I shall address you this morning upon a subject that is more
interesting to me than any other pertaining to the life of man. It is
a subject of deep study and research, and has been from age to age
among the reflecting and philosophical portions of the human family.
The intelligence given to the children of men is the subject to which
I allude, and upon which has been expended more intellectual labor
and profound thought than upon any other that has ever attracted the
attention of man.
The Psalmist has written, "What is man, that thou art mindful of him?
and the son of man that thou visitest him? For thou hast made him a
little lower than the angels, and hast crowned him with glory and
honor." This passage is but one of many which refer to the
organization of man as though it were a great mystery—something that
could not be fully comprehended by the greatest minds while dwelling
in earthly tabernacles. It is a matter of vital interest to each of
us, and yet it is often farthest from the thoughts of the greater
portion of mankind. Instead of reflecting upon and searching for
hidden things of the greatest value to them, they rather wish to learn
how to secure their way through this world as easily and as
comfortably as possible. The reflections what they are here for, who
produced them, and where they are from, far too seldom enter their
minds.
Many have written upon this great subject, and there exists a great
variety of reflections, views, and opinions which I have not time to
dwell upon in detail. I will merely give you a few texts, or what you
may term a textbook. Nor shall I now take time to minutely elaborate
any particular point, but will present such views as shall come into
my mind, trusting that I shall have your faith and prayers to be able
to edify both Saint and sinner, believer and unbeliever.
If the inhabitants of the earth thoroughly understood their own being,
their views, feelings, faith, and affections would be very different
from what they now are. Many believe in predestination, while others
of the Christian world oppose that doctrine and exclusively advocate
free grace, free will, free offering, etc.; and each party of
Christians has its pet theory or doctrine, upon which it builds its
hopes of eternal salvation. Such a course is like five or six hundred
men each selecting and running off with a piece of the machinery of a
cotton mill, and declaring that he had the cotton mill entire. This
comparison may be truly applied to the Christian world as it now is
with regard to the holy and divine principles which have been
revealed pertaining to eternal life and salvation.
Many of you, no doubt, have concluded that the doctrine of election
and reprobation is true, and you do so with propriety, for it is true;
it is a scriptural doctrine. Others do not believe this doctrine,
affirming with all their faith, might, and skill that free grace and
free will are or ought to be the foundation of man's faith in his
Creator. Very well. I can also say to them that free grace and
free will are scripturally true. The first-named doctrine is as true as
the second, and the second as the first. Others, again, declare that
mankind have no will, neither free nor restrained, in their actions;
for instance, the Rationalists or Freethinkers, who deny the existence
and divinity of the Gods that we believe in. But so far from their
believing their own theory, Mr. Neil, of Boston, while in prison for
having no religion, wrote an essay, in which he declared that "All is
God."
I might enumerate many more instances, and say that they are all right
so far as they go in truth. The doctrine of free will and conditional
salvation, the doctrine of free grace and unconditional salvation, the
doctrine of foreordination and reprobation, and many more that I have
not time to enumerate, can all be fully and satisfactorily proved by the
Scriptures, and are true.
On the other hand, many untrue doctrines are taught and believed, such
as there being infants, not a span long, weltering in the flames of
hell, there to remain throughout the countless ages of eternity, and
the doctrine of total depravity. Some have gone so far as to say that
a man or woman who wishes to be saved in the kingdom of God—who wishes
to be a servant or handmaid of the Almighty, must feel that deep
contrition of heart, that sound repentance, and such a sense of his or
her unworthiness and nothingness, and of the supremacy, glory, and
exaltation of that Deity they believe in, as to exclaim before God and
their brethren and sisters that they are willing to be damned. To me
that is one of the heights of nonsense; for if a person is willing to
be damned, he cares not to make the efforts necessary to secure
salvation. All this confusion is in the world—party against
party—communities against communities—individuals against individuals.
One sets out with five truths and fifteen errors, making the articles
of his faith twenty; another dissents from him, rejects those five
truths, selects perhaps five more, and adds as many errors as did the
former one, and then he comes out a flaming reformer. Men, in
dissenting from one another, have too often exercised no better
judgment than to deny and dissent from many truths because their
ancestors cherished and believed them, which has produced numerous
parties, sects, and articles of faith, when, in fact, taking them in
mass, they have an immense amount of true principles.
