens
by whom their spirits were brought into existence. But how long
they resided in the heavens before they came here is not
revealed.
248
We will refer now to the 19th chapter of Job, to show that there
were sons of God before this world was made. The Lord asked Job a
question in relation to his pre-existence, saying, "Where wast
thou when I laid the corner stone of the earth?" Where were you,
Job, when all the morning stars sang together, and all the sons
of God shouted for joy; when the nucleus of this creation was
commenced? If Job had been indoctrinated into all the mysteries
of modern religionists, he would have answered this question by
saying, "Lord, why do you ask me such a question? I had no
existence at that time." But the very question implies the
existence of Job, but he had forgotten where he was, and the Lord
put the question as though he did exist, showing to him in the
declaration, that, when he laid the corner stone of the earth,
there were a great many sons of God there, and that they all
shouted together for joy. Who were these sons of God? They
certainly were not the fleshly descendants of Adam, for he had
not then been placed in the Garden of Eden. Who were they then?
They were Jesus, the elder brother, and all the family that have
come from that day until now--millions on millions--and all who
will come hereafter, and take tabernacles of flesh and bones
until the closing up scene of this creation. All these were
present when God commenced this creation. Jesus was also there
and superintended the work, for by him God made the worlds,
consequently he must have been there, and all felt joyful, and
shouted for joy. What produced their joy? It was foreknowledge.
They knew that the creation then being formed was for their
abiding place, where their spirits would go and take upon them
tabernacles of flesh and bones, and they rejoiced at the
prospect. They had more knowledge then than the world of mankind
have now. They saw that it was absolutely necessary for their
advancement in the scale of being to go and take tabernacles of
flesh and bone; they saw that their spirits without tabernacles
never could be made perfect, never could be placed in a position
to attain to great power, dominion and glory like their Father;
and understanding that the earth was being created to give them
the opportunity of reaching his position, they sang together for
joy. They composed a hymn, and if we could have a copy of it, we
should no doubt find that it was a hymn in relation to the
construction of the earth and its future habitation by those
spirits in the form of men. I should like to see that hymn
myself, and if we had it we would get our choir here to sing it.
I think it would impart a good deal of information to us, and
perhaps we would shout for joy again.
248
It is very evident that this was the belief of the people in the
days of the Savior. Even the Apostles and those with Jesus
evidently believed in the pre-existence of man. This is manifest
from a certain question which they put to Jesus on the occasion
of a blind man making his appearance before him. They said to
him, "Master, who did sin, this man or his parents, that he was
born blind?" In other words, did this man sin before he was born,
and in consequence of his sin was he born blind? Or was it that
his father sinned that he was born blind? This question would
have been very foolish to put to the Savior, unless they had
believed in the pre-existence of man. But they not only did
believe it, they also believed it possible for man to sin in that
pre-existence, and that the penalty of that sin might be carried
down to this state of existence, and be the cause of blindness at
birth, and with that belief they put the question to the Savior.
That would have been a very favorable opportunity for him to have
corrected them, if their ideas about pre-existence had been
false. He could have turned to them and said, he could not have
sinned before he was born, and that be the cause that he was born
blind, because he had no previous existence. But he said no such
thing, he replied, "Neither this man nor his parents sinned, but
that the glory of God might be made manifest."
249
In the first and second chapter of Genesis, in the new
translation given by inspiration through Joseph Smith the
Prophet, this subject is made very plain. After Joseph had
translated the Book of Mormon from the gold plates, the Lord
commanded him to translate the Bible. Now you know that we have
no inspired translator at the present day among any of the
nations. We have translations of the Bible made by the wisdom and
learning of men, but as each translator has differed in his
views, no two of them agree. Indeed, when we go back in the
history of the Bible, we find that about four hundred and fifty
years before Christ Ezra compiled into one volume the different
books of the Old Testament so far as they were given. Previous to
that they had been in scattered manuscripts. The five books of
Moses were kept in the Ark of the Testament. The writings of
Joshua and others who followed Moses were kept here and there,
and but very few copies were to be had in those early days.
Indeed, so scarce were the copies of the Bible, that in the days
of the kings of Israel they had lost almost all knowledge of any
written copy of the Bible. They retained many of their
ordinances, their Temple worship, and so on, but written copies
of the Bible had so nearly disappeared, that on repairing the
Temple at a certain time they found a copy of it hid up, but they
did not know whether it was true or not. They had nothing to
compare it with, and the only way they could ascertain whether it
was a true copy of the Bible was to send for a man of God--a
Prophet--and get him to inquire of the Lord whether it was
genuine or not. Thus we see that the people in those early ages
were not favored as we are in these days with copies of the
Bible. But Ezra, according to the history, gathered up these
fragments as far as he could.
249
Two hundred years before Christ there were seventy-two
Israelites, said to be six out of each tribe, met together in the
city of Alexandria in Egypt, and they translated the law of
Moses, the prophets and the psalms from such Hebrew copies as
they happened to have possession of, into the Greek. This was
called the Septuagint translation. Jerome, a staunch Roman
Catholic, translated this Greek version called the Septuagint
into what was termed the Vulgate--a Latin translation. That, and
copies of it made by scribes for many generations, became the
Bible of the Roman Catholics; and even to this day, so far as
they use Latin they appeal to that edition of the Scriptures
called the Vulgate.
249
In the year 1610 the Vulgate edition was translated into English.
This was called the Douay Bible, because it was published at the
town of Douay in France, and it is the Roman Catholic Bible, so
far as the English translation is concerned, to the present day.
It differs materially from the Protestant Bible.
249
About the same time that the Douay translation was published--in
1607, King James the First appointed fifty-four men, some six or
seven of whom did not serve, to translate the Bible from the
original Hebrew, and they gave us that version called King James'
translation.
249
All these translators that I have spoken of translated by their
own wisdom, according to the best understanding they had. None of
them were prophets or revelators, and not one of them understood
the meaning of the original text like a man of God filled with
the Holy Ghost. But they have made a very good translation
notwithstanding, especially the forty-seven who labored under the
appointment of King James. Different parts of the Scriptures were
portioned out among six different classes of translators, and
they, I believe, have given us the very best copy of the Bible in
existence, so far as translations by human wisdom are concerned.
250
But to come back again, as I said before, after having translated
the Book of Mormon, this young man, Joseph Smith, a man of no
education or learning, comparatively speaking, was commanded to
translate the Bible by inspiration. He commenced the work, and
the first and second chapters of Genesis containing the history
of the creation are very plain and full. In the first chapter the
Lord speaks about the spiritual creation of all things before
they were made temporally. In the second chapter he goes on to
state that there was not yet a man to till the ground, "for in
heaven created I them." That explains the mystery about the work
previously spoken of in the first chapter, and shows that it had
a reference to the great work which God had performed in the
heavens before he made this earth temporally. This same doctrine
is inculcated in some small degree in the Book of Mormon.
However, I do not think that I should have ever discerned it in
that book had it not been for the new translation of the
Scriptures, that throwing so much light and information on the
subject, I searched the Book of Mormon to see if there were
indications in it that related to the pre-existence of man. I
found them in a great revelation that was given to the prophet
who led the first colony to this country from the Tower of Babel
at the time the language was confounded. This great prophet had a
remarkable vision before he arrived on this continent. In this
vision he saw the spiritual personage of our Savior as he existed
before he came to take upon him flesh and bones; and Jesus, in
talking to this great man of God, informed him that as he
appeared to him in the spirit so would he appear to his brethren
in the flesh in future generations, and said he, "I am he that
was prepared from before the foundation of the word, to redeem my
people." He furthermore addressed himself to this great man
saying, "Seest thou that thou art created in mine own image?"
That is, man here on the earth is in the image of that spiritual
body or personage of Jesus so far as we are not deformed. "Seest
thou that thou art created in mine own image, yea even in the
beginning created I all men after mine own image." This is about
the only place that refers pointedly to the pre-existence of man
in the Book of Mormon. I think there are one or two other
passages in which it is just referred to.
251
Now admit, as the Latter-day Saints do, that we had a previous
existence, and that when we die we shall return to God and our
former habitation, where we shall behold the face of our Father,
and the question immediately arises, shall we have our memories
so increased by the Spirit of the living God that we shall ever
remember our previous existence? I think we shall. Jesus seems to
have gained this even here in this world, otherwise he would not
have prayed, saying, "Father, glorify thou me with that glory
which I had with thee before the world was," showing plainly that
he had obtained by revelation a knowledge from his Father of
something about the glory that he had before the world was. This
being the case with Jesus, why not his younger brethren also
obtain this information by revelation? And when we do return back
into the presence of our Father, will we not there also have our
memories so quickened that we will remember his face, having
dwelt in his presence for thousands of years? It will not be like
going to visit strangers that we have never seen before. Is not
this a comfort to persons who expect to depart this life, like
all the rest of the human family? They have a consolation that
they are going not among strangers, not to a being whose face
they never say, but to one whom they will recognize, and will
remember, having dwelt with him for ages before the world was.
Looking upon it in the light of reason, independent of
revelation, if a person were to form a system of religion
according to the best light that he had, would it not be more
happifying and calculated more in its nature to give joy and
peace to the mind to suppose that we were going back to a
personage we were well acquainted with, rather than to one we had
no idea of? I think I should prefer, so far as reason is
concerned, to be well acquainted with people I am going among.
251
These are the expectations of the Latter-day Saints: we do not
expect to go among strangers. When we get back there we expect
this place to be familiar to us, and when we meet this, that and
the other one of all the human family that have been here on the
earth, we shall recognize them as those with whom we have dwelt
thousands of years in the presence of our Father and God. This
renewing of old friendships and acquaintances, and again enjoying
all the glory we once possessed, will be a great satisfaction to
all who are privileged to do so.
251
If we ever dwelt there, it is altogether likely that God made
some promises to us when there. He would converse with us, and
cheer us up. Being his offspring--his sons and daughters, he
would not be austere and unwilling to converse with his own
children, but he would teach them a great many things. And all
this will be familiar to us. We read in the New Testament that
God did make promises to us before this world was made. I
recollect one passage in one of the epistles of Paul, either to
Timothy or Titus, the Apostle says, "In hope of eternal life,
which God, who can not lie, promised before the world began." To
whom did he make that promise? I contend that we had the promise
of eternal life before the world began on certain conditions--if
we would comply with the gospel of the Son of God, by repenting
of our sins and being faithful in keeping the commandments of
God.
251
There are many Scriptures in the New Testament that have relation
to the previous existence of man, which I do not at this time
feel disposed to quote. They can be searched up by the Latter-day
Saints, and by all who are curious enough to enquire into these
things. There are some other things however, which I feel anxious
to bring forth in connection with the pre-existence of man. One
thing is our origin more fully. I have already stated that the
spirits of the children of men were born unto their parents. Now
who are the parents of these children?
252
There are certain promises made to the Latter-day Saints, one of
them being that when we take a wife here in this world, it is our
privilege by obedience to the ordinances of heaven, to have that
wife married to us for time and for all eternity. This is a
promise which God has made by revelation to his Church, hence the
Latter-day Saints believe in the eternity of the marriage
covenant. This is one of our fundamental doctrines. We consider
that a marriage for time alone is after the old Gentile order,
and they have lost all knowledge of the true ordinances and order
of heaven. They marry until death separates them. I believe that
almost every religious society, in their marriage ceremony, use
this phrase, "I pronounce you man and wife until death shall part
you!" This sort of a marriage never originated with God; the
marriage that originated with him is the same as that of which we
had an example in the beginning--the first marriage that was ever
celebrated here on the earth. Do you enquire what was the form of
that first marriage between Adam and Eve? I will explain it in a
few words. They were united as husband and wife by the Lord
himself; when they were united they did not know anything about
death, for they had not partaken of the fruit of the tree that
was forbidden, and they were then immortal beings. Here were two
beings united who were as immortal as you will be when you came
forth from your graves in the morning of the first resurrection.
Under these conditions Adam and Eve were married. I do not
believe that the Lord used the ceremony that is now used--I marry
you until death shall separate you. By what means did death come
into the world? After this marriage by partaking of the forbidden
fruit, they brought death on both male and female, or as the
Apostle Paul Says, "By one man sin and death entered into the
world, even so shall all be made alive, and every man in his own
order.
252
It seems then, that if there had been no sin death never would
have come upon Adam and Eve, and they would have been living
to-day, immortal, nearly six thousand years after being placed in
the Garden of Eden, and would they not still be husband and wife?
Certainly, and so they would continue if millions and millions of
ages should pass away, and you could not point out any period in
the future, when this relation would cease; no matter how many
myriads of ages might pass away, unless they by sin brought death
into the world. All will admit, who reflect on the subject, that
this marriage was for eternity, and that death interfered with it
only for the time being, until the resurrection should bring them
forth and re-unite them.
253
The "Mormons," or Latter-day Saints, believe in this kind of
marriage, and the first one ever performed on the earth is a
pattern for us. Moreover God has revealed to us the nature of
marriage, and that its relationships are to exist after the
resurrection, and that it must be attended to in this life in
order to secure it for the next life. For instance, if you wish
to obtain a great many blessings pertaining to the future world,
you have to secure these blessings here. You cannot be baptized
in the next state of existence for the remission of sins; that is
an ordinance pertaining to the flesh, which you must attend to
here. And so with all other ordinances which God has ordained,
you have to partake of them here in order to have a claim on the
promises hereafter. It is so with regard to marriage; and this
agrees with what Jesus has said in relation to their not marrying
nor giving in marriage in that world. There will be no such thing
there. Why? Because this is the world for all these ordinances to
be attended to. Here is the place to secure all the blessings for
the next world. We have to show in this probation that we will be
obedient in obeying the commandments of heaven so that we may
have a claim on every blessing pertaining to the next life.
Consequently, we have to secure this marriage for eternity while
in this world. When a female in the Latter-day Saint Church
marries a person outside the Church it is not a marriage in our
estimation, in the scriptural sense of the word, it is only a
union until death shall part them. When a person does this we
really consider them weak in the faith; indeed it is equivalent
in my estimation not only to being weak in the faith, but since
these revelations were given on the subject, if people with their
eyes wide open will still reject these important things, and
marry a person outside the Church, it shows to me very clearly
that he or she has no regard for the word of God, nor for their
own salvation. They are lacking not only in faith but in the
principle of obedience. They have no hope when they marry outside
the Church, but when they marry in the Church according to this
order, and the persons who officiate in declaring them husband
and wife, being commissioned of God and having authority to
administer in all the ordinances of his kingdom, that marriage is
not only for time, but for all eternity.
253
Another question. Having been married for eternity, we die and
our spirits go into celestial paradise. We come forth in the
morning of the first resurrection as immortal males and immortal
females. Our wives, married to us for eternity, come forth, and
they are ours by virtue of that which God has pronounced upon
them through those whom he has appointed, and to whom he has
given authority. We have a legal claim upon them at the
resurrection. But here comes forth a person that is married
outside. She comes up without a husband, he without a wife, or
any claim upon any of the blessings. Here is the difference
between these two classes of beings. One dwells as an angel,
without any power to increase their species, family or dominions,
without the power to beget sons and daughters. This class will be
angels. Perhaps many of them will be worthy of obtaining a degree
of power, glory, and happiness, but not a fullness. Why? Because
they have not come up to that position of their Father and their
God. He has power to beget and bring forth sons and daughters in
the spirit world; and after he has brought forth millions and
millions of spirits, he has power to organize worlds, and send
these spirits into these worlds to take temporal bodies to
prepare them in turn to be redeemed and become Gods, or in other
words, the sons of God, growing up like their father, possessing
all his attributes, and propagating their species through all
eternity. Here then is the difference between these two classes
of beings--one having lost what they might have obtained and
enjoyed if they had had faith in God and been willing to obey his
commandments. But the others are worthy, as the Apostle Paul has
said, to obtain a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory,
while the others will be angels or servants, to go and come at
the bidding of those who are more exalted.
254
This is what Paul meant when he said that in the Lord the man is
not without the woman, neither is the woman without the man; as
much as to say that in order to be in the Lord and to obtain a
fullness of his glory and exaltation, you can not be separated;
or in other words, to speak according to the common phrase, you
can not live old bachelors or old maids and go down to your
graves in this condition. That is not the order of heaven, why?
Because marriage is essentially necessary to qualify them to
propagate their species throughout all eternity, that they in
their turn may have worlds created on which these sons and
daughters of their own begetting may receive tabernacles of flesh
and bones as we have done. This is the order by which all worlds
are peopled by spirits that have been born in the eternal worlds;
and these worlds are organized expressly for them that they may
go and have another change, another state of being different from
their spiritual state, where they may possess bodies of flesh and
bones, which are essentially necessary to the begetting of their
own species. Spirits can not bring forth, multiply and increase.
They must have bodies.
254
We have said this much on the hymn that was sung in the morning,
and these ideas are fully inculcated therein, and they are
established and founded on the revelations God has given in
different ages. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, December 29, 1872
ratt, December 29, 1872
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the 13th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, December 29, 1872.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
TRUE CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR.
254
We are, this afternoon, commemorating according to our usual
custom, one of the most important events that has ever transpired
in our world, and one which most concerns the whole human family,
namely, the death and sufferings of the Lord Jesus Christ for the
redemption of the human family. No other event can be compared
with this in its importance, and in its bearings upon the human
family. Everything else is but of a secondary consideration, when
compared with the atonement that has been wrought out in behalf
of man by the great Redeemer, yet, strange to say, there are
those in the Christian world, so called, who profess to believe
in Christianity and yet deny the efficacy of the atoning blood
that was shed by our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. More
especially has this been the case for a few years past. I suppose
there are many thousands who deny this now, where there were but
few at the time of the rise of this Church. This has arisen,
probably, from the multiplication of spiritual influences, which
now prevail to a very great extent in the christian
world--influences that are evil, revelations, false visions,
spirit rappings and mediums. Almost without exception these false
spirits have taught those who have listened to them, that there
is no efficacy in the Atonement.
255
There is no subject more fully developed and made manifest to the
children of men in modern revelation than that of the atonement.
Much is said in relation to other doctrines, all of which have a
bearing on the atonement, that lying at the foundation of the
whole. If the evil one can prevail over the human family so as to
get them to deny this fundamental doctrine, he knows that they
are safe, so far as serving him and failing of their salvation
are concerned. If they can only be wrought upon and deluded so as
to disbelieve in the doctrine of the atonement, it does not
matter to Satan what else they may believe. It is not my
intention, however, this afternoon, unless so led by the Spirit
of the Lord, to dwell much on this subject. It is one that has
been so thoroughly taught to the Latter-day Saints, that I esteem
it almost unnecessary to repeat that with which they are so
familiar. By partaking of the ordinance of the Lords Supper every
Sabbath day, we commemorate that great event. If we do not preach
so much about it by word of mouth we certainly fulfill the
commandment which God has given requiring us to remember unto the
Father the crucified body and shed blood of his Son, without
which there would have been no remission of sin, and no
redemption, and mankind would have remained in their fallen
state. No light could have penetrated the hearts of the children
of men, and there would have been no resurrection, no exaltation
in the kingdom of God without the atonement. When we speak of
total depravity, it has reference to certain conditions. Man is
not totally depraved now, and the reason is, there has been an
atonement; but do away that, as many do, and total depravity
would reign, and men would live and die totally degraded beings.
All the light that has come into the world, and that lights every
man that comes into the world, has come by reason of the
atonement. It is an event that all Christian societies
commemorate more or less, or at least they did in former times.
They are getting more lax now since the devil and his angels have
given so many revelations against the atonement.
255
The Roman Catholics, about 532 years after Christ, set apart a
day called Christmas, which they no doubt believed at that time
was the day of the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. The
reason why they set apart Christmas and have kept up its
commemoration from that day until the present time, was because a
certain monk, a member of their church, named Dionsysius
commenced a calculation to ascertain, if possible, the period of
time from the birth of Christ to the time the calculation was
made; and from all the information that he could glean he set it
down at 532 years. They had not printed works in those days as we
have now; they had not access to the abundance of historical and
chronological information then that we have; but from all the
information that Dionysius could glean, and making a calculation
thereon, he came to the above result.
256
He also made a calculation in regard to the day on which he
supposed the Savior to have been born, and that was set down as a
day to be celebrated by the Roman Catholics church. They have
certain ordinances in regard to that day, which you may see
observed in their church in this city. People, prior to this
time, did not date their documents from the birth of Christ. If
they were writing a letter they did not say, in the year of our
Lord 520, in the year of our Lord 416, and so on; this was never
done until the calculation of Dionysius was made, then it was
adopted by the Roman Catholics and by all nations among whom they
had power and influence. By and by other chronologists made
calculations as to the time of Christ's birth, and from the
information they could gather together, they discovered that
Dionysius had made a mistake, and that Christ was born about one
year before the time set by him. But by this time there were
great numbers of important State and other documents and papers
in existence, all dated according to the incorrect calculation of
this Romish monk. How to remedy this the people did not know, for
it would not do to alter all these dates.
256
Another set of chronologists made calculations, and they
discovered that Dionysius had made a mistake of two years in
regard to the time of the Savior's birth. Four others, very
learned men, sought diligently, and from the information they
obtained they found that Jesus was born three years before the
time published by Dionysius. Five others made it four years; some
few made it five years before, and some seven years before the
time specified by this Romish monk. Al modern chronologists who
have taken up the subject, agree that Dionysius was incorrect, at
least several years. But did the people alter the dates of their
documents and manuscripts when his error was fully made manifest?
Not at all; they have continued that old, erroneous reckoning
down to this present year. But they have attached the name of
vulgar era to it, in order to indicate that it is incorrect.
Vulgar era! I think the name is inappropriate, for there are
thousands of people at the present day, including the youth of
our land, and perhaps many who have had a collegiate education,
who never knew or inquired into the meaning of vulgar era, or why
the term was introduced. Its real meaning is, incorrect era or
date. For instance, we write a letter to-day, and we call it the
29th day of December, 1872. This is according to the vulgar era,
or erroneous date, or the reckoning of Dionysius; but this is not
the true date. The probability is, independent of the Bible or
Book of Mormon, from the great mass of testimony that has been
accumulated for generations past, that Jesus was born nearly four
years prior to the commencement of this vulgar era, so that our
present year, 1872, should be 1876. You will find a full account
of these matters in the writings of the learned, in
encyclopaedias, and in various works touching upon chronology, so
that you have no need to take my testimony alone on this subject,
for you have access to our library here in this city, and you can
examine works on chronology and see that I am correct. There may
be those here who would like me to cite some works on this
subject. I will cite one that I read while I was in England, a
Bible dictionary, by a very learned author named Smith. This
subject is treated very plainly and fully in that work. I think
that Mr. John W. Young of this city has this work in his private
library. The reason why I make these remarks is, that this is the
first Sabbath after Christmas, and the day on which I believe the
Roman Catholics in this city are celebrating certain ordinances
in their church in commemoration of this event.
257
Having found out that there is an error in regard to the year of
Christ's birth, now let us inquire if the day observed by the
Christian world as the day of his birth, the 25th of December, is
or is not the real Christmas Day? A great many authors have found
out from their researches that it is not. I think that there is
scarcely an author at the present day that believes that the 25th
day of December was the day that Christ was born on. Still it is
observed by certain classes, and we, whether we make any
profession or not, are just foolish enough to observe this old
Roman Catholic festival. The boys and girls all look forward with
great anticipations to Christmas. Many of them, it is true, do
not know the meaning of it, or why it is celebrated; but when we
come to reflect on the matter, it is all nonsense to celebrate
the 25th day of December as the birthday of Jesus. It will do for
a holiday, so you might select any other day for that purpose. It
is generally believed and conceded by the learned, who have
investigated the matter, that Christ was born in April. I have
seen several accounts--some of them published in our
periodicals--of learned men in different nations, in which it is
stated that, according to the best of their judgment from the
researches they have made, Christ was crucified on the 6th of
April. That is, the day on which this church was organized. But
when these learned men go back from the day of his crucifixion to
the day of his birth, they are at a loss, having no certain
evidence or testimony by which they can determine it. I intend
this afternoon to give light on this subject from new revelation,
which we, as Latter-day Saints, can depend upon. I will read to
you from the Book of Mormon, some things that happened, at the
time of the crucifixion, on this great western hemisphere, and I
will say we have a date given there in connection with these
events, showing how old Jesus was at the time of his crucifixion.
It may not be amiss, however, for me to make a few remarks before
I commence reading, to inform strangers who may be present, that
the inhabitants of ancient America, and those who wrote the Book
of Mormon were Israelites! that when they came from the city of
Jerusalem, 600 years before Christ, they were a righteous people,
and had prophets among them, and that they kept the law of Moses.
Now the sacrifices and burnt offerings of that law were typical
of the great offering that was to be made by our Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ. The ancient inhabitants of this continent, to whom
I have referred, understood the nature of these ordinances, and
they looked forward to the coming of the true Messiah and
celebrated it by these ordinances, the same as we look backward
and celebrate his death and sufferings by partaking of the
symbols of, as we have done this afternoon.
257
Now if God led a company of Israelites from Palestine to colonize
this continent, and taught them to keep the law of Moses with its
sacrifices and burnt offerings, typical of the great sacrifice
that was to be made at Jerusalem, it would not be at all strange
for him to give to them a sign concerning Jesus, when he should
be born, and when he should die. He did this by the mouths of
prophets. Numerous prophets were raised up on this land, and they
prophesied to the inhabitants thereof, and taught them about the
coming of Jesus, and what signs would be given at the time he
should come. They taught them that the night before Jesus should
be born there would be no darkness on this land, but that it
would be perfectly light. They would see the sun set in the
evening, and that, during the night, until it should rise the
next morning, there would be no darkness; that great signs and
lights would appear in the heavens, and that they were to be to
them indications of the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ. These signs were given, and by them the people on this
continent knew the very day that Jesus was born.
258
Some years after this, before the crucifixion of Jesus, they fell
into great wickedness. They persecuted the prophets, shed their
blood, stoned them to death, and cast them out of their midst,
and they were full of wrath and indignation and sinned against
great light, so that the Lord was under the necessity of sending
other Prophets to them, telling them that at the time of the
crucifixion, if they did not repent, many of their cities should
be burned with fire, many destroyed with tempests, and that they
should be visited with sore judgments and calamities; and that
during the time Jesus should be lifted up on the cross, there
should be tremendous earthquakes upon all the face of this
continent, and that after that there would be three days and
three nights of darkness, and that this darkness should come
immediately after the execution of the Savior. Now let us read
what the Prophet says on page 450 of the Book of Mormon
concerning these events, which transpired just as they had been
predicted.
258
"And it came to pass in the thirty and fourth year, in the first
month, in the fourth day of the month, there arose a great storm,
such an one as had never been known in all the land." From what
period was this date reckoned? We are informed on page 435 of
this book, that the Nephites began reckoning the beginning of
their year from the sign given them at the birth of the
Savior--the night without darkness. Previous to that they had
reckoned from the time of their leaving Jerusalem, 600 years
before Christ, and they continued this some five centuries, until
they changed the form of their government on this continent, and
introduced judges; then they reckoned their time from the
beginning of the reign of the judges. This mode of reckoning
lasted ninety-one years. Five hundred and nine years having
passed away before the reign of the judges commenced, and
ninety-one added to that made 600 years from the time that Lehi
and the colony came out of Jerusalem. Then they changed their
mode of reckoning, and reckoned from the time this great sign was
given in the heavens, so that we know what this date means--"in
the thirty and fourth year, in the first month, and in the fourth
day of the month." Now I think this gives us a clue to the age of
Jesus when he was crucified, but we will read on, and see about
the storm.
258
"There arose a great storm, such an one as never had been known
in all the land; and there was also a great and terrible tempest,
and there was terrible thunder, insomuch that it did shake the
whole earth as if it was about to divide asunder; and there were
exceeding sharp lightnings, such as never had been known in all
the land. And the city of Zarahemla did take fire."
258
Zarahemla was their great capital city. It was located in the
north part of South America, on one branch of that river that we
call the river Magdalene, that runs down from the mountains to
the northward, and empties into the Caribbean sea. On the west
side of that river was located the great city of Zarahemla. We
will now read further:
258
"And the city Zarahemla did take fire; and the city Moroni did
sink into the depths of the sea, and the inhabitants thereof were
drowned; and the earth was carried up upon the city of Moronihah,
that in the place of the city thereof there became a great
mountain."
259
Now if our miners, those who go into South America, should happen
to dig in a few thousand feet, and should come across old
buildings, they need not be astonished, for the Lord made a
terrible revolution in the land. There came a great mountain in
the place where this city stood; "and there was a great and
terrible destruction in the land southward"--what we term South
America.
259
"But behold, there was a more great and terrible destruction in
the land northward"--North America--"for behold the whole face of
the land was changed because of the tempest, and the whirlwinds,
and the thunderings, and the lightnings, and the exceeding great
quakings of the whole earth; and the highways were broken up, and
the level roads were spoiled, and many smooth places became
rough, and many great and notable cities were sunk, and many were
burned, and many were shook till the buildings thereof had fallen
to the earth, and the inhabitants thereof were slain, and the
places were left desolate; and there were some cities which
remained; but the damage thereof was exceeding great, and there
were many in them who were slain; and there were some who were
carried away in the whirlwind, and whither they went no man
knoweth, save they know that they were carried away; and thus the
face of the whole earth became deformed because of the tempests,
and the thunderings, and the lightnings, and the quaking of the
earth. And behold, the rocks were rent in twain; they were broken
up upon the face of the whole earth, insomuch that they were
found in broken fragments, and in seams and in cracks, upon all
the face of the land."
259
You can see from this, what terrible convulsions have taken place
on this continent, even here in these mountains. In the mountains
west of this valley, you will find the strata of rock set up
almost perpendicular; that was not the way they were first
formed. You will also find there, as elsewhere, strata dipping at
a greater or less angle into the earth. The cause of all this has
been the terrible convulsions that our globe has undergone, and
more especially at the time of the crucifixion.
259
"And it came to pass that when the thunderings, and the
lightnings, and the storm, and the tempest, and the quakings of
the earth did cease--for behold they did last for about the space
of three hours; and it was said by some that the time was
greater; nevertheless, all these great and terrible things were
done in about the space of three hours; and then behold there was
darkness upon the face of the land."
259
I might go on reading, if it were necessary, in regard to the
weeping, wailing and mourning of the people during these three
days of intense darkness--no sun, moon, nor stars were to be
seen, and the vapor was so great that the inhabitants of the land
could feel it, the same as the darkness was felt in the land of
Egypt. It was not, of course, the darkness that was felt, but the
vapor that was so thick. There is one thing, however, to which I
wish to call your special attention, before I make any further
remarks in regard to the date that is here given. When this
darkness dispersed, it is said to have been morning. You will
find it on page 454. "And it came to pass that thus did the three
days pass away; and it was in the morning, and the darkness
dispersed from off the face of land, and the earth did cease to
tremble, and the rocks did cease to rend."
260
You might say that this was not three days and three nights, for
Jesus was crucified and died on the cross at 3 o'clock in the
afternoon at Jerusalem, and consequently for it to have been just
three days and three nights, you might suppose that the darkness
must have dispersed in the afternoon. But this book tells us that
when the three days and three nights of darkness had passed away
it was morning. Now why this discrepancy--for it seems to be
one--between the Bible and the Book of Mormon? Can you account
for it, and tell why it should have been morning in America? The
reason is because of the difference in longitude. The writer of
the account in the Book of Mormon resided in the northwestern
portion of South America. Now you take a map of the world, and
see the difference in longitude between the place where Jesus was
crucified, and that where the writer of the Book of Mormon lived,
and you will find that it is about seven and a half hours. Now
you subtract seven and a half hours from 3 o'clock in the
afternoon, and what time would it be when the three hours of
quaking and the destruction of cities expired, or when the
darkness commenced? Would it not be in the morning? Take away
seven and a half hours longitude from 3 o'clock--the time that
Jesus expired--and would it not be half past seven o'clock in the
morning with the inhabitants of this land, while it was afternoon
with the inhabitants in Jerusalem?
260
I presume that Joseph Smith, being an unlearned man, never saw
this to the day of his death; that is, he never understood it. I
never heard him, or any learned man refer to it until after his
death; but reading it over myself, I saw, at first, there was an
apparent discrepancy between this book and the New Testament; one
placing it in the morning, and the other in the afternoon. When
thinking of this seeming discrepancy, the difference in longitude
occurred to my mind, and that is just what it should be to
account for the difference in time given in the two books; and
this, though not direct, is incidental proof that the man who
translated this book was inspired of God. I do not think that
Joseph Smith, to the day of his death, knew that a difference in
time at different places on the earth was caused by their
difference of longitude.
261
We will now go back to the date, at the commencement of the
extract I have been reading--"in the thirty and fourth year, in
the first month, and on the fourth day of the month"--that would
make him thirty-three years, three days and part of another day
old, at the time of his crucifixion, according to the account
given in the Book of Mormon. But this does not decide his age
exactly, unless we can learn what kind of years the Nephites
reckoned. Did they reckon their years as the English and
Americans do? No, I presume not. How can we learn the length of
their years? I do not know of any better method than going back
to the early Spanish historians who lived contemporary with
Columbus, the discoverer of America. When they penetrated into
Mexico, and conquered that country, they found that the Mexicans
were partially civilized, so that they had many records, although
their mode of keeping them was very different from those of other
nations. The Mexican calendar gave their views and ideas with
regard to the length of the year, and their mode of reckoning
them. This was about the close of the fifteenth century, for
Columbus discovered America in 1492. Soon afterwards these
Spanish historians became extensively acquainted with Mexican
literature, their form of writing, and the half civilization that
existed among them. I have in my possession nine large volumes,
got up soon after the Book of Mormon was translated, by Lord
Kingsborough, on Mexican antiquities. The nine volumes will
probably weigh over two hundred pounds. Five of them contain
nothing but plates of antiquities, the other four contain
translations, in English, Spanish and French, of the declarations
of historians concerning Mexican literature and their knowledge
concerning the length of the year. They reckoned 365 days to the
year, but did not add what is termed the intercalary day every
four years, to make what we call leap year. They did this only
once in fifty-two years, and then they added thirteen days, which
made one day for every four years. This shows that they had a
very good idea of the length of the year.
261
When Jesus was crucified, at the age of about thirty-three years,
if the Nephites reckoned according to the Mexican portion of the
Israelites, they had not added the eight days that we would add
for leap year, consequently this would shorten their years, and
instead of being thirty-three years, three days and part of the
fourth day, it would bring it, according to our reckoning, eight
days less than the Book of Mormon date, or thirty-two years,
three hundred and sixty days and fifteen hours. This, then, it is
highly probable, must have been the real period that existed
between the birth and the crucifixion of our Savior.
261
Now we have a clue in the New Testament to the time of his
crucifixion, but not of his birth; that is, we know that he was
crucified on Friday, for all of the Evangelists testify that
Saturday was the Jewish Sabbath, and that on Friday Jesus was
hung on the cross, and according to the testimony of the learned,
that was on the 6th of April, consequently by going back from the
crucifixion 32 years, 360 days and 15 hours, making allowance for
the longitude, it gives Thursday for his birthday. Again, making
allowance for the errors of Dionysius the monk, adding four years
or nearly so to the vulgar or incorrect era, it would make the
organization of this Church take place precisely, to the very
day, 1800 years from the day that he was lifted up on the cross.
261
This is something very marvelous in my mind. Joseph Smith did not
choose the 6th of April upon which to organize this Church: he
received a commandment from god, which is contained in the Book
of Doctrine and Covenants, setting apart that day as the one upon
which the Church should be organized. Why did he set up his
kingdom precisely 1800 years from the day on which he was lifted
up on the cross? I do not know why. The Lord has his own set time
to bring to pass his great purposes. If Joseph Smith had been
learned in chronology and in the writings of the world; if he had
been a middle-aged or an old man of experience, or a man who had
access to libraries, instead of a farmer's boy, then we might
have supposed that perhaps he had studied chronology, sought out
the true era, found out how to distinguish between the true and
the vulgar, and then find out the true date of the birth of
Christ and his crucifixion, and got it all arranged together
nicely and harmoniously, and then have pretended that he had had
a revelation to organize the Church precisely 1800 years from
that great event. This is what we should have to concede if we
wanted to make out the work an imposition: but the very fact that
God commanded that boy to organize the church on that day, ought
to be regarded as strong collateral evidence of the divine
authenticity of the Book of Mormon.
262
Perhaps I have said all that is needful on this matter. If I
were to celebrate Christmas, or the birthday of Christ, I should
go back a little less than thirty-three years from his
crucifixion, and it would bring it to Thursday, the 11th day of
April, as the first day of the first year of the true Christian
era; and reckoning on thirty-two years, 360 days and fifteen
hours from that, it would bring it to the crucifixion, and bring
it on Friday also.
262
In saying that "it was the thirty-fourth year, first month and
fourth day of the month" on which the great storm and earthquakes
took place, there is another thing to be noted--that it must have
taken place on Friday, according to the Nephite reckoning in
order to bring his crucifixion on Friday. If Tuesday was the
first day of the 34th year, the second day would be Wednesday,
the third Thursday, and Friday would have been the fourth day of
the month, just as the Book of Mormon says, bringing it correct
according to the reckoning of the days of the week.
262
There is another thing that, perhaps, a great many of the
Latter-day Saints and many of the world have not reflected upon;
that is, that the beginning of our present New Year is incorrect,
reckoning the years from the birth of Christ, for the first day
of January was not the day of his birth. We call it the first day
of the year, but it has no reference to the day of Christ's
birth. The first day of the year of the true Christian era should
be the day of the Savior's birth--the 11th day of April. About
122 years ago we did not have the first day of January for New
Year. At that time, or thereabouts, everybody in America and
England reckoned New Year's Day on the 25th of March. That had
been the first day of the year for many generations. How came it
to be changed to the first day of January? In 1751 the Parliament
of Great Britain passed a law that the year should be moved
backwards from the 25th day of March to the 1st day of January,
making the year 1751 some eighty-four days shorter than all the
other years had been. Why did they do this? In order to place New
year in connection with a certain event in astronomy. Those who
are acquainted with the earth going round the sun, know that the
path in which it moves is not a circle but an ellipse, or
elongated circle. You make a wire into the form of a circle and
then pull it out, and that is the form of an ellipse. The sun is
situated in one of the foci of this ellipse, and is nearer to the
earth on the 1st day of January or the 31st day of December, by
about three millions of miles, than it is on the 1st day of July.
The object of placing the year back was to have the year begin
when the earth was in its perihelion in going around the sun.
This was not the only alteration that has been made, but this
accounts for the phrases "new style" and "old style," with which
you occasionally meet in historical documents, the former having
reference to the new mode of reckoning, the latter to the old
mode.
263
I have said that this was not the only change made in time. In
the year 1752--when the second day of September had arrived, in
order to bring the year to correspond with the seasons, it was
found necessary to set the time forward so that the 3rd day of
September should be called the 14th, eleven days being dropped
out of the calendar. This was also established by parliamentary
law; and in this way the seasons have been brought to correspond,
in some measure, with the length of the year. All these things
should be taken into consideration in our dates; and when we read
the saying in the Book of Covenants that the Lord organized his
Church in the year of our Lord 1830, in the fourth month, and on
the sixth day of the month, the Lord made his language to
correspond with our present mode of reckoning, that is, he
adopted the reckoning of the English, established by
parliamentary law. Instead of reckoning the year to begin on the
25th of March, he says, "It being in the year of our Lord 1830,
the fourth month, and the sixth day of the month that the Church
was organized." We are not on this account to take this as the
real date, but it is adapted to our present mode of reckoning. I
have made these remarks that no persons, if they should feel
disposed to search into chronology, might be misled in relation
to this matter. Being so near Christmas and New year, I have
deemed it appropriate to dwell on this subject, for the purpose
of enlightening the minds of all who may be present, so far as I
have information in regard to it.
263
Now, if I have not already occupied too much time, I desire to
dwell a little upon the subject of the chronology of our world.
We have no dates on which we can depend as to the period or
history of our globe from the creation down to the present time.
Chronologists differ in regard to the history and age of the
world. Some make the age of the world, from the creation to the
coming of Christ, to be four thousand years. Archbishop Usher has
introduced this chronology into King James' Bible; and in that
you will find all the dates adapted to that particular reckoning;
and according to his reckoning you will find that Christ came in
the year of the world 4004. Is this to be depended upon? Not at
all. Many chronologists equally as learned, and who have made
deeper researches than he has on this subject, differ with him
materially. There are many who place the birth of Christ at 5500
years from the creation; others place it at 5490, others at 5508
or 9 years. There are about two hundred chronologists who all
differ in regard to this matter. Many Jewish chronologists make
it over six thousand years from the creation till the birth of
Christ, so that you see when we attempt to take up the subject on
the learning of the world, we are in the midst of confusion--no
person knows anything about it. It is not really necessary that
we should know, but we have some little light on this subject.
264
We know that it was not six thousand years from the creation to
the birth of Christ. How do we know this? God has told us in new
revelation that this earth is destined to continue its temporal
existence for seven thousand years, and that at the commencement
of the seventh thousand, he will cause seven angels to sound
their trumpets. In other words, we may call it the Millennium,
for the meaning of the world millennium is a thousand years. Six
thousand years must pass away from the creation till the time
that Jesus comes in the clouds of heaven, and he will not come
exactly at the expiration of six thousand years. When the Prophet
Joseph asked the Lord what was meant by the sounding of the seven
trumpets, he was told, "That as God made the world in six days,
and on the seventh day he finished his work and sanctified it,
and also formed man out of the dust of the earth; even so in the
beginning of the seventh thousand years, will the Lord God
sanctify the earth, and complete the salvation of man, and judge
all things and shall redeem all things, except that which he hath
not put into his power when he shall have sealed all things unto
the end of all things, and the sounding of the trumpets of the
seven angels is the preparing and finishing of his work, in the
beginning of the seventh thousand years; to prepare the way
before the time of his coming." This quotation will be found in
the Pearl of Great Price, p. 34.
