I have no doubt with regard to the good work of the Lord, referred to
by those who have spoken, and it will continue among the nations of
the earth. The Lord will bring out the results to his own honor and
glory; but are we ready?
The Lord has bestowed great knowledge and wisdom upon the inhabitants
of the earth—much truth and knowledge in the arts and sciences. Those
nations that deny their God and Savior will have those principles of
intelligence taken from them. Are the Latter-day Saints prepared to
receive them, enjoy them, and improve upon them, or will those
principles have to go to some other kingdom? There is great wisdom in
the world; their knowledge in mechanism and the exact sciences is very
great. This wisdom will be taken from the wicked. Who will receive it?
Is there a people upon the earth prepared to receive this knowledge
and this wisdom? There should be. Is it reasonable to suppose that the
wisdom God has bestowed upon the nations of the earth should continue
upon it? Or should it be taken from the inhabitants of the earth and
carried back from whence it came? My faith and my desire are that
there should be a people upon the earth prepared to receive this
wisdom. It should not be so forfeited as to be taken from the earth,
for I question whether it would return again. There should be a people
prepared to improve upon their knowledge and wisdom, for all knowledge
and wisdom come from God. All true intelligence is the gift of God. He
is the true fountain of all knowledge and wisdom.
The query arises in the minds of many with regard to their capability.
Is there a principle inherent in the man that loves liquor to let it
alone? Or is he compelled to follow his appetite? Is there ability in
the man or woman that is inclined to handle that which is not their
own, to resist that temptation and learn to be honest and honorable?
Is this inherent in the people, or not? I have my own belief about
it—my own views. I conceive that man is framed, formed, created, made,
fashioned after the image of his God, with a germ in him of that
independence that belongs to the Gods; and that independence is to be
acted upon, to prepare every person that is exalted to enjoy the
society of the sanctified, by a strict obedience to the principles of
right. And each and every individual has the ability, the power, to
overcome every passion within him, subdue every evil, and ride
triumphantly over those passions.
"But," says the man that is addicted to evil, "If I refrain for a day,
the temptation haunts me; if I refrain for a week, I yet am inclined
to sip at the poisonous cup. I could hardly endure to see my neighbor
drinking the poison draught without joining with him: it is almost
impossible for me to resist it." This is folly in the extreme,
for you deny your own senses. There is not a man on the earth but what
denies his own judgment when he reasons with himself in this way. I
can take or refuse, partake or reject, at my own will and pleasure.
That power is inherent in every man and woman upon the earth, to a
greater or less degree. In proportion to the intelligence people are
endowed with, so do they possess the qualification for bettering their
condition by improving their lives and receiving truth for error,
light for darkness. And if they continue to overcome every temptation
and every evil appetite, they will become masters of them, and will
conquer at last, and be counted worthy to be crowned; otherwise they
will miss the glory they anticipate.
Cannot people refrain from taking that which is not their own?
Speaking of moral religion alone, they can. Cannot an individual, who
is in the habit of taking the name of God in vain, resist that
temptation? He can, if he chooses. If he cannot easily do so, let him
do as a boy who came to this country with me said that he did. He was
addicted to swearing; and got a piece of India-rubber to chew when
tempted to swear. That person, I think, has not been heard to swear
for years. No boy, in his youth, was more addicted to that habit than
he was. He did not beat his brains out, but he acts as though he has
more brains in his head than he used to have. I was brought up as
strictly as any child ever ought to be, with regard to morality; yet,
when I went into the world, I was addicted to swearing, through
hearing others. I gave way to it, but it was easily overcome when my
judgment and will decided to overcome it.
Now, brethren, are you prepared to receive the wisdom that God has
bestowed upon the nations? You recollect that this forenoon, we had a
few remarks from brother Simms, in which he stated that the greater
portion of the inhabitants of the earth were inclined to do right.
That is true. There is a monitor in every person that would reign
there triumphantly, if permitted so to do, and lead to truth and
virtue.
There is not a man living upon the earth but, when he hears the truth,
is inclined to believe it and reject error. What prompts them to
receive the evil? They yield to the temptation of that Evil One that
lies in wait to deceive. The pride of the earth is in wickedness—in
the abominations and corruptions of mankind. They delight themselves
in their proneness to wander from their God and from the path of
rectitude, and pride themselves in their iniquity of every kind. It
has become the fashion of the nations of the earth to do evil.