It was the occupation of Jesus Christ and his Apostles to propagate
the Gospel of salvation and the principles of eternal life to the
world, and it is our duty and calling, as ministers of the same
salvation and Gospel, to gather every item of truth and reject every
error. Whether a truth be found with professed infidels, or with the
Universalists, or the Church of Rome, or the Methodists, the Church of
England, the Presbyterians, the Baptists, the Quakers, the Shakers, or
any other of the various and numerous different sects and parties, all
of whom have more or less truth, it is the business of the Elders of
this Church (Jesus, their elder brother, being at their head), to
gather up all the truths in the world pertaining to life and
salvation, to the Gospel we preach, to mechanism of every kind, to the
sciences, and to philosophy, wherever it may be found in every nation, kindred, tongue, and people, and bring it to Zion.
The people upon this earth have a great many errors, and they have
also a great many truths. This statement is not only true of the
nations termed civilized—those who profess to worship the true God,
but is equally applicable to pagans of all countries, for in their
religious rights and ceremonies may be found a great many truths which
we will also gather home to Zion. All truth is for the salvation of
the children of men—for their benefit and learning—for their
furtherance in the principles of divine knowledge; and divine
knowledge is any matter of fact—truth; and all truth pertains to
divinity.
When we view mankind collectively, or as nations, communities,
neighborhoods, and families, we are led to inquire into the object of
our being here and situated as we find ourselves to be. Did we produce
ourselves, and endow ourselves with that knowledge and intelligence we
now possess? All are ready to acknowledge that we had nothing to do
with the origin of our being—that we were produced by a superior
Power, without either the knowledge or the exercise of the agency we
now possess. We know that we are here. We know that we live, breathe,
and walk upon the earth. We know this naturally, as the brute creation
knows. We know that our food and drink come from the elements around
us: by them we are nourished, cherished, refreshed, and sustained,
with the addition of sleep. We live and breathe, and breathe and live.
Who can define and point out the particularities of the wonderful
organization of man?
It enters into the minds of but few that the air we inhale is the
greatest source of our life. We derive more real nourishment to our
mortal tabernacles from this element than from the solid food we
receive into our stomachs. Our lungs expand and contract to sustain
the life which God has given us. Of the component parts of this great
fountain of vitality I have not time to treat; but this interesting
information you may gather in part from numerous works on natural
philosophy. I will, however, say that the air is full of life and
vitality, and its volume fills immensity. The relative terms height,
depth, length, and breadth do not apply to it. Could you pass with the
velocity of the electric fluid over telegraphic wires, during the
continuation of more years than you can comprehend, you would still be
surrounded by it and in the bosom of eternity as much as you now are;
and it is filled with the spirit of life which emanates from God.
Many have tried to penetrate to the First Cause of all things; but it
would be as easy for an ant to number the grains of sand on the earth.
It is not for man, with his limited intelligence, to grasp eternity in
his comprehension. There is an eternity of life, from which we were
composed by the wisdom and skill of superior Beings. It would be as
easy for a gnat to trace the history of man back to his origin as for
man to fathom the First Cause of all things, lift the veil of
eternity, and reveal the mysteries that have been sought after by
philosophers from the beginning. What, then, should be the calling and
duty of the children of men? Instead of inquiring after the origin of
the Gods—instead of trying to explore the depths of eternities that
have been, that are, and that will be—instead of endeavoring to
discover the boundaries of boundless space, let them seek to know the
object of their present existence, and how to apply, in the most
profitable manner for their mutual good and salvation, the
intelligence they possess. Let them seek to know and thoroughly
understand things within their reach, and to make themselves
well acquainted with the object of their being here, by diligently
seeking unto a superior Power for information, and by the careful
study of the best books.
The life that is within us is a part of an eternity of life, and is
organized spirit, which is clothed upon by tabernacles, thereby
constituting our present being, which is designed for the attainment
of further intelligence. The matter composing our bodies and spirits
has been organized from the eternity of matter that fills immensity.
Were I to fully speak what I know and understand concerning myself and
others, you might think me to be infringing. I shall therefore omit
some things that I would otherwise say to you if the people were
prepared to receive them.