264
Neither of these trumpets have sounded yet, but they shortly
will; and this gives us a little clue to the period and age of
our world. We know that six thousand years have not yet elapsed
since the creation, but we know that they have very nearly
expired. We know that God set up and established this kingdom
1800 years from the date of his crucifixion, preparatory to his
coming in the clouds of heaven to receive the kingdom that he
sets up here on the earth, and to rule and reign over all people,
nations and tongues that are spared alive. Perhaps this is
sufficient on the history and chronology of the world; but for
the benefit of the Saints, and it will not hurt the strangers,
although they do not believe in our revelations, I will refer to
some further evidence and testimony on this subject.
264
In the new translation which Joseph Smith was commanded to make
of the Old and New Testament, we find that some of the dates
given in King James' translation of events before the flood are
incorrect, but they are corrected in the new translation. For
instance, the age of Enoch, as given in King James' Bible, is
incorrect. The new translation gives a lengthy prophecy which was
delivered to him before the flood, and this prophecy relates to
generations in the future as well as to things that were past.
Enoch, in his vision, saw the great work that he was destined to
perform on the earth, in preaching the Gospel among the nations,
and gathering out a people and building up a city called Zion. He
saw that in process of time the people of Zion would become
sanctified before the Lord, that the Lord would come and dwell in
their midst and that by and by, after the city had existed 365
years, it with all its people, would be taken up to heaven. And
all the days of Zion in the days of Enoch, says the new
translation, was 365 years, making Enoch 420 years old when he
and his people were translated, which is older than the age given
him in the uninspired translation.
265
In this new translation we have also a much greater history of
the creation of the world than is given in the uninspired
translation made by the forty-seven men employed by King James.
In that book we have a very short history of that great event;
but the inspired translation shows that the periods of time
called days, in which the several portions of the work of
creation were preformed, were not by any means of such limited
duration as the days we speak of, but from what is revealed in
the Book of Abraham, they were probably periods of one thousand
years each. God might have been for the space of a thousand years
in organizing a certain portion of this creation, and that was
called the evening and the morning of the first day, according to
the Lord's reckoning, one day being with him as a thousand years
and a thousand years as one day. By and by another day's work was
performed, which I do not suppose was a day of twenty-four hours,
but an indefinite period of time, called the second day--the
evening and the morning of the second day. By and by the third
day's work was done, and then there was the evening and the
morning of the third day. Three thousand years probably, passed
away in the performance of these three days' work. In the fourth
day the Lord permitted the sun and moon to shine to give light to
the earth. What regulated the evening and the morning the first
three days we do not know, for neither sun nor moon were
permitted to shine until the fourth day. I have no doubt the Lord
has a variety of methods of producing light? The new translation
gives us some information on this subject, for there we read
that, "I the Lord created darkness on the face of the "great
deep." In King James' translation it says darkness was on the
face of the great deep, and I, the Lord, said, "let there be
light, and there was light." Now how did the Lord create this
darkness? He has a power, the same as he had in causing darkness
three days and nights over this american land. But before that
darkness was created what produced light? It must have been light
here on this earth, and probably was so thousands of years before
the Lord created darkness; and then he had the means of producing
darkness, and afterwards of clearing it away, and then called it
morning. But how long that morning had existed we do not know,
unless we appeal to the Book of Abraham, translated by Joseph
Smith from Egyptian papyrus. That tells us in plainness that the
way the Lord and the celestial host reckoned time, was by the
revolutions of a certain great central body called Kolob, which
had one revolution on its axis in a thousand of our years, and
that was one day with the Lord, and when the Lord said to Adam,
"In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die." the Book
of Abraham says it was not yet given unto man the true reckoning
of time, and that it was reckoned after the Lord's time that is
one thousand years with us was a day with him, and that Adam, if
he partook of the forbidden fruit, was to die before that day of
a thousand years should expire. Hence when we go back to the
history of the creation, we find that the Lord was not in such a
great hurry as many suppose, but that he took indefinite periods
of long duration to construct this world, and to gather together
the elements by the laws of gravitation to lay the foundation and
form the nucleus thereof, and when he saw that all things were
ready and properly prepared, he then placed the man in the Garden
of Eden to rule over all animals, fish and fowls, and to have
dominion over the whole face of the earth.
266
There is another very curious thing revealed in Joseph Smith's
translation, and one that explains some mysterious passages in
the first and second chapter of Genesis. In the first chapter of
Generis in King James' translation we read that on the fifth day
the Lord made the whales, the fish and the fowls of the air. On
the sixth day he made the animals, beasts and creeping things,
and last of all he made man, male and female. Now read along in
King James' translation to the seventh day, and we are told that
there was not a man to till the ground, yet he had made them male
and female on the sixth day. Now, where were they made? They were
made in heaven first. All the children of men, male and female,
all the spirits of beasts, fowls, fish and creeping things were
made spiritually in heaven before they were placed temporally
here on the earth, and the spiritual creation differs from the
temporal creation. The new translation says that man was the very
first flesh made here on the earth; whereas, according to the
account in King James' translation the flesh of beasts, fowls and
fish was made on the fifth day, before man was made. But in the
great temporal work of placing man on the earth, he was the first
flesh formed and placed here among all the works of God. He had
made the spirits of fish, fowls and beast, but none of them were
permitted to come to the earth in their fleshy tabernacles until
man, the great masterpiece, was placed here--then they were
brought before him--for him to give names to them.
266
In the work of creation the first is last and the last first. God
made the spiritual part of this creation during these six days'
work that we read of; then he commenced the temporal work on the
seventh day. He planted the garden on the seventh day; he placed
man in that garden on the seventh day; formed the beasts and
brought them before the man on the seventh day, all this being
the temporal work, the first being spiritual. Not so in the last
of his work--the great work that is to come. When the seventh
millennium shall arrive the Lord will redeem man and bring him
forth from the grave, and he will begin to redeem this creation
not making it entirely immortal and spiritual, like a sea of
glass. It will exist for a thousand years in a temporal
condition, as it was before the Fall. This will be the first of
his temporal work in the last days. By and by when the millennium
has passed, and the earth passes away and dies and its elements
are melted with fervent heart, and there is no place found for it
as an organized body, he will again speak and there will be
another creation--a creation of this earth out of the old
materials; in other words a resurrection of the earth, a literal
resurrection. That will be the last of his work. In the morning
of creation spiritual first, and lastly temporal. But in the
ending temporal first in the redemption, and lastly spiritual,
which will be the perfection or ending of his work.
266
There are a great many things that God has revealed to us as
Latter-day Saints, and it would be well for us, for our Elders
and for all, to search these revelations, to prepare their minds
to understand what God intends to do with our creation, and those
who are prepared to inherit it, when it is made new. We, if
faithful, shall inherit it in its temporal condition before the
millennium passes away. Though our bodies may go down to the
grave, God will bring us forth. He will redeem us and bring
together bone to its bone, organize the flesh, sinews, muscles
and every part of the body in its proper place, cover it with
skin, cause the breath to enter into us, and the Spirit from on
high to quicken us, and the human spirit, that will dwell in a
celestial paradise, to return and take possession of the body.
Then we shall inhabit the earth, not at first in its glorified
state--that state which eventually awaits it, but in the
beginning of its redemption in its temporal condition during the
thousand years, of which the work before the Fall was typical.
266
God bless you. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / John
Taylor, January 5, 1873
John Taylor, January 5, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER JOHN TAYLOR,
Delivered in the 13th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, January 5, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
GOD THE SOURCE OF ALL GOOD--THE COMMON LOVE OF MAN FOR
INCREASE--THE
NECESSITY OF RIGHTEOUSLY DIRECTING OUR POWERS.
267
I take pleasure in meeting with the Saints. I like to break bread
with them in commemoration of the broken body of our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ, and also to partake of the cup in
remembrance of his shed blood, and then to reflect upon the
associations connected therewith: our relationship to God through
our Lord Jesus Christ; our relationship to each other as members
of the body of Christ, and our hopes concerning the future; the
second appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ, when, we are given to
understand, he will gird himself and wait upon us, and we shall
eat bread and drink wine with him in his Father's kingdom. I like
to reflect upon all these and a thousand other things connected
with the salvation, happiness and exaltation of the Saints of God
in this world, and in the world to come.
267
We have one day set apart in seven for the worship of God, and I
think it a very great mercy we have, for we can thus draw aside
from the world, its cares, perplexities and anxieties, and, as
rational, intelligent, immortal beings, reflect upon something
pertaining to the future. We are very much engaged, generally, in
relation to things of time and sense. Our hearts, feelings and
affections seem to be drawn out in this direction, and these are
the only things which a great many people have in view. Jesus, in
speaking to his disciples, tells them not to take any thought
about what they shall eat or drink, or wherewithal they shall be
clothed, for, said he, after all these things the Gentiles seek.
We, of course, must take this as being specifically addressed to
his disciples under the circumstances in which they were then
placed; the principle involved in his words is nevertheless true.
Says he, "Consider the lilies of the field, they toil not,
neither do they spin, and yet Solomon in all his glory was not
arrayed like one of these." Again, he says, reflect upon the
fowls of the air, they do not sow, nor reap, nor gather into
barns, yet your heavenly Father takes care of them, and will he
not also take care of you, O ye of little faith?
268
There is something beautiful in reflecting upon many of these
subjects, and something, very frequently, that is quite in
harmony with our feelings when they are in accord with the Spirit
of truth and the light of revelation. We feel, then, that we live
in God, and as the Scriptures say, that in him we move and have
our being. If we have life, or health, or possessions; if we have
children, and friends, and homes; if we have the light of truth,
the blessings of the everlasting Gospel, the revelations of God,
the Holy Priesthood, with all its blessings and government and
rule, all these and every true enjoyment that we possess come
from God. We do not always realize this, but it is nevertheless
true that to God we are indebted for every good and perfect gift.
He organized our bodies as they exist in all their perfection,
symmetry and beauty. He, as the poet has expressed it,
268
"Makes the grass the hills adorn,
And clothes the smiling fields with corn,
The beasts with food his hands supply,
And the young ravens when they cry."
268
He is merciful and kind and benevolent towards all his creatures,
and it is well for us to reflect upon these things sometimes, for
we thus realize our dependence upon the Almighty.
268
In speaking of the affairs of this world, it is often asked by
many--"Why, should we not attend to them?" Of course we should.
Do we not talk of building up Zion? Of course we do. Do we not
talk of building cities and of making beautiful habitations,
gardens and orchards, and placing ourselves in such a position
that we and our families can enjoy the blessings of life? Of
course we do. God has given us the land and all the necessary
elements for this purpose, and he has given us intelligence to
use them. But the great thing he has had in view is, that whilst
we use the intelligence that he gives us for the accomplishment
of the various objects that are desirable for our well-being and
happiness, we should not forget him who is the source of all our
blessings, whether pertaining to the present or the future.
Mankind everywhere and in all ages have universally manifested a
desire to obtain the things of this world--gold, silver, houses,
lands, possessions, &c. This desire is inherent in man; it was
planted in our bosoms by the Almighty, and is as correct as any
other principle if we can only understand it, control it, and
rightly appreciate the possessions and blessings we enjoy. The
earth was made for our possession. The lands, waters, mountains,
valleys, the trees, the minerals, vegetation of all kinds,
plants, shrubs and flowers--all these things were made for the
use of man, and it is for us to appropriate them to their proper
use, to estimate them at their proper value, and as rational,
intelligent, immortal beings, to comprehend the object of the
creation of these things, as well as the object of our creation,
and why and how, and under what circumstances we can enjoy them,
and how long we can retain possession of them. In examining the
human mind you will find many correct feelings and instincts
planted there, if men would be governed by them. I do not know
but it is this the Prophet has reference to when he says, "There
is a spirit in man, and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth it
understanding." Another Scripture says that "God has given to
every man a portion of his Spirit to profit withal;" but then,
many men do not profit by it; and although they have this light
or intuition within themselves, they are not governed by it.
There is a party of religionists in the world, called Quakers, so
strongly impregnated with this idea, that they think that this
inward monitor is sufficient to guide men in all their acts in
life.
269
There are certain political principles (I am referring to the
freedom of the human mind,) that are very pertinent on this
point. When the framers of the Declaration of Independence
assembled on this continent, far away from other nations and
peoples, in reflecting upon governments and man, the very first
thing that they struck upon was this--"We hold these truths to be
self evident, that all men are created equal, and they are
endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, among
which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Almost
simultaneously with them, or I believe a very little after, I
will not be positive as to the date, a number of gentlemen got
together in Paris, France, to lay the foundation of a government
which they thought would be a government of the people, and they
expressed themselves in almost similar words to those which were
expressed here. And you will find, in examining the history of
the world, that whenever mankind have been oppressed or bound
down, there has generally been a reaction, a continual striving
among the people to liberate themselves from their bondage, to
gain freedom and the exercise of those inalienable rights of
which I have spoken.
269
One great principle which has existed among men from the
beginning of creation until now, is a desire, planted within them
by the Almighty, to possess property--lands, houses, farms, &c.,
and in a national capacity, to possess territory, to increase
their boundaries, and to extend their rule and dominion. As I
said before, this principle is correct, only it wants controling
according to the revelations of God.
269
Our time on the earth is very short and transitory. No matter
what we acquire it amounts to but very little, and we soon leave
it. There is no great statesman, warrior, king, emperor or
general, who has acquired extensive territory, but who has had to
leave it soon. This is the universal history of mankind. You may
go back to the old Assyrian empires, or examine the history of
the kings of Babylon and Nineveh, and the mightiest among them
have passed away after a brief exercise of power; no matter how
extensive their possessions were. Read their history in the Bible
and, although some affect to despise that book, it is the best
history we have, and contains a hundred times more information in
relation to those old nations than you can find anywhere else.
When the Medes and Persians dispossessed the Assyrians, they had
just the same ideas as the Assyrians had--they wanted to extend
their territory, and they did it, but what did it amount to? Not
very much when we speak of it as immortal beings; when we speak
of it as mortal beings, as butterflies that flutter around for a
short time, and then die, it might be a sort of transient,
passing glory, like a sunbeam when the sun shines from behind a
cloud--it appears very brilliant, but it soon passes away. So it
was with their glory, and where is it now? Why you can scarcely
find where their mightiest cities stood. People think they can,
but there is nothing definite about it, and their glory, pomp and
majesty have no more existence now than their cities. They had a
correct principle planted in their bosoms, but it was perverted
and corrupted, and they sought by fraud, strategy, war, robbery
and plunder to possess themselves of dominion, empire and
authority, and when they got through, they had to lie down among
the silent dead; and could neither move a hand, stir an arm, move
a leg nor open an eye, but had to be devoured by worms.
271
That is the history also of the Grecian and Roman kingdoms. It
was said of Alexander that after he had conquered the world he
sat down and wept because there was nothing more for him to
subdue, and I have heard it said frequently, in regard to
individuals, that they wanted everything in their own grasp; and
if they had had a world, it would not have been big enough, they
would have wanted a little piece outside to make a garden patch.
We see man here striving anxiously for the possession of lands,
houses and so forth. That is all right enough, but it wants to be
corrected. I will refer you to some Scripture about Abraham. We
read that God took him upon a certain hill, and told him to lift
up his eyes eastward, westward, northward and southward, and said
to him, "To thee and to thy seed after thee will I give this
land." Here was a promise made by God. Of course Abraham ought to
have felt interested in it. But was it pertaining to this world
only? No, certainly not. I mean was the promise confined to
Abraham's lifetime? No, certainly not. Then what had it reference
to? These are questions that demand our serious attention and
consideration. We find also that there was a promise made to
Joseph, that he should possess a land, rich and fruitful,
abounding in the precious things of the earth, and the precious
things of the mountains, and of the everlasting hills; that
should abound in corn, wine and oil, and the rich blessings of
life, and that he should become a multitude of nations in the
midst of the earth. These blessings were spoken by men who were
just, as it were, tottering on the brink of the grave, by Moses
and Jacob, for instance, who put their hands on the heads of
their descendants and blessed them previous to their departure.
How was it in regard to the promise made to Abraham? Did he
really possess that which was promised him? Certainly not. Yet
God promised. Then why did not Abraham possess that which was
promised? Because it was not necessary at that time. Stephen, in
talking about it, I suppose about eighteen hundred years after,
says that "God promised these things to Abraham, but nevertheless
he gave him none inheritance in it, no not so much as to set his
foot on;" but, says he, he will give it to him and his seed. That
is, they shall by and by inherit. This was the idea and feeling
they had in relation to this matter. They did not consider the
world at that time in a perfect state, and men who understand
themselves do not consider it in a perfect state to-day. Abraham
and his seed had that land given to them and they will possess
it, redeemed and renewed, when it will be worth having. Well,
then, how is it? A good deal as it was with the rich man that
Jesus spoke of in his day. He had gathered around him a great
quantity of property, and said he, "Soul, sit down and be at
rest, do not trouble thyself any more, take thine ease, eat,
drink and be merry, for thou hast much goods laid up for many
years." Jesus says, "Thou fool, this night shall thy soul be
required of thee," and then whose shall these things be which
thou possessest? Would he have them? No. Who would? Perhaps his
children and wife, perhaps not, just as it happened; there was no
dependence then any more than now about such things. All that the
rich man knew was that his soul would depart, and that his body
would be placed in the ground to feed the worms. These things
ought to lead us to reflection. As I said before, the principle
or desire to acquire the goods of this world is in itself good,
but it has been perverted by man; and when Gentiles and "Mormons"
seek for nothing but what they shall eat and drink, and
wherewithal they shall be clothed, they are both fools, for they
do not know at what time their souls will be required of them.
271
If man were to live up to the privileges with which he is
surrounded; if he followed the light of revelation and sought for
and became acquainted with God, and correct principles in
relation to the future, he would not want to lay up so much the
treasures of the earth as the treasures of eternal life. But you
are now talking of spiritual things? No, I am not, I am talking
about temporal things, and I will go back, and examine some men
who have lived here on the earth, Job, for instance. He said, "I
know that my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand in the
latter day upon the earth, and that I shall see him; and though
worms feed on my body, yet in my flesh I shall see God." Job,
when he was resurrected, expected to stand upon and to inherit
the earth in the latter days, when the earth should be redeemed.
271
Another prophet, speaking of the same things, says, "I shall
stand in my lot in the end of the days." He also expected an
inheritance upon the earth. And then, the ancient apostles, in
talking about these things, said that the Saints should live and
reign on the earth after the resurrection, when the earth should
have become purified. Hence it is very natural for a feeling of
this kind to be planted in the bosoms of men, that is, an
attachment to the earth, for it is man's eternal inheritance, but
that feeling must be sanctified.
271
Who is it that will possess the earth? Is it those ancient
monarchs who fought, conquered, subdued and slew their thousands,
waded through seas of blood to gain empire? No, not at all. Is it
the man, who, by fraud, deception, trickery, dishonesty and
chicanery, took advantage of those around him, and so amassed
large wealth and possessions? Verily no. Who will, then? Let
Jesus speak. Says he, "Blessed are the meek, for they shall
inherit the earth." They are the ones who will rejoice before God
in the possession of the blessings of earth, and not the kings
and other characters to whom I have referred. One of the prophets
saw the end of these kings and rulers, and he says, "They were
gathered together, as prisoners are gathered together, into a
pit, and they were shut up for many days, and after many days
they will be visited." They will have some chance of salvation
and of an exaltation, but they have to remain in prison for many
days, like the antediluvians had, before Jesus went to preach to
the spirits in prison, who were sometimes disobedient in the days
of Noah.
271
We have a great many principles innate in our natures that are
correct, but they want sanctifying. God said to man, "Be fruitful
and multiply, and replenish the earth and subdue it, and have
dominion over the fish of the sea, the fowls of the air, and the
creeping things that creep on the face of the earth." Well, he
has planted, in accordance with this, a natural desire in woman
towards man, and in man towards woman, and a feeling of
affection, regard and sympathy exists between the sexes. We bring
it into the world with us, but that, like everything else, has to
be sanctified. An unlawful gratification of these feelings and
sympathies is wrong in the sight of God, and leads down to death,
while a proper exercise of our functions leads to life, happiness
and exaltation in this world and the world to come. And so it is
in regard to a thousand other things.
272
We like enjoyment here. That is right. God designs that we should
enjoy ourselves. I do not believe in a religion that makes people
gloomy, melancholy, miserable and ascetic. I would not want to
spend my life in a nunnery, if I were a woman, or in a monastery
if I were a man; and I would not think it very exalting to be a
hermit, and to live by myself in a poor miserable way. I should
not think there was anything great or good associated with that,
while everything around, the trees, birds, flowers and green
fields, were so pleasing, the insects and bees buzzing and
fluttering, the lambs frolicking and playing. While everything
else enjoyed life, why should not we? But we want to do it
correctly and not pervert any of these principles that God has
planted in the human family. Why, there are some people who think
that the fiddle, for instance, is an instrument of the devil and
it is quite wrong to use it. I do not think so, I think it is a
splendid thing to dance by. But some folks think that we should
not dance. Yes, we should enjoy life in any way we can. Some
people object to music. Why music prevails in the heavens, and
among the birds! God has filled them with it. There is nothing
more pleasing and delightful than it is to go into the woods or
among the bushes early in the morning and listen to the warbling
and rich melody of the birds, and it is strictly in accordance
with the sympathies of our nature. We have no idea of the
excellence of the music we shall have in heaven. It may be said
of that, as one of the Apostles has said in relation to something
else--"Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered
into the heart of man to conceive of those things which are
prepared for those who love and fear God." We have no idea of the
excellency, beauty, harmony and symphony of the music in the
heavens.
272
Our object is to get and cleave to everything that is good, and
to reject everything that is bad. One reason why religious people
in the world are opposed to music and theatres is because of the
corruption that is mixed up with them. Wicked and corrupt men
associate themselves with these things, and degrade them; but is
this any reason that the Saints should not enjoy the gifts of
God? Is that a correct principle? Certainly not. It is for them
to grasp at everything that is good, and calculated to promote
the happiness of the human family.
273
I remember the time very well, and many of you do, when we used
to commence our theatrical amusements here by prayer. We do not
do so much of it now. This practice is put to one side. I suppose
one was right and the other is right. I merely speak of these
things. All our acts should be sanctified to God. You know that
we are in the habit of having parties occasionally. I will give
you my ideas about some of them. I have attended one or two
lately, and I think we are running rather wild, and that we do
not act as much like gentlemen and ladies as we should, nor quite
as much like Saints as we ought to do. I think there is a great
deal of impudence and pertness, a great amount of interfering
with other people's rights in these places, and I think that we
need correcting, that is, in our Ward. I do not know how it is
here in yours. Perhaps you do better here. I am speaking of
things as I see them. I think we ought to elevate everything of
this kind to its proper standard. We ought not to intrude upon or
take advantage of anybody, even in amusements. When this is not
observed, I will tell you what it leads to: it leads to a
separation in society, inducing men and women who desire to be
polite, refined and courteous, to keep out of the company of
those who do not take this course, and produces, if you please
something like an aristocracy, which is very repugnant to the
wishes of good feeling men and women. But they have either to do
this or to be run over in many instances.
273
I speak of these things for your information. I do not know that
you need any information of this kind here. I suppose I ought to
have delivered this lecture in our Ward. In all our amusements we
should see that things are conducted right, and we should never
forget to act the part of ladies and gentlemen, and we should do
away with frowardness and impudence, and treat everybody with
kindness, courtesy and respect. I speak of these things because
they strike my attention. But perhaps I have said enough on this
subject.
273
We are here--a number of Saints. Well, you have outsiders among
you. That is none of our business, they are not us. I am now
talking to Saints. We have come here to fear God and keep his
commandments. I do not expect to frame my religion, ideas or
amusements to suit the feelings of any man under the heavens. I
want to get my inspiration from God, and be led by him, and I
want to honor him in all my acts. I do not care what this, that,
or the other man does. Know ye not that God has called us from
the world to plant among us the principles of eternal truth, to
teach us correct principles, and to show us how to conduct
ourselves towards one another, and towards all men? To show us
also how to enjoy life, what course to pursue to elevate
ourselves in the world, and to bring up others to our standard?
We should never descend to others. That is my feeling, but I have
seen some do it. Go out among the Indians here, and you will see
traders among them who, instead of lifting up the Indians, go
right down to them. I do not object, myself, to have good,
decent, respectable, honorable men associated with us more or
less; but I do object to descending to the morality of the wicked
and corrupt. I do not believe in drinking, or in the
lasciviousness and dishonesty that are practiced by many who call
themselves honorable men. I want nothing to do with them, and I
say, "My soul, enter not thou into their secrets; and mine honor,
with them be not thou united."
274
We have come here for the purpose of elevating ourselves, and of
elevating the people that we are among. We have come here to
build up Zion, to be taught of the Lord, to establish
righteousness, and to prepare a people for his coming. What is
there in the world that we do not know? We knew their religion,
philosophy and morality before we came here. We came here in
order that we might prepare a people for the time when the
bursting heavens shall reveal the Son of God, when creation shall
feel his power and cease to groan, and when all people under the
heavens shall say, "Blessing, glory, honor, power, might, majesty
and dominion be ascribed to him that sits on the throne and the
Lamb forever." We came here to introduce principles in regard to
our religion, morals, social status, the covenants that we make
with God, and all things pertaining to this world and the world
to come. And because of this, heavy responsibilities devolve upon
us as parents, Elders in Israel, Bishops, Presidents, High
Priests, Seventies, and in every office in the Priesthood and all
the various avocations in life, that we may be able to say,
finally, "I have fought the good fight, I have finished my
course, I have kept the faith, I have done that which is right, I
have been full of integrity, virtue, holiness and purity, and
hence is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord,
the Righteous Judge, shall give unto me, and not unto me only,
but to all those who love the appearing of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ." These are some things we are after, the attainment
of which ought to be the object of our existence.
275
Well, but is it not right for us to have lands? Certainly, we
have come here for the purpose of building up a Zion, and we
ought to use all diligence for its accomplishment. You Saints
possess facilities here that people never possessed before. Do
you realize this? Perhaps that is stretched a little. I expect
that in the days of Enoch they had a splendid time and that they
lived in a very happy manner. But we are living in the
dispensation of the fullness of times, when God is gathering all
things together in one, and he has brought us from different
nations, countries, climes and peoples. What to do? To make fools
of ourselves? Is our object to live as the wicked do--to be
"covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents,
heady, highminded, despisers of those who are good, to have a
form of godliness without the power?" No, we came here that we
might learn the laws of the Almighty, and prepare ourselves and
our posterity for thrones, principalities, powers and dominions
in the celestial kingdom of our God. We talk sometimes about
Zion, that has got to be built up in Jackson County; also about a
New Jerusalem that has to be built and prepared to meet a
Jerusalem that shall descend from the heavens. How do our lives
and actions compare with these things? Are our hearts, feelings
and affections drawn out after them, or are we forgetful and our
minds swallowed up with the affairs of time and sense? Are we
preparing our children for this time, and spreading an influence
around us wherever we go to lead people in the paths of life and
lift them up to God? Or are we taking a downward course--come
day, go day, just as it happens? I think we ought to wake up and
be alive, and endeavor to pursue a course that will secure the
smile and approbation of the Almighty. Every one of us, as
fathers, mothers and Elders of Israel, ought to cultivate the
Holy Ghost in our hearts, and let it burn there like a living
fire. We ought to draw near to God, and receive from him light
and life and intelligence. We ought to seek for wisdom to manage
our youth, that they may grow up in the fear of God. Well, we are
doing this, more or less? Yes, very well indeed, in many
respects, and in many respects very poorly. I feel led to talk of
these things, and what I am led to refer to, I speak about. We
ought to be preparing our youth to tread in our footsteps, if
they are right, that they may be honorable members in society,
that when we get through in this world and go into the other, we
may leave behind those who are full of integrity, and who will
keep the commandments of God. We ought to teach our children
meekness and humility, integrity, virtue and the fear of God,
that they may teach those principles to their children. No matter
about many of these furbelows, or whether they can dance round
dances or not; that is not of very great importance. No matter
whether they are in the tiptop of fashion, or whether their
feathers and ribbons are all right, only get the spirit, heart
and feelings right. Let the heart be drawn out to God. Let there
be an altar in every house, and let the sacred fire burn on that
altar. Seek to implant in the hearts of your youth principles
that will be calculated to make them honorable, highminded,
intelligent, virtuous, modest, pure men and women, full of
integrity and truth, who will represent you correctly that is, if
you walk correctly, and if not, that will represent, at any rate,
the principles of truth which you profess to believe in, that
they with you may have an inheritance in the kingdom of God, and
inherit the earth, for Jesus says it is the meek that will
inherit the earth.
275
There are many things that we may hear that we do not fully
comprehend; and we perhaps see many things that are distasteful.
But never mind the actions of men, especially the leaders of the
Church and kingdom of God. You are not their judges. God is. You
follow their counsel, and if they and you have the Spirit of God,
you will see eye to eye. The Scripture says, "The watchmen will
see eye to eye when God brings again Zion," perfect in holiness.
If you have committed sin, pray that God may forgive it. If you
family has sinned, pray that God may forgive them, and lead them
in the right path, and do not be too censorious about others. We
are none of us perfect, we all need mercy, and if we exercise
judgment without mercy, perhaps judgment without mercy may be
meted to us. Let us be merciful. Jesus says, "Blessed are the
merciful for they shall obtain mercy. Blessed are the pure in
heart, for they shall see God." Let us have our hearts right, out
spirits pure and our affections sanctified, and let us seek to
promote a love of those principles among our youth everywhere
where we go, that we may be blessed of the Lord and our offspring
with us. Then when Zion shall be redeemed and the purposes of God
shall be accomplished, no matter whether we possess much or
possess little, God will be with us, and he will bring us off
victorious, and we shall join in singing, "Worthy is the Lamb
that was slain, and has risen again, to receive glory and honor,
and power, and might and majesty and dominion;" and if we are
faithful, we shall live and reign with Christ on the earth.
275
May God help us to be faithful the name of Jesus. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Wilford Woodruff, January 12, 1873
Wilford Woodruff, January 12, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER WILFORD WOODRUFF,
Delivered in the 13th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
January 12, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE SIGNS OF THE COMING OF THE SON OF MAN--THE SAINTS' DUTIES.
276
My address this afternoon will be intended for those who profess
to be Latter-day Saints--those who have entered into covenant
with the Lord our God. I am surrounded with those who know by
experience that we are dependent upon the influence and
inspiration of the Holy Ghost to enable us to teach the things of
the kingdom of God. My faith is that no man, in this or any other
generation, is able to teach and edify the inhabitants of the
earth without the inspiration of the Spirit of God. As a people
we have been placed in positions the last forty years which have
taught, in all our administrations and labors, the necessity of
acknowledging the hand of God in all things. We feel this
necessity to-day. I know that I am not qualified to teach either
the Latter-day Saints or the world without the Spirit of God. I
desire this this afternoon, and also your faith and prayers, that
my mind may be led in a channel which may be beneficial to you.
In my public teaching I never permit my mind to follow in any
channel except that which the Spirit dictates to me, and this is
the position we all occupy when we meet with the Saints, or when
we go forth to preach the Gospel. As Jesus told his Apostles,
Take no thought what ye shall say, it is told us, Take no thought
what we shall say; but we treasure up in our minds words of
wisdom by the blessing of God and studying the best books.
276
We are told in the 24th chapter of Matthew that Jesus, on a
certain occasion, taught his disciples many things concerning his
Gospel, the Temple, the Jews, his second coming and the end of
the world; and they asked him--Master, what shall be the sign of
these things? The Savior answered them, but in a very brief
manner. As my mind runs a little in that channel, I feel disposed
to read a portion of the word of the Lord unto us, which explains
this matter more fully than the Savior explained it to his
disciples. That portion of the word of the Lord which I shall
read, is a revelation given to the Latter-day Saints, March 7,
1831, forty-two years ago next March. It commences on the 133rd
page of the Book of Doctrine and Covenants.
276
[The speaker read the revelation, and then resumed his remarks as
follows]:
277
I want to ask who are looking for the fulfillment of these
events, and who upon the earth are preparing themselves for the
fulfillment of the word of the Lord through the mouths of
Prophets, Patriarchs and Apostles for the last six thousand
years? Nobody that I have any knowledge of, without it is the
Latter-day Saints, and I for one feel that we are not half so
much awake as we ought to be, and not half as well prepared as we
ought to be for the tremendous events which are coming upon the
earth in quick succession in these latter days. Who can the Lord
expect to prepare for his second coming but his Saints? None.
Why? Because, as is said in this revelation, light has come forth
to the inhabitants of the earth, and they have rejected it,
because their deeds are evil. This message has been proclaimed
among the Christian nations of Europe and America, and in many
other nations, for the past forty years. Inspired men--the Elders
of Israel--have gone forth without purse or scrip declaring the
Gospel of life and salvation to the nations of the world, but
they have rejected their testimony, and condemnation rests upon
them therefor." As the Prophet said, "Darkness covers the earth,
and gross darkness the minds of the people." Who believes in the
fulfillment of prophecy and revelation? Who, among priests and
people today, has any faith in the sayings of Jesus Christ? If
there be any people besides the Saints whose eyes are open to the
great events which will soon overtake the nations, I would like
to know and visit them. I would to God that the eyes of the
Latter-day Saints were open far more than they are to those
things that rest upon them! The Lord is looking to them alone to
build up his Zion here in the mountains of Israel, and to prepare
the bride, the Lamb's wife, for the coming of the Great
Bridegroom. I believe in the fulfillment of the revelations which
the Lord has given to us, as much as I believe that I have a soul
to save our lose, or as much as I believe in the shining of the
sun in the firmament of heaven. Why? Because every word that God
has ever spoken, whether by his own voice out of the heavens, by
the ministration of angels, or by the mouths of inspired men, has
been fulfilled to the very letter as far as time has permitted.
We have fulfilled many of the sayings of the Prophets of God. The
revelation I have read this afternoon was given forty-two years
ago. Has there been any sound of war since then? Has there been
any sound of war in our land since that period? Has there been
any standard lifted up to the nations, any gathering together of
the people into these mountains of Israel from nearly all
nations? There has. We have had a beginning, the fig tree is
leaving, putting forth its leaves in the sight of all men, and
the signs in both heaven and earth all indicate the coming of the
Lord Jesus Christ.
277
When my mind, under the influence of the Spirit of God, is open
to comprehend these things, I many times marvel and wonder, not
only at the world but also at ourselves, that we are not more
anxious and diligent in preparing ourselves and our families for
the events now at our doors, for though the heavens and the earth
pass away, not one jot or tittle of the word of the Lord will go
unfulfilled. There is no prophecy of Scripture that is of any
private interpretation, but holy men of God spake as they were
moved upon by the Holy Ghost, and their words will be fulfilled
on the earth.
279
We are approaching an important time. As Jesus once said, The
world hate me, and without a cause, therefore I have chosen you
out of the world, and the world hate you also. The servant is not
above his master, you are not above me, they have hated me and
they will hate you. The Lord has chosen the Latter-day Saints,
and through them has sent a message to all nations under heaven.
The Zion of God is opposed by priest and people in every sect,
party and denomination in Christendom. The Elders of Israel have
been called from the plow, plane, hammer and the various
occupations of life, to go forth and bear record of these things
to the world. We have followed this up until the present time for
more than forty-two years--forty-three years next April. The
kingdom has steadily grown, and while we have labored we have
seen the fulfillment of the word of the Lord. The sea has gone
beyond its bounds, there have been earthquakes in divers places,
and there have also been wars and rumors of wars. These are only
a beginning, their fullness has not yet opened upon the sons of
men, but it is at their doors; it is at the doors of this
generation and of this nation. And when the world rise up against
the kingdom of God in these latter days, should the Saints have
any fears? Should we fear because men, in their secret chambers,
concoct plans to overthrow the kingdom of God? We should not.
There is one thing we should do, and that is, pray to God. Every
righteous man has done this, even Jesus the Savior, the Only
Begotten of the Father in the flesh, had to pray, from the manger
to the cross, all the way through; every day he had to call upon
his Father to give him grace to sustain him in his hour of
affliction and to enable him to drink the bitter cup. So with his
disciples. They were baptized with the same baptism that he was
baptized with; they suffered the same death that he died, being
crucified as he was. They sealed their testimony with their
blood. Nevertheless all that Jesus said concerning the Jews has
had its fulfillment to the present day. This should be a strong
testimony to the whole infidel world of the truth of Christ's
mission and divinity. Let them look at the Jewish nation and the
state of the world, in fulfillment of the words of the Savior
eighteen hundred years ago in Jerusalem. It is one of the
strongest testimonies in the world of the fulfillment of
revelation, the truth of the Bible and the mission of Jesus
Christ. The Jews have fulfilled the world of Moses, the prophets
and Jesus, up to the present day. They have been dispersed and
trampled under the feet of the Gentile world now for eighteen
hundred years. When Pontius Pilate wished to release Jesus
Christ, saying that he found no fault in that just man, the high
priests, scribes, pharisees an other Jews present on that
occasion cried, "Crucify him, and let his blood be upon us and
upon our children." Has it not followed them to this day, and
been manifest in their dispersion, persecution and oppression
through the whole Gentile world for eighteen hundred years? It
has. And they have to fulfill the words of the Lord still
further. As I have been reading to you to-day, the Jews have got
to gather to their own land in unbelief. They will go and rebuild
Jerusalem and their temple. They will take their gold and silver
from the nations and will gather to the Holy Land, and when they
have done this and rebuilt their city, the Gentiles, in
fulfillment of the words of Ezekiel, Jeremiah and other prophets,
will go up against Jerusalem to battle and to take a spoil and a
pray; and then when they have taken one-half of Jerusalem captive
and distressed the Jews for the last time on the earth, their
Great Deliverer, Shiloh, will come. They do not believe in Jesus
of Nazareth now, nor ever will until he comes and sets his foot
on Mount Olivet and it cleaves in twain, one part going towards
the east, and the other towards the west. Then, when they behold
the wounds in his hands and in his feet, they will say, "Where
did you get them?" And he will reply, "I am Jesus of Nazareth,
King of the Jews, your Shiloh, him whom you crucified." Then, for
the first time will the eyes of Judah be opened. They will remain
in unbelief until that day. This is one of the events that will
transpire in the latter day.
279
The Gospel of Christ has to go to the Gentiles until the Lord
says "enough," until their times are fulfilled, and it will be in
this generation. Forty years have passed since the revelation I
have read was given to the sons of men. We are living in a late
age, although it is true there are a great many vast and
important events to transpire in these days. But one thing is
certain, though the Lord has not revealed the day nor the hour
wherein the Son of Man shall come, he has pointed out the
generation, and the signs predicted as the fore-runners of that
great event have begun to appear in the heavens and on the earth,
and they will continue until all is consummated. If we, as
Latter-day Saints, want anything to stir us up, let us read the
Bible, Book of Mormon and the Book of Doctrine and Covenants,
they contain enough to edify and instruct us in the things of
God. Treasure up the revelations of God and the Gospel of Christ
contained therein.
279
As an individual, I will say that I feel a great responsibility
resting upon me, and it also rests upon you. Joseph Smith and
Brigham Young alone have not been called to build up in the
latter day that great and mighty kingdom of God which Daniel
foretold, and which he said should be thrown down no more for
ever. I say, they were not called to be the only ones to labor in
building up that great and glorious Zion, which was to become
terrible to all nations; nor their counselors, nor the Twelve
Apostles; but this responsibility rests upon every one of the
Lord's anointed upon the face of the earth, I do not care who
they are, whether male or female, and the Lord will require this
at the hands of all the Latter-day Saints. I therefore desire
that we may be awake to these subjects, and to the position we
occupy before God and in the world.
280
The inhabitants of the earth may hate and oppose us, as they did
Jesus Christ, and as they have all inspired men, as they did
Noah, Enoch, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and all the
prophets who ever lived. They have always been a thorn in the
flesh to the world. Why? Because they had enough independence of
mind to rebuke sin, to maintain the promises of God unto man, and
to proclaim the declarations of the Almighty unto the inhabitants
of the earth, fearless of consequences. The last song sung here
was, "Do what is right, let the consequence follow." That is what
I say to the Latter-day Saints. let us do what is right, maintain
our religion before God, be valiant in the testimony of Jesus
Christ, and prepare ourselves for his coming, for it is near, and
this is what God requires at our hands. He leans upon no other
people; he expects from no people but those who have obeyed his
Gospel and gathered here, the accomplishment of his great work,
the building up of his latter-day Zion and kingdom. And, as I
have said, this responsibility rests not only upon Prophets and
Apostles, but upon every man and woman who has entered into
covenant with him. I say that we are too near asleep, we are not
half awake to the position that we occupy before God, and the
responsibilities we are under to him. We should be on the watch
tower.
280
Who is going to be prepared for the coming of the Messiah? These
men who enjoy the Holy Ghost and live under the inspiration of
the Almighty, who abide in Jesus Christ and bring forth fruit to
the honor and glory of God. No other people will be. There never
was a more infidel generation of Christians on the face of the
earth than there is to-day. They do not expect that God will do
anything in a temporal point of view towards the fulfillment of
his promises; they are not looking forward for the establishment
of his kingdom, or for the building up of his Zion on the earth.
Their eyes are closed to these things, because they have rejected
the light. When Joseph Smith brought this Gospel to the world,
there was a great deal more faith in God, a great deal more faith
in his revelations, and, according to the light they had, a great
deal more pure and undefiled religion than there is now. We have
carried the Gospel to all Christian nations who would permit us,
and they have rejected it, and they are under condemnation. Our
own nation is under condemnation on this account. This land,
North and South America, is the land of Zion, it is a choice
land--the land that was given by promise from old father Jacob to
his grandson and his descendants, the land on which the Zion of
God should be established in the latter days. We have been
fulfilling the prophecies concerning it, for the last forty
years. We have come up here and established the kingdom. True, it
is small today, it may be compared to a mustard seed, but as the
Lord our God lives, the little one will become a thousand, and
the small one a strong nation, and the Lord Almighty will hasten
it in his own time, and the world will learn one thing in this
generation, and that is, that when they fight against Mount Zion,
they fight against the decrees of the Almighty and the principles
of eternal life.