Where is there a nation that acknowledges the Supreme God to be their
President and their King? The best form of man-made government upon
the earth is that of a nation now breaking to pieces. Have they ever
acknowledged God? No. They spurned from their presence the man who
would acknowledge that God should reign King of nations as well as
King of Saints. Have we proof of this before us? We have. When Joseph
Smith rose in the majesty of his calling before God, he saw what we
are now hearing of through dispatches received from week to week. The
nation is ruined, and will crumble to pieces. They will destroy
themselves. Joseph rose up and said—"I will save them, if they will
let me." He stepped forth like a man and proffered his services to
save the nation that is now breaking; and he would have saved it, if
they had permitted him. What did they bestow upon him in return? They made a martyr of him—I would not like to say a savior,
although he is our benefactor. He is the man through whom God has
spoken and revealed some of the most glorious principles that ever
were revealed to the children of men; yet I would not like to call him
a savior, though in a certain capacity he was a God to us, and is to
the nations of the earth, and will continue to be. He was not the Only
Begotten of the Father, who died for the sins of the world; but he was
the Prophet of the Lord, through whom God spoke to the nations and
dictated laws by which they were to be governed to secure to
themselves eternal life. And when he would have saved the people of
the nation, they crowned him a martyr of Jesus. They performed an act
that secures to him crowns of glory, immortality, and eternal lives.
They succeeded in shedding his blood and that of the Patriarch Hyrum.
They shed the blood of the innocent, and the nation said amen to it.
Were they aware of it at the seat of Government? I have no doubt they
as well knew of the plans for destroying the Prophet as did those in
Carthage or in Warsaw, Illinois. It was planned by some of the leading
men of the nation. I have said here once before, to the astonishment
of many of our own countrymen, that there was a delegate from each
State in the nation when Joseph was killed. These delegates held their
council. What were they afraid of? You and me? No. They were afraid of
those eternal principles God has revealed from the heavens; they
trembled and quaked at the sound of them. Joseph would have saved the
nation from ruin.
Some have inquired, "Will they patch up the old garment?" Let them
apply their new cloth, if they please. Mr. Crittenden has reported a
patch to put on the old garment. Let them put it on, and the rent will
be made worse. Let them remain as they are, and the garment is worn
out. Is the form of the Government ruined? Has its form become evil?
No; but the administrators of the Government are evil. As we have said
many times, it is the best form of human government man ever lived
under; but it has as corrupt a set to administer it as God ever
permitted to disgrace his footstool. There is the evil. Can they
better the condition of our country? No; they will make it worse every
time they attempt to do so. What is the difficulty? Brother Carrington
says there is no noble-minded master-spirit to lead out—one whom the
rest will follow. They are all master-spirits! They are all smart men!
This is the difficulty. They used to have men whom they looked up to,
though but very seldom. I can recollect almost every President of the
United States. There never was a wise man that was much looked up to
or revered until after his death: then the people could revere him—a
Jefferson, a Monroe, an Adams, &c. The administration of Andrew
Jackson was as good as that of anyone that ever occupied the
presidential chair, and he had a great many enemies. What do you think
of that, you gentlemen who are acquainted with the United, or rather
the once United States—you who have age and experience? You remember
the struggle at the election of Andrew Jackson, and so do I. I repeat
that his administration was as good as that of any man that ever
administered the government. Some of his opponents did not like him
very well for some of his political moves. I liked his moves, only he
did not go far enough in removing the deposits and spoiling the United
States Bank. But the administration of King James Buchanan, what an
administration!
Brother Carrington alluded to William H. Seward of New York. He is
considered by many as one of the smartest men that ever was in this
Government. Were it not that he had the advantages of the learning and
wisdom of one of the best men in the Government—had he been a mechanic
or farmer, I doubt whether he would have possessed an extra amount of
knowledge. "What of his natural abilities?" I do not consider him a
man of great ability. He came to Auburn, N.Y., to study law with a
gentleman I well knew. That gentleman took him into his office and
house a boy, and made a man of him. He was one of the most influential
and best men in the country; he was a man of brain and heart, and he
took all the pains possible to make something of the boy. After Mr.
Seward had been with the Judge a few years, he began to be looked upon
as one possessed of a considerable degree of smartness. What would he
be, if he was the President? Judging from his late speech, as received
in a dispatch, I would suppose that he hardly knew enough to find his
way across the little city of Washington. The prospect of his lofty
position appears to have nearly ruined his brain.