Jesus Christ says, "And this is life eternal, that they might know
thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou has sent." We are
not now in a capacity to know him in his fulness of glory. We know a
few things that he has revealed concerning himself, but there are a
great many which we do not know. When people have secured to
themselves eternal life, they are where they can understand the true
character of their Father and God, and the object of the creation,
fall, and redemption of man after the creation of this world. These
points have ever been subjects for speculation with all classes of
believers, and are subjects of much interest to those who entertain a
deep anxiety to know how to secure to themselves eternal life. Our
bodies are organized from the eternity of matter, from such matter as
we breathe, and from such matter as is found in the vegetable and
mineral kingdoms. This matter is organized into a world, with all its
appendages, by whom? By the Almighty; and we see it peopled by men
and women who are made in the image of God.
All this vast creation was produced from element in its unorganized
state; the mountains, rivers, seas, valleys, plains, and the animal,
vegetable, and mineral kingdoms beneath and around us, all speaking
forth the wonderful works of the Great God. Shall I say that the seeds
of vegetables were planted here by the Characters that framed and
built this world—that the seeds of every plant composing the vegetable
kingdom were brought from another world? This would be news to many of
you. Who brought them here? It matters little to us whether it was
John, James, William, Adam, or Bartholomew who brought them; but it
was some Being who had power to frame this earth with its seas,
valleys, mountains, and rivers, and cause it to teem with vegetable
and animal life.
Here let me state to all philosophers of every class upon the earth,
When you tell me that father Adam was made as we make adobies from the
earth, you tell me what I deem an idle tale. When you tell me that the
beasts of the field were produced in that manner, you are speaking
idle words devoid of meaning. There is no such thing in all the
eternities where the Gods dwell. Mankind are here because they are the
offspring of parents who were first brought here from another planet,
and power was given them to propagate their species, and they were
commanded to multiply and replenish the earth. The offspring of Adam
and Eve are commanded to take the rude elements, and, by the knowledge
God has given, to convert them into everything required for their
life, health, adornment, wealth, comfort, and consolation. Have we
the knowledge to do this? We have. Who gave us this knowledge? Our
Father who made us; for he is the only wise God, and to him we
owe allegiance; to him we owe our lives. He has brought us forth and
taught us all we know. We are not indebted to any other power or God
for all our great blessings.
We see man upon the earth, and discern that he is endowed with great
intelligence, which displays its scope and power in various ways to
meet and provide for the exigencies and wants of the human race. Wise
statesmen know how to devise and plan for a kingdom, and can closely
calculate the results of the policies they adopt. They understand the
course to be pursued to induce the people to submit to a wholesome
government or to a despotic rule as may please the will of the rulers.
There are historians of various grades, philosophers wise and simple,
and an exceedingly great variety of capacities and tastes. In our
Republican government we see some who are acute politicians, but that
seems to be the extent of their knowledge. You may find others who are
good statesmen, but poor politicians. Some are excellent
mathematicians, and understand and care for but little outside that
science. Still, if a man is capable of learning the geography of the
earth, he is also capable of learning the laws of the nations that
inhabit it, if you will give him time according to his capacity. One
scholar in a school may far outstrip the rest; but give them
sufficient time, and they can learn what the quick, bright scholar has
learned so easily and quickly. If we are capacitated to learn one
thing today, we can learn another tomorrow. It is the height of
folly to say that a man can only learn so much and no more. The
further literary men advance in their studies, the more they discern
there is to learn, and the more anxious they are to learn. This is
made manifest before us day by day, and is observed upon the face of
the whole earth.
The principle of intelligence is within us. Who planted it there? He
who made us. That which you see developed in the children of men (you
may call it disposition, or whatever else you please), is the force of
the mind or the spirit, and the body is a tabernacle organized for its
temporary habitation.
It is written of the Savior that he descended below all things. If he
did, he descended in capacity. I will merely tell you what I believe
on this point. I believe that there never was a child born on this
earth with any less capacity than dwelt in the child that was born in
a manger of his mother Mary. I believe, according to the natural
ability which he received from his mother and from his supposed father
Joseph, that there never was a child that descended lower in capacity,
or that knew less. Yet, according to the history given of him, his
power of mind developed with such wonderful rapidity that when he was
but a few years old he propounded questions to the learned doctors of
his day which they could not answer, and answered questions
propounded to him which the querists could not answer. He increased in
wisdom and knowledge, and came into communication with his Father. The
Being whom we call Father was the Father of the spirit of the Lord
Jesus Christ, and he was also his Father pertaining to the flesh.
