The Gospel of Jesus Christ is perhaps one of the most comprehensive
subjects that mankind can reflect upon. It not only embraces things as
they now exist, associated with the human family, but it takes us back
to days that are past and gone, to the organizations of this world and
of other worlds, and by the principle of revelation it develops,
unfolds and makes manifest unto the human family the great purposes of
God as they shall transpire throughout every succeeding age. There are
thousands of details or minutiae mixed up with these great projects,
purposes, and designs, some of them we comprehend correctly, or think
we do; others are not so clear and comprehensible to our minds.
There are some things we, as a people, have to do with perhaps more
than any other people that exist, though they have to do with all
people, if the people would have to do with them. But, in relation
more particularly to the position that we occupy before God, before
the world and before each other; and the faith we have in God, in his
Work, in his ordinances, in his laws and in his kingdoms—and the
reasons of that faith are to me and to all Latter-day Saints matters
of very great importance—we are led to inquire upon what is our faith
based, why are we Latter-day Saints? Why do we believe, as we do, in
the doctrines of this Church? And whence do we obtain our faith or our
knowledge, as the case may be, in relation to these matters? Why is it
that there has been so singular a religious movement as that which has
taken place within the last thirty years, introducing views that are
contrary to the commonly established views of the whole religious
world? Why is it that this people, say in this Territory, embracing a
scope of country of some five hundred miles in extent, with a
population that, comparatively speaking, may be called dense for a
country like this, has assumed the proportions of a body politic, if
you please, that have organized themselves into a Territory and have
asked for admission as a State into the great American Confederation?
Why is it that a thing so singular as this has taken place? Is it
because there has been a desire among the originators of this Work, or
any part of them, to establish a political power? I am not aware that
this is the case. If there has been any such feeling and desire apart
from other leading principles it is something I am not acquainted
with. We have commenced to gather ourselves together under certain
influences, certain principles and under a certain faith. We have
gathered ourselves together from various parts, and although there has
been a strong influence used to separate us, to scatter us abroad, to
produce disunion, to sever us one from another; yet no
influence, no power, no reasoning, nor anything whatever that has been
brought to bear on this people to accomplish that object has
succeeded; there is some cause, some reason for this. There are mighty
motives underlying, overruling and overreaching all motives of a
political character. The first thing that ever was proclaimed by the
Elders of this Church was the Gospel of peace on the earth, and
goodwill towards men has continued to be preached, and among other
influences there has been a certain influence that has gathered the
people to together. There has been no influence that could be brought
to bear upon this people that could sever or separate them.
There must be, therefore, some reason for movements of this kind. Such
movements are not very common in the world. It is common for various
religious societies to arise in the world; but, generally, they are
very narrow and contracted in their notions. They are not adhesive or
cohesive, they do not unite or combine. You may take the Methodist
society, the Presbyterian society, the Baptist society, the
Episcopalian Church, the Roman Catholic Church, or any other you
please, and you will find that motives of a political character will
separate them and make them enemies to one another and make them take
up arms against one another, fight one another and shed each others
blood. They not only seek to destroy each other, but they all pray to
the same God to help them to do so. There is nothing strange or
singular in this; for there is no motive, principle or power to cement
or unite them together further than a sort of fancied religion which
does not possess the principles of union; for instance, in some of the
great wars that took place in Europe some years ago; one of the last
with which we are the most familiarly acquainted, was between Russia,
England, and France. Who took up sides in the struggle? There was the
Greek Church under the Russians, Protestant England, Catholic France,
and the Muhammadan or Turk fighting against each other. The Catholics
were Christians, the Protestants were Christians, the Russians were of
the Greek or Christian Church, the Turks were Muhammadans; all
worshippers of the same God, under different forms. These were arrayed
against each other in deadly strife all praying to the same God to
give them power over their enemies, and their enemies were also
Christians; then they went to slaying and destroying each other. Let
us notice the difficulties between France and Italy against Austria.
In this case there were two Catholic powers engaged against another
power which was also Catholic. Religious considerations do not confine
or control them in the least. They fought just as hard to kill their
fellow Christians, as the Muhammadans or any other people would fight
to kill their enemies. They were all in the same church, all partaking
of the same sacrament, all believing in the same doctrines and
worshipping the same God.