281
I rejoice before God that I have lived to hear the principles of
eternal life proclaimed to the sons of men; I rejoice that I have
lived to see this people gathered together, I rejoice in coming
to the land of Zion with the Saints of God. When we came here
twenty-four years ago, we were a little handful of men, pioneers;
we came to a parched and barren desert. Since then we have built
up six hundred miles of cities, towns, villages, gardens, farms
and orchards; and while doing this we have had to contend with
the opposition of both priest and people. Have they prevailed?
They have not, and they will not. Why? Because he who sits in the
heavens, the Lord our God, has decreed certain things and they
will come to pass; because the Lord is watching over the
interests of this people. He requires us to work with him, he is
at work for us. It is our duty to build these temples here--this
in Salt Lake City, another in St. George, in Logan or wherever
they may be needed for the benefit of the Saints of God in the
latter days. I think many times that many of us will get to
heaven before we shall want to go there. If we were to go there
to-day, many would meet their friends in the spirit-world and it
would be a reproach to them, for you, Latter-day Saints, in one
sense of the word, hold in your hands the salvation of your dead,
for we can do much for them. But I think many times that our
hearts are too much set on the vain things of the world to attend
to many important duties devolving upon us connected with the
Gospel. We are too much after gold and silver, and we give our
hearts and attention to temporal matters at the expense of the
light and truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
281
We have not much time to spare as a people, for a great work is
required at our hands. I know that, without the power of God, we
should not have been able to do what has been done; and I also
know that we never should be able to build up the Zion of God in
power, beauty and glory were it not that our prayers ascends into
the ears of the Lord God of Sabaoth, and he hears and answers
them. The world has sought our overthrow from the beginning, and
the devil does not like us very well. Lucifer, the Son of the
Morning, does not like the idea of revelation to the Saints of
God, and he has inspired the hearts of a great many men, since
the Gospel was restored to the earth, to make war against us. But
not one of them has made anything out of it yet--neither glory,
immortality, eternal life nor money. No man or people ever did
make anything by fighting against God in the past, and no man or
people will ever make anything by taking that course in the
future.
281
This is the work and kingdom of God; this is the Zion of God and
the Church of Christ, and we are called by his name. The
Latter-day Saints have to abide in Christ, and we can not do that
unless we bring forth fruit, any more than the branch of the vine
can unless it abide in the vine. To abide in Christ we must enjoy
the Spirit of God, that our minds may be enlightened to
comprehend the things of God. When I look at the history of the
Church of God in these latter-days I many times marvel at what
has been done and how we have progressed, considering the
traditions, unbelief, failings, follies and nonsense that man is
heir to in the flesh. We have had a great many traditions to
overcome and the opposition of the world to contend with from the
beginning until to-day. Brethren and sisters, we should be
faithful. The Lord has put into our hands the power to build up
his Zion and kingdom on the earth, and we have more to encourage
us than was ever possessed by any generation that has preceded
us. We have the privilege of building up a kingdom that will
stand for ever. Noah and the antediluvian world did not have this
privilege. Enoch built up the Zion of God a little while, and the
Lord took it away. Jesus and the Apostles came here. Jesus
fulfilled his mission, preached the Gospel, was rejected by the
Jews, and was crucified. His disciples had a similar fate, and
the Gospel was taken to the Gentile nation, with all its gifts
and blessings and power, and Paul the Apostle of the Gentiles
warned them to take heed lest they, in turn, should lose it
through their unbelief.
282
You know how it has been with them--that there has been a falling
away, and that for seventeen hundred years the voice of a Prophet
or Apostle has not been heard in the world; and now again, in
these latter days, the Lord Almighty, remembering his promises
made from generation to generation, has sent Angels from heaven
to restore to man the Gospel and has given authority to
administer the same. The Revelator John, says he saw an angel
flying through the midst of heaven, having the everlasting Gospel
to preach to them that dwell on the earth, to every nation,
kindred, tongue and people, saying with a loud voice, "Fear God
and give glory to him who made the heavens, the earth, the seas
and the fountains of water, for the hour of God's judgment has
come."
282
Oh! ye Gentile nations, wake up and prepare yourselves for that
which is to come, for as God lives his judgments are at your
door. They are at the door of our nation, and the thrones and
kingdoms of the whole world will fall, and all the efforts of men
combined cannot save them. It is a day of warning, but not of
many words, to the nations. The Lord is going to make a short
work, or no flesh could be saved. If it were not for the
manifestation of the power of God what would be the fate of his
Zion and people? The same as in the days of Christ and his
Apostles. The Lord has had Zion before his face from before the
foundation of the world, and he is going to build it up. "Who am
I," saith the Lord, "That I promise and do not fulfill?" The Lord
never made a promise to the sons of men which he has not
fulfilled, therefore Latter-day Saints, you have all the
encouragement in the world to sustain you in the faith that the
Zion of God will remain on the earth. The work is in our hands to
perform, the God of heaven requires it of us and if we fail to
build it up we shall be under condemnation, and the Lord would
remove us out of the way and he would raise up another people who
would do it. Why? Because the Almighty has decreed that this work
shall be performed on the earth, and no power on earth or in hell
can hinder it.
283
I would here say to our delegate to Congress, when you go to
Washington, have no fears with regard to the opposition of men.
You have every reason to go in confidence, and do your duty,
knowing that the Lord will stand by you, and so has every man in
the Church and kingdom of God, I care not where we are placed or
what God requires at our hands. He is at the helm, and he has
protected us until today. Where should we have been a few years
ago when the army was sent to destroy us, if it had not been for
the protection of the Almighty? We should not have been here. And
so it will be in days to come. The world hate us because the
Almighty has called us out from the world to proclaim his Gospel
and build up his kingdom. Let us be faithful, for the Lord is
going to protect us, and build up Zion. He will also gather
Israel, rebuild Jerusalem and prepare the way for his second
coming, in the clouds of heaven. Then let us, Latter-day Saints,
wake up to our duty. Think nothing too hard that the Lord
requires of us. Let us build this Temple that we may attend to
the ordinances for the living and the dead. If we not do this we
shall be sorry. When I see men who have received the word of God,
and tasted the powers of the world to come, and then turn away, I
think of the parable of the five wise and five foolish virgins.
It will pay us to be wise and to have oil in our lamps, to have
fellowship with the Holy Spirit, and to live our religion and
keep the commandments of God day by day. Brethren are passing
away. I have been away three or four weeks on a visit to the
people in the upper settlements, and since my return I hear of
this man and that man dead, whom I saw well and hale before I
went away. So it will be with us in a little while. We shall pass
away and go to the other side of the vail, and the burden of the
building up of Zion will rest upon our sons and daughters. Then
rejoice in the Gospel of Christ. Rejoice in the principles of
eternal life. I am looking for the fulfillment of all things that
the Lord has spoken, and they will come to pass as the Lord God
lives. Zion is bound to rise and flourish. The Lamanites will
blossom as the rose on the mountains. I am willing to say here
that, though I believe this, when I see the power of the nation
destroying them from the face of the earth, the fulfillment of
that prophecy is perhaps harder for me to believe than any
revelation of God that I ever read. It looks as though there
would not be enough left to receive the Gospel; but
notwithstanding this dark picture, every word that God has ever
said of them will have its fulfillment, and they, by and by, will
receive the Gospel. It will be a day of God's power among them,
and a nation will be born in a day. Their chiefs will be filled
with the power of God and receive the Gospel, and they will go
forth and build the new Jerusalem, and we shall help them. They
are branches of the house of Israel, and when the fullness of the
Gentiles has come in and the work ceases among them, then it will
go in power to the seed of Abraham.
283
Brethren and sisters, let us remember our position before the
Lord! Let us try and keep the faith, let us labor for the Holy
Spirit, that our hearts, minds and eyes may be opened, that we
may live by inspiration, that when we see dark clouds rising and
evils strewing our path, we may be able to overcome. The Savior
was tempted, so were his Apostles, and if we have not been we
shall be. As the Lord told Joseph Smith, "I will try and prove
you in all things, even unto death. If you are not willing to
abide my covenants unto death, you are not worthy of me." Did
Joseph abide unto death? I think he did, and he with Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob, will sit at the right hand of the Lord Jesus
Christ, and will receive his glory and crown. He was true and
faithful unto death, and his testimony is in force to-day, in
language as loud as ten thousand thunders. Whether it is believed
or rejected it will have its fulfilment on the heads of this
generation.
284
By and by great Babylon will fall and there will be wailing,
mourning and sore affliction in her midst. The sons of Zion have
got to stand in holy places to be preserved in the midst of the
judgments that will shortly overtake the world. We can see how
fully the revelation, calling us to go to the western countries,
has been fulfilled. In less than forty years, a standard has been
lifted up, and people gathered here from France, England,
Scotland, Wales, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and almost all the
nations of the earth in fulfillment of that revelation. When it
was given no man among us knew anything about Salt Lake or the
Rocky Mountain; but it has been fulfilled before our eyes. We
have come up here, and in so doing have fulfilled the revelations
of God, so far. Let us continue, I pray God my heavenly Father
that he will bless the Latter-day Saints; that he will give us
his Holy Spirit and wisdom, that our eyes may be opened, that we
may have faith in the things of God. Let a man lose the Holy
Spirit and what faith has he? None, either in God or in his
revelations, and that is what is the matter to-day. You may take
the best friends we have outside of this kingdom, and you can
hardly get them to believe that God has anything to do with the
affairs of men, or that he has power to do anything for them,
either as individuals or nations. If their eyes were open one
moment they would understand that God holds them all in the
hollow of his hand, weighs them in the balance and that they
cannot make a move without his permission. They would no longer
wonder why the Latter-day Saints have faith in God if their eyes
were open so that they could understand the work and things of
God. They can not understand it, they cannot even see the kingdom
of God unless they are born of the Spirit of God, and they cannot
enter into it unless they are born of the water and the Spirit,
according to the words of Jesus to Nicodemus.
284
I have a desire that we may be faithful in our mission and
ministry, as Elders of Israel and as Saints of God, that we may
do our duty, and maintain our position before the Lord. Let our
prayers go up before him. If I have any forte it is prayer to
God. We are not called to build up Zion by preaching, singing and
praying alone; we have to perform hard labor, labor of bone and
sinew, in building towns, cities, villages; and we have to
continue to do this; but while we are so engaged, we should not
sin. We have no right to sin, whether we are in the kanyon
drawing wood, or performing any other hard labor, and we should
have the Spirit of God to direct us then as much as when
preaching, praying, singing and attending to the ordinances of
the house of God. If we do this as a people we shall grow in the
favor and power of God. We should be united together, it is our
duty to be so. Our prayers should ascend before God, and I know
they do. I know that President Young is prayed for--I know that
his counselors and the Twelve are prayed for, and that the Church
and kingdom of God is prayed for. We should continue this, and if
we pray in faith we shall have what we ask for. The Lord has
taught us to pray, and I rejoice that I have learned to pray
according to the order of God, for in this we have a
promise--that where two or three agree in asking for any thing
that is just and right, it shall be granted unto them.
284
May God bless you! May he give us wisdom, and his Holy Spirit to
guide us, that we may be enabled to be true and faithful to our
covenants, and be prepared to inherit eternal life, for Jesus'
sake. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / John
Taylor, January 12, 1873
John Taylor, January 12, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER JOHN TAYLOR,
Delivered in the 13th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Evening, January 12, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE SPIRIT AND PRINCIPLES OF THE GOSPEL THE SAME AS OF OLD--EARLY
EXPERIENCE OF SETTLERS OF UTAH--RELIGIOUS LIBERTY--MODERN
SO-CALLED
CIVILIZATION--BAPTISM FOR THE DEAD.
285
It was announced this afternoon that I should speak here this
evening. Brother George Q. Cannon is here, however, or will be I
expect, and when he comes I would much sooner listen to him than
speak myself, and I presume you would also; therefore when he
comes I shall be pleased to give way that you may have the
pleasure of listening to him. He is only here to-day and will be
going away again; I am here frequently.
285
I always take pleasure in speaking of the things pertaining to
the kingdom of God to my fellow men, and especially to the
Saints. I feel that my lot is identified with theirs, and I
expect to be associated with them, not only in time but in
eternity. The Gospel that we have received has unfolded unto us
principles pertaining to eternal life that we were entirely
ignorant of heretofore. It has put us in possession of certainty
in relation to the future, and we always have confidence so long
as we are keeping the commandments of God. We know for ourselves
of the truth of the doctrines that we believe in, because, having
obeyed the Gospel, the Spirit, which in Scripture is called the
gift of the Holy Ghost, has been imparted unto us, and that
Spirit does in the latter days just as it did in former days--it
unfolds the things of God to those who receive it and reveals to
them the relations they hold to each other and to God and his
Church and kingdom, not only in this life but in that which is to
come; for we have entered into eternal covenants. The covenants
which men enter into generally are of a transitory nature, and
pertain only to time, and when time ceases with them these
obligations terminate. Our covenants, however, are of another
character. We enter into eternal covenants with God to serve him
faithfully here on the earth, and then we expect to be associated
with him in the heavens. Having entered into covenants of this
kind we feel that there are certain responsibilities and
obligations resting upon us, which it is our bounden duty to
perform. And then we consider that there are certain duties which
God has laid upon us in relation to ourselves, to those who have
existed before us and to those who shall come after us. Our
religion is not something in which we alone are personally
concerned, but the moment people are put in possession of the
Spirit of God they begin to fell interested about the welfare of
others.
286
It would be a very hard thing for many people in this day to do
as the Apostles did in former days, that is to go without purse
or scrip, trusting in God for their sustenance, to preach the
principles of life to mankind. It has never been considered a
hard thing by the Elders of this Church to pursue that course.
Inspired by the Spirit of God they feel as God feels towards the
human family--a desire to bless, comfort, and instruct and to
lead them in the paths of life. God places this principle in the
hearts of his servants--it emanates from him and is part of his
nature; and inasmuch as the Elders are dictated by this spirit in
their acts insomuch do they resemble their heavenly Father, who
is full of benevolence and "causes his sun to rise on the evil
and on the good, and makes the rain to descend on the just and on
the unjust;" and hence whenever we become acquainted with the
principles of life ourselves we feel a desire to communicate the
same unto others, and I see those all around me, here in this
assembly, who, as well as myself, have traveled thousands of
miles--I have traveled hundreds of thousands--on the same
principle as the ancient disciples did, trusting in God for
sustenance while proclaiming the principles of life to the
people. Men do not always appreciate this; but that makes no
difference, the principle is the same.
286
God is kind, benevolent and merciful to the human family. He
feeds and clothes them as he does the lilies of the field, or the
birds. He takes care of them, but they do not appreciate this.
Thousands and millions of the human family seem hardly to
comprehend that God has anything to do with them, or that they
are under any responsibilities or obligations to him. Still as a
father, full of kindness, benevolence and love, he feels after
the human family and he seeks to promote their happiness and
well-being, and he would save and exalt them in his kingdom, if
they would be obedient unto his laws. We understand this
principle, and therefore are governed and actuated by it, and no
matter what the thoughts and feelings of others may be in
relation to us, we know for ourselves that God has spoken. I know
for myself, if nobody else does, that God lives, and I obtained
this knowledge through obedience to the Gospel that he has
revealed unto us in these last days. I know that it is the
privilege of all men to have this knowledge if they will obey the
Gospel and be governed by its principles; and hence when I and my
brethren have gone out to preach the Gospel, we have told the
people precisely the same things as were taught, in former times,
by the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. He told his disciples to
preach the Gospel to every creature the promise being that he
that believed and was baptized should be saved, but he that
believed not should be damned; and said he: "These signs shall
follow them that believe: In my name they shall cast out devils,
they shall speak with new tongues, if they drink any deadly thing
it shall not harm them, they shall lay hands on the sick and they
shall recover." They, in other words, should receive the Holy
Ghost, and that Spirit would take of the things of God, and show
them unto them.
287
I have gone forth and I have told the people as the disciples did
formerly. When they have asked me what to do to be saved, I have
said, "Repent, and be baptized in the name of Jesus for the
remission of sins, and you shall receive the Holy Ghost." "What
is that?" "It is the same that it was in former times, or it is
nothing at all. It produces the same results as it did in the
days when Jesus and his Apostles were upon the earth, or it is
not the Holy Ghost. It is not a phantasy, or I am a false
teacher." That is the position that I have assumed always,
wherever I have gone; there is no mincing this matter. I felt
like Moses did when he was leading the children of Israel to the
land of Canaan, as we heard Brother Pratt talking about this
afternoon. The Lord said he would not go with Moses and the
people because the people were rebellious and stiffnecked, but
Moses plead with him, saying, "Oh God, if thou goest not with us,
carry us not up hence;" and if I can not have a religion that God
will sustain with the Holy Ghost, I want nothing to do with it,
and I will have nothing to do with it. Feeling these sentiments
and principles, I have always had confidence in God. I know in
whom I have believed, and understand that God is at the helm,
leading, guiding, controlling and governing the affairs of his
people.
287
What is it that has brought you Latter-day Saints here? It is the
principles of the Gospel. You heard them perhaps in England,
Scotland, Ireland, Wales, France, Denmark, Sweden, Norway,
Germany or some other parts of the earth; no matter where you
heard them, when you did hear you believed them. You had the same
teachings that I have spoken of to-day. And I have heard men
praising God in these different languages for sending the Gospel
unto them, and for communicating unto them the principles of
eternal truth. They know by the same principle that we knew it,
that the Gospel which they had heard was true, and they could
bear testimony to it. And it was in consequence of this that you
Saints came here. You heard Brother Pratt talking to-day about
the gathering, about the Lord taking one of a city and two of a
family, and bringing them to Zion. Did you come here because you
considered that this was a better land? No. Was it because you
had friends and associations here? No, you left your friends and
associations. Was it because there was something very desirable
for you here? No, it was because God had dictated it, and because
the Holy Ghost which you had received planted a desire in your
bosoms to come and mingle with your brethren. As the Scripture
says, "I will take them, one of a city and two of a family, and I
will bring them to Zion, and I will give them pastor after my own
heart that shall feed them with knowledge and understanding." You
hardly knew, in many instances, how or why on earth you struggled
and toiled and obtained the means to come to this land. Your
brethren, here, operated upon by the same spirit, sent forth
their means to assist you; and before railroads were built here,
as many as five hundred teams were sent year after year to the
frontiers, to bring from there those who were desirous of coming.
Those who were scattered did what they could, and those who were
here did what they could, and the result of these united
operations is that thousands of you are now here who would not
have been had it not been for this.
288
The question then arises, What are we here for? "Oh," say some,
"we have a pretty good country here." Yes, but what about the
country? We did not come here after gold or silver; most of us
came before that was discovered. I came to this city before it
was known that there was any gold in California. We did not come
here because it was beautiful place, for when we arrived it was
inhabited by Digger Indians, wolves, bears and coyotes--a
desolate, arid plain, a howling wilderness. That was the position
in which we found the country. And to get here we had to make the
roads and build the bridges, and when we got here we did not have
orchards and vineyards, and beautiful pleasant places ready for
us, we had to make them. We had to roll up our sleeves and take
our teams and go into the kanyons and drag down the logs, and saw
our boards by hand. I have sawed many a one by hand and George Q.
Cannon has assisted me. "What," say some, "do you minister saw?"
Yes, we ministers saw and we work, and I would be ashamed to be
dependent upon anybody but myself for a living. I hope that God
will ever preserve me from that, and I shall feel grateful to my
Heavenly Father if he will always enable me to obtain my own. I
remember being over in Tooele a number of years ago, and a party
said to me, "Brother Taylor, I wish you would come here and
preach."--"Well," said I, "I am here, am I not?" "Yes, but we
would like you to come again." Said I, "Perhaps I will, when I
get ready." "Well, but if you will come here, we will make you up
something, we will get you some chickens, a little flour and some
pork," and I do not now remember what else. Said I, "I am very
much obliged to you, very much indeed, for your proffered
kindness, but I always prefer to dig my own potatoes, and I would
just as soon plant them as not, and then dig them." These are my
sentiments, and also those of my brethren. Here is Brother
Woodruff, he has traveled hundreds and thousand of miles, as I
have, and he generally digs his own potatoes and he knows how to
plant them, and on these points, for diligent labor, I will set
him against any man in this Territory.
288
We did not come here then, for anything of that kind. There were
no houses here when Brother Woodruff and I first came here, and
before we had any we had to make them. Before we had any gardens
we had to make them; before there were any flowers we had to
plant them, and we had to plant the seeds before any trees grew.
I have got trees in my orchard now that grew from seeds planted
by my first wife, which she brought from the East when I came
here. People come here now, and many of them say, "you have a
very beautiful city here." Yes, our city is well enough. "And you
have a very pleasant place, and nice streams of water." Yes, but
we had to make the ditches for them to run in, they did not run
as they now do when we first came, we have had to do everything
that has been done.
289
Well, what do you gather together for? What is your object? Just
precisely what the Prophet told of thousands of years ago. You
know that Brother Pratt was talking about fleeing "as doves to
the windows," and while I was listening to him I was very much
interested, and thought we had been fulfilling the words of the
Prophets. I think that some of our folks, both young and old,
sometimes forget "The pit when they were dug, and the rock whence
they were hewn;" and I think they spend a great deal of their
time in frivolity and nonsense. This is not the case generally,
and I do not care, this evening, to make accusations, for I
delight to see that many are engaged in Sunday Schools, and in
acts of benevolence and kindness and many of our young brethren
and sisters are engaged in labors of a similar kind. But a large
number are thoughtless, forgetful, careless and indifferent in
relation to the things of God, and to the duties and
responsibilities devolving upon them, and I fear are forgetful in
many instances of the object of their existence.
290
Many strangers are now amongst us, parties whom we term
"Gentiles." They have their ideas, feelings, systems, and modes
of worship, and we have ours. Do we wish to interfere with them?
No, no, and I would protect, to the extent of my ability, any
religious denomination in this Territory, and no man should
interfere with them. What, the Episcopal church? yes. The
Methodist? Yes. The Presbyterians and the Catholic? Yes, no
matter who or what they are, I will protect them. If God has a
mind to bear with people, I will. Then, you would not persecute
anybody for the sake of their religion? No, not at all, that is a
matter between them and their God, and they have a perfect right
to worship as they please, or not to worship at all, and they
ought to be protected in all their rights to the fullest extent.
No man ought to interfere with them, and no gentleman, no
Latter-day Saint who understands himself would do so. They have a
right to worship as they please, or not at all if it suits them.
Then we have our rights, and one of them is to protect the
people--everybody, socially, morally, religiously and
politically--in every position, and to preserve a good, wholesome
state of affairs in our midst, and not to be interfered with by
anybody, outsiders or insiders. Ministers and editors preach and
write and tell us that when the waves of "civilization" shall
roll over Utah, things will be changed, and say they, "The people
will become elevated and refined in their feelings and they will
be like us." Some of their waves are not very pleasant, they have
brought a lot of scum with them, and it babbles and stews and
froths and foams, and exhibits anything but that which is
pleasant and enticing, or that is calculated to promote the
happiness and well-being of man. We do not have any sympathy with
gambling, drunkenness and prostitution, for instance, and these
are among the waves they have brought. They find fault with us
for having more wives and children than they, and for preserving
purity and chastity in our midst, and they would introduce their
infamies amongst us. Gentlemen, we hope you will keep your waves
back, where they belong, put them in your own cesspools, keep
them where they originated. No such things have been originated
by us, we came here to get rid of them, and that we might fear
God, and worship him in spirit and in truth, according to the
principles that he has revealed. The Scriptures say, in speaking
of the last days, that perilous times shall come--men shall be
lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud,
blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, truce
breakers, having a form of godliness but denying the power
thereof." This is a very singular statement, but I do not think
you would have to travel very far among our reformers--those who
have come to reform and regenerate us--to find this pattern fully
exemplified. Are they lovers of their own selves? There are a
great many here who would not object to take our possessions, and
give us nothing for them. Covetous, the Scriptures say. Why, at
the time Buchanan commenced his raid upon us, they had it all
planned, and had our possessions apportioned, and had agreed who
should have this establishment, that and the other. But it did
not exactly work, and they did not get them, but that did not
alter the feeling or principle that existed. Covetous, boasters
and proud! I am quoting from your own Bible--King James'
translation--and one of your own Prophets predicted these very
things of you. Boasting! How much swaggering do we see around
everywhere? No matter where you go you see little boys growing up
full of pride, impudence and impertinence. They are called "Young
America." Beautiful specimens, and fine men they will make when
they are full grown! Plenty of them come along here. We know all
about them. What is the feeling abroad in the world in relation
to disobedience to parents? Who the devil cares about father or
mother? Say the young folks, "I am of age and I will do as I
d----d please? and off they go, and do as they please. The
Prophets have testified that these things would be, and what we
see and hear is only fulfilling their words.
290
What kind of people should these be? They should have a form of
godliness, many of them be very pious, have long faces, and for a
pretence make long prayers. Jesus in his day accused some of
being men of this kind, an said he, "These shall receive the
greater condemnation." They shall be truce and covenant breakers.
Have we any such now-a-days? Why if a man borrows five dollars he
must give a mortgage on something, because the lender fears he
will be cheated out of it. Men have no confidence in each other's
word. I would not give a straw for a man if I could not trust his
word. There is nothing of him, no foundation, nothing to tie to.
Yet these are the very people that the Prophet said should exist
in the last days. They enter into covenant and never think of
fulfilling it. Their word amounts to nothing, their integrity has
no foundation.
290
I speak of these things for your information, for this is the
condition of the world. And are we free from it? Not by a long
way--I wish we were. I wish there were more honesty, virtue,
integrity and truthfulness, and more of every principle among us
that is calculated to exalt and ennoble humanity. I speak of
these things as a shame to the human family; and if they exist
among the Saints it is a crying, burning shame, and we all ought
to be disgusted; for if anybody in the world ought to be men of
integrity, truth and honesty, we should be, everywhere and under
all circumstances. And if we say a thing it ought to be as worthy
of belief as if we had sworn to it, and as if we were bound by
ten thousand ties to accomplish it. But if a man has not the
principle of integrity in his own self you cannot put it there.
The Latter-day Saints should be ashamed to mix up with these
things, and to prostitute the principles which God has revealed
unto them. I speak of these things to warn you against them.
292
The Lord has brought us here, that we may be taught and
instructed in correct principles and led in the path of life. Did
we gather here to get religion and to prepare to die? Nothing of
the kind. I do not care one particle about death. I have had him
grin at me numbers of times, but I care nothing about him, and I
ask no odds of him. I know something beyond death. We are here to
prepare to live, and to teach our children how to live after us;
and to teach the world the same lesson if they will only receive
it. We know that our spirits existed with the Father before we
came here. We know that we are immortal as well as mortal beings,
and that we have had to do with another world as well as this. We
know that the world abounds with corruption; but it is our
business to keep ourselves from it, and to progress in virtue,
truth, integrity and holiness. We came here to be saviors. "What,
saviors?" "Yes." "Why, we thought there was only one Savior."
"Oh, yes, there are a great many. What do the Scriptures say
about it?" One of the old Prophets, in speaking of these things,
says that saviors shall come up upon Mount Zion. Saviors? Yes.
Whom shall they save? In the first place themselves, then their
families, then their neighbors, friends and associations, then
their forefathers, then pour blessings on their posterity. Is
that so? Yes. This reminds me of some remarks I heard a short
time ago. There was a number of gentlemen, travelers, passing
around the world, and on their way they stayed here awhile. They
wanted to obtain some information from me upon certain subjects,
and I took them around a little, and among other places I took
them to see the Tabernacle and the foundation of the Temple. Said
one, "When you get that Temple built you will have another place
to meet and preach in." "Oh no," said I, "that is not for
preaching." All the idea that most men have about a Temple of the
Lord is that it is for preaching. "Well," said these gentlemen,
"what is it for if not to preach in?" I answered, "The Christian
world have no knowledge of what Temples are for, but we build
them for the same purpose as they were built for anciently--to
perform ordinances in them." "To perform ordinances" "Yes, among
others, baptism for the dead?" "Baptism for the dead?" "Yes,
baptism for the dead, that those who have lived before us, and
have not been in possession of the light that we have, may be
placed in a position in which they can receive intelligence from
God, and salvation at his hands; that all God's creatures who
have lived may have an opportunity to have the Gospel preached to
them, and to participate in its blessings. As Paul says, 'If the
dead rise not at all, why, then, are ye baptized for the dead?'"
Said I, "The Christian world know nothing about these things, but
God has revealed them to us, hence we are baptized for our dead,
that they may partake of the Gospel and have the opportunity of
being exalted in the kingdom of God. Hence, as the Scriptures
say, "saviors shall come up on Mount Zion."
292
There are a great many more reasons why we engage in these
operations, which it is not necessary to talk about to you
Saints; you understand them in part, but not much; but you will
understand more when it is developed. Well then, we are desirous
of blessing our posterity? We read of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
before they left the world, calling their families together, and
under the inspiration of the spirit of prophecy and revelation,
putting their hands upon their heads and pronouncing certain
blessings upon them, which should rest upon their posterity
through every subsequent period of time. We have the same Gospel
and Priesthood, and the same light and intelligence, and we are
after the salvation and exaltation of our families that shall
come after us, as they were, and we are seeking for God's
blessings to be poured upon their heads as they were. And is our
fathers have died in ignorance of the Gospel, not having had an
opportunity to listen to it, we feel after them, and we go forth
and are baptized for them, that they may be saved and exalted in
the kingdom of God with us.
292
Is this the Gospel? Yes, the very Gospel that Jesus taught, and
when he was put to death in the flesh, and was quickened by the
Spirit, he went and preached it to the spirits in prison who
sometimes were disobedient in the days of Noah. Did he preach to
them that they should stop there? No, not at all. What did he
come here for? To open the eyes of the blind, to unstop the ears
of the deaf, to preach glad tidings to the poor, to open the
prison doors to those that were bound, and to preach the
acceptable year of the Lord. That is what he came to do; and when
he got through preaching to the living he went and preached to
the spirits in prison, and "opened their prison doors," as the
Prophets said he would do, "to those that were bound."
292
We are after these things. God has shed upon us the light of
eternal truth, he has revealed to us the everlasting Gospel, and
that Gospel brings life and immortality to light. We are seeking
to walk in that light, to enjoy these privileges ourselves and to
impart them to others, that others with us--the living and the
dead, those who have been, those who are and those who are to
come, may rejoice with us, that we and they may obtain exaltation
in the celestial kingdom of God.
292
May God help us to be faithful, in the name of Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / George
Q. Cannon, January 12, 1873
George Q. Cannon, January 12, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER GEORGE Q. CANNON,
Delivered in the 14th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Evening, January 12, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
UNIVERSALITY AND ETERNITY OF THE GOSPEL.
294
The subjects that have been touched upon by Elder Taylor are the
most delightful that the human mind can contemplate. It is true
that men can find employment and considerable enjoyment in the
acquisition of wealth, and in expending the same in the busy
scenes of life, but after all, there is something unsubstantial
and unreal about everything of this character. Decay is written
upon everything that is human, death is written upon everything
that we put our hands to and upon ourselves. We know that we are
here but for a short time; we know that everything we possess
will, like ourselves, perish and pass away; that our existence
here is an ephemeral one--shortlived, therefore when we can
contemplate the future and the life that is to come, and can
understand anything connected with it that we can rely upon,
there is something in the contemplation that lifts us above
everything of a sublunary or perishable character. We are brought
nearer to God, we feel that there is a spark of immortality
within us, that we are indeed immortal and partakers of the
Divine nature, through our inheritance as the children of God.
And this is the effect that the principles of the Gospel, when
properly understood, have upon mankind. They had this effect upon
them in ancient days; they have this effect upon them in these
days. It is on this account that men are capable of making
sacrifices; and that men in ancient days could face every danger
and could submit to the most ignominious tortures and death. It
is knowledge concerning the future, which God has given to the
Latter-day Saints, that has sustained them in their persecutions
and trials in the past, and which sustains them at the present
time; and it is this which has sustained thousands of other
people who have not been Latter-day Saints, and who have not had
a fullness of the Gospel, but only understood the principles of
the Gospel to a partial extent. What is there that is calculated
to fill the heart of man with greater joy than the knowledge that
God has revealed the plan of salvation--a plan which not only
comprehends within its scope man's individual salvation, but the
salvation of his ancestors and his posterity, and gives unto him,
to a certain extent, the power to be a savior of men, to be a
progenitor in the earth, as Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were; to be
the means in the hands of God of bringing to pass also the
salvation of those who have passed away in ignorance. It has been
a matter which has puzzled thousands of well-meaning, honest
people who believed in God and in the Gospel as far as they knew
it,--to understand what disposition would be made of those who
died in ignorance of the Gospel. For instance, the millions of
heathen who have died without having heard the name of the Lord
Jesus Christ. Many men, including ministers, have entertained the
idea that they go to a place of punishment from which there is no
escape, but that they welter there in torment throughout the
endless ages of eternity. Others, more charitable, have scarcely
any idea what will become of them, and they therefore do not
venture an opinion respecting the subject.--Others still, have an
idea that this can not be the fate of the heathen, or, if so,
that God must be unjust. There is something revolting to the
merciful mind in the idea that God, our Heavenly Father would
condemn millions of people to endless pain because of their
ignorance of some great principle or truth, which he might have
communicated to them but did not. For instance, millions of
people have lived in Polynesia and the islands of the Pacific for
unnumbered generations--history does not tell us how many, their
traditions scarcely number them--and they never heard, until
quite recently, the name of Jesus christ, never knew that he was
the Son of God and the Savior of the world. They have died by
millions in total ignorance of the plan of salvation as taught in
the Scriptures. Millions died on this great continent before the
landing of the whites on American soil--countless tribes of
Indians wandered to and fro from the polar regions of the north
to the equator, and from the equator to the polar regions of the
south, and not one amongst them all knew anything about God, his
Son Jesus Christ, or the plan of salvation. They lived and died,
generation after generation, in ignorance of these important
truths, and many of them were doubtless just and upright men, so
far as their traditions enabled them to act and walk uprightly.
294
Certain religious denominations entertain the belief that these
people have all been consigned to endless torment; and not only
those who have inhabited this land, but those who have inhabited
Polynesia and Australasia, the groups of Islands in the indian
Archipelago and throughout Asia and Africa. Who can contemplate
such a plan of salvation, or rather condemnation, and admire the
author of it, and worship him as a just, pure and holy being? Is
there any wonder when such theories are propounded and advocated
by the professed ministers of Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace,
that men have revolted at such a belief and would not exercise
faith in Jesus Christ? The wonder to me is that so many have
received teachings from men who, professing to be ministers of
Christ, have entertained such views as these. To think that God
would consign to endless torment millions of his creatures who
died in ignorance, of which they might have been relieved if he
had revealed his will and sent his ministers unto them!
294
This is not the faith of the Latter-day Saints. The Gospel that
we have heard brings to us peace and joy. There is no feature in
it from the contemplation of which we recoil. There is no feature
connected with it that we can not sit down and contemplate with
pleasure and joy, and the more we contemplate and investigate it,
the higher our admiration rises for the author of it--the great
and good Creator who has revealed it. So far as I understand this
plan of salvation, which is the one taught by Christ and his
Apostles in ancient days, and which is left on record in the
Scriptures, there is nothing connected with it but what excites
my admiration and calls forth my unbounded gratitude to God for
having revealed it, and for having given me the privilege of
understanding it, so far as I have learned it. Instead of a
Gospel filled with woe, sorrow and condemnation, it is a Gospel
of peace, joy and happiness to those who received it.
296
We as a people, brethren and sisters, and we should always bear
this in mind, do not believe that God our Heavenly Father will
condemn any human being unless he has been made acquainted with
the law which he has revealed; in other words, to use the
expression of one of the Apostles, "Where there is no law, there
is no transgression." Unless a law is proclaimed unto men, that
they may understand it, there can be no transgression of that
law, and consequently no condemnation following its
transgression; and if condemnation follow, there must be a
knowledge of law. There must be a comprehension of a law and
wilful violation of it, before condemnation can come. There is no
room for the exercise of pity to a person who, knowing a law,
violates it. We do not have any feelings of pity to men who
violate our laws when they understand them. We may regret their
course, but when we know that they understood the law, and had
power to live above it, and that through yielding to their
weaknesses and to their propensities they have violated the law,
we feel to say, "Let justice take its course, the punishment is a
just one, and they must abide by it." So it is in the Gospel--you
will not be condemned for that which you do not understand,
neither will any other people that ever lived--that now live--or
ever will live in the future. They will be condemned according to
their knowledge: every man will be judged according to the deeds
done in the body. Then what shall be done with the millions who
have died in ignorance? If I thought that the plan of God's
salvation was confined to this earth, and this limited space of
time, I should have different ideas of God to what I have. But
God is eternal, and his salvation is an eternal plan of
salvation. This earth, or the elements of which it is composed,
is eternal. We who live on the earth are eternal in one
sense--our spirits are eternal; and the elements of which our
bodies or tabernacles are created are also eternal. They can be
changed, dissolved and reconstructed, recreated and reorganized,
but they are eternal, and so are we, and we shall live eternally.
God's providence and God's salvation are not confined to this
space of time, which we call life; but they extend throughout
eternity and when individuals die in ignorance of the Gospel they
will have the opportunity of hearing that Gospel elsewhere. As
has been said, "If the dead rise not at all, then why are ye
baptized for the dead?" This was the remark of Paul. Peter also
tells us that Jesus went to preach to the spirits in prison which
sometime were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God
waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing,
wherein few, that is, eight souls, were saved by water. They had
been in prison for nearly 2,500 years, according to our
chronology; but Jesus, having the power to preach the Gospel,
went and preached to them while his body lay in the tomb. I know
that this doctrine is strange to many persons. I recollect on one
occasion preaching on the Sandwich Islands to a large
congregation, endeavoring to prove that baptism for the remission
of sins was necessary, and that, according to the words of Jesus
to Nicodemus, unless a man was born of the water and of the
Spirit he could in no wise enter the kingdom of heaven. After I
had got through, a gentleman came forward from the congregation
and commenced interrogating me on the statement which I had made;
and in his remarks he dwelt particularly on the case of the thief
on the cross. Said he, "You have told us that no man can enter
the kingdom of heaven unless he is born of the water and of the
Spirit." I told him that I had quoted the words of the Savior. He
wished to know how I disposed of the repentant thief on the
cross, who died at the same time that the Savior did. Said he,
"You recollect that Jesus said, 'This day, shalt thou be with me
in Paradise;' but your doctrine conveys the idea that the thief
did not and could not go to Paradise unless he was born of the
water." I remarked to him that I supposed our views with regard
to Paradise differed. He said that he believed that Paradise was
heaven--the presence of God, and that the thief went there
immediately after death. I said to him, "The Scriptures tell us
that he did not." The assertion startled him, and said he, "Do
you mean to say that Jesus did not go to heaven?"--I replied,
"Jesus certainly did not go into the presence of his Father when
he died, and to prove to you that what I say is correct, I have
only to refer you to the 20th chapter of John, which contains the
account of Mary and Jesus, after his resurrection. Mary went to
the sepulchre on the morning of the Sabbath, and she found that
the stone had been rolled away and that the Savior's body was
gone. She was startled at the occurrence, and turning round she
saw somebody standing beside her whom she supposed to be the
gardener, and she inquired of him what had become of the body of
her Lord. Instead of the gardener, it was Jesus, and he called
her by name, and as soon as she heard her name she knew it was
Jesus, and stepped forward to embrace him. But Jesus said, 'Touch
me not, for I am not yet ascended to my Father, but go to my
brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father and your
Father; and to my God and your God.' Now, said I, "here is the
testimony of Jesus himself that, on the sabbath after his
crucifixion, during which time his body had lain in the tomb, he
had not yet ascended to his Father." Said I, "Peter tells us that
during this time, he had been to preach to the spirits in prison,
who were disobedient in the days of Noah; and he also says--For
this cause was the Gospel preached to them that are dead, that
they might be judged by that Gospel, just the same as they who
are living." From this we can learn how proper was the remark of
Jesus to the thief. He did not say, "Thou shalt be with me in my
kingdom this day." The thief said, "Lord, remember me when thou
comest into thy kingdom." But Jesus who was then undergoing the
pangs of death, and had not time to explain the plan of salvation
to him, said, "This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise." And
he no doubt was with him, and heard him explain the Gospel in its
fullness, plainness and simplicity, and he had an opportunity of
receiving or rejecting it.