What is the difficulty with King James? His high position and exalted
opinion of himself so addled and bewildered him, that he said, "I am
the greatest man in the nation! I am the Chief Magistrate!!"
What shall we do with such men? Perhaps we may call them honorable
men in the earth, in order not to hurt the feelings of some by
speaking lightly of such talent in our nation. They are so wonderfully
smart! That is the difficulty. Every man in Congress is so smart that
he is looking to the presidential chair. The boys of West Point and
the boys studying law in the nation have their eyes on the
presidential chair. The general feeling is—"I am intending to sit
there." They are all looking to the presidential chair, and have been
for years—the boy, the middle-aged Congressman, and the greyheaded
Senator. The boy says—"I am the best council I can get. I am at West
Point, and I shall soon graduate. Generals Washington, Taylor, and
Jackson reached the chair of state, and I shall soon be there." Could
he be counseled by anybody? No. Every man is his own counselor, his
own general, and his own governor. We used to say, when we were
boys—"Hurrah! Every man for himself, and the Devil for us all!" and
they will find it to be so.
They are too wise. They will prove, by their conduct, whether they are
capable of forming and sustaining a government for the Southern States
that have seceded. There is no more a United States. Can they
amalgamate and form a government? No. Will they have ability to form a
government and continue it? No, they will not. Hear it, Jew and
Gentile. Suppose there is a division between the North and South, and
the fifteen slave States try to form a permanent government, can they
do it? I tell you they cannot. They are too smart. South Carolina is
taking the lead, and says she—"We will sit as kings and queens, or
revolt from you." Says Georgia—"We have as smart men in our State as
you have, and we will have a President for our State." "But you
cannot," says South Carolina. How long will it be before some other
State, perhaps New York, forms a separate government? And if a State
has a right to secede, so has a Territory, and so has a county from a
State or Territory, and a town from a county, and a family from a
neighborhood, and you will have perfect anarchy.
King James is not so prompt now as he was three years ago, when he
sent troops to Utah. South Carolina comes out and boldly declares her
secession from the compact of States, and takes possession of all the
public property within her borders, except Fort Sumter. There is no
Latter-day Saint engaged in this act. One of the most contemptible of
characters we ever had here could swear falsely in Washington, and the
Government could receive his oath, and make it a basis, with other
lies, of sending an army here. William Drummond went to Washington and
swore that we were treasoners, and to many palpable falsehoods; and
King James could act upon that and send an army here at an expense of,
probably, fifty million dollars. Says King James—"Those lies are
true." "What! Receive a lie?" Yes, go and swear to a lie, and the
Government can hear that and act upon it. But when South Carolina
takes possession of the public funds, of the customhouse, of the
arms, arsenal, dockyards, forts, cannon, &c.—"You must not coerce.
Do not infringe upon them: they have the right to do this." What a
reign is the reign of King James! It is enough to astound and throw
into the shade the wisdom of all nations upon the earth!
What will King Abraham do? I do not know, neither do I care. It is no
difference what he does or what any of them do. Why? God will
accomplish his own purposes, and they may do or not do; they may take
the road that leads to the right, or they may take the road that leads
to the left; and whichever road they do take, they will wish they had
taken the other. King James pledged himself, at Cincinnati, that on
his election to the presidential chair he would take the Island of
Cuba, annex a portion of Mexico, and so obliterate the "Mormons," that
"Mormonism" should not be known at the end of his reign. These three
things he pledged himself to his party to do. Some gentleman may say
that I am mistaken. I am not mistaken; I am telling the truth, and you
may believe it or not.
Did he take Cuba? He did not. Did he annex Mexico, or any portion of
it? He did not. Did he destroy "Mormonism?" He did not. What has he
done? Ruined the nation, at far as he had influence to do so. He began
at the wrong end of the race: the course was marked out for him, but
he ran the wrong way. He ought to have begun by taking Cuba, then
annexed Mexico, or such portion of it as he wanted; and then he might
have considered a little about "Mormonism." If he had just reflected
for a moment, he knew Joseph Smith. If he had reflected upon the
career of Joseph and the career of this people, he would have seen at
once that every time the enemies of this kingdom undertook to trample
it under their feet and obliterate it from the earth, the more they
spread it abroad and brought it into note and character. But he began
at the wrong end, and he has wished, every step he has taken and
everything he has done, that he had taken some other step and done
something else. One reason of this is, that his will is such that he
will ride over his friends and tread them in the dust, and not make
the first apology to them. I attribute this to his ignorance. This is
not wisdom; it is not greatness, nobility, or magnanimity; but it is
sheer ignorance, willful ignorance, know-nothing ignorance; and that is
the difficulty.