How has it been in the United States? Precisely the same. Who were the
first to separate? It was the religious communities of the country
that separated first, Baptist from Baptist, Methodist from Methodist,
Universalist from Universalist, &c. The churches made a division long
before the States divided, showing that there was less virtue or unity
in churches than in the state of the body politic. The Northern and
Southern armies are composed of members of these different sects that
exist in the Federal and Confederate States.
I mention these things to show you that there is no adhesive principle sufficiently powerful to unite the people of any portion of
the earth, similar to the one that has sprung forth in our day and
right among this people; if there is anything of that sort abroad in
the world I am not acquainted with it. Then it follows, as a natural
consequence, that if there is nothing to unite the people together
they are deficient in some principle, doctrine, faith, or practice.
Philosophy has not united the people together; politics has never done
it; no social principles have ever accomplished it.
Freemasonry is one of the strongest binding contracts that exists
between man and man, yet Freemasons are mixed up in those different
armies, trying to kill each other, and so they have contended against
each other for generations past. There must be something, then, to
control this people different from that which seems to control other
people socially, religiously, politically or any other way. There is
some kind of a cohesive power, some kind of an attractive principle,
something that unites and concentrates this people together in a
manner altogether different from that of any other people under the
face of the heavens; and so singular is it, that it attracts the
attention of philosophers, of statesmen, of politicians and of leading
men of every grade—they wonder at it, as they wondered at Jesus when
he was upon the earth; they wonder what this state of things will grow
to; they are fearful of the consequences and results of this union. We
are naturally led to inquire how these things originated; from whence
springs this principle, this influence, this power, for it is a very
important one. It has dragged us from our homes; it has sent hundreds
of Elders wandering up and down the earth for these ten, twenty and
thirty years past; it has made us, in the estimation of our friends we
used to associate with, laughingstocks and fools, and it has finally
brought us together in this place; it has also assumed a political
power as a natural consequence or result, simply because there was no
other course for us to pursue. Whenever a body of people are thrown
together, the inevitable consequence is a political power. It cannot
be otherwise. They must have organizations, representation, laws and
administrators of law; there must be a body politic formed whenever a
body of people are gathered together as we are; and the very fact of
our organization, religiously and politically, the very fact of that
oneness that so universally prevails among this people produces a
terror to evildoers and to those who are opposed to us. Why is it
that a principle of this kind should exist among this people? For we
can readily discover, in looking abroad in the world, that it does not
exist anywhere else. Is it because we are more learned than they are?
Is it because we are more intellectual and refined? Because we are
greater philosophers, better statesmen, more acquainted with cause and
effect, have studied more extensively the position of the world
generally and its government and laws? I do not so understand it.
There is something besides this; naturally, we are no smarter than
other men and no more intelligent than they are; but there is a kind
of principle of some sort that infuses itself into our very nature, is
a great principle in our body politic and is mixed up with our
religion and with our morals; it is a sort of secret spring of some
kind that governs, actuates, controls, unites, and cements us together
in a manner that no other people under the face of the heavens are
united. I would like to try to make it plain to others, if the Lord
will help me, why it is that these things have taken place. To begin, we will go back to the time when this movement first commenced.
It would seem that a record had been hid up upon this continent for
generations past. It would seem that a people had lived upon this
continent who were full of the Holy Ghost, who had a knowledge of God,
who possessed revelation, who had Prophets inspired by the Spirit of
God, as they were on the Asiatic continent or in any other part of the
world. It would seem that these Prophets, in common with the Prophets
on the Asiatic continent and with the men of God in former ages, had
looked forward to a time that we read of in the Bible, called the
"Dispensation of the fulness of times, when God would gather together
all things in one, whether they be things in the heavens or things
upon the earth."
It would seem that these Prophets had recorded these things in this
record, that in the time of the dispensation of the fulness of time,
when God should commence his great Latter-day Work, that among other
things men should be taught the laws of life and the knowledge of God,
and that the coming forth of this Work was to be the starting point of
a great event; one of sufficient magnitude to have attracted the
attention of all the ancient Prophets that ever did live; one of
sufficient magnitude to influence the attention of the Gods in the
eternal worlds; one of sufficient magnitude to cause that a medium of
communication should be opened between the heavens and the earth, that
light should again burst forth from the heavenly world, that the
spirit of prophecy and revelation should again be unfolded, that an
era should be inaugurated pregnant with life, light, and intelligence
unto those that then lived, that they might have an opportunity of
becoming acquainted with God, of knowing his laws, purposes and
designs, his Gospel, the principles of eternal truth, the laws of
life, that men should again be acquainted with things that had been,
with things that were and with things that were to come.
