I am very much gratified with what I have heard from our brethren
today. I think they have spoken well. I have been interested and
instructed.
As I have often told you, I am unable to draw the dividing line
between the spiritual and the temporal. We set apart one day in the
week for the purpose of meeting together to administer the sacrament
of the Lord's Supper, and to speak upon things which pertain to
building up the kingdom of God on the earth. This is our business—this
labor is upon us—and I do not know that we have anything else to do,
for it comprehends the whole existence of man. Thus far we have been
successful in this great work; in it we have been blessed, and in it
we delight to be blessed.
Every person is seeking after happiness, and all persons pursue a
course that seems to them to lead to the possession of happiness; when
they pursue an opposite course to that they are fully aware of it. The
most profligate and wicked person is always ready to acknowledge, when
willing to tell the truth, that he knows that he does wrong and is not
happy in doing so; and that, if he ever enjoys happiness, he must
cease to do evil and learn to do well. We wish to obtain happiness; we
wish to obtain our rights.
In regard to our political rights, I will ask, have we ever seen a
day, since Joseph found the plates from which was taken the Book of
Mormon until this day, in which the Christian, the moral, and the
political world, or any other portion of the inhabitants of the earth,
ever gave to Joseph Smith and his brethren one blessing that they
could possibly keep from them? They have withheld every favor, every
blessing, every accommodation that was possible for them to hold from
the Latter-day Saints. Yet every move they have made has actually
tended to sustain, build up, strengthen, and increase the very power
they were trying to destroy. They have tried to destroy the truth, to
hinder the increase of the Latter-day Saints, to lessen their numbers,
rob them of their location and homes, and last of all drive them from
what is called civilization. But the results of all these acts,
instead of accomplishing what they desired, have given the Latter-day
Saints territory and comparative independence. All the evil they have
sought to bring upon us the Lord, through his inscrutable providence,
has converted into blessings for his people.
We are infinitely more blessed by the persecutions and injustice we
have suffered, than we could have been if we had remained in our
habitations from which we have been driven—than if we had been
suffered to occupy our farms, gardens, stores, mills, machinery, and
everything we had in our former possessions. Had we not been
persecuted, we would now be in the midst of the wars and
bloodshed that are desolating the nation, instead of where we are,
comfortably located in our peaceful dwellings in these silent, far off
mountains and valleys. Instead of seeing my brethren comfortably
seated around me today, many of them would be found in the front
ranks on the battle field. I realize the blessings of God in our
present safety. We are greatly blessed, greatly favored and greatly
exalted, while our enemies, who sought to destroy us, are being
humbled.
We want our political rights, and they are here within our reach; we
need not go to California, Oregon, Washington Territory, Nebraska,
Missouri, nor New York to obtain them. The people are here, and they
possess rights. We have a right to labor, to accumulate food and
clothing, to gather the various products of the earth, to cut the
timber and saw it into boards, to make adobies and quarry rock and
build habitations, and then we have a right to inhabit them. We have a
right to drink of the water that flows from the mountains, and we have
a right to get up in the morning when we are sufficiently rested. We
have a right to go to the canyons after wood, or to harness our teams
and go on a visit to Davis, Utah, or any other county. We have also a
right to assemble, as we did a short time ago, in the capacity of a
mass meeting, and we have a right to say that we will have laws, rules,
and regulations for the public good, and officers and adjudicators of
the laws. It is our right to frame our own laws, and to elect our own
officers to administer them.
We were told this morning, that some brethren prayed but did not
believe they would receive an answer. I do not find fault with them
for this, but I say, pray on until you can make yourselves believe
that your prayers will be fully answered according to that which is
best for you to receive. Self-argument is the most effectual argument
that can be used. Let each person argue himself into the belief that
God will grant to him his request in righteousness. Some people are
naturally of a doubtful mind, and have to contend continually against
unbelief.
The enemies of God and truth do not love us any better this year than
they did last year, nor will their love for us increase in the year
that is to come. They would dethrone the Almighty, and would have
destroyed Joseph Smith, when he had not three men to stand by him, had
they the power to do so; and they would blot out every vestige of this
kingdom if they could. The body may be destroyed, but the spirit still
lives.