297
These are the views entertained by the Latter-day Saints on this
important subject. We believe that every being that ever has
lived--that does live now or eve will live--will sooner or later
be brought to a knowledge of the eternal plan of salvation, and
that none will be condemned to endless torment only those who sin
against the Holy Ghost, for Jesus says every sin shall be
forgiven except the sin against the Holy Ghost; that shall not be
forgiven in this world or the world to come. Every human being
will be brought to a knowledge of the Redeemer's grace; every
human being will have truth and error placed before him or her,
and will have the opportunity of embracing truth and rejecting
error. God has placed us here, we are his children, and he loves
us all. We can not begin to understand the love that God our
Father has for his children. He loves all that dwell on the face
of the earth--the dark sons of Cain that dwell in Africa and in
America, in asia and throughout the islands of the sea, as well
as those who live in Europe and America who are of the white
race. All are the objects of his care. His providence is over all
and his salvation is extended to all. But upon whom will
condemnation rest? This is condemnation, says Jesus, that light
has come into the world, and men are made to understand it and
reject it. But will all be saved? Yes, every human being will be
saved except those who commit the unpardonable sin. But will they
all receive the same salvation? No every man will be rewarded
according to the deeds done in the body. Will those who live
lives of ease and pleasure, consulting their own inclinations and
gratifying them, be saved with those who endure all things for
the truth's sake? We read in the Scriptures of men and women who
aspired to serve God with all their mights, and to do everything
that was required of them. They were they who wandered about in
sheepskins and goatskins, who dwelt in dens and caves of the
earth. They were willing to take upon them the obloquy and shame;
to be sawn asunder, to have their heads cut off, to be crucified,
to be thrown into the dens of wild beasts, and to suffer anything
and everything, every kind of death, for the sake of the Gospel
that they had embraced, and they endured these things
unflinchingly. Will they receive only the same glory as those who
pass along without any affliction and suffering, and who have
pleasure all their days? No, the Apostle Paul, in the chapter
that has been quoted from--15th chapter of the 1st of
Corinthians, makes it plain that there is a difference in the
degrees of glory that men will receive after death. He says that
there is one glory of the sun, another of the moon and another of
the stars. This shows that different degrees of glory will be
awarded men and women in the resurrection according to their
faithfulness here. Some will receive the glory of the sun, which
is called the celestial glory; others will receive a glory
typified by the moon, called the terrestrial glory; and others a
glory typified by the stars, which is called the telestial glory.
297
The Latter-day Saints, as a people, are seeking to obtain
celestial glory. They want to go where the Father and Son are,
and to dwell eternally in their presence. They want to receive
blessings similar to those which Jesus has received. On this
account they have been as willing as the former-day Saints to
suffer all things for the sake of the Gospel of Christ.
297
Many men wonder why we left the State as and when we did, and
came into this wilderness, and why we endured persecutions. This
is a matter of constant wonder to those who investigate our
history and who do not understand the reasons which have prompted
us to cling to our religion. They say, "If you will abandon this
principle or that, we will fellowship you. If you reject the Book
of Mormon, that is not much, you have the Bible. If you would
reject Joseph Smith as a Prophet, we would receive you. Your
doctrine is not so unpalatable. If you did not have so much
confidence in Brigham Young, and did not take him as your
counselor in all things, there would not be anything particularly
objectionable in your doctrines. You believe in the Bible, the
Old and New Testaments; but there are some principles of your
religion which you might as well abandon." Some men who call
themselves good friends of the Latter-day Saints reason like
this. They do not seem to understand that every principle
connected with the Gospel is vital to salvation, and that if we
reject the Book of Mormon we reject the Bible; if we reject
Joseph Smith, we reject Jesus Christ who inspired and sent him;
if we reject Brigham Young as an Apostle, we might as well reject
Peter, James and John and the other Apostles who lived in ancient
days; and that, in fact, to reject any of these would be to
reject the whole, and that to be Latter-day Saints we have to
believe every principle connected with our religion, or we have
to be complete apostates to the whole of it. We can not say we
will receive this and reject that principle. We cannot say, We
will receive faith in Jesus Christ, repentance of sin, baptism
and the laying on of hands and reject everything else. We will
not gather with the people, we will not pay tithing, we will not
believe in Brigham Young as an Apostle or Prophet. We can not be
Latter-day Saints and feel thus, we must either receive, or be
apostate to, the whole of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
298
We are fighting for great truths, not with carnal
weapons--swords, guns, or weapons of war; but we are engaged in a
great and mighty spiritual contest, we are seeking to establish
or rather to re-establish the principles of truth and
righteousness on the earth. We are endeavoring to erect a
standard of purity higher than that which now prevails and is
recognized by men, and to elevate the people to that standard.
That is the aim and labor of the Saints. We are misunderstood--so
were Jesus and his Apostles, and the Prophets of God in ancient
days. We stand in goodly company. We are arrayed, in this
respect, with the noblest of earth's sons. Our names are cast out
as evil, and everything we do is misrepresented and
misunderstood, but this does not change our disposition or the
character of the work we are engaged in. We are resolved,
notwithstanding this, to stand firm to the principles which God
has revealed unto us. This is the duty of every Latter-day Saint,
come life or come death, or whatever may be the consequences. If
God has entrusted us with the revelations of his will, if he has
taught us holy and pure doctrines, as we testify that he has, we
would be recreant to God and to the duties and obligations he has
placed upon us if we did not stand up and face the world in arms,
if necessary, to maintain his great truths in the earth.
298
It is so with everything connected with our religion. There is
nothing impure about it--it is God's. There may be impurity in
men, and they may fail in carrying out the doctrines which God
has entrusted to them, but this does not alter the doctrines.
They are true and good from beginning to end, from the first to
the last that has been committed to us, and their practice among
the people will exalt them. "What?" says one, "will plural
marriage, that we have been taught to look upon as so degrading,
elevate people?" Yes, even that principle, much abused as it is,
when it is understood by the people, will be viewed in a very
different light from what it is now. And so with every other
principle of the Gospel. There is nothing that we teach or
practice but what is contained in the Bible, and for which we do
not have the example of Prophets and Apostles, and that was not
embodied in the plan of salvation revealed to the ancients. We
are willing to be tested by the word of God. Not by man's
traditions and misconceptions; but we are willing to go to and be
tested by that book upon which Christendom relies--the
translation of the Scriptures made by King James the First, of
England. If we have embraced error, we are willing to renounce it
whenever it is proved to us.
299
There are about a hundred and twenty-five thousand people in
these valleys in Utah Territory. We are but a small handful of
people, and we are surrounded by the foremost civilization of the
age, which is believed in and upheld by forty millions of people,
who have in their possession all the agencies of the pulpit and
the press--the most advanced agencies of civilization; and our
barbarism, as it is called, is brought face to face with their
advanced civilization. We do not shrink from the contest, but are
willing to abide the issue and to submit to the results. We are
not afraid of this Gospel. It is reported of President Young that
he once said, It was a very poor religion that would not stand
one railroad. I do not know whether he ever did make the remark,
but whether he did or not, it is true. It is a poor religion that
will not stand one, two, three, or half a dozen railroads, or
that will not stand in the midst of the hottest persecution, and
triumph when in contact with everything that can be brought
against it. I would not give a fig for my religion if it would
not do this, so long as its believers are not extirpated, as were
the believers in the Gospel in ancient days. If they will only
let us live and enjoy our natural and heaven-bestowed rights, I
have no fears as to the result. It is true that the wicked could
turn in and kill us off in detail, as they killed our ancient
predecessors--the Apostles and followers of Christ. In that day
they killed every man that professed to have revelation from God.
They searched and hunted until not a man could be found among the
sons of men who could say unto the people, "thus saith the Lord,"
until not a man could be found who could say that an angel had
appeared to him; until not a man could be found among all the
children of earth who could say, "God has revealed this to me."
If God would permit it, we might be hunted, slain and driven
until all were finally extirpated from the face of the earth, and
in this way, probably, our religion would not stand and endure
the contest or contact with what is called a superior
civilization. But so long as we are allowed to live, and to enjoy
the exercise of our opinion in this great nation, whose boast it
is that it is the land of untrammeled liberty, I do not fear the
contest or its result, and in saying this I believe I speak the
sentiments of every man and woman who belongs to the church in
this Territory. We know that we have received the truth, that it
will be triumphant in the end, and that it will live through and
survive all kinds of persecution that may be brought to bear
against it.
300
But there is something that I dread more than active persecution.
We have endured persecutions which have driven us from our home.
Mobs have burned our houses, destroyed our corn and wheat fields,
and torn down our fences; our men have been slain, and in some
instances our women ravished. We have been driven as wild beasts
are driven from the habitations of men, and compelled to flee to
the wilderness. We have endured this, and we know that we can
endure it, and live in the midst of it, for we have been tested.
But we have not yet endured prosperity, we have not yet been
tested in this crucible, which is one of the severest to which a
people can be subjected. We have not been tested with abundance
of property and wealth lavished upon us; and here, my brethren
and sisters, is the point against which we have to guard more
than all others, for there is more danger to-day to the Zion of
God in the wealth that is pouring into and increasing in the
hands of the Latter-day Saints, than in all the armies that have
ever been mustered against us, or all the mobs that have been
formed for our overthrow, from the organization of the Church
until to-day. There is danger not in mines alone, not in the
increase of strangers in our midst, not in the seducing
influences which attend the presence of some of them, but in the
fact that we ourselves are growing wealthy, and that it is
natural for us to become attached to wealth, and for the mind of
man to be allured by it, and by the influence which it brings.
There is danger in this, and I look for the same results to
follow this condition of affairs that formerly followed
mobocracy. The mobs came upon us, and they cleansed from among us
the hypocrites and cowards, and those who could not endure. The
Gospel of Jesus Christ, which brought persecutions, and called
upon men to forsake houses and lands and everything that was dear
to them, and to push out into the wilderness, had no attraction
for the classes I have named, in the early history of the Church;
and I expect that there will be attraction for the classes I have
named, in the early history of the Church; and I expect that
there will be attractions stronger than the Gospel to hypocrites
and those weak in the faith in the present phase of our history,
and that influences now operating will produce the same results
as we have witnessed, that is, to cleanse the people of God. We
have, therefore, at the present time, that at our doors, which
menaces us with greater danger than mobs. I do not dread the
results, but doubtless many, unless they are very careful, will
have their hearts hardened and their eyes blinded by, and they
will fall a prey to and be overcome by, these evils, which the
adversary is seeking to pour upon us.
301
It has been truly said by many, "Introduce fashions into Salt
Lake, increase wealth among the people and induce them to follow
fashion and be surrounded by influences that will win them from
their primitive habits, then you have solved the Mormon problem."
There is great truth in this statement. I recognize it and warn
you of it. I know that if we would allow ourselves to be thus
influenced, there is really more danger in this than in anything
else. I stand here to-night in the presence of God and before
you, my brethren and sisters, and I declare that I fully believe
that we shall stand this trial, as we have others. I have no fear
as to the result, so far as the entire people is concerned. But
as a people we had better be warned. We had better watch well our
ways, look well to our hearts, keep our minds well on the
principles that God has revealed, and love our religion more than
anything else on the face of the earth. We must preserve our love
for the principles of our faith intact and inviolate, free from
every impurity. What could be offered to us that we have not got
in our religion? Is it wealth? I expect to have boundless wealth
and boundless dominion, if faithful to God; and I expect that
ever faithful man and woman in the Church will have everything
that his or her heart can desire in this Gospel which God has
revealed. The Prophet Isaiah, speaking of Jesus, says, To the
increase of his kingdom there shall be no end. That promise is
also made to us--to the increase of our kingdom there shall be no
end. What did the Lord say to Abraham when he had blessed him? He
told him to look upon the stars of heaven and promised that as
they were countless and innumerable so should his seed be. That
promise, made to Abraham, the Father of the Faithful, is couched
in the words of Isaiah to Jesus. There was to be no end to the
kingdom of Abraham, he was to have thrones, principalities and
dominions; to be crowned not with a barren, empty crown, not a
crown without a kingdom, but a real one, emblematical of endless
and boundless rule, power, dominion and glory. The Lord has
promised the same glory to every being who attains to the glory
of the sun, who gains a fullness of glory in his celestial
kingdom. They all will be heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus
Christ. Recollect the words--joint heirs with Jesus Christ, and
as he has dominion and rule so will they. He that has been
faithful over a few things shall be made ruler over many, says
Jesus; and in another place he says that all who have forsaken
fathers, mothers, houses or lands for my sake shall receive a
hundred fold in this life, and in the life to come life
everlasting. We are promised, then, a hundred fold for all we
forsake in this life, and life everlasting hereafter. What was
the song which John says was sung by the saved in heaven? "Thou
hast made us kings and priests unto God, and we shall reign on
the earth." This is the promise made to the faithful by God, the
King of kings. It is natural for man to seek to exercise rule
wherever he can; and it is perfectly right when bounded and
controlled by principle.
301
In the Gospel there is open to us room for the exercise of this
feeling without any evil results following it. We can, if we
choose, in this life lay a foundation for eternal riches,
dominion and rule, and the possession of all blessings which God
has promised to the faithful. We therefore look for a heaven of
this kind. The Latter-day Saint does not look for an empty
heaven, where he has got to sing continually to the thrumming of
the harp. The Saints look for a tangible heaven, the same as we
have here, only glorified immensely. We expect to be like God,
our heavenly Father--to take part in creation, in the creation
and peopling of new worlds, and in doing things similar to what
God has done. This is a subject of such magnitude that I can only
briefly allude to it in passing.
302
Do you understand, can you understand, brethren and sisters, why
the ancients were willing to suffer and endure all things? They
knew that God had in store for them everything that their hearts
could desire; and that the joys of which they had a slight
foretaste here they would receive a fullness of hereafter. If
they had wives they knew they would be theirs for eternity. If
they had families they knew they would be theirs for eternity.
They knew that Jesus meant what he said to Peter when he said,
Thou art Peter, to thee I give the keys of the kingdom, and
whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven?
What ordinances were there that Peter had to perform on earth
that should be bound in heaven? The Latter--day Saints understand
it. God has restored the same authority to the earth, and has
bestowed it upon the man who occupies the same position in the
Church in this day that Peter held in his. Peter was the senior
Apostle--the President of the Twelve, and he, therefore, had the
right to hold the keys, and to seal a wife to her husband, and
the ordinance would be bound in heaven as he bound it on the
earth. The Latter--day Saints claim to have received the same
authority. We believe when we marry that we marry for eternity,
and that our wives and children will dwell with us in eternity.
This is our faith. It was over his posterity that Abraham was to
reign. What benefit would it be to him to have posterity as
numerous as the sands on the sea--shore, or as the stars of
heaven, if he did not rule over them? But embody the idea of rule
and dominion, and of his being a prince over his posterity, the
progenitor of a great and mighty race, over whom he should
eventually reign and rule, and then we see the precious nature of
the promise which the Lord made to him. The Lord gave him Canaan
as an everlasting possession, yet Stephen, the martyr, when he
preached his last discourse to the Jews, told them that Abraham
had not had so much as a foot of it, but the time would come to
which I have referred, when he and his seed would sing, "Thou
hast made us kings and priests unto God, and we shall reign on
the earth. This reigning on the earth was embodied in their ideas
of heaven. This is the kind of heaven to which the ancients
looked, and it is the kind of heaven to which the Latter-day
Saints look, and this is in consequence of the great and glorious
principles which God has revealed to them. Because of this they
have been willing in the past to endure what they have endured.
302
There is much more connected with these points than any human
being can say with regard to them. They are immense in their
magnitude, and cannot be grasped at once. But the more the truth
which God has revealed is investigated the more beautiful it
appears. I often remark, There is something beautiful to me in
the idea of a people being gathered together as the Latter--day
Saints have, and dwelling in love and harmony. By this, says
John, you may know that you have passed from death unto life,
because ye love one another. We, with all our faults, do love one
another. The Latter--day Saints dwell together in unity, no
matter where they come from. They come here by hundreds and
thousands from foreign lands, but here they are in the midst of
their friends. They may not speak the same language, and may have
different habits and ways of living, but when they reach here
they are at home. This is one of the results of the Gospel. It is
strange, but how beautiful and Godlike, and how much it ought to
fill our hearts with gratitude that we live at a time and are
associated with a people who are thus blessed.
303
The world would give everything they possess, and there have been
those who would have given their lives, to partake of the
blessings that we enjoy and that are so common in our midst. I
have just made a hasty trip through the length of the Territory.
Before starting, I telegraphed to different points that I wanted
horses at such a time. I promised no remuneration whatever, but
they supposed that my business was of importance, and at the time
needed the horses were at hand and men ready to accompany them.
When I thanked them, they would say, "There is no need, brother
Cannon, we have as much interest in this work as you have."
Wherever we went there were friends, and tables spread to give us
all we wanted. Can it be done in any other country? I believe
that we have made a journey that could not be made in any other
country, unless in Russia, where a despot rules. He could order
the people as he pleased; but this has been done by simply
inquiring by telegraph, "Can you do so and so?" The response
came, "Yes, anything you want." What caused this? Was it
despotism? No, it was love. Their interest in this work is as
great as mine or any man's, and it was a pleasure to them to do
it. The result was that we went to St. George and returned in a
little over nine days, and staid there four, traveling seven
hundred miles. It has filled me with peculiar feelings, and I
have rejoiced to think that I have been associated with such a
people as the Latter-day Saints. I said to the, "You know, I
would do the same." "Yes, we know that." The majority of this
people feel that they cannot do too much for this work. It is the
work of God, and we feel that we cannot do too much for the
salvation of our fellow-men. We have shown this time and time
again. To illustrate it: the latter-day Saints have sent year
after year five hundred teams clear to the Missouri river, with
four yoke of cattle to the team, and over five hundred men to
drive these teams, and a great number of men to guard and watch
them. These teams were loaded with provisions to feed the
returning emigrants for upwards of a thousand miles. This was
done willingly. Men spent their entire summer, and in this
country that means the entire year, for when a man and his team
lose the summer, they lose the benefits of the entire year's
labor. Where can you see anything like this, except in Utah? What
was it done for? To build up some man or despotism, or to gratify
some impostor? No, it was because the people loved their
fellow-creatures--their brethren and sisters. This was missionary
labor on a large scale. It was not like putting a few cents into
a missionary box, and then publishing each man's name, and the
amount he contributed, in a magazine, to show the world how much
he had done for the salvation of the poor heathen. There was
nothing of this kind here; there were no trumpets blown on the
corners, Pharisee-like, to show the amount of donations made, but
quietly and unobtrusively the people of this Territory sent their
young men and teams, two thousand yoke of cattle, sometimes
more--twenty-five hundred--with horses and provisions and
everything necessary to equip large companies and bring, a
thousand miles over land to this city, men and women they had
never seen, and whose names they had never heard. This is done
all the time, the people paying hundreds of thousands of dollars
for the emigration of their poor brethren and sisters in foreign
lands. A great deal is published in foreign lands about
missionary efforts. I recollect when a child how anxious my
parents were that I should save a little to send the Gospel to
the heathen. That was before they joined this Church. I thought
it a very great thing to do as they desired. But the Latter-day
Saints are doing this all the time. They send missionaries over
the earth. Men leave their families and comfortable homes to
preach the Gospel in foreign lands without purse and scrip. What
for? For the salvation of their fellow-creatures. It is the
result of the teachings of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. And we
have to do more of it, and to feel greater interest in our
fellow-creatures than we do, until the time shall come when we
shall love our neighbors as we do ourselves. That time must come
for us as a people.
303
May God bless you, by brethren and sisters and friends, and pour
out his Holy Spirit upon you, enlighten your minds and strengthen
you in doing right, regardless of consequences, that you may be
able to endure to the end, which I pray in the name of Jesus.
Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Hyde, January 19, 1873
anuary 19, 1873
DISCOURSE BY PRESIDENT ORSON HYDE,
Delivered in the 14th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, January 19, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
REWARDS ACCORDING TO WORKS--TITHING.
304
It is some time since I had the pleasure of meeting with the
Saints in the Fourteenth Ward of Salt Lake City. I only regret,
this afternoon, a severe cold that I have taken since I arrived
in the city, which, I fear, may disqualify me, at least in part,
from doing justice to any subject that may engage my attention.
304
I discern but a small portion of the people of this ward
collected together on the present occasion. I do not express
myself thus with the idea of finding fault with them for their
non-attendance at meeting. I only wonder how so many of you were
enabled to come together at this time and I almost wonder how I
got here myself without being stuck in the mud. However, we are
here to wait upon the Lord, that we may renew our strength, and
certainly in these times of wonders we have as much occasion for
food adapted to our immortal spirits, to strengthen and
invigorate them, as we have for food to nourish and strengthen
the body. We may be more sensible of the want of food for the
body than we are of the want of food for the mind, but still a
lack of the latter preys upon the interior man as much as a lack
of the former disqualifies us for the discharge of those arduous
duties which pertain to our mortal organization.
304
I hardly know, my brethren and sisters what to speak to you about
this afternoon. I have no sermon prepared, and I do not know that
I should have prepared one if I had had time, for a discourse
delivered by any individual that is not the outburst of
inspiration by a higher power can not be productive of any
lasting good, though good moral principles may be set forth, and
that too in an engaging and interesting point of light.
305
In the course of my life I have traveled over a considerable
portion of the world, and have had opportunities to mark the
different customs, fashions and styles of people, and not only
people, but the different styles of architecture which prevail
among them--every variety which the mind is capable of imagining,
from the princely mansion down to the meanest hovel. I have found
that all classes have some kind of shelter or home. It is rarely
that I have met with one who has said to me, "I have no home, no
shelter, nowhere to go." Even the insects and most of the wild
animals have some kind of refuge, some place to flee to in the
time of storm. Our Utes who roam over the mountains here have
their wickiups, not very desirable to us, but they serve them a
purpose--they shield, or at least partially shield, them from the
inclemency of the storm. All classes of people then, we say, have
some place of resort or refuge, and the presumption is that all
have built according to their taste, coupled with their ability.
This is about the idea that I have formed.
305
Whence came the idea of these forms and structures? Where did
they originate? I believe that everything that is of service to
and that is designed for a blessing to man, came in some way by
the revelations of God. I do not say that they have all been
revealed through a Prophet or through an Apostle. God has
organized every human being on the earth, and has given to him a
temperament and a disposition susceptible of impressions; and
though he may not know their origin, still they play upon his
imagination, and disclose to him many important matters connected
with his earthly existence. A carpenter has many tools in his
box. They are not all the same kind, yet in the execution of the
several branches of his art he finds a use for them, they are not
to be thrown away; and so it seems to me that in the great family
of man there is not one to be thrown away, but all may be used by
him who created them.
306
The art of printing was no doubt revealed from on high, the
matter or facsimile being imparted to some instrument--some
vessel chosen for that peculiar purpose, not necessarily an
Apostle or Prophet--by which to open a door to flood the world
with intelligence, to organize and establish the kingdom of God.
But whoever it may be through whom such revelations are made, his
own individual organization is played upon by the light of
revelation, though he may not understand it and give God the
glory, to whom, in reality, it belongs. It was not necessary that
the power of steam to facilitate business and journeys by land
and sea throughout the world, should be revealed to Joseph Smith,
Brigham Young, Isaiah or Jeremiah; but there was an organization
prepared to receive that communication; and so I might say in
relation to all the arts and sciences that exist on the earth. If
I might be allowed the expression, I would say that the celestial
kingdom is a central college where all true sciences exist. We
have them here, not in their pure and refined state, but merely
the coarse and shadowy outlines. No doubt many of you have had
your portraits pencilled upon the canvas by the artist, and after
he had drawn the outlines, without filling up or embellishing at
all, you looked at it and said, "That is not myself, it does not
look like me, it belongs to some one else." But when it came to
be filled up and embellished, perhaps you were ready to own it.
We have the shadows of things that are, and not the real things
themselves, in many respects. The question arises in my mind,
whether or not there are mansions prepared, the other side the
vail, adapted to every human being who ever did or ever will live
upon the earth. Jesus said to his disciples on a certain
occasion, "I am going to leave you. In my Father's house are many
mansions, if it were not so I would have told you. I go to
prepare a place for you." It seems that, at this time, there was
no place prepared for them; that those that were already
constructed were designed for others, and not for them, hence
said he, "I go to prepare a place for you, and if I go I will
come again and receive you to myself, that where I am there ye
may be also." It is very natural for every person who dwells on
earth, when weary, or when his task is done or his journey ended
to seek his home. I will venture to say that when you go from
this assembly you will naturally seek your own abiding places.
You may perhaps call in at a sick neighbor's; but your ultimate
purpose is to retire to your own homes, and you are not content
until you arrive there. The question with me is whether all
people will not naturally seek the place designed and prepared
for them on the other side of the vail--whether there does not
exist a sympathy between the moral qualifications of the human
heart and the character of that mansion which its owner is
destined to occupy--a kind of attractive power that will lead
each one to his respective abode. Brethren and sisters, we are
all forming characters which will entitle us to the different
styles of mansions in our Father's house. If I seek and do obtain
a superior degree of intelligence--if I do labor to acquire
purity of heart and uprightness of conduct in all things, no
matter how high my standard, is there not a mansion,
corresponding with the exertions which I make, that I am heir to
and destined to inherit? I am inclined to the idea that this is
so.
306
I have heard some say, "I would like to know what my condition
and situation will be the other side of the grave." We are
solving that problem in our present state of existence, we are
determining the matter by our actions in every-day life. I
recollect once, in my travels, standing on the deserts of Sahara,
where I could view the wide expanse and motion of sand, filling
the air as the drifting snows do the atmosphere here many times.
I saw the sirocco fill the air with sand so that it was with
difficulty we could open our eyes, without endangering our sight.
I saw neither plant nor flower of any kind there, nor even a
shrub on which a camel could browse. There are places, I suppose,
in the desert, where springs of water burst forth, that are
green, breaking the monotony that reigns over that wide expanse,
but I did not see them. And yet I consider "You will drink every
drop of moisture and every drop of dew that distills from heaven,
and in return you send forth no plant or flower, ungrateful soil!
Come northward a little, or northwest, and land on the southern
borders of Europe, say Italy, and there is a beautiful country,
delightful fruits of a very fine grade grow there almost
spontaneously; the weather or climate is adapted to almost every
one, but particularly to those who are natives of the country.
Come further north, into Germany, for instance, or to England.
There it is much colder; more hardy fruits grow there. Well,
continue on northward to Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Lapland and
indeed into the Arctic regions. What do we find there? Hardy
races of men, adapted to the climate, and they seemingly prefer
that as a residence to any other portion of the earth. There is
the Esquimaux dwelling in his habitation of ice--ice forming the
walls of his dwelling. He is wrapped in the skins of animals, and
he lives to a great extent on the blubber of whales. Would he
like to exchange situations with the inhabitants of warmer
countries? He has no disposition to emigrate, that seems to be
the place he is attached to. All this, for aught I know, may
reflect something of the climate of those regions that we may
hereafter inhabit. I do not know but the very heavens reflect
their existence upon earth. I do not know but that, in a shadowy
form, the earth itself is a facsimile of the heavens.
307
Now, on another subject, what would you think, brethren and
sisters, of that man who would refuse to pay his taxes to the
government under which he lives. There are some who decline to
pay their taxes in this country as if the original inhabitants
were exercising a jurisdiction which the dignity of modern
civilization affects to despise and repel! What do we think of
any man who declines to pay his taxes? We think him not entitled
to the protection of the laws. I believe there is one statute in
utah which says that every man shall have the privilege of voting
at the polls after a residence of six months, provided he be a
taxpayer within its boundaries. This is an important clause. I do
not speak of this because I want to urge the collection of taxes,
I care nothing about that in comparison, I use this as an
illustration, in reference to some other matters which I wish to
urge upon your attention. Go where we will we find we have to pay
our taxes to political organizations and governments. The Savior
of the world, poor as he was, was not exempt from this obligation
or hability, hence he said to Peter, "Pay taxes." "Oh, we have no
money." "Well, go and east your hook into the sea, and you will
take a fish, and in that fish you will find money, take that and
pay the taxes for thee and me." Thus we see that he who made all
things discharged this liability. We also should pay our taxes to
the governments and powers of this world. If we never should pay
our taxes with what kind of a grace could we appeal to the
Country Court for aid to construct a road here, a bridge there,
or an improvement yonder? "You have not paid your taxes, how can
you expect anything to revert to you when you have not aided to
replenish the treasury or to keep the fountain full? You have no
right to expect to share in the advantages enjoyed by loyal
citizens." Again, if I refuse to pay my taxes to the government
is it not pretty conclusive evidence that I am an enemy to that
government and its friends? It seems to me that the tide beats in
that direction, and shows that I am disloyal. If I pay all my
taxes and discharge all my obligations to the government under
which I live, I should be called a loyal citizen.
307
Says one, "I do not know what is done with the taxes. I would
like to know how they are applied, and what use is made of the
money, and before I pay I think I will ascertain." If you
undertake this I think you will have a heavy and difficult job on
your hands. I would not like to ferret it out. When I get my
receipt for taxes paid I put it in my pocket, and say, "Good bye,
sir," till he calls again. That is all the care I have. If the
collector makes a bad use of the money he collects, or
appropriates it for other than legitimate purposes, somebody else
will see to him, not I. I have got his receipt, I have done my
duty, I have discharged the obligation devolving upon me.
308
We all look, brethren and sisters, for the kingdom of God to be
established at some time, if it is not already done, and yet some
of us complain very much about paying our tithing. The very word
grates on the ears of some! Well, as taxes are to the governments
of the political world, so is tithing to the kingdom of God. That
is my understanding, and if I pay my tithing I come within the
promises and protection of Heaven's laws, and I am considered a
loyal subject of and a friend to that government. I will notice
here a little peculiarity with regard to tithing. There is not
much said about it in the New Testament Scriptures, except mere
allusions; it is the same with regard to polygamy; but you turn
to the Old Testament and you will find that these two subjects
run parallel one with the other, and where one exists the other
follows as a matter of course. I might ask a question here as to
what our Savior meant when he said, "The first shall be last, and
the last shall be first." If the first order of things is to lap
over on to us who are engaged in forming the last and closing
scenes of God's work on earth pertaining to this dispensation,
the last may turn back; and if the former dispensation forms the
field of our last labors or under its shadows we bring things to
a close, by and by the reality, the substance may come. I do not
know that we can charge the Savior with folly when he said, "The
first shall be last and the last shall be first."
309
Do I want a mansion in yonder world that is glorious? Then I must
comply with the law of Heaven and pay my tithes and bring my
offerings and prove to the Heavens that I am a friend of his
government; and that I am willing to sacrifice anything to please
him and to secure the desired treasure. You no doubt recollect
reading in the New Testament of a certain man who found a
treasure which was hid in a field, and he went and sold all he
had to purchase the entire field. It was but a little portion of
ground that contained the treasure, but he was so bent on
securing it that he purchased the entire field. What was that
treasure? It was the kingdom of God. Some say the gifts of God
are not purchased with money, and again some will contend that
they are. I will speak a word or two upon this subject by way of
illustration. I suppose that in former days they had speculators
among them, somewhat similar to those we have in these days. Once
on a time the inspired Apostle laid his hands upon some who had
been baptized for the remission of their sins, and they received
the Holy Ghost. One Simon Magus saw the operation and he asked
the Apostle to give him that gift, saying to him, "I will give
you money for it." Probably Simon said to himself, "I see money
in it," as much as some of you do in that mine; "just give me
that gift, that upon whomsoever I lay my hands they may receive
the Holy Ghost, and thus I will accumulate a fortune." Said
Peter, "Be it known unto you that the gifts of God are not
purchased with money, thy money perish with thee," &c. But then
again, read in another part of the Scriptures about a certain
steward who had charge of his master's goods. He was accused unto
his lord of wasting these goods, or of making an improper use of
them, and he was called to an account, and informed by his master
that he could no longer be steward. Said the steward, "What shall
I do? I am bound to lose my place, and to dig I can not, I am not
used to it, and to beg I am ashamed; what shall I do to sustain
myself?" This happy thought occurred to his mind--I will go round
now to all my lord's debtors, and I will say to this one, "How
much owest thou to my lord?" "One hundred measures of wheat."
Said the steward, "I will forgive you fifty. I am yet in power, I
am not yet displaced, take thy bill and sit down quickly and
write fifty." So he went and did to all his lord's debtors. His
lord saw what he was doing and called him to account, and he
commended the unjust steward for his wisdom and shrewdness--he
had acted wisely for himself. And now says the Savior, as if
predicating a principle upon this transaction, "I say unto you,
make unto yourself friends with the mammon of unrighteousness,
that when you fail you may be received into everlasting
habitations." While it is the suggestion of one spirit, which is
the spirit of falsehood, although the truth may be spoken by that
spirit, yet God will not own it, and yet the same principle
spoken of by another spirit, which is of God Heaven will own.
What are all the riches of this world given unto us for, but to
secure some mansion in yonder world that will be glorious, and
grand and worthy the noble and sacrificing spirit that sought it?
309
Well, we pay our tithing. What does it consist of? One-tenth of
all we possess at the start, and then ever after one-tenth of our
annual income. If that be one thousand dollars per annum you pay
one hundred of that in taxes to the kingdom of God. Say some, "If
it be God's kingdom we should think it could stand and roll on
without this kind of backing or aid." I will tell you that the
Lord Almighty wishes to prove our fidelity to him. It is not for
his sake that we pay tithing, it is for ours. Hence he says, "If
I were hungry or thirsty, I would not call upon them for meat or
drink, but I want to prove you and see whether you are loyal to
me or whether you are rebellious. Hence bring your tithes and
your offerings into my storehouse and prove me now, herewith, and
see if I will not open to you the windows of heaven and pour you
out a blessing that there shall not be room to receive." We are
told by some of the unbelievers that we pay tithing and we are
dupes to fanaticism, that we are priest-ridden, and bound down
with galling chains of oppression. That same class of persons
will boast that they pay no tithing. They are not priest-ridden,
they are free-born American citizens and are not subject to this
priestly rule. Ahem! By and by perhaps these individuals go hence
to the other side of the vail, and they inquire the way to their
home or mansion, and yonder, perhaps, one represented by the
deserts of Sahara is pointed out to them, and they are
told--"There is your home. You have been eager to grasp every
blessing that flowed from the beneficent hand of the Creator, but
what have you given in return? No more than that sandy desert has
given, and there is the place of your home. An American citizen,
eh! Not priest-ridden, not oppressed so that you have to pay
tithes or taxes to the kingdom of God?" "No, we do not know any
such kingdom." Well, brethren and sisters, I almost shrink at the
task of following this subject up. It is a little sensational,
but perhaps it might as well be told, if not in whole, at least
in part.
310
We find that there are many worlds surrounding us, revolving in
their sphere and orbit. Some learned men have pretended to say
that some of the planets in our own solar system are nothing but
a mass of liquid fire. I do not know how true this is, I can not
vouch for it. It is a long time since I was there, and I have
forgotten much that may, at some future day, be brought to my
recollection, when the vail shall be parted from all eyes, and we
see as we are seen and know as we are known. Here is my friend
and brother Pratt, he is more skilled in astronomy than I am, and
if I am guilty of an error, he can correct me if he sees fit. But
some learned men say that there are worlds which roll in eternal
night, not one ray of light from the grand central luminary
penetrating or dawning upon their orbit, but they move in an
eternal eclipse--always dark. I do not know how this is, but I
know that some will come up and want an inheritance, and it will
be said to them, "Depart from me, ye workers of iniquity, into
everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels." There
are some now who love darkness rather than light because their
deeds are evil. I will venture to say that if some of the zealous
opposers of what is sometimes called "Mormonism," who were once
united with us, could see an improper step made by your humble
servants, they would seize upon it with the greatest avidity. If
there was a dark spot in my moral character, that would be food
for them. I, or my friend brother Pratt, or President Young, may
have achieved worthy exploits and done great good, but they pass
by this, they have no relish or appetite for it; but the moment
there is a dark spot, either real or imaginary, they are ready to
seize upon it with the greatest avidity, and roll it as a sweet
morsel under their tongue, because they are children of darkness
and love darkness rather than light. Now the sun, the great
fountain of light of our system, is said to have dark spots on
his disc. I believe it is so, but there is much light there, and
he throws his rays to an immense distance. Now, because he has
some dark spots on him, shall we dispense with and refuse to
receive his light? No, with all the darkness he has we love the
sun, and whether on sea or on land his rays are cheering and
welcome, notwithstanding the dark spots that may exist on his
face. So in relation to the servants of God. We may be men of
like passions with others, but if an additional halo of light and
glory burst upon us, and we as reflectors send that abroad for
the benefit of others, the dark spots, real or imaginary, in our
characters, should be overlooked, as those of the sun are
overlooked.
311
Well, others besides those I have referred to, come up and want a
mansion. They are asked--"Have you showed yourselves friends to
the kingdom of God?" "No, we have sought to hedge up its progress
in every way we could. We have told all the lies we could
manufacture, and sent them abroad on the wires to create a storm
of indignation against it--anything was justifiable to suppress
'Mormonism.' We have even twisted plain, straightforward common
sense law into a ram's horn, and made it so complex that neither
we nor anyone else could understand it, for the sole purpose of
ensnaring the feet of the defenders of this latter-day kingdom."
"Well, you want a mansion, and you love darkness rather than
light because your deeds are evil?" "Yes." "Well, yonder is your
home, in that world that rolls in eternal eclipse." "And these
shall go away," says the Bible, "into outer darkness, where there
shall be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth." Dwell in
eternal night! Oh, ye sons of rebellion, ye daughters of
departure, contemplate the character of your future home! Turn
from your ways, seek unto the Lord God of Israel, and know ye
that mortal man here on earth is not perfect. I do not know that
the angels of God are perfect, I rather question it. You question
the perfection of the angels of God? A little, for the Bible says
that God charges his angels with folly. If the angels are charged
with folly by him who sits on the throne, with much more
propriety may mortals who are at a greater distance from the
central government be charged with the same. I will tell you that
this is a singular kind of a world, and the machinery of man is
very singular and complex, and it requires the wisdom of God to
know and understand everything in relation to it, or even a small
portion of it. I might go on and point out the different
characters, but having given you two or three examples, you must
draw your own inference in relation to the condition hereafter of
every living being. "Why," says one, "I expect to go into the
celestial kingdom." You do? That is the highest grade of glory
that we have any knowledge of. Put you or me into a place that we
are not qualified to fill, and is it a heaven or a hell to us?
For instance, there are many heavy mercantile firms in this city.
An upright man, full of charity and good works, applies at the
counting house of one of these large establishments for a berth
as chief clerk, to keep their financial affairs properly posted
up. He knows nothing about figures or about wielding the pen, but
he is a good man. Let the weight of responsibility gradually
descend and fall upon him, and he says, "I am crushed, I can not
do anything with this position, Oh deliver me from this place!"
How often do we hear men say, "I am going to be a ruler in the
kingdom of God." The presumption is that such men possess certain
necessary qualifications. To be a ruler without the
qualifications for one, is to receive an exalted position to
become a mark of ridicule for all beholders. I will tell you that
to put you or me in a place that we are not qualified to fill, it
is a hell for us, instead of a place of honor and exaltation, and
I feel that I have no time to lose in preparing and qualifying
myself to learn first to be a subject. If I can not submit to be
a subject, how can I ever expect to be a ruler? If I have not
regard enough for the kingdom of God to comply with its
requirements and laws and to pay my tithing, but show myself
disloyal all my life, how can I expect to be elevated as a ruler
in that kingdom that has no end? I can not expect it.
311
I will now repeat what I said before--the celestial kingdom is
the seat of all science, and like a great tree whose shadow
reaches our earth, true science emanates thence, where it exists
in its most refined and pure state, down here to our earth. Now,
unless we go to and establish schools to educate ourselves and
our children in all the shadows that are reflected upon our
earth, how can we manage the substance? As it is said, "He that
is unfaithful in the unrighteous mammon, who shall commit to his
trust the true riches?" And if we are unfaithful to the shadows,
who will commit to us the golden beams of purity, intelligence
and love, even the sciences as they exist in the celestial
kingdom? It is for us to look at and reflect upon these things,
and to devote ourselves to the acquisition of knowledge.
311
This city is becoming a fashionable city. I see that the
Latter-day Saints are copying the fashions of the outside world.
I love to see innocence, purity, cleanliness and all this, and I
would rather have disclosed to me, in the visions of one night's
sleep, the true principles of godliness as they exist on the
other side of the vail, than to have all the pride and fashion
that decorate these poor mortal bodies, for one view of eternal
things throws into the shade all earthly grandeur and glory. This
is what I delight in. Brethren and sisters, let us pay our
tithing, that we may earn an inheritance in the kingdom of God,
and we shall find that our loyalty in this shape will actually
purchase us an everlasting inheritance.
312
Says one, "What becomes on tithing? I would like to know whether
these Priests, Apostles, Bishops and Presidents use it all up in
extravagance?" I will tell you where it goes, though I am under
no obligation to do so, any more than I am to tell what is done
with the money I pay to the tax collector, or the internal
revenue man. When you go to the marriage altar, or to be baptized
for yourselves or for your dead relatives, or to get your
sealings and anointings, or anything of this kind, do you have to
pay five shillings or five dollars for officiating for your
father or mother who is dead and gone, that they may share the
benefits of the everlasting Gospel with you, or are those
ordinances free to you? You do not have to pay for them, do you?
Do you find beggars in the streets of Zion? I have traveled
through many countries in the old world, and I could hardly pass
a corner, without hearing the petition--"A penny if you please, a
penny, a penny. My mother is at home sick, got a little baby and
cannot get out, and they are afflicted. Oh, please sir, a penny,
a sixpence to help them!" No such scenes in this country. I have
seen nothing of the kind, and I question very much whether you
have. In those old countries beggary is going on in five hundred
different ways, but you do not see any of it here. What stops up
all these channels of distress? Tithing--the taxes you pay to the
kingdom of God. The little child's mother is provided for, if her
Bishop looks after her, and the presumption is that he does.
These little children are cared for. Is there any real poverty in
our land? There may be, but really the cases are few and far
between. All are well fed, all comfortably clad, and wherein they
are unable to do it themselves, the tithing department pays.
313
We may think that we are going to get all our sealings,
anointings our marriages and everything of that kind free, but we
are mistaken about that--we have got to pay for them all. How do
you pay? Tithing and offerings to the kingdom of God pay for it
all. Then when you come up to have accounts adjusted, and the
books are opened, and another book is opened and the dead are
judged out of those things written in the books according to
their works, they have paid the charges, and that which they
claim is their own, it is given to them of God. Not so with the
world, they only marry for time. I have married a great many
couples in the ways of the world, but I never married any of them
for time and for all eternity, my mind did not stretch so far
then--I married them until death should separate them. Those who
have paid no tithing and have not enlisted under the law and
commandments of God, those who have had no faith in Jehovah and
in the resurrection, are parted when they go down to the grave.