The ancient Prophets of the two continents foresaw that the issuing
forth of that record was to be the commencement of the Latter-day
Work; one said, "Truth shall spring out of the earth; and
righteousness shall look down from heaven." "The meek shall increase
their joy in the Lord, and the poor among men rejoice in the Holy One
of Israel." It is one of those sticks that Ezekiel saw should be
written upon, even the stick of Joseph which should be written for
Ephraim, and be united with the stick of Judah, and become one
stick—one in prophecy, one in revelation, one in doctrine, one in
ordinances, one in unfolding the purposes and designs of God, and in
leading mankind to a knowledge of the truth, as it was to be
introduced in "the times of the restitution of all things spoken of by
all the holy prophets since the world began."
The revealing of these records was to be one of the starting points in
relation to this matter. Then it needed some instrument, some
individual, some messenger, some communication, because it would be
impossible without something of this kind that these things could
transpire. There needed some authorized messenger, some communion from
the Lord to reveal, unfold and make these things manifest. To talk
about the world as it is, and the authority they have to preach the
Gospel and administer the ordinances and dictate the affairs of the
kingdom of God, is foolishness to reason upon; but we will merely give
it a passing notice. Where did the different religious sects get their
authority from? Who ordained them to administer in the name of God?
Who gave them that authority? The Church of England gave
authority to all the seceding sects that have sprung out of her, and
they left her because she was corrupt. Where did the Church of England
obtain her authority? From the Church of Rome, which they say is the
mother of harlots and the abomination of all things. Where does the
Church of Rome obtain her authority? They tell you that they get it
down in an unbroken chain of descent from the Apostles' times. Their
statement is the most reasonable, rational and consistent of them all.
The Greek Church professes to be governed by the same authority. When
we apply a test to them we find that they do not stand upon a very
good foundation. When, and wherein, and how have they departed from
the true authority of God? I will quote a certain Scripture by one of
the old Apostles, "He that transgresseth, and abideth not in the
doctrine of Christ, hath not God." Do they abide in the doctrine of
Christ? I think not.
Who taught them to sprinkle little children? Did the Gospel of Jesus
Christ teach them this? No. But they rely on an unbroken descent for
their authority. In answer to this, the Protestants tell them that the
chain of their Popedom has been broken at different times. I do not
care whether it has or not. If the Pope transgressed, it is not to say
that the bishops and priests and the whole community did; this would
not be a sufficient argument to satisfy me that the Roman Catholics
had departed from the faith of Christ; but when they gathered together
the authorities of the church from all the world in a solemn conclave,
as they did at the Councils of Nice and Trent, and passed resolutions
which admitted of doctrines and principles in direct violation of the
laws of God and of the Church of God, then as a church, with the voice
of their representatives they forsook God and introduced the doctrines
of men. "He that transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine of
Christ, hath not God;" and if they do not abide in the doctrine of
Christ they do not retain their priesthood and authority to administer
in the ordinances of God. Then we are left without authority on the
earth.
Shall we go to the Greek Church for the true authority? It is based
pretty much upon the same principle as the Roman Catholic Church is,
and all the sectarian bodies of Christendom are as destitute of the
true authority of God as the mother church is.
Where shall we look for the true order or authority of God? It cannot
be found in any nation of Christendom. There is no people that have
held communion with God, no true church, priesthood, or authority, no
medium of communication between God and man for church government, to
dictate, regulate, manage, and control the affairs of his kingdom upon
the earth.
How did this state of things called Mormonism originate? We read that
an angel came down and revealed himself to Joseph Smith and manifested
unto him in vision the true position of the world in a religious point
of view. He was surrounded with light and glory while the heavenly
messenger communicated these things unto him, after a series of
visitations and communications from the Apostle Peter and others who
held the authority of the holy Priesthood, not only on the earth
formerly but in the heavens afterwards. That they hold it in the
heavens we know from the Scriptures. In them there are certain
principles revealed in relation to that matter that nobody could
reveal unless they were acquainted with the principle of revelation.