Infidels and Christians, make all you can of this statement. The
Bible, which all Christians profess to believe, reveals that fact, and
it reveals the truth upon that point, and I am a witness of its truth.
The Apostles who were personally acquainted with Jesus Christ did know
and understand what they wrote, and they wrote the truth.
He was endowed with capacity to receive intelligence. We, his
brethren, are also endowed with capacity to receive intelligence. And
what some would call the volition of the creature—the will of
the creature—the disposition, the power of willing or determining, is
bequeathed to us in like manner as it is to the Son of God; and it is
as independent as it is inherited by the angels or Gods—that is, the
will to dispose of this intelligence at our pleasure in doing good or
evil. It is held by the followers of Robert Owen that men are more or
less influenced entirely in their actions by the force of
circumstances: but is there a man or woman in this house that could
not walk out, if you wanted to—if your will was set in you to do it?
Or sit here until meeting is out, if you are disposed? The volition of
the creature is made independent by the unalterable decree of the
Almighty. I can rise up or sit still—speak or be silent. Were this not
so, I would at once request parents never to correct a child for
another disobedient act.
We are organized to be so independent in this capacity as to determine
and act for ourselves as to whether we will serve God and obey him in
preference to serving ourselves. If we serve ourselves and evil
principles, we do not subserve the object of our creation. This
element of which our tabernacles are organized is calculated to
decompose and return to its mother earth, or to its native element.
This intelligence, which might be called divine intelligence, is
implanted in mortal or human beings; and if we take a course to
promote the principles of life—seek unto our Father and God, and
obtain his will and perform it, the spirit will become purified,
sanctified, cleansed, and made holy in the body, and the grave will
cleanse the flesh. When the spirit overcomes the evil consequences of
the fall, which are in the mortal tabernacle, it will reign
predominant in the flesh, and is then prepared to be exalted, and
will, in the resurrection, be reunited with those particles that
formed the mortal body, which will be called together as with the
sound of a trumpet and become immortal. Why? Because the particles
composing these bodies have been made subject and obedient, by the law
of the everlasting Priesthood, and the will and commandment of the
Supreme Ruler of the universe, who holds the keys of life and death.
Every principle, act, and portion of the lives of the children of men
that does not tend to this will lead to an eternal dissolution of the
identity of the person.
"Why," some say, "we thought that the wicked were to be sent to hell
to dwell with eternal burnings for evermore." They go to hell and will
stay there until the anger of the Almighty consumes them and they
become disorganized, as the elements of the fuel we burn are
disorganized by the action of fire and thrown back again to their
native element. The wicked will endure the wrath of God and be "turned
into hell, with all the nations that forget God." What will be done
with them there? Those who did not persecute the Son of God in the
flesh while acting for themselves and following the direction of their
own will—those who did not persecute the holy Priesthood of the Son of
God—those who did not consent to the shedding of innocent blood—those
who did not seek to obliterate the kingdom of God from the earth,
will, by-and-by, be sought after.
You read about a first resurrection. If there is a first, there is a
second. And if a second, may there not be a third, and a fourth, and
so on? Yes; and happy are they who have a part in the first
resurrection. Yes, more blessed are they than any others. But blessed
also are they that will have part in the second resurrection, for they
will be brought forth to enjoy a kingdom that is more glorious than
the sectarian world ever dreamed of.
The "Mormon" Elders will tell you that all people must receive this
Gospel—the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and be baptized for the remission
of sins, or they cannot be saved. Let me explain this to you. They
cannot go where God and Christ dwell, for that is a kingdom of
itself—the celestial kingdom. Jesus said, "In my Father's house are
many mansions," or kingdoms. They will come forth in the first, second,
or some other resurrection, if they have not been guilty of the
particular sins I have just mentioned; and they will enjoy a kingdom
and a glory greater than they had ever anticipated. When we talk about
people's being damned, I would like to have all understand that we do
not use the term "damnation" in the sense that it is used by the
sectarian world. Universal salvation or redemption is the doctrine of
the Bible; but the people do not know how or where to discriminate
between truth and error. All those who have done according to the best
of their knowledge, whether they are Christians, Pagans, Jews,
Muhammadans, or any other class of men that have ever lived upon the
earth, that have dealt honestly and justly with their fellow beings,
walked uprightly before each other, loved mercy, tried to put down
iniquity, and done as far right as they knew how, according to the
laws they lived under, no matter what the laws were, will share in a
resurrection that will be glorious far beyond the conception of
mortals.
