Notwithstanding the inclement and uncomfortable state of the weather,
the wheels of time do not cease to roll and bring a few of us together
on the morning of the first day of the week, to worship the King and
Lord of Hosts.
I am grateful for this opportunity of addressing you, my brethren and
sisters, for a short time. It is not the weather, it is not the might
and power of nations that can stay the progress of Jehovah's designs.
We are living, as you all know, I trust, in a momentous period of the
world. I will here remark that in the course of some conversations I
have recently had with certain individuals, we have had occasion to
enquire somewhat into the purposes and designs of the great Creator in
these days in which we live. It would be impossible to point out all
his purposes and designs; suffice it to say that it is highly
satisfactory to the just and to the upright that we can know somewhat
concerning them; and the fact of our being called as co-workers with
him to labor in the carrying out of his purposes and designs is an
honor to us that few can appreciate. We are permitted to assemble here
and in other places also from time to time to be instructed in the
ways of the Lord, for the express purpose of making us acquainted with
his purposes designed in the bosom of eternity, to be brought about
and accomplished in this dispensation, called the Fulness of Times;
and this, that we may be the better prepared to cooperate with our
Lord and Master in the bringing of them about, and also be better
prepared to meet those events when they shall transpire.
A short time ago a gentleman asked me if I really knew this to be the
work of God, for, said he, "If I did, most cordially would I embrace
the doctrines which are taught by your people as emanating from the
Most High; yes, I would willingly resign all worldly honor and my
position in life also, and bow with humble submission to the
requirements of your faith." I observed something like this, We are
not to be the judges of the amount of evidence required to bring
mankind under condemnation before God for rejecting the truth. We may
fancy to ourselves that we would like to see the dead raised from
their sleeping tombs; we may fancy that we would like to see the
mountains broken down, the valleys exalted or the floods in their
course stayed at the behest of the servants of God; we may indulge in
ideas and desires similar to these, yet said I, if there be an amount
of evidence addressed to your understanding, which seals conviction
upon your heart with regard to the truth, how will you meet that
conviction in a coming day, when we come to stand before God and the
spirits of just men made perfect? Do you think you can then open your
mouth and say, "I knew thee that thou art an hard man, reaping
where thou hast not sown, and gathering where thou hast not strawed:
And I was afraid, and went and hid thy talent in the earth: lo, there
thou hast that is thine. His Lord answered and said unto him, Thou
wicked and slothful servant, thou knewest that I reap where I sowed
not, and gather where I had not strawed: Thou oughtest therefore to
have put my money to the exchangers, and then at my coming I should
have received mine own with usury. Take therefore the talent from him,
and give it unto him which hath ten talents. For unto every one that
hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that
hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath. And cast ye the
unprofitable servant into outer darkness: there shall be weeping and
gnashing of teeth." —Matthew xxv, 24-30. Or will you be like the man
who was found in the assembly without the wedding garments, and unto
whom it was said, "Friend, how camest thou here?" What argument did he
make, and what had he to say for himself? He was dumb. Remember then,
I say, that it is the Judge of all the earth that parcels out the
evidences of his divine interposition unto man, not according to man's
traditions but according to that wisdom which is in the bosom of the
Eternal, knowing just the caliber of men and what it will require to
turn the scale of reason and to penetrate the soul of every
individual. It is for High Heaven to do this, and the Lord Almighty
will not judge according to our desires, but he will judge according
to the amount of evidence that he himself is pleased to give to each
person.
A few remarks upon this subject, brethren and sisters, may not be
amiss at the present time. I have noticed the providences that have
attended this people from their origin in the year 1830, and I have
noticed this, that a prejudice has been indulged in, by those who did
not choose to embrace the Gospel, against the people of the Saints.
There has ever been a kind of feeling indulged in by the world that
the Saints were going to do something very bad, something dreadful;
but what have they done up to the present time? The reply is, Why
really nothing that we can establish against them. This is the view
that has been taken of the Saints by those who knew us not, but the
very course that we are now taking has been the course that has
thwarted the wicked in their every design. The way their sails are new
set indicates that they design some evil, some mischief, and they have
said within themselves, Let us forestall the pending difficulty and
remove the danger before we encounter it. This has been the feeling of
the world, so far as my acquaintance extends in connection with the
progress of events and advancement of this people. Storms have been
drawn around us repeatedly, and caused us to be broken up and expelled
from the land where we had made our homes; not that we had done
anything, but because the wicked foolishly believed that we were going
to do something that was dangerous and desperate.
Now all the world is against us, and the learning of this world has
ever been opposed to the righteousness of God. In the beginning of
this work those that were sent to advocate the Gospel were unlearned;
as a general thing they were unskilled in the ways of the world.
Uncultivated and untutored boys were sent forth to proclaim the words
of life, and what was the simple message they were sent to bear?
Repent, for the hour of the visitation of Jehovah is at hand, repent
and embrace the Gospel. It did not require much learning to
make this announcement; it was a plain simple message. If, for
instance, your house was on fire, and the news went to the sources of
help, the most illiterate could declare the fact as well as the most
learned man in the world. He would simply have to say, such a man's
house is on fire, and every one could understand that. The simple
proclamation of the Gospel was just as easy to be understood. Now, if
it were some difficult diplomatic negotiation which required to be
entered into, it would require all the embellishments of art to secure
it a passage through, but the simple message of the Gospel required no
such learning, it was simply to call upon the people to repent and to
inform them that the chastising arm of Jehovah was about to fall upon
the nations. We went forth, we made this announcement throughout the
length and breadth of the United States, not only once but twice and
thrice, and in fact all the day long until we created such a storm
around us as to drive us beyond the confines of civilized man, and how
cruel was the ordeal! It was no less cruel on the part of those that
inflicted the wrong, although on the part of Jehovah it was an act of
mercy to allow the wicked to drive us, or to cause us to be placed in
these valleys of the mountains. The Heavens foresaw the danger, but we
knew it not; but our Father knew it and that was enough. Was there not
a Providence over us? Did he not deal kindly with his people? And has
he not done so from the beginning?