Moses and Elias were seen with Jesus on the mount, when Peter
and his brethren saw them, who said, "Master, it is good for us to be
here: let us build three tabernacles, one for thee, one for Moses, and
one for Elias." Who was this Moses? He was a man who had officiated
before on the earth, had held the holy Priesthood, had been a teacher
of righteousness, and who, with the Elders of Israel, had talked with
God, and had received revelations from him, holding the Priesthood
that administered in time and eternity. When he got through with
this world his official duties were not ended, for he appeared to
Jesus, Peter, James, and John upon the mount, to confer on them certain
principles, authorities and Priesthood, that they might also be
enabled to administer in the ordinances of salvation, and officiate as
the representatives of God upon the earth. And hence, when Joseph
Smith came, those who had held the keys before came to him, so he told
me and others, and revealed unto him certain things pertaining to the
kingdom of God upon the earth, and ordained him and set him apart to
the ministry and Apostleship unto which he was called. He presented
himself before the world and informed the people that God had spoken,
and that he had spoken to him. He told them that the heavens had been
opened and that angels clothed in light and glory had appeared to him
and revealed unto him certain things. Then we have Oliver Cowdery, who
tells us something about these things, and gives his testimony as a
living witness. Again, there were eleven witnesses in relation to the
Book of Mormon, who testify that the Book of Mormon was a divine
revelation from God. And some of these witnesses tell us that an angel
of God came and laid before them the plates from which the Book of
Mormon was translated, and they knew that their testimony was true and
faithful. Others tell us that they saw and handled the plates from
which the record was taken. I have conversed with several of those men
who say they have seen the plates that Joseph Smith took out of the
hill Cumorah; I have also conversed with Joseph Smith, who has told me
of these things and many more that it would be unnecessary on the
present occasion to relate. Here, then, is an abundance of testimony
that assumes a supernatural agency—an interposition of the Almighty—an
opening and an unfolding of something to the human family with which
they have been unacquainted. These things are left for the human
family to reason upon; they are presented unto us in that capacity,
just as things were presented formerly to others. We were told
formerly that "faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God,
and how can they hear without a preacher, and how can he preach unless
he be sent." Here, then, was a medium introduced by the Almighty to
excite the faith or unbelief of the people. Here are certain records
unfolded, and here is a man presenting himself before the people,
declaring that God was about to usher in the dispensation of the
fulness of times; and for this purpose he had introduced an ancient
record that had belonged to the aboriginal inhabitants of this
continent, together with that, he tells them that the so-called
Christian churches had gone astray, and all mankind were laboring
under gross darkness, and that darkness had covered the whole earth.
He furthermore tells them that God had it in his mind to reveal unto
them his will, and draw back the dark veil that overspreads the minds
of the people—to introduce the principles of eternal truth, and that
he came as a messenger from God, having been set apart by holy
angels sent by the Almighty for that purpose, that, in the first
place, he might be acquainted with correct principles, and then be
able to teach them to others. This is the phase which this thing
assumed at that time; and the people felt about it as the old Jews did
when Jesus told them that they were deceivers, whited walls and
painted sepulchres; they said, Away with such a fellow from the earth.
When Joseph Smith told the priests, the good Methodists, the righteous
Presbyterians, and the holy Roman Catholics that they were all wrong,
how could they endure it. But you must endure it, for God has spoken
and the word has gone forth. The Lord, in the first place, commanded
all men everywhere to repent and to be baptized in the name of Jesus
Christ for the remission of sins, giving them a promise that they
should receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. This is different to
anything that has been before in the world. That which was before,
assumed no shape and came with no authority from God. The various
sects of the world imagined that they had the Holy Ghost, but they
forgot that it was to lead men into all truth. That spirit which they
have mistaken for the Holy Ghost has led them into confusion,
contention, and strife, and consequently it is not the Holy Ghost
spoken of in the Scripture. Joseph Smith, having found and made
manifest these things, and having turned the key that unlocks the
destinies of the human family, having had committed unto him the key
of this dispensation, he began to unfold and make manifest the things
of God to the world, to all who were desirous to listen and yield
obedience thereunto. A good many felt as the people felt when Jesus
came, that "This man speaks with authority, and not as the scribes;"
there were other principles and another spirit introduced developing
other precepts, laws, ordinances, manifestations, and doctrines, and a
greater power was associated with it than had been with any previous
manifestations. What then? Why, the Lord was reasonable—he always has
been; he is a good and gracious God, a benefactor and friend, suiting
his doctrines and principles to the capacities of the human family.