What will Abraham do? King James says that if Mr. Lincoln takes the
oath of office, and enters into the administration of the Government
with as great pleasure as he resigns his official duties, he will be a
happy man. If I could advise King James, and have him take my
counsel, it would be to resign tomorrow morning, and let Mr.
Breckenridge be crowned king for three weeks, that another king might
come before King Abraham to see what the administration of that king
would be. I do not know of anything better that I could advise him.
"Mormonism" will live, and God will promote it; but shall we be
prepared to be promoted with it? That is the question with me. It is
in my thoughts by day and by night, Shall I be prepared for the things
that are coming upon the earth? I will try to be; and if I have an
evil appetite, I will overcome it. If I have a disposition to do that
which is morally wrong, I will reject that disposition; I will subdue
and overcome it. Will you? Then you who drink, lie, steal, or do
anything that is morally wrong, or break the commandments of God in
any way, or injure your fellow men, cease to do that evil and learn to
do well.
I exhort the brethren not to boast over our enemies' downfall. Boast
not, brethren. God has come out of his hiding place, and has commenced
to vex the nation that has rejected us, and he will vex it with a sore
vexation. It will not be patched up—it never can come together
again—but it will be sifted with a sieve of vanity, and in a short
time it will be like water spilled on the ground, and like chaff upon
the summer threshingfloor, until those wicked stewards are cut off.
If our present happy form of government is sustained, which I believe
it will be, it will be done by the people I am now looking upon, in
connection with their brethren and their offspring. The present
Constitution, with a few alterations of a trifling nature, is just as
good as we want; and if it is sustained on this land of Joseph, it
will be done by us and our posterity. Our national brethren do not
know how to do it. They are not capable of controlling their own
passions, to say nothing of ruling a nation. What is the reign of a
king who cannot control his passions? Will not his subjects sorrow?
Yes, they will feel the weight of his wrath, and their backs will
ache, and their heads will ache, and they will receive the lash from a
heavy hand.
We are serving a King who can control his passions; and who, as
brother George Simms remarked in the forenoon, can be touched with the
feelings of the infirmities of the weak. Who can be thus touched,
except those who have suffered in like manner? None. And no being
knows how to control or govern on earth, unless he has been a subject
on an earth. No being is fit to rule, govern, and dictate, until he
has been controlled, governed, and dictated—has yielded obedience to
law, and proved himself worthy, by magnifying the law that was over
him, to be master of that law. We are serving a King who wisely
controls himself and his subjects. If we are permitted to rule,
govern, and control, in the first place we must control our passions
until they are in perfect subjection to us. When we have controlled
one and got it perfectly mastered, we shall be prepared to control
two; and if we can properly rule over two, we can reign over two
thousand or over millions as well as two. If you can control one, you
are then prepared to control your family; and if you are prepared to
control a family, then you are able to control a city; and if a city,
then a nation, upon the same principle. That is the way that God hath
obtained his power, and that is the way that we shall obtain power.
A large share of the ingenuity of the world is taxed to invent weapons
of war. What a set of fools! I wonder if they think that they
will never die, unless they kill one another. Is there any danger of
their living here forever? Not a bit of it. Let the people alone, and
they will die of themselves, without killing them. But much of the
skill, ingenuity, and ability of the Christian nations are now devoted
to manufacturing instruments of death. May we be saved from the
effects of them! As I often tell you, if we are faithful, the Lord
will fight our battles much better than we can ourselves. We should be
apt to get nervous in fighting battles, and sometimes get into corners
where we might almost have to take a little gunpowder to encourage
us—to nerve up our energy—or have to burn some under our noses to
become a little used to it. When the Lord fights the battles of the
Saints, he does it so effectually that nobody gets nervous but the
enemy. We might become nervous, and perhaps give way to passion.