When the Saints escaped from Missouri and subsequently from Illinois;
when we wandered over the prairies and found a resting place for a
season in an Indian country, and when we furnished five hundred of our
best men, leaving our women and children unprotected in an Indian
country, while they went to fight their country's battles, and to
secure to the country that had permitted us to be driven from our
homes the very land upon which we now dwell was there not, I ask, a
kindly Providence over them that went and also over them that
remained? Yes, there was. We came into these valleys under the
protecting care of our heavenly Father. We came with a few old crazy
wagons, and many of us but very poor teams, for be it known unto you
that the people who took our homes put them at their own prices, and
paid out their own commodities; and if they had an old wagon which
they thought would bear up till we got beyond the confines of
civilization they would turn it out, considering that would be long
enough for it to last us.
In this way we came to these valleys, and had to so live till we got
something from an untried soil, not knowing whether a peck of wheat,
corn, or potatoes could be raised from it, but Heaven blest our labors,
Providence smiled upon our exertions and we made out to continue along
until the land became abundantly blessed, and now our granaries are
filled with plenty. If the wrath of God had been against this people to
the same extent that the wrath of man was against us, where would we
have been today? Annihilated! Nothing would have been left of us, and
our career would have been highly colored on the pages of history, and
sent down to posterity with the sting of the Anathemist upon it. But
the wrath of Heaven was not upon us; it was only the wrath of man. Do
you not see the difference between the wrath of Heaven and the wrath
of man? If our enemies had been one with the Almighty, or if he had
been one with them, we should have been obliterated long before this.
But here, in us, is the evidence that the world and the Almighty do not exactly agree. They never did, and they never will agree,
and hence I say the Saints will live when the ungodly shall wither and
die; when the wicked are in ruin and disgrace, this people will
flourish under the blessing of our Father and God.
These things, although silent, are upon the pages of history, they are
still in the memories of men, but though silent they speak in language
too powerful for the world to conceive their strength and weight in
the balances which shall determine their future destiny. Like the
other portions of Jehovah's creation, the great family of planets
revolve around their center, they move in their majesty, although in
silence; you can see them but not hear them; they cease not to move;
the course of their speed and their velocity is the same continually,
and yet, though they move in silence, they speak in language too
powerful to be misunderstood, and in thunder tones declare the voice
of the Almighty. Well might an individual, say, who does not consider
these shining works of the Creator, O, that I had some evidence that
these are the works of the Almighty, I would adore him forever! Bless
you, these are better evidences that the Almighty exists and rules in
the heavens above than any that recital can adduce, showing hourly,
daily, and nightly, that they are governed by law, and proclaiming to
all nations that the Lord is God, that by him they are made, by him
they are controlled, and that he views all the works of his hands with
an impartial eye.
Whoever will look upon the history of the Saints and see the
providences of the Almighty that have attended them, must see that
these Divine interpositions speak in evidence too powerful to be
resisted. I confess that these are arguments more potent than I am
capable of adducing at the present time. Now he that will look at
these things and run them over in his mind, will readily see that
these are evidences of divinity in our religion. Where is there
another people over whom Heaven has exercised these peculiar
providences? Why is the world at war with us? It is because we are not
like them. If we would go to work and establish about forty tippling
shops, as many gambling houses, and as many houses of ill fame, bless
you we could get into the Union without any trouble; the track would
be clear, the wheels greased, and we would go right in; but, because
we are not so inclined there is a good deal of friction about it, they
fear that we are going to do something dreadful. Now, I can tell you
that we are not going to do anything very wonderful nor very shocking,
but if we are faithful and keep ourselves unspotted from the world,
our God is going to astonish the nations; he is going to do something
both wonderful and mighty, and it will be dreadful to the wicked; he
will show this and every other nation that lift their hands against
his anointed that they will henceforth cease to be a nation. He has
commenced his work already, but he is only giving the alphabet now, we
shall be getting into the pictures by-and-by. When I was a boy and
went to school we studied Webster's spelling book, and when we got
along a piece with our lessons, we used to say I have got over to the
pictures now, and the time is near at hand when we shall see such
pictures exhibited by the hand of the Almighty as were never before
witnessed by mortal eye; that will be a trying time.
The field of learning is boundless, and I venture to say that the most
learned man in the world is far more studious when he gets into higher
branches than when he first com menced his studies, for he can
discover fields of learning which before he could not conceive of, and
so it is with the works of Jehovah; there is always a field in which
the Almighty can display his power and his goodness, and it is
enlarging all the time.
Brethren and sisters, I do not feel disposed on this cold morning to
detain you any great length of time, but suffice it to say that I am
glad of the opportunity of meeting with you, and I feel in my heart to
say God bless the Saints—Heaven's blessing be with them. This is my
desire, it is my earnest prayer, and if we can so live as to be
without spot, and blameless in the day of the coming of the Lord Jesus
it will amply compensate for all our toils, all our privations, and
for all our labors of love in the kingdom of God.
That this may be the case with us, is my earnest and sincere prayer,
in the name of Jesus. Amen.