Farewell to all alliance then! They have raised families of
lovely children, they have passed through sorrow, tribulation and
joy, tasted the sweet and the bitter together, but when they
reach the grave farewell for ever, an eternal separation takes
place. Not so with the Latter-day Saints. We are administered to
by the authority of that priesthood that is without beginning of
days or end of life, whose ministration is just as efficient the
other side of the vail as this side, for what it binds on earth
is bound in heaven, and what it looses on earth is loosed in
heaven. If we have not a priesthood possessing this power and
authority we have none at all. We claim that we have, and it
cannot be found anywhere else. If we go to the Presbyterian
church, with all respect to its ministers and people, and ask,
"Do your ministrations reach beyond the vail? Can you marry for
time and for all eternity?" we are told, "No." And every other
sect in Christendom will say the same. They could just as easily
argue me out of my existence as to convince me that the
ministrations of my priesthood do not reach within the vail of
eternity, and run parallel with the great God himself, because
that priesthood comes from God, and Heaven can not destroy his
own power, unless he destroy himself, and that he will not do, he
will not be guilty of suicide. This is the superiority of the
Priesthood that is conferred upon the Latter-day Saints; and
although we have this treasure in earthen vessels, and are
despised and rejected, there is a purity and an eternal principle
embraced therein which will last until the heavens are no more.
313
God bless you, Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, January 19, 1873
Orson Pratt, January 19, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the 14th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Evening, January 19, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
DIFFERENT DEGREES OF REWARD AND OF PUNISHMENT--MARRIAGE FOR
ETERNITY NECESSARY TO A FULLNESS OF CELESTIAL GLORY.
313
I do not know when I was more edified and instructed than I was
this afternoon in listening to the discourse of Elder Hyde.
According to my judgment it was certainly calculated in its
nature to edify and instruct every person who listened to it with
attention. It was delivered in eloquent language, was plain and
simple, pointed and definite, and, if obeyed, was calculated to
do good to all.
313
The Lord has appointed a variety of gifts in his kingdom, some
having one and some another, and especially in the Quorum of the
Twelve, of which Brother Hyde is the President, there is a great
variety of gifts and talents, and it gives me great pleasure to
listen to them, and it would be with great satisfaction that I
would listen more than I do. But I am frequently called upon to
address the people when I would prefer to listen to others.
314
What subject I may present before you to-night I do not know.
Sometimes a subject will open to my mind while I am listening to
the singers, and sometimes I rise without having the first thing
before my mind to speak to the people, and I trust in God to give
me what is needful at the very moment. This is the case with me
this evening, and I do humbly pray to my Father in heaven, in the
name of his beloved Son, that he will grant unto me the Spirit to
discern what to say and what would be most adapted to the wants
of those who are present. There is such a vast field of light and
truth which God has revealed in different ages of the world, and
more especially in our times, that the great difficulty with the
servant of God, I have often thought, is to distinguish and
discern what portion of the great variety would be most pleasing
in the sight of the Lord to lay before the people.
314
There are a great many peculiarities in our religion, but the
generality of the Latter-day Saints are well acquainted with
them. Sometimes strangers attend our meetings who would be glad
to have us dwell upon certain subjects, which they think would
greatly interest them. We are willing to do so, but still we
study to have the Spirit to edify all, whether they be in the
Church, or whether they be strangers who are here on a visit.
314
Among the peculiarities which God has revealed directly to the
Latter-day Saints may be mentioned the various degrees of
happiness and glory which exist in the eternal world, also the
various degrees of punishment upon the different classes of
individuals. Formerly, before we became Latter-day Saints, we
were instructed by our fathers and mothers, and by the ministers
whom we heard, that there were but two places in the eternal
worlds, one or the other of which was intended for all the human
family; that all that happened to miss heaven would be sent to
the other place, which they called hell. This subject was dwelt
upon very lengthily and very interestingly by Brother Hyde this
afternoon, and during his remarks he told about the different
mansions that God had in reserve for all the human family, some
of which are glorious, and others intended as places of
punishment. These things were dwelt upon very fully by Brother
Hyde, in some respects, but there were some items connected with
them that were not fully investigated and laid before the people.
314
They way that we obtained a more perfect knowledge of the future
condition of the children of men was by revelation; indeed all
the knowledge that ever mankind did obtain in relation to this
matter was by revelation. We read in Paul's first epistle to the
Corinthians something about the different glories connected with
the resurrection of the dead. We are told in the reasoning of
Paul that when people come forth from the dead, some will inherit
one glory and some another; and these glories are typified by the
various creations which the Lord had made. Paul says, "there is
one glory of the sun, another glory of the moon, and another
glory of the stars, and that as one star differs from another
star in glory, so also is the resurrection of the dead."
315
We are also told in the Scriptures that there is a great variety
of punishments as well as glories--these punishments differing in
nature according to the works of the children of men. For
instance we read of some persons who are to be punished for sins
they have committed without any chance of forgiveness either in
this world or in the world to come. This plainly indicates to us
that certain classes of sins can not be forgiven in that world,
while other classes of sins may be forgiven on certain
conditions. He that sins against the Holy Ghost, we are told,
shall not receive forgiveness. Men can sin against God the
Father, and if they repent in this world, they may be forgiven;
if they sin against Jesus his Son, and repent and work the works
of righteousness, these sins may be blotted out; but if they sin
against the Holy Ghost after having received the same and been
baptized by him, there is no forgiveness for that sin, neither in
this world nor in the world to come.
315
Now if there is to be a variety of punishments as well as a
variety of glories, there must be a variety of places of
punishment. It would look inconsistent to us, even here in this
life, to see a person guilty of but a small crime against the
laws of our country thrust into the same dungeon with the
murderer. It would be unjust, for instance, according to our
notions, for a person who has committed but a trifling offence
against the law to be thrust into the darkest and deepest dungeon
along with him who has shed innocent blood. We have sufficient
justice in our own bosoms to classify these individuals and to
pint out to each the apartment in which he is to dwell. Is the
Lord less just than man? Is he not filled with the great
principles of justice far beyond that which any man ever did
receive? From him have emanated all our ideas of justice,
consequently we cannot look upon him as a being who would consign
the poor heathen who died without a knowledge of the law, and
others who have led moral lives but who have not obeyed the
Gospel of the Son of God, to the same punishment as the murderer
and him who sheds innocent blood. We should regard it as unjust
if all these classes were to be thrust into one place, there to
welter under the same conditions of punishment throughout the
endless ages of eternity without any hope of redemption. I could
not look upon this as just, and I presume that no other
reflecting being could, especially if he was acquainted with the
Scriptures. Jesus, in speaking upon this subject, says--"He that
knows his master's will and does it not shall be beaten with many
stripes;" while he who is ignorant of his master's will and does
things that are worthy of stripes, shall be beaten with few. I
have not quoted the saying of Jesus, word for word, but I have
given you the sentiment; the Lord, therefore, in judging man,
judges not by the act in all cases, but according to the
understanding and knowledge of the individual who performs that
act. If two persons were each to commit a murder--shed innocent
blood--and one had a full knowledge of the revealed law of God,
and the other was in entire ignorance of it, there would be a
distinction in judging these two characters. We would say at once
that he who had sinned against knowledge should receive a heavier
punishment than he who had not this knowledge.
316
Suppose that Saints, who have not only heard the law of God, but
have embraced the Gospel of the Son of God, have been renewed in
their minds by the power of the Holy Ghost and have tasted the
good word of God and the powers of the world to come, should be
so far overcome as to shed innocent blood, would there be any
forgiveness for them? Not at all. Would it be our duty, if such a
person were judged, and condemned by the laws of our country to
be hanged by the neck until dead, to visit him and pray that God
would forgive his sins? No, we would be sinning against God in
doing so. Why? Because God has revealed to us that persons who
have this light and knowledge, and shed innocent blood, cannot be
forgiven in this world nor in the world to come, and we should
not ask him to do that which he has decreed that he will not do.
Such a person commits the unpardonable sin--he sheds innocent
blood after having the light of the Holy Ghost, knowing that in
so doing he is not only sinning against God the Father and
against his Son, but against the convictions of the Holy Ghost.
316
Supposing, again, that persons outside of this Church, that have
heard the Gospel of the Son of God, but have refused to obey it,
should murder, they sin against great light and knowledge, but
not against the Holy Ghost. Here is the difference between the
two classes of murderers; the Latter-day Saint would never be
forgiven, but he would become a son of perdition.
317
Now let me bring up some instances from Scripture in regard to
these different classes of individuals and the light and
knowledge which they had. Some may be forgiven, as I have already
stated, in the world to come. Let me refer you to a certain class
that are named in the Scriptures that will be forgiven on certain
conditions. You recollect that the Apostle Peter, having gathered
around him a large congregation of Jews, the murderers of our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, who had shed innocent blood,
delivered to them a discourse, but it was a very different one to
that which he preached to the mixed multitude who had gathered
from the different nations on the Day of Pentecost. When he
preached to the latter he said, "Repent, every one of you, and be
baptized in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of your
sins, and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, for the
promise is unto you and your children, and unto all that are afar
off, even to as many as the Lord our God shall call." That was a
true Gospel sermon, preached to individuals that were not guilty
of murder. They were all required to repent, believe in Jesus
Christ, to be baptized in water for the remission of sins, and
they and all who were afar off, who would receive the Gospel,
were promised the forgiveness of sins and the gift of the Holy
Ghost. But come to the other sermon to which I have referred, the
one preached to the wicked and corrupt Jews who crucified Jesus.
Peter said, we wot [know] not but what you have done it through
your ignorance--in other words, you have not received the Holy
Ghost and because you have not had the Spirit of the Lord resting
upon you, you have shed the blood of the Innocent One, you have
murdered the Son of God, the Messiah; but you have done it
through ignorance. Now the question is, was there any hope for
them? Could they have their sins forgiven in this life? No,
Peter, after first telling them that they had shed the blood of
the Just One in their ignorance, then tells them how and when
they may obtain forgiveness. I will repeat the worlds: "Repent
ye, therefore, and be converted"--no baptism here--"repent ye,
therefore, and be converted that your sins may be blotted out,
when he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto
you, whom the heavens must receive until the times of the
restitution of all things spoken of by the mouth of all the Holy
Prophets since the world began." He did not tell them to be
baptized for the remission of their sins. Why? Because he
understood too well the nature of their sin to tell them to be
baptized for the remission thereof. He knew they had lost that
privilege in this world, because they had shed the blood of the
Holy and Just One. He said to them, If you will repent now, you
murderers, you who have killed Jesus, the Just and Holy One,
there is one hope that even your sins may be blotted out. Not in
this life, not by baptism for the remission of sins, but when the
time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord and
he shall send Jesus Christ whom the heavens will receive until
then, and not even then unless they repent while here in this
life. This must have been sorrowful news to those to whom it was
communicated, if they believed it.
317
"Repent and be converted." Notice now what this sentence means.
The world "converted" has been construed to be born of God," or
to become a new creature; but the true meaning of the word is to
reform our lives, converted from doing that which is evil to do
that which is good--turning from sin and transgression to that
which is righteous before God. If those Jews would repent and
turn or be converted from their sins to do that which was right
they had a hope of having their sins blotted out when Jesus
should be sent from the presence of the Father in the times of
restitution; but until then they must remain in torment,
suffering for their sins.
318
Let me bring up another instance. There was a man in ancient
times, named David, and because he was a man after God's own
heart, the Lord chose him to be king over Israel. The Lord also
greatly blessed this man, and poured out richly upon him the
spirit of prophecy and revelation, and many of his psalms, which
we now sing with so much pleasure in our meetings, contain
prophecies relating to the most remote generations of the human
family. This man was Prophet and Revelator, he was filled with
the Holy Ghost and spoke as he was moved upon by that Spirit. God
loved him, and said that he was a man after his own heart. God
also blessed him, while but a ruddy youth, fleeing from cave to
cave, and from mountain to mountain to escape from the
persecutions of Saul, who sought to take his life, with eight
wives. This was before he was placed upon the throne. But after
Saul had been cut off and David had been elevated to the throne
of Israel, the Lord also gave him all the wives of Saul his
master. So says Nathan the Prophet, and he was sent to reprove
David. What had he done to need reproof? Why he had taken his
neighbor's wife, a person he had no claim upon, and he not only
committed adultery by thus taking the wife of another, but by his
order her lawful husband was placed in from of the battle that he
might be destroyed, and he was destroyed, hence, though he
himself did not thrust a dagger to his heart, he became a
murderer in the sight of heaven by having this man placed where
his blood would be shed. After all his goodness, and after all
the light and knowledge which God had given to this man, he
committed these two great crimes. Nathan the Prophet was sent to
reprove him for them, and he did so by means of a parable. He
told David, the king, that a certain poor man had but one ewe
lamb, and his rich neighbor, close buy, had a great flock, and
there came along a stranger, and the rich man went to this poor
man's fold and took the only sheep he had and dressed it in order
to make a sumptuous feast for the stranger. This kindled David's
wrath, for though he had transgressed, the principle of justice
was not extinct in his bosom, and he said, "he who hath done this
thing shall surely die." Nathan said, "Thou art the man." god
hath given to thee a great number of wives, among the rest all
the wives of thy master Saul. All this great flock of sheep, as
it were, has been given unto you from the Lord, yet you have gone
and taken the only one that a poor man had, and committed
adultery with her, therefore said the Lord, I will punish you.
With what kind of punishment was this man punished? Amongst them
was that of suffering in the eternal worlds. How long? I can not
say exactly, but a good many centuries, a thousand years at
least; this man, once righteous, now wicked, had to suffer the
penalty of that crime. Did he repent? He did. Did he cry unto the
Lord? He did. Was he sorely troubled? He was, and he was perhaps
as repentant as any one could be; but the decree had gone forth,
and hence that man had to endure the penalty of his crime. Peter,
when referring to this subject on the day of Pentecost, as
recorded in the second chapter of the Acts of the Apostles,
quotes from the Psalms of David, and says, "Thou hast not left my
soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see
corruption." It seems that after all, though David's repentance
could not wipe away his sin, yet he had a hope, and he looked
forward to the time when he would be liberated from hell; when
that time arrived he would come forth and receive some kind of a
glory, how much I do not know, for it is not revealed; but
suffice it to say, he sinned against great light and knowledge
and because of his sin he fell from a very high position. That he
had received many of the principles that are now understood by
the Latter-day Saints under the new and everlasting covenant, I
doubt; for if he had he never could have been redeemed, he never
could have said, "Thou wilt redeem my soul from hell," etc.
319
Let us refer to some other instances. There were the Lamanites, a
people who, according to the Book of Mormon, had dwindled in
ignorance on this American continent before Christ came. They had
dwelt here for centuries, and before the coming of our Savior
they were sunk in the depths of ignorance. They had lost the
knowledge of the principles of salvation, and they had become a
very ignorant, wicked, idolatrous people. The Nephites, and
enlightened nation which dwelt on this continent at the same time
went missionaries to the Lamanites to convert them, if possible,
from their sins. They went amongst them and had much success,
bringing a great many thousands of them to a knowledge of the
truth. This nation had been taught, in their ignorance and
wickedness, that there was no harm in murdering the Nephites, and
they had murdered them while in ignorance of the law of God; but
when the Gospel was laid before them, could they obtain
forgiveness for these murders? On certain conditions, and one of
them was that they would lay down their weapons of war, and they
did so, burying them deep in the earth as a testimony before God
that they would no more shed innocent blood; and through their
great sorrow and repentance the Lord had compassion upon them,
and he forgave in this life the sins they had committed in
ignorance. That showed that murderers, under certain conditions,
could be forgiven here; but there are other classes of murderers
for whose forgiveness in this life it would be very wrong to
pray, even if they never had received the Holy Ghost--I mean
those who have read and understood the revealed law. To pray for
present forgiveness would be contrary to the mind and will of
God, and hence it would be sinning against him. I believe I have
said sufficient to show the principle upon which the Lord acts in
punishing the sins of the children of men. Now let me say a few
words in relation to their coming forth and redemption.
319
I will here ask, will many of these individuals who have sinned
against God come forth and inherit that high degree of exaltation
in the celestial world? This is a great question. Can they
inherit the same glory that will be enjoyed by the Saints who
have lived in different ages of the world and endured faithful to
the end? Can they receive that full exaltation and shine forth in
the kingdom of God? No. Why not? Because they are not prepared
for it. I do not say but what they may in some future age,
according to the purposes of God, be led along from one step to
another, until, finally, some of them attain to celestial glory.
We Latter-day Saints believe that when the Lord comes he will
redeem the heathen nations, not into his presence, into celestial
glory, but they will come forth from their graves; not with
celestial bodies and prepared to wear a celestial crown, to shine
forth as the sun in the kingdom of their Father. No; such a glory
they cannot have, but they will have a glory adapted to the light
and knowledge which they have had, and that glory is typified by
the moon. "There is one glory of the sun, another glory of the
moon, and another glory of the stars, and as one star differeth
from another star in glory, so also in the resurrection of the
dead." Now, there is quite difference among these celestial
bodies that shine in the firmament. The sun is far more glorious
than the moon, so much so that astronomers tell us it would take
several hundred thousand full moons to make a light equal to the
light of the sun; in other words, if all our visible firmament
from the horizon was just one glare of moons, all this would not
be equal to the light of the sun, consequently you can form an
idea of the difference between the glory of the sun and the glory
of the moon.
319
Again, when we look upon those twinkling stars in the firmament
of heaven, we see some shining with a much greater brilliancy
than others, and they are divided into classes by astronomers,
and ranked according to their magnitude, or according to the
intensity of the light they shed forth upon our world, not
according to the real nature of the stars, because they are too
far off for us to judge of that, only we know that they are suns,
the centres of systems, and that they shine by their own
radiance; and if we were as near to them as we are to our sun,
many of them would be far more resplendent in their glory, and
would shed forth more light than our sun does. But the Apostle
Paul in speaking on this subject had reference to the glory of
the stars as they appear to us, and to the amount of light which
they seem to send forth.
320
Now those persons who receive a glory like that of the stars, or
as the light of the stars appears to us, will not come up to that
glory enjoyed by the heathen, for their glory will be like that
of the moon, and all the stars put together do not shed forth as
much light upon our world as one moon, and hence the glory of
that class of beings whose glory differs as the stars will be
lower than that of the heathen, for they will receive the glory
of the moon. But all who go into the glory typified by the sun
will have to obey certain principles of law, and that law is a
celestial law. What is that law? It is the law of the Gospel. All
persons in these days who enter celestial glory must not only be
acquainted with the Gospel as taught in ancient times, but they
must be acquainted with it as it is taught and administered by
men having authority to administer it now. If they do this, they
will be entitled to the blessings of the Gospel, to the
forgiveness of sins in this world, and being thus made the sons
and daughters of God, they will be entitled to all the fullness
of the glory of that plan of salvation, and Jesus says that they
shall shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of my Father.
320
As we have not time to enter fully into the investigation of all
these different glories, I wish more particularly to inquire
concerning the nature of this higher state of glory called
celestial. Will there be any difference among those who are
redeemed into that glory? There will, in some respects. They will
all be equal in the enjoyment of some blessings, and so far their
glory will be the same, but yet in some respects there will be a
difference. Some who will inherit a portion of that glory will
have no families, they will be deprived of that blessing to all
ages of eternity, while others will receive an exaltation and
kingdom, and will have wives, children, dominion, greatness and
power far above those I first referred to.
321
Now why would there be this distinction in the celestial kingdom,
and what is the cause of it? It is because certain persons who
have obeyed the Gospel have become careless and indifferent in
regard to securing that high exaltation which was within their
reach. God has revealed to this people what is needful for an
exaltation in his kingdom. He has revealed to us, as we heard
from Elder Hyde this afternoon, that marriage is destined for
eternity as well as time,--that the marriage covenant between
male and female must be entered into in this life, and the
ordinance performed here by those whom God has appointed and
ordained to hold the keys and authority to seal on earth that it
may be sealed in heaven; for in heaven there is neither marrying
nor giving in marriage; no such thing can be attended to there.
Now persons among the Latter-day Saints who do not enter into
this covenant of marriage but prefer to lead a single life can
not enjoy all that fullness of exaltation which will be possessed
by those who have had this covenant sealed upon them. They might
not have forfeited the blessing of celestial glory altogether,
but they have forfeited the right to have wives by which only
they could have a posterity in the eternal worlds. Who will be
the subjects in the kingdom which they will rule who are exalted
in the celestial kingdom of our God? Will they reign over their
neighbors' children? Oh no. Over whom then will they reign? Their
own children, their own posterity will be the citizens of their
kingdoms; in other words, the patriarchal order will prevail
there to the endless ages of eternity, and the children of each
patriarch will be his while eternal ages roll on. This is not
according to present customs, for now when a young man reaches
the age of twenty-one years he is free from his parents, and
considers that he is no longer under the necessity of being
controlled by his father. That is according to our customs, and
the laws of our country. It is a very good law and adapted to the
imperfections that now exist; but it will not be so in the
eternal worlds. There will never be any such thing there as being
form under their father's rule, no matter whether twenty-one or
twenty-one thousand years of age, it will make no difference,
they will still be subject to the laws of their Patriarch or
Father, and they must observe and obey them throughout all
eternity. There is only one way by which children can be freed
from that celestial law and order of things, and that is by
rebellion. They are agents, and they can rebel against God and
against the order of things he has instituted there, just as
Satan and the fallen angels rebelled and turned away. The
increase of those who are exalted in that kingdom will endure for
ever; and the bringing forth of children will not be attended
with sorrow, pain and distress as it is here: these evils have
come in consequence of the fall of man and the transgression by
him of God's holy laws. But when men are redeemed to immortality
and eternal life there will be no pain, sorrow or affliction of
body, and yet children will be brought forth, and to their
increase there will be no end. Hence the promise of God to the
patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, that their seed should be as
numerous as the stars of heaven, or as the sands upon the sea
shore. We all know that the sand on the sea shore is innumerable
to us. If we take a handful it numbers its tens of thousands of
grains, and if Abraham's seed are to become as numerous as the
sands on the sea shore they will fill a great many worlds like
this of ours. There is to be no end to the increase of the old
Patriarch, and, as his posterity increases, world on world will
be created and brought into existence, and those children will be
sent forth from the presence of the Patriarch to take upon
themselves bodies, as we have done here in this world. I mean
their spirits. Understand me now, resurrected parents are the
parents not of bodies of flesh and bones, but of spirits the same
as we were before we came and took these mortal bodies, that is,
when we lived up in yonder world in the presence of our Father,
and in the company of the thousands of millions of our brother
and sister spirits. They will be of the same class and nature,
and they will have to take their position in worlds that will be
created for them the same as we came from heaven to this world,
that we might gain knowledge and experience that we could not
gain in any other way. Thus will the Lord continue his work and
purposes, and there will be one eternal round in creation, and
redemption, in the formation and redemption of worlds, and
bringing them back into his presence.
321
We read that God is the Father of our spirits, the Father of the
spirits of all flesh Moses calls him. The Apostle James tells the
Saints in his day that we have fathers in the flesh who have
corrected us, how much more ought we to be obedient to the Father
of our spirits and live?
322
What will become of the old bachelor who refuses to obey the
ordinance of marriage? We have preached to the young men of this
Territory, and laid before them the sacredness of the marriage
covenant. We have told them and the young women that it is their
duty to enter into this covenant as much as it is their duty to
be baptized for the remission of their sins. The same God that
commanded the latter gave the revelation concerning the marriage
covenant, yet there are some who will give heed to one
ordinance--baptism--but will be careless and indifferent about
the other. By taking this course they do not altogether forfeit
their right and title to enter that kingdom, but they do forfeit
their right and title to be kings therein. What will be their
condition there? They will be Angels.
322
There are many different lasses of beings in the eternal worlds,
and among them are angels. Who are these angels? Some of them
have never yet come to take upon them bodies of flesh and bones,
but they will come in their times, seasons and generations and
receive their tabernacles, the same as we have done. Then there
are others who were resurrected when Jesus was, when the graves
of the Saints were opened and many came forth and showed
themselves to those who were then living in the flesh. Besides
these there are angels who have been to this world and have never
yet received a resurrection, whose spirits have gone hence into
celestial paradise, and there await the resurrection. We have now
mentioned three classes of angels. There are others, among them
some redeemed from former creations before this world was made,
one of whom administered to our first parents after they were
cast out of the garden as they were offering sacrifices and burnt
offerings, according to the commandments which they received from
God when they were driven from the garden. After they had done
this many days an Angel came and ministered to them and inquired
of them why they offered sacrifices and burnt offerings unto the
Lord. The answer was, "I know not, save it be that the Lord
commanded me." Then this angel went on to explain to our first
parents why these offerings were made and why they were commanded
to shed the blood of beasts, telling them that all these things
were typical of the great and last sacrifice that should be
offered up for all mankind, namely the Son of the living God.
These angels that came to Adam were not men who had been redeemed
from this earth--not men who had been translated from this
earth--but they pertained to former worlds. They understood about
the coming of Jesus, the nature of these sacrifices, &c.
323
Some of these angels have received their exaltation, and still
are called angels. For instance Michael has received his
exaltation. He is not without his kingdom and crown, wife or
wives and posterity, because he lied faithful to the end. Who is
he? Our first, great progenitor, Adam, is called Michael, the
Prince. I am mentioning now things that the Latter-day Saints are
acquainted with. Many of these things I have just been quoting
are revelations given to us, as those who are readers will
recollect. Some of these angels have received their exaltation.
They are kings, they are priests, they have entered into their
glory and sit upon thrones--they hold the sceptre over their
posterity. Those other classes I have mentioned have neglected
the new and everlasting covenant of marriage. They can not
inherit this glory and these kingdoms--they can not be crowned in
the celestial world. What purpose will they serve? They will be
sent on errands--be sent to other worlds as missionaries to
minister, they will be sent on whatever business the Lord sees
proper; in other words, they will be servants. To whom will they
be servants? To those who have obeyed and remained faithful to
the new and everlasting covenant, and have been exalted to
thrones; to those who have covenanted before God with wives so
that they may raise up and multiply immortal intelligent beings
through all the ages of eternity. Here is the distinction of
classes, but all of the same glory, called celestial glory.
323
But how about these terrestrial, can they come up into the
celestial? No, their intelligence and knowledge have not prepared
and adapted them to dwell with those who reign in celestial
glory, consequently they can not even be angels in that glory.
They have not obeyed the law that pertains to that glory, and
hence they could not abide it. But will there be blessings
administered to them by those who dwell in celestial glory? Yes,
angels will be sent forth from the celestial world to minister to
those who inherit the glory of the moon, bearing messages of joy
and peace and of all that which is calculated to exalt, to redeem
and ennoble those who have been resurrected into a terrestrial
glory. They can receive the Spirit of the Lord there and the
ministration of angels there.
324
Now let us come to still inferior glories. I have mentioned those
who inherit the glory of the stars. Who are they? They are not
the heathen, for they come up higher--into the terrestrial glory.
Who are they, then, who are permitted only to inherit a glory
typified by the stars? They are the general world of mankind,
those who have heard the Gospel of the Son of God but have not
obeyed it. They are to be punished. How long? Until Jesus has
reigned here on the earth a thousand years. How much longer?
Until the "little season" has passed away after the end of the
thousand years, and then when the final end shall come and the
trump of God shall sound, and the great white throne shall appear
and the heaven and the earth shall flee away; when that time
shall come, the sound of the trump shall call forth those
sleeping millions of all ages, generations and nations who have
heard the sound of the Gospel and have not obeyed it, but until
then their bodies must sleep. They are not worthy of the first
resurrection." "Blessed and holy is he who has part in the first
resurrection, for on such the second death has no power." But
those who will not give heed to the law of the Gospel have no
claim on this first resurrection, and their bodies must sleep
through all these long centuries that are to intervene between
the time of their death and the end of the earth. Where will
their spirits be all that time? Not in any glory; they cannot
inherit a glory until their punishment is past. They are not
permitted to enter into prison. A great many people, and perhaps
some of the Latter-day Saints, have supposed that these
characters will go into prison. I do not know of any revelation
anywhere intimating that any one of this class of persons will
ever be put in prison. Where do they go? To another place
altogether different from a prison. A prison is designed for
those who never heard the Gospel here in the flesh, but yet have
committed a few sins without the knowledge of the revealed law,
and who have to be beaten with few stripes in prison. But those
persons who hear the Gospel, as the nations of the present
dispensation are doing, can not go to prison, it is not their
place. They fall below a prison, into outer darkness or hell,
where there will be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth.
There they have to remain with the devil and his angels in
torment and misery until the final end, then they come forth. Can
they come where God and Christ dwell? No, worlds without end they
cannot come there. Can they go into the presence of the heathen
where the glory is that of the moon? No, they cannot even come
there. When they are delivered from the power of Satan and
endless death and brought forth, where do they go? If they do not
go into the presence of God the Father, if they are not counted
worthy to enter into the terrestrial world among the heathen,
where will they go? God has provided mansions for them according
to their works here in this world. Having suffered the vengeance
of eternal fire for the space of a thousand years and upwards,
and suffered the extreme penalty of the law of God, they can now
be brought forth to inherit a place where they can be
administered unto by terrestrial beings and by Angels holding the
Priesthood, and where they can receive the Holy Ghost.
324
Those in the terrestrial world have the privilege of beholding
Jesus sometimes--they can receive the presence of the Son, but
not of the fullness of the Father; but those in the telestial
world, still lower, receive only the Holy Ghost, administered to
them by messengers ordained and sent forth to minister to them
for glory and exaltation, providing they will obey the law that
is given unto them, which law will be telestial law. That will
finally exalt them. How far I know not, but where God and Christ
are they can not come, worlds without end.
324
Now I think I have set forth these glories and these different
degrees of punishment, and the different classes of people that
are to be judged according to the knowledge that they have here
in this world. I have set these things forth as plainly as I am
capable of doing in one short discourse; and will bring my
remarks to a close in a few moments.
325
We are what the Lord calls Latter-day Saints--we have received
light and knowledge to that degree from the heavens that will, if
obeyed, exalt us to these high privileges of which I have been
speaking. On the other hand, if not obeyed, that very light and
knowledge are sufficient to sink us below all things. Hence we
stand on dangerous ground in some respects, and we have need to
fear lest we sin against this light and have not the privilege of
even the telestial world. He that rejects this covenant, (let me
quote the word of the Lord given in these last days)--"He that
rejecteth this covenant and altogether turns therefrom, shall not
have forgiveness of sins in this world nor in the world to come"
Do you hear it, Latter-day Saints? If you do, then strive with
all your hearts to be faithful. Strive to abide in the covenant
that you have received. There is no halfway business with us--we
have got to remain faithful to this covenant, for if we turn away
from it we can not even claim the glory that the world will have
when the last resurrection shall come, but our doom is fixed--we
have to dwell with the devil and his angels to all eternity. Why?
Because they once had light and knowledge, dwelt in the presence
of God, and knew about the glories of his kingdom. But they
rebelled, and kept not the law that was given to them--they
sinned against light and knowledge and were thrust down in chains
of darkness, there to remain until the judgment of the great day.
If we do not wish to be placed in their society for all eternity
we must abide in the covenant that we have made. If we do this,
Latter-day Saints, glory and honor and immortality and eternal
lives, and thrones and kingdoms and dominions and creations and
worlds will be given to us, and our posterity will increase
until, like the sand on the sea shore, they cannot be numbered.
325
Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Joseph
F. Smith, February 9, 1873
Joseph F. Smith, February 9, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER JOSEPH F. SMITH,
Delivered in the 13th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, February 9, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORD'S SUPPER.
F. Smith
While preparing the Sacrament the thought was impressed upon my
mind to make a few remarks on the subject, although I will not
promise to confine myself to it. I desire to be led by the Spirit
of the Lord.
F. Smith
The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper is a very important and sacred
ordinance; however simple it may appear to our minds it is one
which will add to our acceptance before God, or to our
condemnation.
F. Smith
It was instituted by the Savior in the place of the law of
sacrifice which was given to Adam, and which continued with his
children down to the days of Christ, but which was fulfilled in
his death, he being the great sacrifice for sin, of which the
sacrifices enjoined in the law given to Adam were a similitude.
F. Smith
The Lord designed in the beginning to place before man the
knowledge of good and evil, and gave him a commandment to cleave
to good and abstain from evil. But if he should fail, he would
give to him the law of sacrifice and provide a Savior for him,
that he might be brought back again into the presence and favor
of God and partake of eternal life with him. This was the plan of
redemption chosen and instituted by the Almighty before man was
placed on the earth. And when man did fall by transgressing the
law which was given him, the Lord gave to him the law of
sacrifice, and made it clear to his understanding, that it was
for the purpose of reminding him of that great event that should
transpire in the meridian of time, whereby he and all his
posterity might be brought forth by the power of redemption and
the resurrection from the dead, and partake of eternal life with
God in his kingdom. For this reason Adam and his posterity, from
generation to generation, observed this law, and continually
looked forward to a time when there should be provided for them a
means of redemption from the fall and restoration from death to
life, for death was the penalty of the law transgressed, which
man was powerless to avert, the fiat of God being, "In the day
that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die," and this penalty
was to follow upon all flesh, all being as helpless and dependent
as he was in this matter. Their only hope of redemption from the
grave and the power of death was in the Savior whom God had
promised, who should suffer death, but being without sin, having
himself never transgressed any law, being without blemish, pure
and holy, he should have power to break the bands of death and
from the grave rise to immortal life, thereby opening the way for
all who should follow him in the regeneration to come forth to
life again, redeemed from the penalty of the law, and from the
sin of transgression to eternal life. In anticipation, therefore,
of this great sacrifice which was to be offered for Adam and his
seed, they offered sacrifices, more or less acceptably, and in
conformity to the pattern given, in proportion to the knowledge
of God and of the gospel which they had, and their faithfulness
from generation to generation, to the days of Jesus.
F. Smith
They would take the firstlings of their flocks, the best fruits
of their fields, and those things which were emblematic of
purity, innocence, and perfection, symbolical of him who was
without sin, and as a lamb slain from the foundation of the
world," and offer sacrifices unto God in memory of him, and the
matchless and wonderful deliverance to be wrought out for them by
him.
F. Smith
Undoubtedly the knowledge of this law and of other rites and
ceremonies was carried by the posterity of Adam into all lands,
and continued with them, more or less pure, to the flood, and
through Noah, who was a "preacher of righteousness," to those who
succeeded him, spreading out into all nations and countries, Adam
and Noah being the first of their dispensations to receive them
from God. What wonder, then, that we should find relics of
Christianity, so to speak, among the heathens and nations who
know not Christ, and whose histories date back beyond the days of
Moses, and even beyond the flood, independent of and apart from
the records of the Bible." The ground taken by infidels, that
"Christianity" sprang from the heathen, it being found that they
have many rites similar to those recorded in the Bible, &c., is
only a vain and foolish attempt to blind the eyes of men and
dissuade them from their faith in the Redeemer of the world, and
from their belief in the Scriptures of divine truth, for if the
heathen have doctrines and ceremonies resembling to some extent
those which are recorded in the Scriptures, it only proves, what
is plain to the Saints, that these are the traditions of the
fathers handed down from generation to generation, from Adam,
through Noah, and that they will cleave to the children to the
latest generation, though they may wander into darkness and
perversion, until but a slight resemblance to their origin, which
was divine, can be seen. Yet this is a stumbling block to some
and there are those who endeavor to make progress on this
foundation against the work of God, but it is absolute folly. How
do we know that the Bible accounts of Adam and the succeeding
generations are correct? How do we know anything pertaining to
God and his dealings with men anciently? We know many things by
tradition, naturally, by intuition. "There is a spirit in man,
and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth it understanding."
There is an inherent principle in man that leads him to faith in
a superior or a Supreme Being, who has designed and created all
things. The Bible account, being the most rational and indeed
only historical one of the creation and the dealings of God with
men, we are constrained to accept it, in the main, as truth. Then
we behold the wonderful works of God spread out before us, the
starry heavens, the sun and moon, the earth on which we dwell,
and its times and seasons, its fruits and grains, its herbs and
varied productions, its fountains and rivers, mountains, valleys
and plains, and the mighty deep, all teeming with life and
animation; also the laws that govern these vast creations, and
man, the crowning work of God, on this earth, the masterpiece, if
you please, whom inspiration teaches us, is the offspring of that
eternal being who is the Creator of all things, he being the most
perfect in his organization, possessing greater attributes,
powers of reason, and intelligence than all other beings,
constituting him the "lord of creation," and the nearest in
resemblance to the Creator. We look at these things and we cannot
but come to the conclusion that this is not the work of chance,
but the result of matured omniscient designs and purposes, that
man is the son of God, possessing the attributes and image of his
Father, and in the beginning much of this intelligence, insomuch
that he was the companion and associate of God and dwelt with
him, and knew no sin. The Lord gave him the earth as a possession
and an inheritance, and laws for his government, that he might
fill the measure of his creation and have joy therein.
F. Smith
We look at these things in this manner, and they appear rational
and true, and we are convinced that they are true, that the
Scriptures, the Bible and Book of Mormon, are of divine origin.
F. Smith
But is this all we have to convince us of the truth of these
things, and to confirm upon our minds the principles laid down as
the Gospel of Christ, which is called "Mormonism?" These are the
only means of knowing in regard to the truth of religion that the
world claim to have, or that we had prior to becoming acquainted
with the doctrines of this Church, and we were in a measure
satisfied because it was the best light we possessed. There are
thousands of the most intelligent and best educated men that
live, and some of the greatest and brightest minds in many
nations now engaged in the dissemination of what they believe to
be the Gospel of Jesus Christ, claiming no other means of knowing
the truth, than tradition and reason, and they appear to be
satisfied with their convictions and faith. Millions of dollars
are expended annually in promulgating their religion, they
"compass land and sea to make proselytes," with no other
acknowledged evidence of the truth of the Bible, or of the divine
mission of Jesus Christ, than that I have cited.
F. Smith
But we go farther than this, although to my mind this mode of
reasoning is conclusive so far as it goes, and no doubt is left
as to the existence of our Father and God, or that he created all
things for a wise purpose, for his glory, and for the glory and
happiness of his children, that the earth and the fullness
thereof are God's, although designed for man and his use, and
finally to be given to him as an everlasting inheritance, when he
shall, through obedience, prove worthy of it. But, as I said
before, we go farther than this--there is "a more sure word of
prophecy, whereunto we do well to take heed." There is
revelation, a means of direct communication from God to man, a
power which can rend the veil between us and god, open the eyes
of our understanding, and bring us into proximity to him, so that
we may know him as he is, and learn from his own mouth and from
the mouths of his holy messengers his laws and will concerning
us, as anciently. This is the principle by which Adam knew God in
the garden where he was placed in the beginning. God came to him
day by day, and converses with another, giving him instructions
and counsel, for man was pure. And when he was cast out, God did
not forsake him, but appeared to him, sent his angels to
communicate with him concerning the plan of salvation, and gave
him the Holy Ghost to be a light in his path through the world,
made dreary to him by being banished from the immediate presence
of God.
F. Smith
Men have enjoyed privileges from that day to this, in proportion
to their worthiness, through every Gospel dispensation, thereby
obtaining a knowledge of God for themselves, not being left to
the traditions of the fathers and to reason alone. From time to
time the Lord raised up Prophets, to whom he has appeared, either
himself or by his messengers, as to Abraham, Jacob, Moses,
Samuel, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and all the Prophets from the
beginning, revealing his will and making known his requirements,
so that they have had a positive knowledge given to them of God
himself.
F. Smith
We claim that in this dispensation this key of knowledge has been
restored to man, and we stand upon the same footing with the
ancients, and are not left in uncertainty or doubt, the truth of
the Gospel being confirmed upon our understandings by inspiration
and revelation from God, "line upon line, and precept upon
precept," until we have obtained a knowledge of God, "whom to
know is life eternal."
F. Smith
The ordinances of the Gospel have been restored in their purity.
We know why the law of sacrifice was given to Adam, and how it is
that relics of the Gospel are found among the heathen.
F. Smith
When Jesus came and suffered, "the just for the unjust," he that
was without sin for him that had sinned, and was subject to the
penalty of the law which the sinner had transgressed, the law of
sacrifice was fulfilled, and in the stead thereof he gave another
law, which we call the "Sacrament of the Lord's Supper," by which
his life and mission, his death and resurrection, the great
sacrifice he had offered for the redemption of man, should be
kept in everlasting remembrance, for said he, "This do in
remembrance of me, for as often as ye eat this bread, and drink
of this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till he come." Therefore
this law is to us, what the law of sacrifice was to those who
lived prior to the first coming of the Son of Man, until he shall
come again. Therefore we must honor and keep it sacredly, for
there is a penalty attached to its violation, as we shall see by
reading the words of Paul: 1 Cor. xi, 27, 30.
F. Smith
"Wherefore whosoever shall eat this bread and drink this cup of
the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of
the Lord.
F. Smith
"But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread
and drink of that cup.
F. Smith
"For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh
damnation to himself, not discerning the Lord's body.
F. Smith
"For this cause many are weak and sickly among you, and many
sleep."
And it is even more plainly given in the Book of Mormon, which I
will read. Nephi, 8th chapter, 9th verse, page 471.
F. Smith
"And now it came to pass that when Jesus had spoken these words,
he turned his eyes again upon the disciples whom he had chosen,
and said unto them, behold verily, verily I say unto you, I give
unto you another commandment, and then I must go unto my Father,
that I may fulfill other commandments which he hath given me. And
now behold, this is the commandment which I give unto you, that
ye shall not suffer any one knowingly, to partake of my flesh and
blood unworthily, when ye shall minister it, for whoso' eateth
and drinketh my flesh and blood unworthily, eateth and drinketh
damnation to his soul; therefore if ye know that a man is
unworthy to eat and drink of my flesh and blood, ye shall forbid
him."