According to the Constitution of our Government, we have rights in
common with our fellow countrymen. We have a right to settle in any
unoccupied and unclaimed part of the public domain owned by our
Government, where the machinery of the Government has not extended,
and there govern and control ourselves according to republican
principles; and the Congress of the United States is not authorized in
the least, by the Constitution that governs it, to make laws for that
new settlement, and appoint adjudicators and administrators of the law
for it, any more than we have a right to make laws and appoint
administrators of the law for California, Ohio, Illinois, or Missouri.
This, however, is done by the Congress of the United States; but it is
an assumption of power not within the Constitution of the American
Republic. When Congress, or the President of the United States,
appoints a governor for a territory, that appointment is not according
to the Constitution, though it is according to laws enacted by
Congress. In "Amendments to the Constitution of the United
States," articles nine and ten, it is definitely stated that, "The
enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights, shall not be
construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." "The
powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States
respectively, or to the people."
We were told this morning that we shall not always be driven. Were we
driven in 1857 and 1858? No. And they might have traveled up and down
Ham's Fork to this day, and we still would have remained here enjoying
our safe retreat. They had no power, and did not exercise any.
I say to the enemies of truth that I can tell them the words that are
spoken in their private counsels. The very thoughts of their hearts
are made known to me. They lay their plans to accomplish such and such
a work in so long a time, and then plan a movement to destroy the
"Mormons." That is what they talk about and what is in their hearts,
but they will be disappointed in it all. Every time they make a
movement against this kingdom they will sink still lower in the scale
of national power, while the kingdom of God will rise more and more in
influence and importance in the eyes of all people.
If any of you are afraid, think not that you can escape danger by
fleeing to the States east, or west to California, "For it shall come
to pass, that he who fleeth from the noise of fear shall fall into the
pit; and he that cometh up out of the midst of the pit shall be taken
in the snare." Again, "The fear of man bringeth a snare: but whoso
putteth his trust in the Lord shall be safe."
The valleys of Utah are the safest places in the world. There is not
another place upon this globe where a people can with more safety
assert their rights before the heavens and in the face of all men.
Look at those ranges of rocky peaks with which we are surrounded, for
"He that walketh righteously, and speaketh uprightly; he that despiseth
the gain of oppressions, that shaketh his hands from holding bribes,
that stoppeth his ears from hearing of blood, and shutteth his eyes
from seeing evil; He shall dwell on high: his place of defense shall
be the munitions of rocks: bread shall be given him; his waters shall
be sure." "And it shall come to pass in the last days, that the
mountain of the Lord's house shall be established in the top of the
mountains, and shall be exalted above the hills; and all nations shall
flow unto it." "The noise of a multitude in the mountains, like as of
a great people; a tumultuous noise of the kingdoms of nations gathered
together: the Lord of hosts mustereth the host of the battle."
Therefore, O Israel, fear not. If any are afraid, search out among the
caves of the impregnable rocks safe places to store up grain and other
nutritious substances, and when trouble comes you can retire and crawl
into your hiding places, while the more courageous of your brethren
shall fight your battles, and we will whip your enemies soundly, God
being our helper.
When I think of the weakness and littleness of men, and the folly of
their trying to thwart the purposes of the Almighty, it makes me feel
like the Prophet Elijah—"For it came to pass at noon, that Elijah
mocked them, and said, Cry aloud: for he is a god; either he is
talking, or he is pursuing, or he is on a journey, or peradventure he
sleepeth, and must be awaked." I laugh at their folly; God laughs at
their folly. So long as the Latter-day Saints will live their
religion, they shall never be confounded, worlds without end. Never be
afraid; your hearts are brave, your arms are strong, and God is our
defense. There are those among us who are timid, and are apt to flee
from under the protecting care of our heavenly Father, and be caught
weak and unprotected by the very enemy they are trying to escape from.
We will cling to the Constitution of our country, and to the
Government that reveres that sacred charter of freemen's rights; and,
if necessary, pour out our best blood for the defense of every good
and righteous principle.
I heard a gentleman say, not long ago, that he was going to stick to
the Union. When the Southern revolt transpired, it was asked of him,
"Where is the Union now? There are now two Governments, instead of
one." His reply was, that he should stick to the Government that
protected him in the possession of freemen's rights. The spirit and
letter of our Constitution and laws will always give us our rights,
and under them we could have served God in Missouri and Illinois as
well as in the courts of high heaven. But the administrators of the
law trampled it under their feet, and willfully and openly desecrated
the holy principles held forth in the Constitution of our country.