How many times have I been asked, "Do you believe that such a man as
John Wesley will be damned?" I could answer the question either way,
for they do not know what it is to be saved or damned. John Wesley is
in the spirit world. He did not receive the ordinances of the
everlasting Gospel in the flesh, and consequently is not prepared to
hold the keys of the kingdom and be a minister of the great work of
God in the last dispensation, but is dependent upon others to attain a
celestial glory. Has he gone to hell? No. When the spirit leaves the
body, it goes into the spirit world, where the spirits of men are
classified according to their own wills or pleasure, as men are here,
only they are in a more pure and refined state of existence. Do you
suppose that John Wesley is lifting up his eyes in hell, being in
torment? No; he is talking to those who heard and would not believe
him when he was on the earth. He may be asking them whether they do
not now see the justice of a reformation from the Church of England
mode of religion—whether they do not now see that that Church had gone
astray from the true religion, and that he was right. Yes; and they,
no doubt, see it as John Wesley does, and are willing to worship God
according to the best knowledge they have. As death left him, so
judgment will find him, trying to worship God in the best manner he
was acquainted with. John Wesley and his true followers will receive a
glory far surpassing what they ever thought or dreamed of while under
the influence of their greatest inspirations, and they will be saved.
Are they also damned? Yes, because they have not attained the victory
over the enemy of all righteousness. It is the holy Priesthood of God
that gives man the victory in this world, and he begins to reign over
the power of the enemy here. The keys of the kingdom of the Son of God
outreach and circumscribe the power of the Enemy.
Much has been said about the power of the Latter-day Saints. Is it the
people called Latter-day Saints that have this power, or is it the
Priesthood? It is the Priesthood; and if they live according to that
Priesthood, they can commence their work here and gain many victories, and be prepared to receive glory, immortality, and eternal
life, that when they go into the spirit world, their work will far
surpass that of any other man or being that has not been blessed with
the keys of the Priesthood here.
Joseph Smith holds the keys of this last dispensation, and is now
engaged behind the veil in the great work of the last days. I can tell
our beloved brother Christians who have slain the Prophets and
butchered and otherwise caused the death of thousands of Latter-day
Saints, the priests who have thanked God in their prayers and
thanksgiving from the pulpit that we have been plundered, driven, and
slain, and the deacons under the pulpit, and their brethren and
sisters in their closets, who have thanked God, thinking that the
Latter-day Saints were wasted away, something that no doubt will
mortify them—something that, to say the least, is a matter of deep
regret to them—namely, that no man or woman in this dispensation will
ever enter into the celestial kingdom of God without the consent of
Joseph Smith. From the day that the Priesthood was taken from the
earth to the winding-up scene of all things, every man and woman must
have the certificate of Joseph Smith, junior, as a passport to their
entrance into the mansion where God and Christ are—I with you and you
with me. I cannot go there without his consent. He holds the keys of
that kingdom for the last dispensation—the keys to rule in the
spirit world; and he rules there triumphantly, for he gained full
power and a glorious victory over the power of Satan while he was yet
in the flesh, and was a martyr to his religion and to the name of
Christ, which gives him a most perfect victory in the spirit world. He
reigns there as supreme a being in his sphere, capacity, and calling,
as God does in heaven. Many will ex claim—"Oh, that is very
disagreeable! It is preposterous! We cannot bear the thought!" But it
is true.
I will now tell you something that ought to comfort every man and
woman on the face of the earth. Joseph Smith, junior, will again be on
this earth dictating plans and calling forth his brethren to be
baptized for the very characters who wish this was not so, in order to
bring them into a kingdom to enjoy, perhaps, the presence of angels or
the spirits of good men, if they cannot endure the presence of the
Father and the Son; and he will never cease his operations, under the
directions of the Son of God, until the last ones of the children of
men are saved that can be, from Adam till now.