We are never going to destroy the enemies of God by the evil passions
that are in us—never, no never. When those who profess to be Saints
contend against the enemies of God through passion or selfwill, it is
then man against man, evil against evil, the powers of darkness
against the powers of darkness. But when men who are sanctified,
purified, do anything, they will do it with a coolness as if
conversing at their firesides with each other; they will do it with
the power of the living God. If they are ever called to wipe out their
enemies, they will do it without excitement; they have to do it by the
power of the Gods, or not at all. They are not going to do it with
wicked hands. Are we prepared to receive the blessings, and let the
fighting alone? I do not believe much in fighting, and my faith is to
escape such a calamity as to war and fight with either friends or
enemies. I want to so have power with God, that he will govern and
control and guide and direct the steps of our enemies, until they
drive into the ditch. How easy it is for the Almighty to direct the
steps of our enemies, until they fall off the precipice and are dashed
in pieces, without the efforts of his servants.
Let us be faithful, live our religion, govern our passions, and boast
not against our enemies because we live to see the commencement of the
fulfillment of this prophecy in our day. The prophecies must be
fulfilled. Boast not, then, over your enemies. One might say, "Is it
not a delight for us to speak of fulfillment of prophecy?" Yes. If it
delights your soul, speak to the Saints; but do not boast to the
wicked and ungodly that the Lord is coming out of his hiding place to
vex the nation. They will learn that soon enough. I have heard Joseph
say, "You will see the sorrows and misery of the world and the misery
that will be upon this land, until you will turn away and pray that
your eyes may not be obliged to look upon it." Said he, "There are men
in this Council that will live to see the affliction that will come
upon this nation, until their hearts sink within them." He did not
live here to see it, though he will see it. Can you endure the sight
of it? No. Boast not over the misery of your fellow men. God will
fulfil his purposes.
Be ready at all times and in all places to do your duty, and be the
friends of God. Cease to mingle with the wicked. Many of our Elders
seem to believe that Christ and Baal can yet be made friends. How many
times Elders of Israel try to make me fellowship the Devil, or his
imps, or his servants; also try to make you fellowship your enemies,
to amalgamate the feelings of the Saints and the ungodly! It cannot be
done; it never was done, and never can be accomplished. Christ
and Baal never can be friends. One or the other must reign
triumphantly on the earth, and I say that Jesus Christ shall reign,
and I will help him; and Baal shall not reign here much longer—the
Devil shall not have power much longer upon the land of Joseph. I will
be the friend of God and his Son Jesus, my Savior. Let the Elders of
Israel and all the Saints be the friends of Jesus and our Father in
heaven, and cling to them. Now, take one side or the other. Either be
for God, or else walk out and show that you are for the Devil and
believe that he will come off conqueror, and that you are going to
stick by him. Here are the two powers on the earth—the evil and the
good, not to speak of the ten thousand paths they make through the
earth, and the various spirits that go to and fro. It is the good and
the evil. Will you have the good and refuse the evil? Then be moral
Christians, as we frequently say, and was alluded to this morning.
There are moral Christians among the heathen, among the Hindoos, and
among all nations. God has laid a plan to save all such. His name be
praised!
Can you learn a little, and treasure it up in good and honest hearts?
Be honest before God and with yourselves, and let that monitor that
God has placed within you take the preeminence; and when persons say
they are inclined more to evil than good, tell them it is a falsehood.
Until they sin away the day of grace, there is something in all
persons that would delight to rise up and reject the evil and embrace
the truth. There is not a person on the earth so vile but, when he
looks into his own heart, honors the man of God and the woman of
God—the virtuous and holy—and despises his comrades in iniquity who
are like himself. There is not a man upon the earth, this side of
saving grace, unless he has sinned so far that the Spirit of the Lord
has ceased to strive with him and enlighten his mind, but delights in
the good, in the truth, and in the virtuous, and despises his own
comrades that are with him day by day. Look into the world and into
the hearts of the people, and see what they see in their secret
reflections, and they will manifest to you that they delight in and
reverence that character that lives a virtuous and holy life. "What do
you think of your comrades that drink, curse, swear, carouse, and
follow all manner of abominations?" "My heart loathes them," will be
the reply, though they will not tell this only in a whisper in the
ears of their fellow beings. But you speak into their hearts, and
there it is; and every time they have the privilege of thinking and
holding converse with themselves, there is the good that leads to
happiness: the evil and misery you all know.
Let truth bear sway, and true integrity shed a charm around your whole
being. Rise up for the right in the strength of your own ability. God
has bestowed upon you the power to reject the evil and receive the
truth; the good, the light, and the virtuous. Cleave to God with all
your hearts, that we may be ready for the day that is fast
approaching.
May the Lord bless us! Amen.