F. Smith
These are some of the injunctions and commandments that are given
in relation to the partaking of the Lord's supper. Now let us be
careful what we do, that we may not incur the penalty affixed to
the transgression of this law, remembering that the ordinances
which God has given are sacred and binding, that his laws are in
force, especially upon all that have covenanted with him in
baptism, and upon all unto whom they come, whether they embrace
them or no, as Jesus said, "this is the condemnation of the world
that light has come into the world, but ye love darkness rather
than light." Therefore all men will be held accountable for the
use they make of the light which they possess. For this reason we
are commanded to preach the Gospel unto every creature, that
those who obey and are baptized may be saved, and those who
reject it may be condemned.
F. Smith
I bear my testimony to these things. I know that Joseph Smith was
and is a Prophet of the living God, and President Young is also a
Prophet of God, and that by inspiration and revelation, and not
of man. God bless you and help us to be faithful, is my prayer in
the name of Jesus. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, January 26, 1873
Orson Pratt, January 26, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the 13th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, January 26, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
LATTER-DAY JUDGMENTS.
330
If I feel the liberty of the Spirit to do so, I shall read a
number of quotations, this afternoon, from the Book of Doctrine
and Covenants and from the Bible, and perhaps from the Book of
Mormon in relation to some of the great events which are about to
take place on the earth, more especially the judgments that are
coming to pass speedily. The first that I will read will be the
9th and 10th paragraphs of a revelation given through the Prophet
Joseph Smith, July 23rd, 1837.--
330
Verily, verily, I say unto you, Darkness covereth the earth, and
gross darkness the minds of the people, and all flesh has become
corrupt before my face. Behold, vengeance cometh speedily upon
the inhabitants of the earth, a day of wrath, a day of burning, a
day of desolation, of weeping, of mourning, and of lamentation,
and as a whirlwind it shall come upon all the face of the earth,
saith the Lord.
330
And upon my house shall it begin, and from my house shall it go
forth, saith the Lord. First among those among you, saith the
Lord, who have professed to know my name, and have not known me,
and have blasphemed against me in the midst of my house, saith
the Lord.
330
I will make a few remarks upon these passages as I read
them. It seems that this is a dispensation peculiar in its
nature, differing from former dispensations. It is a dispensation
of mercy and of judgment--of mercy to those who receive the
message of mercy, but of judgment to those who reject that
message. In other words it is a dispensation in which the Gospel
has been revealed from heaven, the servants of God called to
labor in the vineyard for the last time, and in which the Lord
intends to pour out great and terrible judgments upon the nations
of the wicked after they have been warned by the sound of the
everlasting Gospel. We are told in the revelation I have just
read, that vengeance cometh speedily upon the inhabitants of the
earth; that it is a day of wrath, burning, desolation, weeping,
mourning and lamentation, and that as a whirlwind these things
shall come upon the inhabitants of all the earth.
There are some who have been baptized into this Church, baptized,
perhaps, when they were eight years of age, entered into a
covenant with the Lord to keep his commandments according to the
best of their ability and understanding, some of whom, when they
have been brought into temptation, have turned away from that
covenant. Have they blasphemed the name of the Lord? I do know
that as I walk along the streets of Salt Lake City, I often see
boys from six or eight up to fifteen, sixteen, eighteen, and
perhaps twenty years of age collected together, and so far as my
ears are concerned, I can bear testimony that they have no regard
nor respect for the word of the Lord nor for the covenants into
which they have entered, for they blaspheme his name in the midst
of his house or kingdom. Will the Lord hold them guiltless? Can
they escape his wrath and indignation? Can their parents escape
the judgments of the Almighty if they have neglected to teach
them the wickedness of telling the name of the Lord in vain? If
the parents have not done this the sins of their young and
inexperienced offspring will rest more or less upon their heads.
If the children are lost the parents who have not properly
instructed them may be lost also, for the Lord has said in one of
the revelations which this book contains that inasmuch as they
who are parents do not teach their children the doctrine of
repentance, and faith in Christ, and the doctrine of baptism,
that they may be baptized when they are eight years old, and be
confirmed by the laying on of hands for the reception of the Holy
Ghost, the sins of the children shall be upon the heads of the
parents. Again he says, "You shall teach your children to walk
uprightly before the Lord, and teach them to pray to and have
faith in God, and if you do not these things, the sins of your
children shall rest upon your heads. And this shall be a law unto
my people in Zion, and in all the stakes of Zion that shall be
established."
331
Do we teach our children to walk uprightly and keep the
commandments of the Most High? Do we read to them the revelations
of God, and show them how wicked it is to take his name in vain?
Do we point out to them how that we should not curse ourselves,
nor one another, nor anything that is about us? Do we not often
hear children in the streets of our city heaping curses upon the
heads of their fellows? "D--n your soul," is often used by them:
"d--n my eyes," and d--n this thing, and d--n that thing, as
though they had no fear of God before them. Is this wicked or is
it not? Every person who reads the word of the Lord, knows that
it is wicked; and these children growing up thus in our midst go
from one degree of sin to another until they finally lose,
altogether, the Spirit of the Lord. What will be the
consequences? There is a day of reckoning and judgment coming,
and it shall begin at the lord's house, and from there it shall
go forth among all the nations of the earth. Let parents awake
and see to it lest the same destruction that will overtake their
children because of their apostasy come upon them also.
332
To show what the Lord has said further in relation to some of the
judgments which are coming upon the earth, I will read the third
paragraph of a revelation given to the Prophet Joseph Smith in
March, 1829, before this Church was organized. It will be found
on page 173 of the Book of Doctrine and Covenants, and is as
follows--
332
"Behold, verily I say unto you, I have reserved those things
which I have entrusted unto you, my servant Joseph, for a wise
purpose in me, and it shall be made known unto future
generations; but this generation shall have my word through you;
and in addition to your testimony, the testimony of three of my
servants, whom I shall call and ordain, unto whom I will show
these things, and they shall go forth with my words that are
given through you; yea, they shall know of a surety that these
things are true, for from heaven will I declare it unto them. I
will give them power that they may behold and view these things
as they are; and to none else will I grant this power, to receive
this same testimony among this generation, in this the beginning
of the rising up and the coming forth of my Church out of the
wilderness; clear as the moon, and fair as the sun, and terrible
as an army with banners. And the testimony of three witnesses
will I send forth of my word; and behold whosoever believeth on
my words, them will I visit with the manifestation of my Spirit,
and they shall be born of me, even of water and of the Spirit.
And you must wait yet a little while, for ye are not yet
ordained; and their testimony shall also go forth unto the
condemnation of this generation if they harden their hearts
against them; for a desolating scourge shall go forth among the
inhabitants of the earth and shall continue to be poured out from
time to time, if they repent not, until the earth is empty, and
the inhabitants thereof are consumed away and utterly destroyed
by the brightness of my coming. Behold, I tell you these things,
even as I also told the people of the destruction of Jerusalem,
and my word shall be verified at this time as it hath hitherto
been verified."
333
Here we see what the Lord promised unto his servant Joseph
concerning the testimony that should go forth unto this
generation. Those things which the Lord had entrusted Joseph
Smith with were the plates form which the Book of Mormon was
translated, Joseph being then engaged in that work. The Lord gave
him a promise that there should be three witnesses raised up who
should know from heaven of the truth of those plates. Joseph, at
that time, had no knowledge who these witnesses should be, but a
promise was made that they should be raised up. Before that year
expired--the year 1829--there were three witnesses raised up,
namely Martin Harris, Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer. They saw
the plates from which the Book of Mormon was translated, and they
were commanded to bear record of them to all people, nations and
tongues to whom the work should be sent. These three witnesses
saw the Angel of the Most High God, and after the work had been
published with their names contained therein, the Lord began to
raise up his Church and to bring it out of the wilderness. It was
in April, 1830, that the church was organized, a little over a
year after this revelation was given, and those who believed in
the Book of Mormon and in the things here spoken, were visited by
the manifestations of the Spirit of the Lord--they were born of
the water and of the Spirit--and their testimony went forth in
connection with that of the three witnesses, and the Lord says
that through the united testimonies of those who believed in this
work he would condemn this generation, that he would send forth a
desolating scourge, and it should be poured out upon the
inhabitants of the earth until the earth should be empty and
desolate inasmuch as its inhabitants would not repent of their
sins. The Lord informed us on that occasion that it should be
with the inhabitants of the whole earth as it was with the
inhabitants of Jerusalem in ancient times, that is, as he spoke
concerning their destruction and his word was verified, so should
they be verified at this time in relation to the inhabitants of
the earth in the latter days. Consequently we see from these
revelations, that the judgments of the Almighty are to be
universal--upon all the earth desolation and destruction, a day
of vengeance and burning and sore calamity until the inhabitants
are wasted away and the earth made empty and desolate.
333
We will now read other revelations confirmatory of the same
thing, so that we can judge a little concerning the nature of the
judgments which will be poured out. In a revelation given in
February, 1831, the Lord thus speaks of his servants, in the
fifth paragraph, near the middle--
334
Lift up your voices and spare not. Call upon the nations to
repent; both old and young, both bond and free, saying, prepare
yourselves for the great day of the Lord; for if I, who am a man,
do lift up my voice and call upon you to repent, and ye hate me,
what will ye say when the day cometh when the thunders shall
utter their voices from the ends of the earth, speaking to the
ears of all that live, saying, repent, and prepare for the great
day of the Lord; yea, and again, when the lightnings shall streak
forth from the east unto the west, and shall utter forth their
voices unto all that live, and make the ears of all tingle that
hear, saying these words, repent ye, for the great day of the
Lord is come.
334
And again, the Lord shall utter his voice out of heaven, saying,
hearken, O ye nations of the earth, and hear the words of that
God who made you. O, ye nations of the earth, how often would I
have gathered you together as a hen gathereth her chickens under
her wings, but ye would not? How oft have I called upon you by
the mouth of my servants, and by the ministering of angels, and
by mine own voice, and by the voice of thunderings, and by the
voice of lightnings, and by the voice of tempests, and by the
voice of earthquakes, and great hailstorms, and by the voice of
famines and pestilences of every kind, and by the great sound of
a trump, and by the voice of judgment, and by the voice of mercy
all the day long, and by the voice of glory and honor, and the
riches of eternal life, and would have saved you with an
everlasting salvation, but ye would not? Behold the day has come,
when the cup of the wrath of mine indignation is full.
334
Here we perceive how long the Lord will bear with the people--all
the day long, stretching forth his hand, pleading with them by
the voice of lightnings, thunders, earthquakes, great hailstorms,
famines, pestilences of every kind, and by the voice of mercy and
judgment, yet they will not repent, but will harden their hearts
when all these things go forth among them, from nation to nation,
people to people, and from kingdom to kingdom, and they will
refuse the message of salvation. It is true that the Lord has not
yet spoken by the voice of thunders, calling upon the people form
the ends of the earth, saying, "Repent and prepare for the great
day of the Lord," but such an event will come; and when it does
come it will not be a mere ordinary, common thunderstorm, such as
we experience occasionally, extending only over a small extent of
country, but the Lord will cause the thunders to utter their
voices from the ends of the earth until they sound in the ears of
all that live, and these thunders shall use the very words here
predicted--"Repent O ye inhabitants of the earth, and prepare the
way of the Lord, prepare yourselves for the great day of the
Lord." These words will be distinctly heard by every soul that
lives, whether in America, Asia, Africa, Europe, or upon the
islands of the sea. And not only the thunders, but the lightings
will utter forth their voices in the ears of all that live,
saying, "Repent, for the great day of the Lord is come." Besides
the voices of thunder and lightning, the Lord himself, before he
comes in his glory, will speak by his own voice out of heaven in
the ears of all that live, commanding them to repent and to
prepare for his coming. I do not know how the Lord will send
forth his voice so as to make all the people on the four quarters
of the globe hear it, for the loudest sound that we can produce
only extends over a small area, a few miles at most; but the Lord
has power to make his voice heard by all that live on the four
quarters of the earth, and when he fulfills this prediction, all
that live will literally hear the words that are here named; and
the wicked will perish out of the earth as they did in the days
of Noah, and so far as they are concerned the earth will be made
empty and desolate.
334
I will now read a paragraph, testifying in different words to the
same things in a revelation given in August 1833. Speaking of
Zion that is to be built up in Jackson County, MO., and of the
Temple that is to be reared there unto his name, the Lord says:--
334
And inasmuch as my people build an house unto me in the name of
the Lord, and do not suffer any unclean thing to come into it
that it be not defiled, my glory shall rest upon it; yea, and my
presence shall be there, for I will come into it, and all the
pure in heart that shall come into it shall see God; but if it be
defiled I will not come into it, and my glory shall not be there,
for I will not come into unholy temples.
334
And now, behold, if Zion do these things she shall prosper, and
spread herself and become very glorious, very great and very
terrible, and the nations of the earth shall honor her, and shall
say, Surely, Zion is the city of our God, and surely Zion cannot
fall, neither be moved out of her place, for God is there, and
the hand of the Lord is there, and he hath sworn by the power of
his might to be her salvation and her high tower: therefore,
verily, thus saith the Lord, let Zion rejoice, for this is
Zion--THE PURE IN HEART; therefore, let Zion rejoice while all
the wicked shall mourn; for behold, and lo, vengeance cometh
speedily upon the ungodly as the whirlwind, and who shall escape
it? The Lord's scourge shall pass over by night and by day, and
the report thereof shall vex all people; yet it shall not be
stayed until the Lord come; for the indignation of the Lord is
kindled against their abominations and all their wicked works;
nevertheless Zion shall escape if she observe to do all things
whatsoever I have commanded her, but if she observe not to do
whatsoever I have commanded her, I will visit her according to
all her works, with sore affliction, with pestilence, with
plague, with sword, with vengeance, with devouring fire;
nevertheless, let it be read this once in their ears, that I, the
Lord, have accepted of their offering, and if she sin no more,
none of these things shall come upon her, and I will bless her
with blessings, and multiply a multiplicity of blessings upon
her, and upon her generations for ever and ever, saith the Lord
your God. Amen.
335
Here we perceive what the Lord intends to do both for Zion and
for the wicked. Zion shall spread herself if she will only keep
the commandments of God, and she will become great, glorious and
terrible; or as one of old said--The church will come forth out
of the wilderness, leaning upon the arm of her beloved, and we
will be as fair as the sun, as clear as the moon, and terrible as
an army with banners. So will Zion be clothed upon with the glory
of her God and armed with the panoply of Heaven, and the nations
will fear and tremble because of her, for God will be in the
midst of Zion, and he hath sworn by the power of his might that
he will be her refuge, her high tower and her strength, and he
will uphold and sustain her, if she keep his commandments in all
things; but if not, here is another declaration to all-- fathers
and mothers, middle aged, old and young--who transgress the
commandments of God, "If Zion does not observe to do all things
whatsoever that I have commanded her, I will visit her according
to all her works, I will visit her with sore tribulations--with
pestilence, plague, vengeance, sword, with the flame of devouring
fire," &c.
335
The Lord means what he says, He has told us in one of the first
revelations published in this book, that though the heavens and
the earth should pass away, not one of the prophecies and
predictions contained in these revelations should go unfulfilled;
therefore if Zion sin, if her people suffer pride to arise in
their hearts, and follow after the foolish fashions of the
Gentiles who come into their midst, and are lifted up one above
another, the rich and wealthy looking down upon the poor with
scorn and derision because they cannot clothe themselves in the
same costly apparel as the rich, and begin to make distinctions
of classes among themselves, behold the Lord will visit Zion
according to all her works, and he will purge her and pour forth
his judgments upon her, according to that which he has spoken.
335
I hope that we shall take a course to prevent these things coming
upon us. It is better to be chastened and receive judgment in
this world, even if it be sword, pestilence, famine and the flame
of a devouring fire, if we can be brought to repentance thereby,
than to remain unchastised and go down swiftly to the pit. If we,
because of our sins, need chastising by the Almighty, let the
chastisement come while we are in the flesh, that we may repent;
and I would say still further, and pray in the name of the Lord,
"Oh Lord, if chastisement must come, may it come from thine
hands." When the Lord through the Prophet gave David the choice
of one of three terrible judgments--first to fall into the hands
of his enemies, and for the people of Israel to be afflicted many
years; second, a lengthy famine, and third, three days'
pestilence, he chose the three days' pestilence, for he said it
was better to fall into the hands of the Lord, who was full of
tender mercy, and who might repent and withdraw the chastisement,
than to fall into the hands of the wicked who have no mercy. I
would say the same so far as my feelings are concerned, and if it
be needful let the Lord chasten those who need it, and not suffer
us to continue in our sin, and to grow and flourish like the
green bay tree, as the wicked do until we are cut off finally
from the earth and cast away in the eternal worlds. It is better
for us to be saved there if we are punished here.
336
The scourge of the Lord, we are told in this revelation, shall go
forth by day and by night, and the report thereof shall vex all
people. Among all those revelations concerning the scourges that
were to go forth, the one which I have read was given long before
the cholera broke out. The first year that we have any knowledge
of that terrible plague, if I mistake not, was 1833, some four
years after this revelation was given that the Lord would send
forth scourges. He did send forth a scourge that seemed to sweep
over all the nations of the earth. Did it come among the
Latter-day Saints? It did. Why? Because they did not keep his
commandments, and as the Destroyer was abroad laying waste the
nations, the Latter-day Saints had to receive their share, I mean
those among us who did not keep the commandments of the Lord.
When we were journeying between Ohio and the state of Missouri,
Joseph told us if we did not keep the commandments of God and
hearken to his counsel we should die off like rotten sheep in
that camp. There was no sickness among us at that time, and
probably some in the camp did not believe that the words of the
Prophet would be fulfilled; but after we had traveled a few
weeks, and did not do that which we were told, we learned to our
sorrow that the hand of the Lord was upon us, and found the words
of the Prophet verified to the very letter, and numbers were laid
low by cholera.
336
The Lord has told us in this book that he would scourge this
people, and would not suffer them to go on in wickedness as he
does the world. He will make a difference in this respect between
those who profess his name and the world. The world may prosper.
They have not the religion of Heaven among them; they have no
revelators and prophets among them; they have not the baptism of
the Holy Ghost, nor the gifts and blessings of God among them,
and consequently though they transgress the revealed word of God,
he suffers them to go on, apparently without checking them, until
they are fully ripened in iniquity, then he sends forth judgment
and cuts them off, instead of chastening them from time to time.
Not so with the Saints. God has decreed, from the early rise of
the Church, that we should be afflicted by our enemies, and by
various afflictions, and he would contend with this people and
chasten them from time to time until Zion should be clean before
him. He has done this, and more especially while we were in the
States. We were inexperienced, and did not then understand the
necessity of strictly obeying every word spoken by the mouth of
God, and we had to suffer because of this. We were first driven
from Kirtland, in the State of Ohio; driven again from Jackson
County, in the State of Missouri; again from Clay County into
other counties in Missouri; again from Far West and Caldwell
County; driven from the State of Illinois, though we were
prospered there until the people waxed wealthy through their
industry, then we were driven again. We have been literally
fulfilling the prophecies contained in this good old book, the
Bible. Zion has been tossed to and fro and not comforted. She has
been driven from place to place and from State to State, until
finally she was driven into the wilderness. What have all these
afflictions been for? To fulfill the word of the Lord by the
mouth of the Prophets. Joseph Smith told us, or the Lord did
through him, and it is printed here in this book, that when he
first planted this people in Jackson County, in the State of
Missouri, if we did not take such and such a course, our enemies
would come upon us, our blood would be shed by them, and we
should be scattered and driven from place to place, and this has
been literally fulfilled upon our heads.
337
I do not know that it is necessary to say any more about the new
revelations, let us turn now to some of the old ones. I might
refer you to many prophecies contained in the Book of Mormon, as
well as those contained in the Book of Covenants relative to the
great judgments of the latter days, but I perceive that I shall
not have time to do so, and also to refer to some that are in the
Bible. I will turn now to the revelations of St. John, and will
refer first to a few sayings contained in the 14th chapter,
commencing at the 6th verse:--
337
And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the
everlasting Gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth,
and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people.
337
Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for
the hour of his judgment is come.
337
It seems that the dispensation in which the Angel should fly was
to be characterized as a dispensation of judgment. Immediately
after the Angel brought the Gospel judgment was to be poured out
on the nations of the earth. In the 8th verse we read, "And there
followed another Angel, saying, 'Babylon is fallen, is fallen,
that great city, because she made all nations drink of the wine
of the wrath of her fornication.' And a third Angel followed,
saying with a loud voice, "If any man worship the beast and his
image, and receive his mark in his forehead or in his hand, the
same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured
out without mixture into the cup of his indignation and he shall
be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy
Angels and in the presence of the Lamb.'"
337
To show that this preaching of the Gospel and the pouring out of
these judgments upon spiritual Babylon the Great, was a work
which should precede the coming of the Son of Man, I will read
the 14th verse and to the end of the chapter:
337
And I looked, and behold a white cloud, and upon the cloud one
sat like unto the Son of man, having on his head a golden crown,
and in his hand a sharp sickle.
337
And another Angel came out of the Temple, crying with a loud
voice to him that sat on the cloud, Thrust in thy sickle and
reap; for the time is come for thee to reap, for the harvest of
the earth is ripe.
337
And he that sat on the loud thrust in his sickle on the earth;
and the earth was reaped.
337
And another Angel came out of the Temple which is in heaven, he
also having a sharp sickle.
337
And another Angel came out from the altar, which had power over
fire, and cried with a loud cry to him that had the sharp sickle,
saying, Thrust in thy sharp sickle, and gather the clusters of
the vine of the earth, for her grapes are fully ripe.
337
And the Angel thrust in his sickle into the earth, and gathered
the vine of the earth, and cast it into the great winepress of
the wrath of God.
337
And the winepress was trodden without the city, and blood came
out of the winepress, even unto the horse bridles, by the space
of a thousand and six hundred furlongs.
337
You see then from this what is to follow the coming of that Angel
with the Gospel. The one representing the Son of man is to thrust
in his sickle and reap the earth, then the Angels are sent forth
to thrust in their sickles and also to reap. These Angels are to
gather the clusters of the vine of the earth into one place that
they may be punished and the judgment which will overtake them
who are thus gathered together will be so severe as to cause the
blood that is shed to reach to the horses' bridles. That is
called the winepress of the Lord. Would you like to know where
that spot is, and why the people are gathered there? The Lord
will suffer three unclean spirits, John tells us in another
place, to go forth about that time, spirits of devils working
miracles, and they shall gather together the kings and great men
of the earth and their armies to a place called in the Hebrew
tongue Armageddon, the Lord calls it a great wine press. Where is
this Armageddon? It is a little east of the old city of
Jerusalem.
338
In order to show you that that is the wine press where the Lord
will pour out these judgments, let me call your attention to the
third chapter of the prophecies of Joel, where this same thing is
alluded to, the valley of Jehoshaphat mentioned by Joel, and the
valley of Armageddon spoken of by John, being very near together,
in the same neighborhood. Joel says--
338
For, behold, in those days, and in that time, when I shall bring
again the captivity of Judah and Jerusalem,
338
I will also gather all nations, and will bring them down into the
valley of Jehoshaphat, and will plead with them there for my
people and for my heritage Israel, whom they have scattered among
the nations and parted my land.
338
In the 9th verse he says--
338
Proclaim ye this among the Gentiles, Prepare war, wake up the
mighty men, let all the men of war draw near; let them come up;
338
Beat your plowshares into swords, and your pruninghooks into
spears; let the weak say, I am strong.
338
Assemble yourselves, and come, all ye heathen, and gather
yourselves together round about: thither cause thy mighty ones to
come down, O LORD.
338
The Lord will come with all his Saints in the clouds of heaven
just about the time this army gets into the valley of
Jehoshaphat.
338
Let the heathen be wakened, and come up to the valley of
Jehoshaphat; for there will I sit to judge all the heathen round
about.
338
"Put ye in the sickle, for the harvest is ripe"--the same harvest
mentioned in the 14th chapter of John.
338
Put ye in the sickle, for the harvest is ripe: come, get you
down, for the press is full, the fats overflow; for their
wickedness is great.
338
Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of decision: for the day of
the LORD is near in the valley of decision.
338
The sun and the moon shall be darkened, and the stars shall
withdraw their shining.
338
If you want to know about the time when the sun and moon are to
be darkened, and when the stars will no longer give any light,
and when there will be total darkness over all the face of the
earth, here is an event predicted so that you can not mistake.
When you see the nations of the earth, especially the heathen
nations, and also those north of Jerusalem--the great nation of
Russia and other nations on the continent of Asia, together with
many in Europe, gather up against Jerusalem after the Jews have
returned and rebuilt their city and Temple, and when their armies
become exceeding great multitudes in the valley of decision, then
you may look for the Lord to come down with his mighty ones, and
for the constellations of heaven to be darkened.
338
The LORD also shall roar out of Zion, and utter his voice from
Jerusalem; and the heavens and the earth shall shake: but the
LORD will be the hope of his people, and the strength of the
children of Israel.
338
The children of Israel as well as Judah will put their trust in
the Lord God of their fathers in that day, and they will look for
deliverance from his hand. They will know that they can not stand
without the aid of the Lord against all those from the north
quarters--God and Magog, all the hosts of Russia and of the
various nations round about that come up there and cover the land
like a cloud. They will know that unless God helps them they can
not obtain a victory over this mighty host; but they will put
their trust in the Lord, and he will "roar out of Zion and utter
his voice from Jerusalem," and he will be the hope of his people
and the strength of the children of Israel.
338
So shall ye know that I am the LORD your God dwelling in Zion, my
holy mountain: then shall Jerusalem be holy, and there shall no
strangers pass through her any more.
338
And it shall come to pass in that day, that the mountains shall
drop down new wine, and the hills shall flow with milk, and all
the rivers of Judah shall flow with waters, and the fountain
shall come forth of the house of the LORD, and shall water the
valley of Shittim.
338
Egypt shall be a desolation, and Edom shall be a desolate
wilderness, for the violence against the children of Judah,
because they have shed innocent blood in their land.
338
But Judah shall dwell for ever, and Jerusalem from generation to
generation.
339
For I will cleanse their blood that I have not cleansed: for the
LORD dwelleth in Zion.
339
Let me make a few remarks here in relation to the difference
between Zion and Jerusalem. Zion will be favored with the
presence of the Lord before the Jews are permitted to behold him.
The Lord will come to the Temple of Zion before he comes to the
Temple at Jerusalem. Before he comes in the clouds of heaven with
power and great glory, he will manifest himself in the city and
Temple of Zion; or in other words all the pure in heart who are
permitted in those days to enter into the Lord's Temple in Zion,
which will be built on this continent, the Lord will reveal his
face unto them, they will see him and he will dwell in the midst
of Zion. His throne will be there. This land--the land given to
the children of ancient Joseph, now called the American
continent--will be the land of Zion, and the great central
capital on this land will be the New Jerusalem; and the
inhabitants of that city and their habitations of that city and
their habitations and Temple will be overshadowed by the glory of
God. But after he has come to and roared out of Zion, after he
has "suddenly come to his Temple," and visited his people there
in the character of a Shepherd, and dwelt in their midst for a
long space of time, he then goes with all his Saints to visit old
Jerusalem, the last work before the day of rest shall come being
to visit those nations that are gathered together in the great
winepress to be trodden without the city on the east side of the
city, and there the blood of horses, camels and men will be
mingled together, and in those small valleys, so great will be
the number slain that the blood will reach to the horses'
bridles, for a certain distance, according to the words of the
Lord.
339
I do not know that I have time to enter into a full investigation
of some other terrible judgments that are to come, but I will
refer to a few of them mentioned in the revelations of St. John.
Before doing so, however, let me say for your information that
the Lord gave through the Prophet Joseph Smith what is termed a
key to John's revelation. The Prophet on one occasion asked the
Lord what was meant by the sounding of the trumpets of the seven
angels, and the Lord answered him in this language, as near as I
can recollect: "As the Lord made the earth and the heavens in six
days, and on the seventh day finished his work and made man out
of the dust of the earth, so in the beginning of the seventh
thousand years will the Lord God sanctify the earth and redeem
man, even all that is within his power, and shall seal all things
unto the end of all things. And the sounding of the seen trumps
is the preparing and finishing of his work in the morning of the
seventh thousand years."
340
This gives a clue to the time when the seven angels will sound.
They will not sound their trumpets in the evening of the sixth
thousand years, but when the six thousand years shall have passed
away from the creation, and the morning of the seventh has
commenced, then these great events will happen. Jesus does not
come immediately at the commencement of the seventh thousand
years, but as there was a work in the beginning which he
performed on the seventh day, such as planting the garden and
placing men therein, so there will be a certain work to be
performed in the beginning of the seventh thousand years, namely,
the resurrection and redemption of man, including the heathen
nations and those people in prison who have died without the law
and have been punished for their sins. When the Lord has caused
these seven angels to sound their trumps, he will bring about all
these purposes which he has ordained, and which must be
accomplished in that morning. Before Jesus appears in the clouds
of heaven they are to sound to prepare the way of the Lord before
his coming. What will take place when they sound? I will tell you
some few things.
340
When the first angel sounds there will come upon the inhabitants
of the earth a great hailstorm mingled with fire and blood, and
so severe will be this storm of fire and blood, that one--third
of the trees will be destroyed, and all the green grass will be
burned up. The second angel will sound his trump, and the Lord
will pour out his judgments upon the water, and a third part of
the sea will become blood, and in consequence of the corruption
thereof one--third part of all the animals living in the sea will
die.
340
When the third angel sounds his trump, John says he saw a star
fall form heaven to earth, burning as it were like a lamp, and it
fell upon the fountains and rivers of water, and they were turned
into bitterness, and the name of the star was called "Wormwood,"
and great were the numbers of the people who perished and died
because of the bitterness of the waters.
340
The fourth angel will sound his tramp and certain judgments will
follow. By and by the fifth angel will sound his trump, and an
angel will descend holding the key of what is termed the
bottomless pit, and he will open the door of this pit, and there
shall issue therefrom certain terrible creatures called locusts.
And it will be given unto them to torment men five months--the
time which is to intervene between the sounding of the fifth and
sixth trumpets, and during that time these awful creatures, such
as neither we nor our forefathers, in all the generations before
us, have ever seen on the earth, will torment the wicked. These
creatures have wings, hair like women, teeth like lions, tails
like scorpions, and with their stings they will torment the
wicked for five months. But it will not be given unto them to
destroy men, only to torment them. That will be a terrible
judgment. They will have a king over them, whose name in the
Greek tongue is "Apollyon," in other words the devil. He has
power over them and with them, and commands these awful beings,
and they go forth and torment the inhabitants of the earth, but
are not permitted to kill them. Men in those days will seek for
death, but it will flee from them, although they will greatly
desire it on account of the terrible torment they endure.
340
When the Lord permits the devil to go forth and torment people he
has considerable power. You can see this in the case of Job. When
the devil stirred up the Lord to torment Job, the devil was
permitted to go and strike Job with pestilence, with sore boils,
and to make him feel sorrow, pain and distress. Said the devil to
the Lord, "He will curse you to your face," and to prove whether
he would or not Job was sorely smitten and afflicted; and so will
men be afflicted by these awful creatures which will issue from
the bottomless pit, and are under his command.
341
By and by the sixth angel sounds his trumpet, and what will take
place? The powers around the great river Euphrates in Asia will
be loosed, and they will come forth riding on horses, and the
number of them is two hundred thousand thousand, that is two
hundred millions-- a great and tremendous army, greater than the
inhabitants of the earth ever saw before. Who will be with them?
This same class of beings with animals such as the earth never
saw nor heard of, only as they heard of them in the revelations
of St. John. Animals with brimstone and fire issuing from their
mouths, having tails like serpents, and heads to their tails, and
with these one-third part of the inhabitants of the earth are to
be destroyed. How long will it be before they are destroyed?
There will be at least a year pass away between the sounding of
the sixth and seventh trumpets. This great army is prepared for a
day, and an hour, a month and a year. Now I have named some of
the judgments, not all, that will transpire before the coming of
the Son of Man. Let me refer in a few words to some of the last
ones that will come before Jesus makes his appearance, called the
seven last plagues. I shall only refer to a few of them.
341
One of the four beasts gives seen vials filled with the wrath of
God to the seen Angels that came out of the Temple and Tabernacle
in heaven, and these vials are to be poured out upon the earth.
We find that the inhabitants are to be visited with greater
judgments than what they have been heretofore, so much so that
when the second Angel pours out his vial upon the great waters,
instead of a third part of them becoming blood, they all become
as the blood of a dead man; and there shall not any living thing
be preserved in the great mass of waters on our globe, but
everything living in the sea will perish, the whole ocean
becoming as the blood of a dead man. Quite a difference between
the blood of a dead man and the blood that comes from a living
man--one is very nauseous when compared with the other. No wonder
then that everything having life in the sea should perish.
341
A third Angel pours out his vial on the fountains and rivers, and
they also become blood. You have already learned that when the
third Angel sounded his trump the third part of the waters become
bitter with wormwood, and it was accompanied by certain judgments
not universal, but when the last plagues are poured out the
fountains and rivers of water, and the ocean become blood. Does
this cause the people to repent? One would imagine that all the
earth would repent when they see judgments of this kind; yet we
are told that for all this the people will blaspheme God, because
of their plagues, sores and pains, and the calamities they have
to endure. They are given up the hardness of heart, the Spirit of
God is withdrawn from them, and instead of repenting of their
evil deeds, their murders, sorceries, whoredoms, idolatries,
thefts and various crimes that are mentioned, they continue in
their wickedness, and judgment after judgment is poured upon them
until they are consumed.
342
When the rivers and fountains are turned into blood, a certain
Angel cries out saying, "Thou art righteous, O Lord, which art
and wast and shall be, because thou hast judged thus. For they
have shed the blood of Saints and Prophets, and thou hast given
them blood to drink, for they are worthy." This shows that there
will be Prophets in those days and that these people will shed
their blood. A great many people think there are to be no more
Prophets; but the Prophets have their blood shed in those days,
and God will give the wicked blood to drink. There are many other
things on my mind that I would be glad to lay before you
concerning the terrible judgments of the last days, but I have
already occupied too much of your time. We are living in this
Territory, comparatively at peace, but unless the Latter-day
Saints live according to the light which God has revealed to
them, they cannot escape. If God sends judgments upon the
nations, he will send them upon us. If he cuts off the horses of
the nations, as he has said in the Book of Mormon that he will,
upon the face of this land, unless we keep his commandments he
will cut off ours. If he visits the inhabitants of the earth with
pestilence and blood, he will visit us in a similar manner unless
we keep his commandments. If the inhabitants of the earth who
know not God are to perish because of their wickedness, how much
more will he visit those who have greater light and knowledge if
they will not keep his commandments? The Lord sent forth the
destroyer in ancient times to lay wast the firstborn of the
Egyptians, pointing out the means by which his people might
escape, and those who failed to do as they were commanded had no
promise of being preserved; so in these days when judgments come,
they will begin among his Saints, and those who have not attended
to the word of wisdom and the laws of life that he has pointed
out and have no claim to mercy and favor, God is no respecter of
persons. They who have great light and yet sin will endure
tribulation and indignation from his hand unless they repent.
Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 /
Wilford Woodruff, February 23, 1873
Wilford Woodruff, February 23, 1873
REMARKS BY ELDER WILFORD WOODRUFF,
At the Funeral Services of Elder William Pitt, in the 14th Ward
Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City, Sunday Morning, February 23,
1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
HIS ACQUAINTANCE WITH THE DECEASED--INCIDENTS IN THE LATTER'S
LIFE SINCE HE JOINED THE CHURCH.
343
My friends here kindly granted me the privilege of making some
opening remarks on this occasion. I had an appointment in Ogden
today, but when I heard of the death of brother Pitt I felt as
though I wanted to attend his funeral. If I had heard that one of
my own family had dropped dead I should not have been more
surprised than I was when I heard of the death of brother Pitt. I
was conversing with him in the street, I think the day before he
was hurt, and he was then, apparently, cheerful, comfortable,
well and happy. When I heard that he was dead, I immediately went
to his house, visited his family and saw his body. I will say
that I seldom or ever give way to weeping, either for the living
or the dead, but upon this occasion, when I saw his body lie cold
in death, all the early scenes of my acquaintance with him in the
Herefordshire mission rushed upon me like a whirlwind, and I
confess that I manifested a good deal of weakness in giving way
to weeping before the family. Solomon says there is a time to
weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to rejoice;
and there are times when reason will excuse weeping. Anthony
said, "I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him," yet Anthony
did, on that occasion, portray before the Senate and citizens of
Rome the virtues of Caesar in his public life. We have come to
bury brother Pitt, and I do no consider it wrong to speak of the
virtues and good deeds of the dead any more than of those of the
living.
343
My first acquaintance with brother Pitt was of such a character
as to cause the formation of ties between us of no ordinary
nature, as it is, I may say, with all the associations of the
Elders of Israel. The world know nothing about these ties. The
ties they form together are very different from those formed
between the servants of God, who are associated together in the
Holy Priesthood and by the power of the Holy Ghost and the
inspiration of the Lord our God. These are ties that no men
comprehend unless they occupy the same position that we occupy. I
have found this in my whole career with this Church and kingdom.
I love the brethren and the Saints of God, because we are
associated together in a great, noble and Godlike cause; and
these associations are to ourselves, and what more can a man do
than lay down his life for his friend? How many are there in this
room and in this Church and kingdom, who, in case of necessity,
would be willing to lay down their lives to save their brethren?
There are thousands of them.
343
I wish, and feel that it is my privilege, to refer to my first
acquaintance with brother Pitt, whose body lies before us to-day.
The history of the Herefordshire mission is before the world and
before the Church, and I wish in a few words to refer to that
mission, for it was there that I became acquainted with brother
Pitt. Brother Taylor and I were the first two of the Quorum of
the Twelve who arrived in England in 1840. Brother Taylor went to
Liverpool, and I went to the Staffordshire potteries. I labored
there with brother Alfred Cordon, who is now in the spirit world.
We were preaching almost every night, and we baptized some nearly
every meeting. It was a very good mission.
344
Some eighty miles from there, in Herefordshire, there were people
who had never seen a Latter-day Saint, and never heard the
Gospel. Some six hundred of them had broken off from the Wesleyan
Methodists, and called themselves the "United Brethren." They
were under the presidency of Elder Thos. Kington. They were
searching for light and truth. As a body they had called upon the
Lord, and had advanced just as far as they could with what light
they had. They prayed to the Lord that he would open the way
before them, that they might advance in the things of his
kingdom. While in this position I went one evening to fill an
appointment in the Town Hall, at the town of Hanley. There was a
very large congregation, and I had appointments out for two or
three weeks in that town and adjacent villages. As I went to take
my seat the Spirit of the Lord came upon me and said to me, "this
is the last meeting you will hold with this people for many
days." I was surprised, because I did not know, of course what
the Lord wanted me to do. I told the assembly when I rose, "This
is the last meeting I shall hold with you for many days." They
asked me after meeting where I was going. I told them I did not
know. I went before the Lord in my closet and asked him where he
wished me to go, and all the answer I could get was to go to the
South. I got into a stage and rode eighty miles south, as I was
led by the Spirit of the Lord. The first man's house I went into
was John Benbow's. He lives now down here at Cottonwood. I had
some conversation with Brother Benbow, and I told him that the
Lord had sent me to that place. But without wishing to dwell on
this subject particularly I will say that I learned that there
were six hundred people there, under Elder Kington, called United
Brethren, and that they had been praying to the Lord for guidance
in the way of life and salvation. Then I knew why the Lord had
sent me to that place--he had sent them what they had been
praying for. I commenced preaching the Gospel to them, and I also
commenced baptizing, Elder Pitt being among the first who was
baptized by me into this Church and kingdom. The first thirty
days after I arrived there I had baptized forty-five preachers,
which flung nearly fifty preaching places, licensed by law, into
my hands; and out of the six hundred belonging to Elder Kington's
body all were baptized but one in seven months' labor. I brought
eighteen hundred into the Church in that mission, and I will say
that the power of God rested upon me and upon the people. There
was a spirit to convince and a people whose hearts were open and
ready to receive the Gospel. And as Jesus said in reference to
John, that all Judea and Jerusalem went out to John's baptism I
felt as if all Herefordshire was coming to be baptized. The third
meeting that I held at Brother Benbow's, the rector of the place
sent a constable to take me up. I was just about to begin when he
entered. I said to him, "Take a chair until after meeting and I
will attend to you." He sat down and when I got through he came
forward and I baptized him with others. He went back and told the
rector, "If you want to take up that man you must go yourself, I
have heard him preach the first Gospel sermon I ever heard in the
world." Almost every man that came to meeting was baptized.
345
I did not see Elder Kington for some little time after going
there; and when I did see him he came to me as the leader of the
people. I laid before him the Gospel. He said, "If it is true, I
wish to embrace it; if not, I shall oppose it." I said, "That is
right." But I made a covenant with him. I said to him, "If you
will go before the Lord and ask him if this work is true, I
promise you in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ that you shall
receive a testimony for yourself if you will promise to obey it."
He said he would, and he went away to attend to his appointments.