Should not this thought comfort all people? They will, by-and-by, be a
thousand times more thankful for such a man as Joseph Smith, junior,
than it is possible for them to be for any earthly good whatever. It
is his mission to see that all the children of men in this last
dispensation are saved, that can be, through the redemption. You will
be thankful, everyone of you, that Joseph Smith, junior, was ordained
to this great calling before the worlds were. I told you that the
doctrine of election and reprobation is a true doctrine. It was
decreed in the counsels of eternity, long before the foundations of
the earth were laid, that he should be the man, in the last
dispensation of this world, to bring forth the word of God to the
people, and receive the fulness of the keys and power of the
Priesthood of the Son of God. The Lord had his eye upon him, and upon
his father, and upon his father's father, and upon their progenitors
clear back to Abraham, and from Abraham to the flood, from the flood
to Enoch, and from Enoch to Adam. He has watched that family and that
blood as it has circulated from its fountain to the birth of
that man. He was foreordained in eternity to preside over this last
dispensation, as much so as Pharaoh was foreordained to be a wicked
man, or as was Jesus to be the Savior of the world because he was the
oldest son in the family.
Abraham was ordained to be the father of the faithful—that is, he was
ordained to come forth at a certain period; and when he had proved
himself faithful to his God, and would resist the worship of idols,
and trample them under his feet in the presence of their king, and set
up the worship of the true God, he obtained the appellation of "father
of the faithful." "For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate
to be conformed to the image of his Son." He knew, millions of years
before this world was framed, that Pharaoh would be a wicked man. He
saw—he understood; his work was before him, and he could see it from
the beginning to the end. And so scrutinizing, penetrating, and
expanded are his visions and knowledge, that not even a hair of our
head can fall to the ground unnoticed by him. He foreknew what Joseph,
who was sold into Egypt, would do. Joseph was foreordained to be the
temporal Savior of his father's house, and the seed of Joseph are
ordained to be the spiritual and temporal saviors of all the house of
Israel in the latter days. Joseph's seed has mixed itself with all the
seed of man upon the face of the whole earth. The great majority of
those who are now before me are the descendants of that Joseph who was
sold. Joseph Smith, junior, was foreordained to come through the loins
of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and so on down through the Prophets
and Apostles; and thus he came forth in the last days to be a minister
of salvation, and to hold the keys of the last dispensation of the
fulness of times.
The whole object of the creation of this world is to exalt the
intelligences that are placed upon it, that they may live, endure,
and increase forever and ever. We are not here to quarrel and contend
about the things of this world, but we are here to subdue and beautify
it. Let every man and woman worship their God with all their heart.
Let them pay their devotions and sacrifices to him, the Supreme, and
the Author of their existence. Do all the good you can to your
fellow creatures. You are flesh of my flesh and bone of my bone. God
has created of one blood all the nations and kingdoms of men that
dwell upon all the face of the earth: black, white, copper-colored,
or whatever their color, customs, or religion, they have all sprung
from the same origin; the blood of all is from the same element. Adam
and Eve are the parents of all pertaining to the flesh, and I would
not say that they are not also the parents of our spirits.
You see some classes of the human family that are black, uncouth,
uncomely, disagreeable and low in their habits, wild, and seemingly
deprived of nearly all the blessings of the intelligence that is
generally bestowed upon mankind. The first man that committed the
odious crime of killing one of his brethren will be cursed the longest
of anyone of the children of Adam. Cain slew his brother. Cain might
have been killed, and that would have put a termination to that line
of human beings. This was not to be, and the Lord put a mark upon him,
which is the flat nose and black skin. Trace mankind down to after the
flood, and then another curse is pronounced upon the same race—that
they should be the "servant of servants;" and they will be, until that
curse is removed; and the Abolitionists cannot help it, nor in the
least alter that decree. How long is that race to endure the dreadful
curse that is upon them? That curse will remain upon them, and they never can hold the Priesthood or share in it until all the
other descendants of Adam have received the promises and enjoyed the
blessings of the Priesthood and the keys thereof. Until the last ones
of the residue of Adam's children are brought up to that favorable
position, the children of Cain cannot receive the first ordinances of
the Priesthood. They were the first that were cursed, and they will be
the last from whom the curse will be removed. When the residue of the
family of Adam come up and receive their blessings, then the curse
will be removed from the seed of Cain, and they will receive blessings
in like proportion.
I have but just commenced my remarks, and have presented you a few
texts; and it is now time to adjourn. The exertion required to speak
to you somewhat at length seems to injure me. I will therefore stop.
I bless you all, inasmuch as you have desired and striven to do right,
to revere the name of Deity, and to exalt the character of his Son on
the earth. I bless you in the name of Jesus Christ! Amen.