The kingdom of God has sustained me a good while, and I mean to stick
to it. We shall form a State Government, and you need not fear any
consequences that may arise from such a course. You may tell your
neighbors that in this step we do not violate any law, nor in the
least transcend the bounds of our rights. If we do not do this, we are
living beneath those rights set forth in the Declaration of
Independence, and the privileges granted to us in the Constitution of
the United States which our fathers bought so dearly for us. Let us
unfurl the stars and stripes—the flag of our country; let us sustain
the Constitution that our fathers have bequeathed to us in letters of
blood; and those who violate it will have to meet the crushing and
damning penalties that will bury them in the mire of everlasting
disgrace. If we sustain it, it will be sustained; otherwise it will
not.
Let us so live that the spirits and power of our religion will be
constantly with us; that the Holy Ghost will be our constant
companion, opening for us an unobstructed intercourse with our
heavenly Father and his Son Jesus Christ, and all is right—there is no
danger then. Our own evils make for us danger; and if chastisement
comes upon us, it is the result of our own unrighteous acts. But if we
live our religion, honor our God and his Priesthood, then we shall
honor every wholesome government and law there is upon the earth, and
become aliens to all unrighteous, unjust, and unlawful administrators,
wherever they may be found. In the various nations, kingdoms, and
governments of the world are to be found laws, ordinances and statutes
as good as can be made for mortal man.
We have forsaken the kingdom of darkness, have come out in open
rebellion to the power of the Devil on this earth, and I for one will
fight him, so help me God, as long as there is breath in my body, and
do all in my power to overthrow his government and rule. And if he
complains that I am infringing upon his ground, I shall very politely
ask him to go to his own place, where he belongs. If any among this
community want to sustain the Government of the Devil, in preference
to the kingdom of God, I wish them to go where they belong. I want to
sustain the government of Heaven, and shall stick fast to it, by the
help of God. If we sustain it, it will build us up and crown us with victory and eternal life.
There is not a man upon the earth who can magnify even an earthly
office, without the power and wisdom of God to aid him. When Mr.
Fillmore appointed me Governor of Utah, I proclaimed openly that my
Priesthood should govern and control that office. I am of the same
mind today. We have not yet received our election returns; but, should
I be elected Governor of the State of Deseret, that office shall be
sustained and controlled by the power of the eternal Priesthood of the
Son of God, or I will walk the office under my feet. Hear it, both
Saint and sinner, and send it to the uttermost parts of the earth,
that whatever office I hold from any Government on this earth shall
honor the Government of heaven, or I will not hold it.
There was a notice read today for the High Council to meet next
Thursday. I would like to see the High Council and Bishops and all
Judges filled with the power of the Holy Ghost, that when a person
comes before them they can read and understand that person, and be
able to decide a case quickly and justly. When men have a just
appreciation of right and wrong, their decision can be made as well
the first minute after hearing a statement of the case, as to waste
hours and days to make it. I would like the Bishops and other officers
to have sufficient power and wisdom from God to make them fully aware
of the true nature of every case that may come before them. But there
are some of our great men who are so ignorant that a personal favor
will so bias their minds that they will twist the truth and sustain a
person in evil. This principle is to be found, more or less, in the
old, middle-aged, and youth. Some, with a trifling consideration, can
so prejudice the mind of a High Councilor, a High Priest, a Bishop,
or an Apostle, that he will lean to the individual instead of the
truth. I despise a man that would offer me money to buy me to his
favor. Goodness will always find stout supporters in the good, and
need not to buy favor. The man who tries to buy the influence of
another to cover up his iniquity, will go to hell.
The kingdom of God is indebted to no man; though a man should give to
it all he possesses, he has only given that which the Lord put in his
possession, and is not excusable in sin on that account, for in giving
his all to the kingdom of God he has done no more than his duty. I
hate to see a man bought. I hate to see High Councilors bought. It is
good to hold on to an old friend; and, no matter how many new friends
I have, I always hold fast to the old ones and never let them go,
unless their wicked conduct breaks the thread of fellowship between
us. But with all the friends I have, I hope in God never to see the
day, while I live, that I cannot decide a case as the Almighty would,
whether it goes against friend or foe. What my friends have done for
me, and the deep affection I bear them, are not taken into account in
the consideration of right and wrong. Let me judge in righteousness
before God, if it cuts off every friend I have.
May the Lord bless you. Amen.