The next time he came to Brother Benbow's; a few day's
afterwards, I asked him if he had enquired of the Lord. He said
he had. "What did the Lord tell you." "He told me it was true;"
and he then said he was ready to obey the Gospel, and I baptized
him. I name this because as soon as Brother Pitt heard this
Gospel he obeyed it, and he was one of the leading men in the
choir of the Church of England in Dimock. I now wish to relate a
circumstance concerning him. The first meeting I held in Elder
Kington's house brother Pitt was present. I will say first,
however, that Mary Pitt, brother Pitt's sister, was something
like the lame man who lay at the gate of the Temple called
"Beautiful" at Jerusalem--she had not been able to walk a step
for fourteen years, and confined to her bed nearly half that
time. She had no strength in her feet and ankles and could only
move about a little with a crutch or holding on to a chair. She
wished to be baptized. Brother Pitt and myself took her in our
arms, and carried her into the water and I baptized her. When she
came out of the water I confirmed her. She said she wanted to be
healed and she believed she had faith enough to be healed. I had
had experience enough in this Church to know that it required a
good deal of faith to heal a person who had not walked a step for
fourteen years. I told her that according to her faith it should
be unto her. It so happened that on the day after she was
baptized, Brother Richards and President Brigham Young came down
to see me. We met at Brother Kington's. Sister Mary Pitt was
there also. I told President Young what Sister Pitt wished, and
that she believed she had faith enough to be healed. We prayed
for her and laid hands upon her. Brother young was mouth, and
commanded her to be made whole. She laid down her crutch and
never used it after, and the next day she walked three miles.
This created a great deal of anger and madness in the feelings of
the rector of that town. We had baptized Brother Pitt, and this
took one from his choir of singers, and he felt angry. We were
holding a meeting at Elder Kington's house one evening, when
these things were taking place. The house had very heavy shutters
on the windows of the first story. We had these shutters closed,
and I rose to preach. The rector came at the head of about fifty
men armed with rocks about the size of a man's fist, or larger
than that. They surrounded the house, and for about half an hour
the house was battered with rocks like a hail storm, the whole of
the windows of the second story being stove in and the glass all
broken. I told brother Pitt that I would go and see these men. He
said, "No, I will go, you will be injured if you go." He went out
into the midst of this mob, of about fifty, I should judge--I do
not know the number. He took their names, and the rector was the
leader. They stoned brother Pitt back to the house, but as we had
finished meeting they left. We had to clear the house of broken
glass and rocks before we could retire to bed. I name this
because it was one of Brother Pitt's first labors with me, and I
will say that from that time until the present he has been a true
and faithful servant of God, and of this Church.
346
Associations of this kind have been formed by all the Elders of
Israel who have gone abroad into the vineyard to preach the
Gospel. We go forth and gather strangers to us in the flesh, but
they embrace the same testimony and Gospel with ourselves. This
was the case with brother Pitt. I do not mourn for him, I did not
when I was at his house; but all these scenes and early
associations rushed on my mind, and as I gazed upon him, and
thought of the way he had been stricken down, taken away from us,
when to all human appearance he was but an hour before, as it
were, enjoying health and strength and attending to the duties of
life, I realized that in the midst of life we are in death.
346
In his associations with this Church and kingdom brother Pitt was
leader of the Nauvoo brass band for a long time; he has also been
associated with the various bands here; and in his associations
with the people he made a great many friends, to whom he was
endeared because of his many virtues and good deeds and his
disposition and desire to serve God. I am certainly glad to see
so many friends gathered together to honor his remains. When I
realize that a man like him has lived, heard the Gospel, embraced
it and has fulfilled the measure of his day, what can we say
about him? Can we mourn because he is gone? Bless your soul, he
is with Joseph to-day, and with others of the Elders of Israel,
and he rejoices with them. Whether his spirit is here witnessing
his funeral services I can not say, it is not revealed to me; but
suffice it to say that he is happy, and blessed are the dead that
die in the Lord, from henceforth saith the Spirit, for they rest
from their labors and their works do follow them.
346
I do not know whether brother Pitt has preached much in the
world, but I do know that he has labored for the benefit of the
Saints of God. But he will preach now. He has gone to the other
side of the vail, and he will preach there to large assemblies of
spirits. He has been faithful and he will receive a crown of
life. His body will lie in the tomb a few years, and but a few.
His death is a loss to his wife and children, and the parting is
grievous. But how glorious is the thought that there is a victory
over the grave! In Adam all died, but in Christ all are made
alive. Christ was the first fruits of the resurrection. This is a
glorious thought to me when I see a Latter-day Saint lie down
with the harness on, true and faithful until he has wound up his
work.
346
Out of that 1800 which we baptized in Herefordshire in seven
months, I hardly know one that has turned against this Church.
There has been less apostacy out of that branch of the Church and
kingdom of God than out of the same number from any part of the
world that I am acquainted with.
347
We are called every day or two to bury some of them. A good many
of them are still living. Some of them are Bishops--bro. Clark,
bro. Rowberry, and a good many of them scattered all through this
Territory. Old father Kington is still living or was the last I
heard of him, though near the grave. They are passing away, and
when I went to see brother Pitt's body, the thought came to me,
Whose turn to go next? May be mine, may be yours, we can not tell
anything about it. These things should be an admonition to us to
be true and faithful while we dwell here. The thought that we can
obey and be sanctified by the Gospel, and be prepared thereby to
inherit eternal life, is one of the most glorious principles ever
revealed to man. I thank God that I have been associated with
such a class of men and women as those who are gathered to-day in
the valleys of the mountains. They are the people whom the Lord
has chosen. We have a hope that the world knows not of, and it
can not enter into their thoughts. Unless they are born of the
Spirit of God, they can not even see the kingdom of God, and they
can not get into it unless they are born of the water and of the
Spirit, hence they can not share in the joyous anticipations and
hopes that we possess. Their eyes, ears and hearts are not opened
to see and hear and feel the power of the Gospel of Christ.
347
Brother Pitt has gone before his family to prepare a place for
them. I say to them, let your hearts rejoice before the Lord. You
are left alone, he has gone before you, but he will prepare the
way. He is not going to lie in the spirit world without having
something to do. There those who have gone before us have
something to do as well as we have here. They are laboring to
prepare the inhabitants of the Spirit world for the coming of
Christ, the same as we are trying to prepare the inhabitants of
the earth for the same great event.
347
I do not wish to occupy a great deal of time, but I will say to
my brethren and sisters this morning, it is better to go to the
house of mourning than to the house of feasting. Death is the end
of all men. The living should lay this to heart. My associations
with brother Pitt have been of the most joyful and consoling
character. We associated together a good while in that land,
while I dwelt there; and we have been since, both in Nauvoo and
this place. I was always glad to meet him. I met him often in the
streets, and we scarcely ever met without referring to former
times, and if I can only have as good a glory, and lie down as he
has--die the death of the righteous--and have as good a reward, I
shall think myself very well off. I consider that when a man has
embraced the Gospel, continued faithful, received his endowments
and the sealing blessings of God upon his head, as brother Pitt
has, he has accomplished the object for which he was created.
347
In closing my remarks I will say that I am thankful for the
associations I have had with brother Pitt, and with the rest of
my brethren and the Saints. This is the Gospel of Christ; this is
the Zion and kingdom of God. The hand of God is stretched out for
the salvation of this people, and however dark the clouds may
appear; however strong persecution, oppression and opposition may
become to this work, the Lord has, from its commencement, until
to-day watched over its interests, and has sustained and
preserved it, and he will continue to do so until its
consummation; until Zion arises and puts on her beautiful
garments, and all the great events of the last days are
accomplished. Then, in the morning of the first resurrection,
brother Pitt will come forth, and he and his family will be
re-united, and they and all the faithful will receive their
exaltation. This is a glorious thought! We should prize our
families, and the associations we have together, remembering that
if we are faithful we shall inherit glory, immortality and
eternal life, and this is the greatest of all the gifts of God to
man.
348
I pray that God will bless you, that he will comfort the hearts
of the family of brother Pitt, that he will feed and clothe them,
and unite them together, and preserve them in the faith, that
when they get through with this world, they may meet their
companion and be prepared with him to receive exaltation and
glory, which may God grant in the name of Jesus, our Redeemer,
amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / John
Taylor, February 23, 1873
John Taylor, February 23, 1873
REMARKS BY ELDER JOHN TAYLOR,
At the Funeral Services of Elder Wm. Pitt, Delivered in the 14th
Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City, Sunday Morning,
February 23, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
CERTAINTY OF DEATH--BY THE SPIRIT OF GOD THE SAINTS OBTAIN THE
FULLNESS
OF THE BLESSINGS OF THE GOSPEL--GOD WILL TAKE CARE OF HIS PEOPLE.
349
I have been very much interested in the remarks made by Elder
Woodruff in regard to his mission to Herefordshire, and more
particularly in regard to brother Pitt, who I have always
regarded as a high-minded, honorable man, one who feared God and
worked righteousness, and a man from whom, in all my acquaintance
with him, I never heard one remark that was inimical to his
character or reputation as a man, as a Saint or in any capacity.
We have often been very much delighted with the music that he
made for us, both in this town and in other places where we have
sojourned. Now he has gone, and has taken the same course as
every person that ever lived, with the exception of two or three
individuals. There is something peculiar about these things that
always creates with me a solemnity of feeling. Not, as brother
Woodruff said, that I mourn the loss of a good man when he has
gone. I do not, I have not the slightest feeling of this kind;
but when I reflect upon the position of the world that we live
in, and of humanity in general, look back through the dark lapse
of ages that have transpired and contemplate the millions upon
millions, and hundreds of thousands of millions who have
inhabited this earth, and that they have all of them gone, we see
that there is no staying of these things, no arresting the course
of destiny, no stopping the hand of fate, or the power of the
destroyer. An eternal decree has gone forth, and it is appointed
for all men once to die. It is impossible for us to evade this,
and with the exception of the very few to whom I have before
referred, all men have paid the great debt of Nature. The human
body may be propped up through the ingenuity, nursing and care of
man for some time, but like a sweeping flood, although you may
dam up the water from its natural course and arrest it in its
progress and keep it back, back, back, for a while, yet by and by
it will rush over its barriers, seek its natural channel, pursue
its own course and find its own resting place. So it is with the
human family. We come into the world, we exist for a short time,
then we are taken away, no matter what our feelings, ideas or
faith may be, they have nothing to do with this great universal
law which pervades all nature.
349
We are here to exhibit our sympathy and affection for our brother
whom we respect and esteem, that is all we can do. Who is there
that can stay the hand of death? What talent, what ingenuity,
what philosophy, religion, science or power of any kind? Who
possesses that power, individually in this assembly or combined
to say to the great monster death, Stand back, thou shalt not
take thy victims? There is no such person, there is no such
power, no such influence, such a principal does not exist, and it
never will exist until the last enemy is destroyed, which the
Scriptures tell us is death. But death shall be destroyed, and
all then, even all the human family, shall burst the barriers of
the tomb and come forth--those who have done good to the
resurrection of the just. Then and not till then will that
influence, that fell tyrant be destroyed. There is something
about that interesting to us, while the world of mankind are
thoughtless and careless, and desire not to retain God in their
knowledge, and wish to put away from them everything pertaining
to him and eternity. We, as Latter-day Saints, if our hearts,
feelings, affections and desires are placed upon those things
that pertain to the future, look back to our associations, as
brother Woodruff looked back to his first associations with bro.
Pitt when first the light of eternal truth beamed upon his mind.
We look back to the feelings that influenced brother Woodruff
when inspired by the Spirit of the living God to go to that place
where those people had been calling upon the same God for light
and truth, intelligence and revelation and a knowledge of his law
and of his purposes, and while God was leading them forth, he was
leading brother Woodruff by the same Spirit and power. We reflect
upon these things with pleasure. It is satisfactory to know that
the hand of God has been with us, that his power has been with
this Priesthood, that the Spirit of the Lord God has been
associated with them, and that the promises of God have been
fulfilled to the Elders when he said he would send his Angels and
Spirit before them. I have rejoiced thousands of times with
brother Woodruff over these things, and I was talking with
brother Pitt about them not long ago, and his countenance lighted
up, his eye was bright and brilliant, and his soul seemed to
rejoice at the recollection. It is pleasant to reflect upon these
principles of the Gospel, and there is something in relation to
the future that animates our feelings and desires.
351
We are gathered here, a peculiar people under the direction and
Spirit of the living God; and our gathering has been effected by
the revelations of the Lord. Some of us have been gathered in one
way, some in another, operated upon and influenced in a variety
of ways. And what is our idea in gathering? Is it simply to
plant, sow, reap and to accumulate a little worldly goods around
us and then lie down in the dust and occupy a small space of two
feet by six? Is this the object of our gathering? Verily no.
Something higher than this dwells in the bosoms of the Latter-day
Saints; they are actuated by another spirit and influence. The
Spirit of the living God has beamed upon their minds, drawn back
the dark vista of the future and unfolded unto them principles of
eternal lives, and they are looking forward to honor, immortality
and eternal lives in the kingdom of God. These are the feelings
and influences, and this the spirit by which we are actuated. We
have obtained a knowledge of our Father who dwells in the
heavens. We have partaken of the Spirit of the living God, which
has flowed unto us through obedience to the Gospel of Jesus
Christ. Our minds have been, as it were, torn from the grovelling
things of time and sense, and we feel as though we are eternal
beings, associated with an eternal religion, with everlasting
principles, sustained by an eternal God who governs, controls and
manages all the affairs of the human family on the face of the
earth, and will in the world to come. Feeling thus we rejoice in
the fullness of the blessings of the Gospel of peace. This is the
Spirit that the living God has imparted unto us; and though the
world are thoughtless, careless and forgetful, and sometimes in
their ignorance seek to oppose us, we care nothing about that.
Why, our life is hid with Christ in God. Do you know it? Do the
world know it? No, they can not perceive it, they know nothing
about it, it is out of their ken. They can not comprehend the
principles, feelings, spirit, light, intelligence, visions and
manifestations of the Spirit of God that dwell in the hearts of
men when they are under the influence of the Spirit of God. They
neither know their peace nor the prospects which lie before them.
They are like the brute beasts, which the Scriptures say are made
to be taken and destroyed, just like the ox that you feed until
he is fat--he does not know that the knife is going to pierce him
by and by. But the Saints understand something about the future.
They have begun to live for ever. They have obtained the spirit
of life and truth and intelligence. They have a hope that blooms
with immortality and eternal life. They know that if the earthly
house of this tabernacle dissolves they have a building of God, a
house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens. Knowing this
they feel that all is right. They feel just as Jesus said to his
disciples--Don't care anything about these fellows who can only
kill the body, and when they have done that there is an end of
their rope, the extent of their power, they can go no further,
but like the other worms of the earth they have got to fall down,
and crumble and be preyed upon by worms; but fear him who, after
he has killed has power to cast into hell. "Yea," said he, "I say
unto you, fear him." You Latter-day Saints, fear not any outside
influences, fear no power or spirit that may be arrayed against
you. Put your trust in the living God and all will be right in
time and in eternity. God will take care of his people. He has
commenced a work and he will roll that forth, and woe to the man
that fights against Jehovah--he will move him out of the way.
Like the grass or flowers of the field all such will pass away,
but God's kingdom and people will live and extend, grow and
increase until the kingdoms of this world shall become the
kingdoms of our God and his Christ. Then that man whose remains
now lie before us, and millions of others, shall be heard to say,
"Glory and honor and power, and might and majesty and dominion be
ascribed to him that sits on the throne and unto the Lamb for
ever."
351
God bless you. It is all right with brother Pitt. Is it right
with us? Let us live our religion, keep the commandments of God,
walk according to the light of truth, follow, as brother Woodruff
said he did, the leadings of the Spirit of God, and that will
lead us into all truth, and by and by, to thrones,
principalities, and powers in the eternal words. May God help us
to be faithful, in the name of Jesus: Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Daniel
H. Wells, February 23, 1873
Daniel H. Wells, February 23, 1873
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT DANIEL H. WELLS,
Delivered at the Funeral Services of Elder Wm. Pitt, in the 14th
Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City, Sunday Morning,
February 23, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
CHARACTER OF THE DECEASED--MANIFESTATIONS OF THE POWER OF
GOD--THE SAINTS
HAVE NO INTEREST APART FROM THE KINGDOM OF GOD--THE FEAR OF
DEATH.
352
I have been associated with brother Pitt a good many years. He
taught music in my family as early, I think, as 1842, and I have
been very intimately associated with him in the public works, in
the Legion, and in the band that he has led, and I have never
seen that man when he was not cheerful and full of life, indeed I
have thought he had more music in him than any man I have ever
known. If there was a musical instrument he could not play, I do
not know what it is. He was always faithful and cheerful under
the most trying circumstances, and no matter what blast blew of
difficulty or persecution, brother Pitt was there on hand at a
moment's notice full of life and music, ready to cheer the hearts
of the people. He was a beautiful painter, and followed that
trade for his subsistence. He was always industrious, and ready
to do a job of work whether he could get anything for it or not.
It made no difference, it was for the kingdom, and it was all
right. He was one of the best of men in my opinion, and as has
been said, it is all well with him.
352
I suppose there are a great many here who would like to bear
testimony and speak a good word for brother Pitt; but brethren,
he does not need it--his whole life has spoken for itself, and
will speak eternally. That mission that brother Woodruff has
mentioned was just as remarkable in my estimation, if not more
so, than the account contained in the New Testament, of the way
in which Cornelius received the Gospel. He was told where to go
to make inquiry about what he should do; and if the circumstance
brother Woodruff mentioned had been put in the same language and
had the antiquity that the baptism of Cornelius has, we would
consider it one of the most remarkable manifestations of God's
power ever given to the children of men. In the Herefordshire
mission there was not only one man and his house ready to receive
the Gospel, but six hundred received it and were baptized, and it
was by the same power and influence--the power of God and the
Holy Ghost resting upon them, a revelation being also given to
the servant of God to carry the Gospel to them; and he was sent
of God just as much as Peter was ever authorized to go and tell
Cornelius, just exactly. And this is only one instance of the
kind among many thousands that are occurring and have occurred
almost daily ever since this work commenced in these last days;
and it is as remarkable as any we read of in the Bible; but
because we live in them and they are common things with us, we do
not esteem them. The healing of sister Mary Pitt, after having
been unable to walk for fourteen years, was a remarkable
manifestation of the power of God. And such things have been
transpiring many years right before the face and eyes of the
children of men throughout the nations of the earth, but what
heed do they give to them? They read over in the Bible about the
great blessings that were poured out on the people in the days of
the Apostles, and yet see things equally remarkable transpiring
right under their eyes and in their midst continually, and take
no notice of it. The work of God is growing and increasing, and
the God of heaven will not go back upon it; his work will spread
and increase until his purposes are all fulfilled.
353
It has been said of brother Pitt that he did not preach much, but
his whole life has been a continual sermon to this generation
since he received the Gospel, and before for aught I know. I
think that he has performed two or three missions, and I do know
that he bore a faithful testimony to the truth of this work, not
only by his words but by his acts. He was on a mission all the
time. He did not hold himself to himself at any time, but he was
continually on the altar, ready to go and to come as he was
directed by the servants of God. A man is as much on a mission at
home, building up Zion, as he is when abroad preaching the
Gospel, and he should esteem his labors under the direction and
dictation of the servants of God just the same. Here is where a
good many make mistakes. They think that unless they are called
to go on a mission to preach the Gospel they are not on a mission
at all, but their only business is to look after their own
individual interests. Why, a Latter-day Saint has no individual
interest separate and apart from the kingdom of God, any where,
at any time and in any place, and all he does should be with an
eye to advance the interests of that kingdom upon the earth. We
have the blessed privilege of being co-workers with the Almighty
in building up his kingdom, bringing to pass his purposes and in
sustaining and spreading abroad the institutions of high heaven
and the principles of the everlasting Gospel in the earth if we
will only let him work with us. But in order to do so we must be
submissive and work in accordance with his plan. We have come
here from the nations of the earth to be taught in his ways, not
that we may make a path for ourselves, and that we may be
instructed in the things of eternal life, and learn to know God
and Jesus Christ whom he has sent, for this is eternal life.
353
This is Scripture, and we have often heard it drop upon our ears
with little effect, and it is unnoticed by the world. But if to
know the only true and wise God and Jesus Christ whom he has sent
is eternal life, unless we have that knowledge we have not
eternal life. What do the world know of the relationship between
God and his children here on the earth. Nothing at all. The world
is without the knowledge of God, hence they are without eternal
life. He has revealed himself in these last days, and is begging
and beseeching his children here on the earth to turn from their
evil ways. He has said through his Prophets long ago, "Turn ye,
turn ye, for why will ye die, O house of Israel? Take upon you my
yoke, for it is easy, and my burden, for it is light. Come and
partake of the waters of life freely, without money and without
price." This is the invitation from God to his children, but they
are a good deal like the inhabitants of Jerusalem when Jesus
mourned over them and said, "Oh Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how often
would I have gathered you as a hen gathers her chickens under her
wings, but ye would not. Now your house is left unto you
desolate." Let this generation look to it, or their house will be
left desolate, and they will be without hope of reaching to that
within the vail unless they receive the invitation which has been
renewed in our day and generation to the children of men, to
repent and be baptized, and to turn to God and live. It seems as
if mankind have ears and hear not, eyes and see not, hearts and
do not comprehend the things of God. It is true, as was observed
by brother Taylor the life of the christian--the true Latter-day
Saint, is hid in God, and the world cannot see it. This work is
transpiring and these remarkable events are taking place right
before their eyes in the building up of this kingdom, and nothing
pertaining thereto is hidden, but it is like a city set on a hill
for everybody to look at, still it seems as though they cannot
see it.
353
There are a great many Latter-day Saints who do not see more than
half of it. They cannot see the kingdom of God in this thing and
in that thing and in the other thing that is presented before
them. This is for the want of a little faithfulness, a little
more of the Spirit of the Lord. There is some obstacle in the way
which prevents a free flow of the Spirit to enlighten their minds
and be to them as a well of water springing up to eternal life.
355
Meet brother Pitt when you might, you would find that feeling in
his heart, welling up continually to eternal life. That was the
kind of man he was. I know it, because I was well acquainted with
him, and associated with him frequently, and I never saw him
without it. I saw him almost every day for years, and I hope it
will be as well with us as it is with him when we pass the ordeal
of death. We all have to pass it. In and of itself it is nothing
to him who is prepared. Brother Pitt might have done a great many
things perhaps that some people thought curious, for he was a
cheerful man, not one of those long-drawn-down, pious souls who
never smiled. A person unacquainted with him might have supposed
that he never had a serious thought, still his heart was full of
love to God. If a man goes about with a handkerchief tied over
his head, and his head bowed down with sorrow for the sins of the
world, that is no evidence to me of love to God shed abroad in
his heart, not a particle. I would sooner risk a man like brother
Pitt, who was always cheerful and on hand, ready to go and come
and to do his duty, whether in the paint shop, in the dance hall
or anywhere else among the Saints of God. His delight was to be
with them and cheer and encourage them in the faith; and he never
swerved to the right or to the left. He was full of integrity.
Did he ever have a doubt concerning the work? He never showed the
least symptom of it to me, and I do not think it ever occurred to
him; I do not believe a shadow of a doubt concerning its truth
ever crossed his mind. He was ready, on hand, and full of fun,
and that is the kind of a man I like to see. I should like for
him to have lived a hundred years, because good men are scarce,
and they are needed to build up the kingdom. Not that it would
have been any better for him to live, he is all right, but for
the sake of the kingdom, and for my sake and your sake, and for
the sake of his family, and for the sake of all with whom he was
associated in this stake of Zion it is a loss to lose such a man,
but it is no loss to himself. He has laid a foundation that will
eternally endure. No person can rob him of his crown. He is safe,
and can do nothing himself that will bar the same. It is not so
with you and me. We may live to do things that will clip our
glory. It would be better that we should be taken away than to
live and do anything of that kind. Not that I think there would
have been any danger of any such thing with him. But he has gone,
and we will soon follow. As it has been expressed to-day, death
is passed upon all men, and we only wait our turn to pay the debt
of nature. Brother Pitt has paid that debt, and that very
self-same body will come forth again, and when we grasp his hand
we shall know that it is brother Pitt, for he will maintain his
identity in the eternal worlds. Do you not think that is
glorious? When the spirit and body are re-united in immortality
they will never be separated again. We need not fear death, that
is if we are numbered among those who will have the privilege of
coming forth in the morning of the first resurrection, for upon
all such the second death will have no power. It is the second
death that people may be afraid of. Fear him who has power to
destroy both soul and body in hell. This is the second death, but
this will have no power upon those who have part in the first
resurrection. All manner of sin will be forgiven to men except
the sin against the Holy Ghost; that will never be forgiven
neither in this world nor the world to come. If men will only be
obedient to the Gospel, and avail themselves of the plan of
salvation devised by our Father and God in heaven before the
world was, they may obtain forgiveness of their sins by being
obedient to the Gospel. The plan of salvation is ample to save to
the uttermost. God, in his mercy, designed it to save his
children, because he delights to give good gifts to his children
far more than an earthly parent does. The Almighty has sent forth
his servants to plead with the children of men, to declare the
acceptable year of the Lord, and to call upon them to repent lest
the end come when no man can work. Some few will listen and be
prepared, because some are honest enough to receive the Gospel,
others are not.
355
I pray God the Eternal Father to bless us all, that we may cleave
to that which is good, reject evil, fill the measure of our
creation in our probation as our brother has done, that we may
lay up a crown and an inheritance in everlasting habitations, for
Christ's sake. Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / Orson
Pratt, March 9, 1873
Orson Pratt, March 9, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER ORSON PRATT,
Delivered in the 16th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, March 9, 1873.
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
CONSECRATION--TEMPORAL EQUALITY--SELFISHNESS TO BE
OVERCOME--RESURRECTION--RETURN TO JACKSON COUNTY--GLORY OF ZION.
355
On page 235 of the Book of Doctrine and Covenants there is a
revelation given to this Church on March 9, 1832, which contains
these words:
355
For verily I say unto you, the time has come, and is now at hand;
and behold, and lo, it must needs be, that there be an
organization of my people, in regulating and establishing the
affairs of the storehouse for the poor of my people, both in this
place and in the land of Zion, or in other words, the city of
Enoch, for a permanent and everlasting establishment and order
unto my Church, to advance the cause, which ye have espoused to
the salvation of man, and to the glory of your Father who is in
heaven, that you may be equal in the bands of heavenly things;
yea, and earthly things also, for the obtaining of heavenly
things; for if ye are not equal in earthly things, ye cannot be
equal in obtaining heavenly things; for if you will that I give
unto you a place in the celestial world, you must prepare
yourselves by doing the things which I have commanded you and
required of you.
355
We will next read a passage which is contained in the latter part
of the 3rd paragraph of a revelation given in March, 1831. It
will be found on page 218 of the Book of Doctrine and covenants.
355
But it is not given that one man should possess that which is
above another, wherefore the world lieth in sin.
356
I will now read a portion of a revelation given on the 22nd of
June, 1834. It will be found in paragraph 2, Book of Doctrine and
Covenants, page 295. Speaking of the Church, it reads as
follows--
356
But behold, they have not learned to be obedient to the things
which I required at their hands, but are full of all manner of
evil, and do not impart of their substance, as becometh Saints,
to the poor and afflicted among them, and are not united
according to the union required by the law of the celestial
kingdom; and Zion cannot be built up unless it is by the
principles of the law of the celestial kingdom, otherwise I
cannot receive her unto myself: and my people must needs be
chastened until they learn obedience, if it must needs be, by the
things which they suffer.
357
I have read these passages of new revelation for the benefit of
the Latter-day Saints who are here this afternoon, and it is well
enough for us to examine ourselves, to see whether we are living
in strict accordance with them, and if we are not, to see whether
there are any persons throughout all the Territory of Utah who
are complying with them. In one of these revelations, given in
March, 1831, before the Lord had led this people to Jackson
County and before we knew where the New Jerusalem was to be
built, or where the great central gathering place for the
Latter-day Saints was to be, the Lord informed us "That it is not
given that one man should possess that which is above another,
wherefore the world lieth in sin." Now let me inquire of the
Latter-day Saints, Are we all equal in the bands of earthly
things, or have we rich and poor in our midst? The answer that
all would give to this question is, Every person and every family
has accumulated just as much wealth, as he or they could, for his
or their own use only, and this order of things has existed
amongst us since the church was organized, nearly forty-three
years. How much longer will this continue? How long will every
family be for themselves, every man's energy and ability be
exerted only for himself and his family, every man grasping to
enrich himself? He does not care about his neighbor, and if he
thinks about him at all, the inquiry rises in his mind, "Have I
got as much wealth as my neighbor, or as this or that person? If
I have not I must strive to obtain as much; for if I have not as
much as my neighbors I can hardly think to crowd myself into
their society; for I have noticed that our wealthy citizens are
creating distinctions of classes among us. If they get up a party
in their own private dwellings, or a nice luxurious supper, for
instance, it is generally only those who are wealthy in
appearance who are invited, and unless I can accumulate as much
wealth as they have, I shall be cast out and fall below into some
other class."
357
I am now talking of facts as they really exist. When do you see a
rich man among the Latter-day Saints who, when he makes a great
feast, invites the poor and the lame, the halt and blind, and
those who are in destitute circumstances? Such events are few and
far between. The Savior has strictly commanded us that when we
make our feasts, instead of inviting those who have abundance and
roll in the good things and luxuries of life, we should invite
the poorest among us, the lame, blind and infirm, and those who
perhaps have not enough food to eat. Do you Latter-day Saints do
this? No, I fear not. There may be persons who are doing these
things; if so, blessed are they if they observe this and all the
other commandments of the Lord.
357
What kind of a revolution would it work among the Latter-day
Saints if the revelation given in March, 1831, were carried out
by them--"It is not given that one man should possess that which
is above another, wherefore the world lieth in sin?" How much of
a revolution would it accomplish in Salt Lake City if this order
of things should be brought about? I think it would work a
greater revolution among this people than has ever been witnessed
amongst them since they had an existence as a Church.
357
Again, in another revelation, given in 1832, soon after the place
of location for the city of Zion was made known, the Lord
declared that the time had come to establish an order among his
people requiring certain persons, whose names were mentioned, to
consecrate a portion of their property. They were to put so many
dollars into the treasury, and that was to be a common property
among those individuals, for their own benefit, and for the
benefit of the Church. Among the persons called to enter into
this order was the great Prophet and seer of the last days.
357
This order was entered into partially by the individuals who were
named, but even they were not all prepared for this partial order
pertaining to the celestial kingdom of God. It was too sacred,
too much in opposition to the traditions of the age, and which
had existed for many generations. We all know that, since the
days of the Apostles, the whole world, except the Nephites and
Lamanites on this continent, have been divided in regard to their
wealth and property. Among whatever nation you might travel on
the eastern hemisphere, and on this hemisphere too, since it was
discovered by Columbus and settled by Europeans, this
individualism has existed among all classes of people, with a
very few exceptions. Among these exceptions we may mention the
Shaking Quakers. This sect is in great error in many respects,
but its members did enter into a community of property. Their
properties were consecrated and put into a store house, and were
controlled by certain men who were chosen for that purpose. How
wisely they used this property or how they lived on this common
stock principle is not for me to say; but suffice it to say, that
so far as consecration and a community of property were concerned
they carried them out. But the great mass of the human family
have sought for ages past, and are still seeking, to accumulate
dollars and dimes, houses and lands for themselves, to bequeath
to their heirs or to whomsoever they see proper. This
individualism that has existed all over the world has been one of
the principal means of introducing almost all the crimes that
exist among men, for as the Apostle Paul has said--"The love of
money is the root of all evil."
357
The Apostles endeavored to introduce the common stock principle
in their day among the Saints, but the people, even then, had
been so long accustomed to accumulating wealth for themselves and
their families instead of having it in common, that the Apostles
found it impossible to establish this principle on a permanent
foundation, and it did not continue. It might have been carried
out a year or two and perhaps a little longer; but according to
the writings of the Apostles to the early Christians, this
principle seems to have been done away with, and individualism
prevailed amongst them.
358
Let me inquire now, how this selfish principle produces the great
variety of evils that exist in the world? I will refer to some
that have sprung from it, and have made their appearance among
the Latter-day Saints, and which will increase unless we reform
in this respect. For instance, wealthy persons have the power to
educate their children more thoroughly than the poor man can.
They can send them to the very best schools and institutions of
learning, and they can keep them there year after year until they
have acquired what is termed a thorough education. Then, their
fathers think, "Our sons have been trained in various branches of
learning and business, they understand book-keeping and other
branches necessary in following mercantile pursuits; they know
how to accumulate means and how to keep everything straight. We
can therefore entrust them with the means we shall leave them,
and knowing how to make good use of it, they will be able to keep
themselves at the head of the heap," or in other words, they will
be above the poor who have not had the education they have had.
358
A rich man can educate his daughters, and have them taught music
and everything calculated to make them refined, polite and
genteel. This enables the daughters to fascinate the rich, and
should a poor man come along, and knock at the rich man's door
and tell him he desires to keep company with his daughters, he is
told that he has no business there. Says the rich man, "My
daughters must marry wealthy men, they must be exalted and be
with the upper class among the Latter-day Saints."
358
The poorer classes, seeing that they have neither the means nor
the business education and information to compete with the rich
ones, grovel along in poverty and ignorance, and a distinction of
classes arises. By and by these rich young men come along with
their fine carriages and if a poor man happens to be crossing the
street, they look down with scorn and contempt upon him, and cry,
"Out of my way there," when if it had been a wealthy man they
would have turned their carriage out of the way until he had
passed; but the "poor scrub," as they term the poor man, must be
blackguarded and ridiculed, and treated as a slave or as a person
who has no right to be seen in the society of the wealthy.
358
What kind of feelings does this produce in the hearts of the
humble poor who desire and are striving to serve the Lord? They
feel in their hearts that they do not fellowship these rich
persons, and this causes hard feelings between these classes. Is
this right or is it wrong? It is wrong, materially wrong, and we
have continued in this wrong over forty years. When shall it come
to an end? When will we learn to keep the commandments of God and
become one, not only in doctrine but in "the bands of earthly
things?" Such a time must come, and if we do not comply with it,
we shall fall behind. I will prophesy to this people on this
subject. The Lord commanded me to prophesy when I was about
nineteen years old, but I seldom do it, for fear I should
prophesy wrong. But I will prophesy concerning this Church and
people, that all who will not come into that order of things,
when God, by his servants, counsels them so to do, will cease
growing in the knowledge of God, they will cease having the
Spirit of the Lord to rest upon them, and they will gradually
grow darker and darker in their minds, until they lose the Spirit
and power of God, and their names will not be numbered with the
names of the righteous. You may put that down and record it.
359
We find, a few years after these revelations that I have read
were given, the Lord saw that we were so covetous and filled with
the selfish principle instilled into our minds by our
forefathers, that we would not give heed to the law wish he gave
concerning the consecrations that were to be made in Jackson
County, Mo., and he determined in his own mind that that should
not be a land of Zion unto the present generation of people, take
them as a people; and he made this decree, after giving them
revelation upon revelation, warning them by the mouth of his
servant Joseph, who went in person and warned them, and sent up
his revelations a thousand miles from Kirtland and warned them.
After they had been sufficiently warned, for some two years and
upwards, after their commencement of the settlement of Jackson
County, Missouri, the Lord fulfilled that which he had spoken
concerning them--that they should be driven out of the land of
Zion. This was literally fulfilled. Why? Because of covetousness.
You will recollect my reading, I think last Conference, a letter
written by the Prophet Joseph Smith. I think it is in the 14th
volume of the Star, in connection with the history of this Church
published in that periodical. That letter was written to one of
the brethren in Zion in relation to the consecrations of the
properties of the people. The Lord said in that revelation that
the principle which he had revealed in relation to the properties
of his Church must be carried out to the very letter upon the
land of Zion; and those individuals who would not give heed to
it, but sought to obtain their inheritances in an individual way
by purchasing it themselves from the Government, should have
their names blotted out from the book of the names of the
righteous, and if their children pursued the same course their
names should be blotted out too, they and their children should
not be known in the book of the law of the Lord as being entitled
to an inheritance among the Saints in Zion.
359
We find, therefore, that the Lord drove out this people because
we were unworthy to receive our inheritances by consecration. As
a people, we did not strictly comply with that which the Lord
required. Neither did they comply in Kirtland. Many of those
persons were called by name to enter into a inferior order,
afterwards called The Order of Enoch, in which only a portion of
their property was consecrated, and even they did not comply, but
some of them broke the most sacred and solemn covenants made
before high Heaven in relation to that order. The Lord said
concerning them that they should be delivered over to the
buffetings of Satan in this world, as well as be punished in the
world to come. He also told them that that soul that sinned and
would not comply with the covenant and promise which they made
before him in relation to their properties, should have his
former sins returned to him, which had been before remitted in
baptism.
360
This ought to be an example for us who are living at a later
period in the history of the Church of the living God, and who
ought, by this time, to have become thoroughly experienced in the
law of God. It is true we are not now required to consecrate all
that we have; this law has not been binding upon us since we were
driven from the land of Zion. The reason why this law was revoked
was because the Lord saw we would all go to destruction in
consequence of our former tradition in relation to property if
this law had continued to be enforced after we were driven out,
hence he revoked it for the time being, as you will find recorded
in one of the revelations given June 22nd, 1834, after we were
driven from Jackson County. I will repeat the words--"Let those
commandments which I have given concerning Zion and her law, be
executed and fulfilled after her redemption." Here you perceive
that, for the salvation of this people and of the nations of the
earth among the Gentiles, God saw proper to revoke this
commandment and to lay it over for a future period, or until
after the redemption of Zion. Zion is not yet redeemed, and hence
we are not under the law of full consecration. But is that any
reason why we should not be under some other law differing from
the one we were formerly required to practice? Do we live up to
the law called the Order of Enoch, which is inferior to that law
requiring full consecrations." No we do not. Let us go down
another scale in the ladder of obedience, and inquire if we are
carrying out a law inferior to the Order of Enoch, that is, the
law of Tithing? Do the Latter-day Saints comply with that, and,
to begin with, when they come from the nations of the earth, do
they consecrate their surplus property to the Lord, placing it in
the hands of the Bishop of his Church, and after that pay
one-tenth of their annual income into the treasury of the Lord?
Where is there a person carrying out this law which was revealed
in the year 1838 and which has never been revoked? It is one of
the most simple and inferior laws, far below the order of full
consecrations and far below the Order of Enoch, but have we as a
people complied with this? I think not. Can you find one out of a
hundred persons in Salt Lake City who has carried out this law?
Have you done it? The Bishops, whose duty it is to collect the
tithing can answer this question better than I can, but I very
much doubt whether the records of the Bishops would show that the
people have complied with the latter clause of this law--namely
to pay one-tenth of their annual income, to say nothing about
their surplus property. Are we under condemnation or are we not?
Judge ye for yourselves. What will become of this people unless
we reform, and repent of our sins in these respects? That which I
have already spoken will be fulfilled upon their heads--they will
lose the spirit of the Gospel.
361
We are looking for the redemption of Zion. What would be our
condition if the Lord were to say unto us this season, "Arise, my
Saints, arise, go back to the land which I promised to give to
you and to your children for an everlasting possession; go back
and build up the New Jerusalem according to the law of the
celestial kingdom," as recorded in the revelation in which the
Lord says unless she be built according to that law he can not
receive her unto himself. What kind of A Zion would we build it
called this present season to go back to Jackson County? We would
have to begin altogether a new order of things. Are we prepared
for it? I think not. If the people had faithfully complied with
these inferior laws they would be better prepared: but when I see
the backwardness of many of the people of this Territory calling
themselves Latter-day Saints, about paying their tithing,
refusing to do so or being careless about it, I say in my heart,
"Oh Lord, when will thy people be prepared to go back and build
up the waste places of Zion according to celestial law?"
361
The Lord has said in this book, (B. D. C.) that the time is to
come when Zion shall be redeemed. I will read the passage. It
commences on page 292, and is as follows:--
361
Behold, this is the blessing which I have promised after your
tribulations, and the tribulations of your brethren; your
redemption, and the redemption of your brethren, even their
restoration to the land of Zion, to be established no more to be
thrown down; nevertheless, if they pollute their inheritance,
they shall be thrown down, for I will not spare them if they
pollute their inheritances. Behold, I say unto you, the
redemption of Zion must needs come by power; therefore, I will
raise up unto my people a man, who shall lead them like as Moses
led the children of Israel, for ye are the children of Israel,
and of the seed of Abraham, and ye must needs be led out of
bondage by power, and with a stretched out arm; and as your
fathers were led at the first, even so shall the redemption of
Zion be. Therefore, let not your hearts faint, for I say not unto
you as I said unto your fathers, mine angel shall go up before
you, but not my presence; but I say unto you, mine angels shall
go before you, and also my presence, and in time ye shall possess
the goodly land.
361
In a revelation given June 22nd, 1834, the Lord tells us that
before the people of Zion shall be redeemed the army of Israel
must become very great. What he meant by this, was "great"
compared with the few individuals to whom this revelation was
given. It will be recollected that a certain number were required
as the strength of the Lord's house to go up to redeem Zion, as
they supposed. They gathered together, some one or two hundred
and went up for this purpose; and the Lord said that the strength
of his house did not hearken to his voice, and did not come up
according to his commandment and revelation, but had said in
their hearts, "If this be the work of the Lord, the Lord will
redeem Zion, and we will stay at home upon our inheritances."
They made excuses and would not go up. The little handful that
did go up were called the Camp of Zion. Some few of them are
still living. When we arrived in the neighborhood of the Land of
Zion, the strength of the Lord's house not having hearkened to
his voice, the Lord gave a revelation and said first, "Let my
army become very great, and let it be sanctified before me, that
it may become fair as the sun, and clear as the moon, and that
her banners may be terrible unto all nations." How do you suppose
we are going to fulfill this, preparatory to the redemption of
Zion? Are we now taking a course to sanctify ourselves before the
Heavens? It is true that the army of Israel is very great even
now when compared with that little handful that went up with the
Camp of Zion, but though blessed with numbers, we are not blessed
with that sanctification which the Lord has spoken of in that
revelation. How much faith have we now, in our disobedience to
the law of tithing, and to many other principles? Blessed are
they who have faithfully paid their tithing all the time, and
blessed are their children, they will receive their inheritance
in the Land of Zion, when the Lord shall come. The Lord will
bless them and their generations for ever. But those who have not
complied with this law are not sanctifying themselves before God,
neither are they preparing themselves for the redemption of Zion.
Their hearts are set upon the foolish things of this world, they
are grasping after riches to aggrandize themselves.
362
This is plain preaching, and perhaps some of you will not like
it. I can not help it, these are the things that present
themselves before my mind. There must be a reformation, there
will be a reformation among this people, for God will not cast
off this kingdom and this people, but he will plead with the
strong ones of Zion, he will plead with this people, he will
plead with those in high places, he will plead with the
Priesthood of this Church, until Zion shall become clean before
him. I do not know but that it would be an utter impossibility to
commence and carry out some principles pertaining to Zion right
in the midst of this people. They have strayed so far that to get
a people who would conform to heavenly laws it may be needful to
lead some from the midst of this people and commence anew
somewhere in the regions round about in these mountains. Ask this
people if they are willing to abide by the law of God, and how
would they vote? The hands of ever one would be up almost without
exception, but when it comes to the very point, when consecration
in part might be required at their hands, that is the time to
prove them and to see whether they would or would not be
obedient. "Oh, I have such a fine house, and such a fine carriage
and horses, such an abundance of merchandise and good things. It
has taken me years and years to get these things, and it is hard
to give one-half, three fourths or nine-tenths of them to
establish another order of things, and I rather think I had
better keep on the background, and see how the order flourishes.
Let others try it first, and if they get on very well and become
wealthy, then perhaps I will venture to give a little of my
property." These are the feelings that exist in the hearts of
some individuals among the Latter-day Saints, but they have got
to be rooted out, or those who give way to them will lose the
Spirit of the Lord.
362
I do not know how many will stand up and obey the law of the Lord
unto the sacrifice of all their earthly goods, or how long it
will be before people will be called upon to make this sacrifice.
I do not know how long it will be before this people are brought
to the trying point to see who is and who is not for the Lord;
but I would advise the Latter-day Saints to prepare for this, for
it may come sooner than some of you expect. If the Lord should
undertake to bring about an order of things different from that
which now exists, and establish it not exactly in the midst of
this people, but in some place where they can commence anew, I
hope the people will begin to pray to the Lord, reckon up with
themselves and examine their own hearts, and see whether they are
willing and prepared, if called upon, to place all that they
have, or as much as they are required in that order of things,
and carry it out.
362
When we go back to Jackson County, we are to go back with power.
Do you suppose that God will reveal his power among an
unsanctified people, who have no regard nor respect for his laws
and institutions, but who are filled with covetousness? No. When
God shows forth his power among the Latter-day Saints, it will be
because there is a union of feeling in regard to doctrine, and in
regard to everything that God has placed in their hands; and not
only a union, but a sanctification on their part, that there
shall not be a spot or wrinkle as it were, but everything shall
be as fair as the sun that shines in the heavens.
363
In order to bring about this, who knows how many chastisement God
may yet have to pour out upon the people calling themselves
Latter-day Saints? I do not know. Sometimes I fear, when I read
certain revelations contained in this book. In one of them the
Lord says, "If this people will be obedient to all of my
commandments, they shall begin to prevail against their enemies
from this very hour, and shall not cease to prevail until the
kingdoms of this world shall become the kingdoms of our God and
his Christ." That promise was given almost forty years ago. In
the same paragraph it says--"Inasmuch as this people will not be
obedient to my commandments and live by every word that I have
spoken, I will visit them with sore afflictions, with pestilence,
with plague, with sword and with the flame of devouring fire." Is
it not enough to make a person fear when God has spoken this
concerning the Latter-day Saints? I do not know all things which
await us. One thing I do know--that the righteous need not fear.
The Book of Mormon is very express upon this subject. In the last
chapter of the first book of Nephi, the Lord, through the
Prophet, speaks concerning the building up of Zion in the latter
days on the earth. He says his people should be, as it were, in
great straits, at certain times, but said the Prophet, "The
righteous need not fear, for I will preserve them, if it must
needs be that I send down fire from heaven unto the destruction
of their enemies." This will be fulfilled if necessary. Let the
righteous among this people abide in their righteousness, and let
them cleave unto the Lord their God; and if there are those among
them who will not keep his commandments, they will be cleansed
out by the judgments of which I have spoken. But if the majority
of this people will be faithful, the Lord will preserve them from
their enemies, from sword, pestilence and plague, and from every
weapon that is lifted against them. God will shield us by his
power, if we are to be led forth out of bondage as our fathers
were led, at the first. This indicates that there may be bondage
ahead, and that the Latter-day Saints may see severe times, and
that unless we keep the commandments of God, we may be brought
into circumstances that will cause our hearts to tremble within
us, that is, those who are not upright before God. But if this
people should be brought into bondage, as the Israelites were in
ancient days, Zion must be led forth out of bondage, as Israel
was at the first. In order to do this God has prophesied that he
will raise up a man like unto Moses, who shall lead his people
therefrom.
364
Whether that man is now in existence, or whether it is some one
yet to be born; or whether it is our present leader who has led
us forth into these valleys of the mountains, whether God will
grant unto us the great blessing to have his life spared to lead
forth his people like a Moses, we perhaps may not all know. He
has done a great and wonderful work in leading forth this people
into this land and building up these cities in this desert
country; and I feel in my heart to say, Would to God that his
life may be prolonged like Moses, in days of old, who, when he
was eighty years old, was sent forth to redeem the people of
Israel from bondage. God is not under the necessity of choosing a
young man, he can make a man eighty years of age full of vigor,
strength and health, and he may spare our present leader to lead
this people on our return to Jackson County. But whether it be he
or some other person, God will surely fulfill this promise. This
was given before our Prophet Joseph Smith was taken out of our
midst. Many of us no doubt thought when that revelation was given
that Joseph would be the man. I was in hopes it would be Joseph,
for I had no idea that he was going to be slain, although I might
have known from certain revelations that such would probably be
the case, for the Lord had said unto him, before the rise of this
Church, that he would grant unto him eternal life even though he
should be slain, which certainly was an indication that he might
be slain. But we still were in hopes that he would live and that
he would be the man who, like Moses, would lead this people form
bondage. I do not know but he will yet. God's arm is not
shortened that he cannot raise him up even from the tomb. We are
living in the dispensation of the fulness of times, the
dispensation of the resurrection, and there may be some who will
wake from their tombs for certain purposes and to bring to pass
certain transactions on the earth decreed by the Great Jehovah;
and if the Lord sees proper to bring forth that man just before
the winding up scene to lead forth the army of Israel, he will do
so. And if he feels disposed to send him forth as a spiritual
personage to lead the camp of Israel to the land of their
inheritance, all right. But be this as it may, whether he is the
man, whether President Young is the man, or whether the Lord
shall hereafter raise up a man for that purpose, we do know that
when that day comes the Lord will not only send his angels before
the army of Israel, but his presence will also be there.
365
Do you suppose that the Lord will suffer any unclean thing to be
in that army? Not at all, for his angels and he himself are to go
before us. God will not dwell in the midst of a people who will
not sanctify themselves before him. That is the reason why he
withdrew his presence from ancient Israel. Moses sought
diligently to sanctify that numerous people and to bring them
into subjection to the law of God; he endeavored to teach them
the higher Gospel ordinances and law, which would have exalted
them into the celestial kingdom of God, but he could not do it;
they were a hardhearted, stiffnecked people and they would not
give heed to his words or to the words of the Lord; and in the
absence of Moses they made to themselves a golden calf and
worshipped it as the God who brought them forth out of the land
of Egypt. if we follow in the same track and make to ourselves
golden gods, and heap up the treasures of the earth and worship
and think more of them than of the laws of heaven, we may fall
under the same example of unbelief and transgression, and under
the same judgment that came upon ancient Israel. But Moses was
not to blame, for he sought diligently to sanctify them, but when
they transgressed time after time, God became so angry with them
that he finally swore in his wrath that he would not go up in the
midst of that people, lest he should break forth in his anger and
fury and consume them in a moment. That was the way he felt
towards them because of their sinfulness, and in order that they
might not be consumed, but that a remnant might be spared, and
that seed might be raised up to old father Abraham and to Isaac
and to Jacob, he withdrew his presence from the midst of the camp
of Israel. But he did not forsake them entirely. Said he, "Mine
angel may go before you. You may have an angel and you may have
Moses for a season, but I will not go with you." He swore that
that people, in the wilderness, should not enter into his rest,
which rest is the fullness of his glory.
365
It is to be hoped that there will be nothing of this kind among
the armies of Israel in the latter days. We have the promise of
the Almighty, and I hope that it will never be revoked, that "I
say not unto you as I said to your fathers, my angel shall go
before you, but not my presence, but I say unto you that my angel
shall go before you and also my presence." In order for the
presence of God to go with us we must retain the higher
Priesthood, for without that and the ordinances thereunto
pertaining, no man can behold the face of God and live; therefore
if we would retain this higher Priesthood we must sanctify
ourselves through obedience to the higher laws. If we do this, we
can then claim the fulfillment of this promise which the Lord has
made and which I have repeated, that his presence shall go with
us.
365
I expect that when the Lord leads forth his people to build up
the city of Zion, his presence will be visible. When we speak of
the presence of the Lord we speak of an exhibition of power. His
presence was with the children of Israel as a cloud by day, and
as the shining of a flaming fire by night. Though Israel were not
worthy to enter the tabernacle and behold the personage of the
Lord and to talk with him, yet Moses, not having forfeited that
right, could enter into the tabernacle of the Lord while his
glory rested upon it, and he could talk to the Lord face to face.
Why? Because he held the higher Priesthood and had been obedient
to the higher law and had attended to the higher ordinances. He
was not subjected to the law of carnal commandments, he had
sanctified himself so that he could endure the presence of the
Lord and not be consumed.
365
We shall go back to Jackson County. Not that all this people will
leave these mountains, or all be gathered together in a camp, but
when we go back there will be a very large organization
consisting of thousands, and tens of thousands, and they will
march forward, the glory of God overshadowing their camp by day
in the form of a cloud, and a pillar of flaming fire by night,
the Lord's voice being uttered forth before his army. Such a
period will come in the history of this people, and when it
arrives the mountains and the hills will be ready to break forth
with a loud voice before the Lord's army, and the very trees of
the field will wave to and fro by the power of God, and clap like
hands. The everlasting hills will rejoice, and they will tremble
before the presence of the Lord; and his people will go forth and
build up Zion according to celestial law.
366
Will not this produce terror upon all the nations of the earth?
Will not armies of this description, though they may not be as
numerous as the armies of the world, cause a terror to fall upon
the nations? The Lord says the banners of Zion shall be terrible.
If only one or two millions of this people were to go down and
build the waste places of Zion, would it strike the people of
Asia and Europe with terror? Not particularly, unless there was
some supernatural power made manifest. But when the Lord's
presence is there, when his voice is heard, and his angels go
before the camp, it will be telegraphed to the uttermost parts of
the earth and fear will seize upon all people, especially the
wicked, and the knees of the ungodly will tremble in that day,
and the high ones that are on high, and the great men of the
earth. We shall in due time walk forth into Jackson County and
build up the waste places of Zion. We shall erect in that county
a beautiful city after the order and pattern that the Lord shall
reveal, part of which has already been revealed. God intends to
have a city built up that will never be destroyed nor overcome,
but that will exist while eternity shall endure; and he will
point out the pattern and show the order of architecture; he will
show unto his servants the nature of the streets and the pavement
thereof, the kind of precious stones that shall enter into the
buildings, the nature of the rock and precious stones that will
adorn the gates and the walls of that city; for the gates will be
open continually says the Prophet Isaiah, that men may bring in
the force of the Gentiles.
366
The nature of the city of Zion is nowhere fully described. John
the revelator has described in his 21st chapter, two cities
coming down from God but of heaven. The first one is the New
Jerusalem. That will come down on the land of Joseph. After John
had seen that, one of the angels who had one of the vials of the
seven last plagues came to him and said, "Come hither, John, and
I will show you another city, that is that great city, the holy
Jerusalem." He took him to the summit of a high mountain and
showed him that great city descending from God out of heaven, and
John describes that city, the height of its walls, the number of
its gates, the names that are to be upon the gates, and a great
many particulars in relation to that city are clearly revealed.
But the New Jerusalem is nowhere so fully described, only as the
Psalmist David says, "Beautiful for situation, the joy of the
whole earth is Mount Zion, on the sides of the north, the city of
the great King." David also says, in speaking of this same city,
"Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God hath shined." From
these declarations we can at least believe that Zion will be a
very beautiful city--"the perfection of beauty," whether it is
constructed after the order of the old Jerusalem or not. Suffice
it to say that God by revelation will inspire his servants and
will dictate to them the order of the buildings of that city--the
number and width of the streets, the kind of houses, the
character of the Temple that is to be built therein, the kind of
rock, timber and the various materials that will have to be
brought from a distance to enter into the composition of that
beautiful city.
367
When the Temple is built the sons of the two Priesthoods, that
is, those who are ordained to the Priesthood of Melchizedek, that
Priesthood which is after the order of the Son of God, with all
its appendages; and those who have been ordained to the
Priesthood of Aaron with all its appendages, the former called
the sons of Moses, the latter the sons of Aaron, will enter into
that Temple in this generation, or in the generation that was
living in 1832, and all of them who are pure in heart will behold
the face of the Lord and that too before he comes in his glory in
the clouds of heaven, for he will suddenly come to his Temple,
and he will purify the sons of Moses and of Aaron, until they
shall be prepared to offer in that Temple and offering that shall
be acceptable in the sight of the Lord. In doing this, he will
purify no only the minds of the Priesthood in that Temple, but he
will purify their bodies until they shall be quickened, renewed
and strengthened, and they will be partially changed, not to
immortality, but changed in part that they can be filled with the
power of God, and they can stand in the presence of Jesus, and
behold his face in the midst of that Temple.
367
This will prepare them for further ministrations among the
nations of the earth, it will prepare them to go forth in the
days of tribulation and vengeance upon the nations of the wicked,
when God will smite them with pestilence, plague and earthquake,
such as former generations never knew. Then the servants of God
will need to be armed with the power of God, they will need to
have that sealing blessing pronounced upon their foreheads that
they can stand forth in the midst of these desolations and
plagues and not be overcome by them. When John the Revelator
describes this scene he says he saw four angels sent forth, ready
to hold the four winds that should blow from the four quarters of
heaven. Another angel ascended from the east and cried to the
four angels, and said, "Smite not the earth now, but wait a
little while." "How long?" "Until the servants of our God are
sealed in their foreheads." What for? To prepare them to stand
forth in the midst of these desolations and plagues, and not be
overcome. When they are prepared, when they have received a
renewal of their bodies in the Lord's Temple, and have been
filled with the Holy Ghost and purified as gold and silver in a
furnace of fire, then they will be prepared to stand before the
nations of the earth and preach glad tidings of salvation in the
midst of judgments that are to come like a whirlwind upon the
wicked.
367
I intended to lay before you some things pertaining to the order
of full consecration that will be observed when we get back to
Jackson County, but time will not permit to enter into that now.
367
May God bless you, Amen.
Journal of Discourses / Journal of Discourses, Volume 15 / George
Q. Cannon, March 23, 1873
George Q. Cannon, March 23, 1873
DISCOURSE BY ELDER GEORGE Q. CANNON,
Delivered in the 13th Ward Assembly Rooms, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, March 23, 1873.
[The 11th chapter of Hebrews was read as a text.]
(Reported by David W. Evans.)
THE TIMES OF OUR SAVIOR COMPARED WITH THE
PRESENT--REVELATION--DUTIES
OF THE SAINTS--SELF TO BE OVERCOME--COMING OF CHRIST.
368
A more comprehensive chapter than this, in its description of the
effects of faith when properly exercised by the children of men,
I think is not contained within the lids of the Bible. The entire
history of God's dealings with the children of men, so far as the
Jewish record is concerned, is epitomized therein. The Apostle,
in the plainest possible language, describes the leading events
that had transpired up to his day among the fathers of his
nation, setting forth with unmistakable clearness the power that
they wielded through faith in God, in accomplishing the work that
was assigned unto them; and he tells the Hebrews, in writing to
them upon this subject, that it is impossible to please God
without faith, for those who come unto him must believe that he
is the rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
368
I expect that the Apostle Paul had a generation to deal with that
were not dissimilar to the generation in which we live--a
generation who had in their midst the Scriptures, the predictions
of the holy Prophets, ministers who professed to have received
the authority which they exercised in ministering to the people
from a high source, and who were, in their own opinion at least,
called of God, an elect people, a chosen generation, who rejoiced
in the power that had been made manifest to and in behalf of
their fathers, and which, to a certain extent, they had received.
The Apostle, in this chapter, pointed out the power which their
fathers exercised through faith, and to the mighty works that had
been wrought thereby, and he endeavored to stir up within them a
desire to exercise the same faith.
368
At the time that Paul wrote this epistle to the Hebrews, the Jews
did not believe in living revelation; they did not believe that
God spoke to his people by any manifestations such as their
fathers had received. We are told that they garnished the
sepulchres of the dead Prophets, that they reverenced the places
of their birth, honored their memories, and declared that if they
had lived in the days of their fathers they would not have been
guilty of putting the Prophets to death. But the Son of God and
his Apostles were treated by them precisely as their fathers had
treated the Prophets of old.
369
It is a good thing for us who live in this generation that we
have this record in our midst. It is an encouraging thing to read
the history of the past, and to learn about the treatment that
men of God received in ancient days. It is encouraging for those
who contend for the same faith to know that slander, persecution,
ignominy and shame, and even death itself are not evidences of
the falsity of a system, or of the falsity of the doctrines
taught by any individual, because we have the history of the
Apostles--some of the best men that have ever trod the earth, and
of Jesus, the holiest and best man that ever trod the earth, or
that ever will, and we find that he and they were persecuted,
hated and despised, and their names were cast out as evil, and
they were slain by a generation who professed to honor God and be
very righteous, and who claimed to be the descendants of the
Patriarchs of old, who were called the friends of God. If this
story were told to us without our knowing anything of the
circumstances, we should be reluctant to believe it. It would be
a difficult thing to persuade us that human beings could have
been so base and degraded, and so lost to every feeling of
humanity as to persecute and crucify a pure being like Jesus, who
had come from the Father for the express purpose of laying down
his life as an expiation for their sins. But the record is before
us. We have been familiar with it from our infancy, and in the
minds of those who profess to have any faith in God, there is no
room to doubt it. It is most fortunate for us that this record
has been preserved, for by it we are enabled to understand what
kind of a generation lived in the day in which the chapter I have
read in your hearing was written. They were a people who spoke
highly of religion, who built synagogues and places of worship,
who honored the Sabbath day, who wore long phylacteries, on which
were written select passages from Scripture, who had the word of
God written on their very doorposts, who prayed at the corners of
the streets, who fasted, and, apparently, sought in every way to
glorify God. They believed in Abraham and Moses, and in the
covenants which God made with them. They believed and practiced
the law which Moses had revealed unto them, and so strict were
they in observing many of its principles, that they were ready on
one occasion to have a woman slain for the violation of the
commandment respecting adultery; and at another time their wrath
was kindled against the disciples because they plucked some ears
of corn on the Sabbath day to appease their hunger. They
considered that act a violation of the Sabbath, and their
righteous souls were shocked thereat. They were shocked over at
the idea of Jesus eating with unwashed hands, and at him, who
professed to be a teacher, associating with publicans and
sinners. They thought it was beneath the dignity of a man of God
to condescend to associate with the low and degraded. This was
the kind of people that existed when Paul wrote this chapter, yet
with all their professions and with all their apparent sanctity
they were utterly destitute of the knowledge and power of God.
They drew near to God with their lips, but their hearts were far
from him. They made a great parade of their religion, but they
dwelt on the glories of the past, on the evidences of God's favor
which their nation and religion had formerly received. But did
they themselves possess the spirit of prophecy, and the faith
which Paul describes? If they had they would have recognized
Jesus when he came amongst them, and they would have gladly
received him and his teachings, and would have obeyed and
practiced in their lives the principles of his Gospel. But as I
have said, they were utterly destitute of the Spirit of God, they
were darkened in their minds, and instead of receiving Jesus and
his teachings, they hounded him until they got him into their
power and then they slew him, and they treated his Apostles in
the same manner.
370
It is truly said that history repeats itself. We are familiar
with this in the history of our race. When the Prophets who
preceded Jesus went into the midst of the people and preached
unto them the word of God, they found them believing in the
Prophets who had gone before. They were willing to receive the
testimony of Moses, and of some who succeeded him. Samuel, after
his death, was recognized as a great Prophet by the Jews, and so
were some others who were dead; but while they lived they were
treated much the same as Jesus and his Apostles were treated. The
wicked could not recognize the character of the men of God who
labored among them, and they rejected and persecuted them, and
slew many of them. This is characteristic of the human family.
One of the most unreliable things connected with mankind is
popular opinion. So far As God's dealings with the children of
men are concerned, and the sending of Prophets and Apostles to
them, those who have been guided by popular opinion have always
erred. The opinions of the great majority concerning the truth
have in almost every instance been unreliable. Moses,
notwithstanding the mighty miracles he performed, was not
appreciated by those among whom he lived, and narrowly escaped
being stoned by the people whom he led across the Red Sea. When
they got into the wilderness they murmured at him, and were ready
to choose others to lead them back to Egypt. It was so with
Samuel. Although the nation was comparatively a righteous nation,
they rejected him. They were not content with the power and
authority which he exercised over them, and they wanted a king.
So with other Prophets. The more wicked the generation, the
harder they were to convince of the truth of the predictions that
were uttered among them by the servants of God; and so much was
this the case, that it became almost an infallible rule, when a
majority of the people decided against a man, he was sure to be a
servant of God.
370
It may be asked, why has this been the case? I know that men say,
If God be God, and is the being that he is described to be, why
has he not manifested his power in the midst of his children to
such an extent that they are compelled to receive the testimony
of his servants? There is a class of people who can not
understand why it is that truth can not be made so plain to the
human understanding that men can not reject it. Infidels advance
this as an evidence that there is no such thing as divine power,
no such being as God, and that there is no Supreme Providence
presiding over the affairs of the children of men. They say that
if God be the kind of being that he is described to be in the
Scriptures, it would be inconsistent with his character to
withhold form the children of men such manifestations of power as
would convince them beyond all controversy that the men have
sends to declare his will unto them are his divinely appointed
servants.
371
It is very plausible, taking one view of the subject, for men to
imagine that this ought to be the way in which God should act;
but there is one saying, written in ancient days, that is as true
to-day as when it was written, that is, "That as the heavens are
higher than the earth, so are God's ways higher than our ways,
and God's thoughts higher than our thoughts." In our degradation
and ignorance we can not comprehend the purposes and plans of our
heavenly Father. No man can do this. If any man were capable of
doing this, he would be unfit to dwell on earth, and he might
perhaps be translated, as Enoch was anciently. No man can rise to
the wisdom of Deity, and comprehend the purposes and designs of
him who created the earth and placed us upon it, and who
regulates the movements of the universe of which we form a part;
and when we try to do it, it is like a child just beginning to
talk, seeking to dictate and comprehend the movements, actions
and thoughts of men who are in possession of the wisdom and
experience of mature age. In fat the difference is greater. Our
Father and God has made it plain to us that he has placed us here
on this earth in order that we may be tested and proved in the
exercise of the agency that he has given us; and if, when he
sends forth his Prophets, he were to manifest his power, so that
all the earth would be compelled to receive their words, there
would be no room then for men to exercise their agency, for they
would be compelled to adopt a certain course, and to receive
certain teachings and doctrines regardless of their own wishes
and will. But God has sent us here, and has given to every one of
us our agency, as much so as he has his. I, in my sphere, have my
agency, as much as God, my Eternal Father, or as Jesus, my elder
brother, has in his. I can do right or I can do wrong; I can
serve God or reject him; I can keep his commandments or violate
them; I can receive his Spirit or reject it. This agency God has
given unto man, and hence it is that when he sends his truth, and
his servants to declare it unto the people, he does it in such a
way that man is left to the free exercise of his agency in
receiving or rejecting them; at the same time we are assured that
whoever receives that truth will also receive the convincing
power of the Spirit of God to bear testimony to him that it is
divine; and this is the reason why, as the Apostle says in the
chapter I read to you, the ancient Saints, though they were
stoned, sawn asunder, tempted, slain with the sword; though they
wandered about in sheep skins and in goat skins, being destitute,
afflicted and tormented, were able to endure to the end. They had
received a testimony from God thorough obedience to his Gospel in
the exercise of their agency in the right direction, and this
enabled them to endure all these things cheerfully, looking
forward, as Paul says Moses did when he fled from Egypt, to the
recompense of reward.
371
In this manner the servants of God have gone forth in every age
and preached the Gospel. To bring the matter down to our own
day--when Joseph Smith commenced to preach the Gospel, to tell
the people that God had once more spoken from the heavens, a
great many said, "Where are the signs, or evidences that God has
done this? Can you not show some sign or work us some miracle
that shall convince us that this is true? If you will work us a
miracle, if you will walk on the water, raise the dead, or do
some other miraculous work, then we will believe that he has
spoken to you, and that the words you testify to are true." They
wanted signs, and yet they had the Bible in their midst. The
position of those to whom Joseph taught the gospel was very
similar to that of the Jews in Paul's day, only the former were
more blessed than the Jews were unto whom Jesus came. They had
the Prophets and Apostles, that is, they had their words. They
had the record of the Gospel as taught by Jesus and his Apostles,
with the account of the miracles wrought by them; they had a form
of godliness, and they thought they were on the road of
salvation. But they did not believe in miracles, they did not
believe that God was a God of revelation, hence they would not
receive the testimony of the Prophet Joseph, but they wanted
miracles to convince them. In this they made a great mistake, as
many others have done in other ages of the world in relation to
this matter. It is written of Jesus that he did not do many
mighty works in Galilee because of the unbelief of the people;
and he said it was a wicked and adulterous generation that
demanded a sign, and none should be given them. When the people
demanded miraculous signs of Joseph Smith to convince them of the
truth of his testimony, they would not, or did not exercise their
agency, but wanted some overpowering evidence to convince them.
372
The Lord does not operate in that way among the children of men.
He sends forth his servants with the truth, and he makes this
promise--he made it through Joseph Smith--If they will believe in
Jesus Christ, repent of their sins, be baptized for the remission
thereof by one having authority, they shall receive the Holy
Ghost and a testimony from Him as to the character of the work in
which they have engaged. A man who comes to God must believe that
he is God, that he has power to do as he says. This is the way
the ancients received their faith. The difficulty to-day is, that
the people do not believe that God is a being of this character.
You talk to those men who profess to be ministers of the Gospel,
and ask them, "Do you have the gifts, powers and blessings of the
Gospel as they were enjoyed by the Saints in ancient days?" and
the reply will be, invariably, "That power is withdrawn, those
gifts and blessings are no longer enjoyed among men. God does not
reveal his will unto the children of men as he did in ancient
days, and it is in vain for you to ask God for those blessings,
for they will not be bestowed." This is the teaching of the
ministers in the religious world to-day. Is it any wonder that
there is no faith among men? Is it any wonder that the blessings
which Paul describes as being the fruits of faith are not
realized to-day? Is it any wonder that men wander in darkness and
error, and that the heavens are as brass over their heads? Is it
any wonder that angels do not come to earth and visit men, and
that the gifts and blessings of the Gospel are not enjoyed? It is
no wonder to me; on the contrary, the wonder to me is that there
is so much faith, or rather that there is any faith left among
the children of men, and to tell the truth, my brethren and
sisters, there is but very little. I can see a great change since
I became old enough to comprehend anything about religion. I can
see an absence of that faith which religious people once had.
There has been a gradual lapsing into unbelief, and infidelity
and scepticism are growing among the people, and today there is
very little of that old fashioned vital religion that was enjoyed
previous to the revelation of the Gospel.
373
Among the earliest of the predictions of the Elders of
this Church that I can remember, were those foretelling, as
effects which should follow the declaration of the Gospel in
these days, those we now see. They declared that when this Gospel
was proclaimed unto the people, if they rejected it, the faith
which they then enjoyed and the light they then possessed would
disappear, and they would be left in darkness. I have lived to
see the fulfillment of this prediction. The Apostle Paul, in his
epistle to the Thessalonians, says "For this cause God will send
them strong delusions, that they may believe a lie who take not
pleasure in righteousness," &c. "For this cause"--because they
rejected the truth and the testimony of God's servants, strong
delusion would be sent unto them, which would cause them to
believe a lie. I have lived to see the fulfillment of that
prediction. The first time I heard of modern revelation outside
of this Church, I was on the Sandwich Islands. I had been from
home then several years. I happened to call at the house of a
friend and picked up a book. I read its preface; and I was
astonished at it. I had never heard of anything of the kind
outside of our Church before then. The author argued that it was
right to expect that spirits would visit and make communications
to men, and he went on to quote from the Bible in support of his
argument. I have since seen many books of the same character, and
it is now as common to believe in spiritual revelation as it was
formerly uncommon. It is as rare a thing now to meet with persons
who do not believe in this in some form as it was formerly to
meet with those who did believe it. Up to the time of my early
manhood I had never heard of anybody believing in this but
Latter-day Saints. Now you will find ministers of
religion--Methodists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, and men of
all classes and degrees who believe in spiritual communications.
But have they any organization, or any point upon which they can
unite together? No, each man receives revelation to suit himself,
until to-day there is no faith in the land and no belief in the
manifestations of the power of God. The adversary has captivated
the hearts of the children of men, he has fortified their minds
against the truth, and is leading them to destruction.
373
Formerly, the great objection to the Latter-day Saints was that
they believed in revelation. That was one of the great charges
made against us in Jackson County, Mo. Another was, that we had a
Prophet, whose words we hearkened to, and that we believed in the
working of miracles. These were among the charges made against us
by the mob as a reason why we should be expelled from our lands.
But after a few years had elapsed, our cunning adversary began to
give revelations and manifestations to the people, and he spread
abroad his lying signs and wonders, and now they are far more
numerous than those contained in the Bible. People everywhere can
get revelation. Profane men and women--drunkards, gamblers and
wicked people of every decree can get round a table and obtain
revelation. What necessity is there for them to obey the Gospel?
What attractions has truth for such persons? They can get all the
revelation they need without having recourse to the Gospel or to
its ordinances, or without being under the necessity of enduring
the ignominy of being the servants of God, for it has always been
considered ignominious by the world to be as servant of God since
Satan had power in the earth. Can you not see how cunningly the
adversary has worked, and how difficult it is under such
circumstances to snatch people from the error of their ways? The
truth has not been sweet or desirable to this generation, and
they have rejected it. The truth has no attractions for those who
do not love it for its own sake. Connected with the truth there
is a love such as Jesus said his followers should have, which
should induce them to cleave to it when they were persecuted,
their names cast out as evil, and when they should be hated of
all men for his sake. There is nothing attractive about all this
to people who do not love the truth for its own sake, but they
who do are willing to endure all things for the sake of the
blessings that God has promised to bestow upon them.
374
Brethren and sisters, it is our duty as individuals and as a
people to live so that we may have that faith that was once
delivered to the Saints; that we may have the revelations of God
in our hearts, that we may know for ourselves concerning the
truth, and have each day a testimony thereof. You know that the
idea is very prevalent that we are led by one man, or by a few
men. It is thought that President Young leads this people
according to his own ideas, and that he and his counsellors and
the Twelve, through some cunning craft of theirs, are able to
influence them to do this or reject that, to pursue this course
or avoid that. I suppose this idea will be prevalent as long as
there are people who do not understand the character of this
work. But it is our duty, one and all, to live so that we shall
have the light of the Holy Spirit and a continual testimony
within us of the truth of the work that God has established, and
that we may have that faith that will enable us to endure all
things. If women had their dead restored in ancient days, women
ought to have faith enough in these days to realize the same
blessings. But a spirit of unbelief, darkness and hardness of
heart has gone forth, and it is shared to some extent by this
people. The more we mingle with the world the more of this spirit
we feel. It permeates the literature of the present day. You can
not take up a book that has not been written by a servant of God,
that does not bear evidence of this spirit of unbelief. You can
not take up a newspaper, but something is said therein to weaken
the faith of those who have any. Unbelief permeates the world at
large. There are good reasons for this. The great mass of the
people ridicule Jesus, the resurrection and life beyond the
grave. They can not understand why men should deny themselves and
suffer as Jesus and his disciples did. The people of to-day can
not comprehend anything but living for to-day, enjoying
themselves and having pleasure to-day, and letting tomorrow take
care of itself. The idea of laying up treasures in heaven is
ridiculed, even by some who call themselves Latter-day Saints. I
have heard, and perhaps you have, some amongst us say, "I am
satisfied with getting the best I can here, and with enjoying
myself to the best advantage here, and let the future take care
of itself. I do not know anything about the life to come, but I
know about this, and I want my enjoyment here, and I will risk
the future."
375
The whole tendency of the Gospel of Jesus is to the effect that
we must deny ourselves, and be willing to endure and suffer even
to death itself. It is right that we should dress comfortably and
according to our means; it is right that we should take care of
our bodies and have suitable food. God has given us the elements
of food and raiment and to build good houses. He has given us
horses and cattle, and the materials to make carriages, and it is
right that we should use these things. I do not believe in any
religion that denies to man the use of the blessings which God
has given, but I deny that God designs that we should abuse or
worship these things. If you or I have wealth, we should not
worship it. If you have comforts, your heart should not be set
upon them. If you have pleasant homes, orchards, gardens and
fields you should not worship them, but hold them as the gifts of
God, and be as ready to go forth and leave them as you would to
leave a barren wilderness, or as these Indians are to take up
their wick-i-ups and go from place to place. As Latter-day Saints
we should be ready and willing to move in any direction and to do
anything that our Father and God requires of us, holding the
religion that he has given us dearer than life itself. Our
brethren and sisters who lived anciently aimed for the same glory
that we are aiming for, and they were willing to be sawn asunder,
to be stoned, to dress in sheepskins and goatskins, to dwell in
dens and caves of the earth, to have their names cast out as
evil, and to do all things for the righteousness of God. We are
aiming for the same glory they have received, and if we attain to
it we must be willing to endure all the afflictions and to make
all the sacrifices they endured and made.
375
There is this difference between us and the work in which we are
engaged, and them and the work in their day--they looked forward
to the time when the kingdom of God would be withdrawn from the
earth on account of the growth of unbelief and apostacy, but in
our day God has promised that this kingdom shall stand for ever.
On that account we can rejoice. We know that our enemies' attacks
upon us will fail. They may drive us, at least they have done it,
but I do not think they will again if we are faithful. They have
driven and persecuted us; they have slain some of our numbers,
they have cast out our names as evil; they have called us
everything vile, as they did Jesus. We are of all men the most
despised, so far as our characters are concerned; and yet we are
known better than any other people. The adversary has spread this
mist of darkness over the minds of the people until they think us
capable of everything evil. But notwithstanding all this, the
course of this work is onward and upward, and it will prevail.
Men may combine and form plots and schemes against it, and do
everything in their power to overthrow it, but they will be
signally defeated every time in the future, as they have been in
the past. There has never been a move against this Church, from
its organization until the present time, that did not benefit it.
There never has been a hostile hand stretched forth that did not
add to the speed and strength of its progress. There never has
been a drop of the blood of its members shed by the ungodly that
has not contributed to the increase of our numbers, and that has
not added to the strength of the system with which we are
connected. Let your minds go back and contemplate history of this
Church, trace the course of this people from the inception of
God's work to the present time, and what has there been done
against it or them that has not added to its strength and to the
certainty of its perpetuity? Think of all the schemes concocted,
and of all the smart men that have been engaged in fighting this
work; think of all the talented men in the church who have
apostatized and have preached against the Gospel, and have
written books and newspaper articles, and everything else to
destroy this work. Think of it, and then think how this people
have gone forth increasing in strength, numbers and everything
that is calculated to make them great and mighty. God has
preserved us. He has given us the supremacy of the land and to
Him the glory is to be ascribed for the supremacy we still
maintain. It is not because or enemies would have it so. They
have fought us step by step; they have devised mischief and evil
in various ways against us, but God, through His providences, has
overruled all for our good, and to Him, not to man, be the glory
therefor. Man is utterly incapable of accomplishing these
results. There were men in ancient days as brave, fearless,
honest and mighty as any who have been connected with this work,
but they sank beneath the blows of their destroyers, and went
down to death. Satan and his emissaries overcame them. But God
has now set to his hand for the last time to build up his kingdom
and to send his Gospel to the people, and he has declared that
when that time arrived his work should never again be overcome.
376
Any man who will look at the condition of the people will say
that if there ever was a time in the history of the world when
God should speak to man it is now. The people everywhere are gone
astray. Men and women are filled with extravagance and foolish
notions, and they are corrupt in every sense of the word. The
churches are corrupted, the people are divided, and the humble
man who desires to serve God is laughed at, ridiculed and crowded
to the wall, while the man who is bold in iniquity, and shrewd in
taking advantage of his fellows, lords it over them. Honesty is
far below par, and the virtuous are the butt and ridicule of the
wicked. Mingle among men of the world and talk to them about
virtue, and they will laugh at you, and if a man is known to be
chaste and pure in his thoughts and actions he is ridiculed and
sneered at. It is so with everything else that God values. Think
of it. Where do you see meek and humble men prospered? You see
bold, defiant men--those shrewd in iniquity, get all the
advantages, and the man who can take advantage of his neighbor
best flourishes most. Is this right? No. I should mourn for the
race if I thought so, I should mourn if I thought that this
condition of things would forever prevail. God promised in
ancient days that in the latter days he would reveal the truth,
send forth his servants and gather out his people. He has
commenced the work. By the preaching of his word, he has gathered
thousands of honest-hearted people who love the truth and who are
willing to abide by it. He has given unto them the same spirit
that he gave to his servants in ancient days. He has given them
the same faith, but they do not always exercise it as they should
do, they are overcome of evil; and there are some who call
themselves Latter-day Saints who have almost got to believe that
there is nothing particularly special in this work, God has not
shown himself as they expected. Such persons will sooner or later
leave the Church if they do not repent.
376
There is this about unbelief, brethren and sisters, it is one of
the most dreadful feeling, I think, that can assail any human
being. I have seen men in this condition, and I have thought
while beholding them, that I got a better conception of hell than
I ever did from any other exhibition. How, you may ask, shall we
guard against this spirit of unbelief? I will tell you. There are
some people who, when assailed by doubt, will commence a
controversy with the devil, they will argue with him, and give
room to him. You should never condescend to any such thing. Just
tell him you have nothing to do with him, bid him to get behind
you, you have set out to serve God and to keep his commandments,
and you are going to do it regardless of him, or any of his
temptations or snares. Be firm and steadfast, and close your ears
against evil influences and everything of that kind. I will tell
you a rule by which you may know the Spirit of God form the
spirit of evil. The Spirit of God always produces joy and
satisfaction of mind. When you have that Spirit you are happy;
when you have another spirit you are not happy. The spirit of
doubt is the spirit of the evil one; it produces uneasiness and
other feelings that interfere with happiness and peace.
377
It is your privilege, and it ought to be your rule, my brethren
and sisters, to always have peace and joy in your hearts. When
you wake in the morning and your spirits are disturbed, you may
know there is some spirit or influence that is not right. You
should never leave your bed chambers until you can get that calm,
serene and happy influence that flows from the presence of the
Spirit of God, and that is the fruit of that Spirit. So during
the day you are apt to get disturbed, angry and irritated about
something. You should stop, and not allow that influence to
prevail or have place in your heart. "Why," says one, "not be
angry?" No, not be angry, unless righteously so at some great
wrong that ought to be reproved. That is not the anger of which I
speak. Some people will get angry with their wives, husband,
children or friends, and will justify themselves and think they
are perfectly right because they have some spirit which prompts
them to say harsh things. I have known people give themselves
great credit for their frankness and candor for speaking angrily
and improperly. "Why," said they, "it is better to 'spit' it out
than to keep it in." I think it is far better to keep it in than
to let it out. If you do not speak it, nobody knows how you feel,
and certainly the adversary does not get the advantage over you.
You do not make a wound.
377
We of all people should be happy and joyful. When the clouds seem
the darkest and most threatening, and as though the storm is
ready to burst upon us with all its fury, we should be calm,
serene and undisturbed, for if we have the faith we profess to
have we know that God is in the storm; in the cloud or in the
threatened danger, and that he will not let it come upon us only
as far as is necessary for our good and for our salvation, and we
should, even then, be calm and rejoice before God and praise him.
Yes, if led like the three Hebrew children, to the fiery furnace
to be cast therein, or as Daniel was, into the lions' den, even
then we should preserve our equanimity and our trustfulness in
God. I know that some will say, "This is folly and enthusiasm,"
but notwithstanding this idea I know that there is a power in the
religion of Jesus Christ to sustain men even under these
circumstances and they can rejoice in them. Yes, if we had to
take out flight into these canons and mountains to hide from our
enemies who were hunting us in the deserts and wilds of this
great interior country, we should be as happy then if we loved
our religion as we are to-day. I know that when the Saints
crossed these plains in destitution, driven by their enemies from
their pleasant places, burying their dead by the wayside, I know
that God bestowed peace upon them, and that they rejoiced to as
great an extent as they have at any time since.
377
Brethren and sisters, seek for the faith once delivered to the
Saints. I know that faith will grow in you, and it should grow in
you and you should instill it into your children, that it may be
a fixed principle with them, that we whom God has called from the
nations of the earth may be the nucleus of a faith that shall be
found amongst us the faith once given to the Saints, and until a
race shall spring from us who, like the mighty of ancient days,
shall, through faith stop the mouths of lions, put to flight the
armies of the aliens, quench the violence of fire and raise their
dead to life; until the darkness that enshrouded us and our
fathers shall be known no more, and we be prepared for an eternal
residence in his presence. This is my prayer in the name of
Jesus. Amen.