What was the consequence when men heard those principles? Many of them
had a portion of the Spirit of the Lord among them, and as light
cleaves to light, truth to truth, and intelligence to intelligence,
wherever there was the light of the Spirit of God in the mind of man
it discovered, comprehended, and embraced the truth. What is it? God
has spoken; a record has been revealed, making manifest the events
that have transpired on this Continent, and prophecy, and revelations,
and visions, and the purposes of God, &c. This agrees with the Old
Record; there is no need to bring argument here on that question, for
it has been argued and investigated throughout the world. What then?
Did I know because Joseph Smith knew? Not exactly. Joseph Smith had
certain things revealed to him, and he was commanded to communicate
those things unto others. What then? He that believeth and is baptized
shall be saved, and he shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost and
shall know for himself of the things which he has believed in. This
was the principle upon which my faith was based at the commencement.
For instance, an Elder came to me and preached the Gospel and told me
all these things. I was struck at once with them. I was well
acquainted with the Bible, yet I had never heard such teachings
before; had never seen such principles developed; had never listened
to such words as came from his mouth, illustrating, making
manifest and explaining the Scriptures, the Book of Mormon, and the
revelations of God, and opening the heavens as it were to my view. It
was to me one of the greatest things I had ever heard. He said to me,
"If you will be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission
of sins you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, inasmuch as you
go in faith and humility and obedience to the law of God and forsake
your sins," &c. This was precisely the same thing that Peter told the
people in his day. Said he, "Repent, and be baptized every one of you
in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of your sins, and you
shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." What will it do for us,
Peter? "It will cause your old men to dream dreams, and your young men
to see visions, and your servants and handmaids shall prophesy; it
will bring things past to your remembrance, lead you into all truth,
and show you things to come." Here was quite a chance for a man to
detect whether Peter was an impostor or not; and there was a favorable
opportunity to detect whether the Mormon Elder was an impostor or not,
for he promised the same things that Peter promised to believers, and
all the Elders do the same. Can you find a Methodist, a Presbyterian,
a Baptist, an Episcopalian, a Roman Catholic that dare tell you what
Paul said anciently, "I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ?" Why?
Have you not been persecuted and afflicted and been let down in a
basket over a wall, been driven from place to place and considered a
deceiver? Yes. "But I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it
is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; and
therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith." I
have obeyed the same Gospel. What then? Did the signs follow? Yes; I
believed before I obeyed, and after I had been baptized in the name of
Jesus for the remission of sins, and received the Holy Ghost by the
laying on of hands, that Holy Ghost took of the things of God and
showed them unto me, so that I then knew for myself. But did I believe
particularly because I heard tongues and prophesyings and saw
healings? No; but these made me glad, for in them I saw the ancient
order of things brought back again. It made me rejoice to see the sick
healed, the lame to leap for joy and the blind receive their sight,
the deaf to hear and the dumb speak. This was a certain amount of
testimony for the doctrines that had been advanced. But, besides this,
there was an inward evidence—an invisible manifestation of the Spirit
of the living God, bearing witness with mine that this was the work of
God that he had established in the last days, and I knew it for myself
and not because anybody said so. At first I believed it on the
testimony of others, and then obtained a knowledge for myself. If
there is no other man under the heavens that knows that Joseph Smith
is a Prophet of God I do, and I bear testimony of it to God, angels,
and men. How did it operate upon others? In the same way, inasmuch as
they were sincere and faithful, and diligent in observing the laws of
God, and hence, as the Scriptures say, "You are all baptized into one
baptism, and have all partaken of the same Spirit," and that is the
Spirit that first commenced to be revealed through Joseph Smith, and
the administration of holy angels, and the development and restoration
of the holy Priesthood. If you do not know in the same way that I know
this is the Work of God, I would not give a straw for your religion.
Having received this knowledge, it operates the same upon all and hence the union that exists among us. It is the same in
Canada, the same in the Northern States, the same in the Eastern
States, the same in the Western States, and the same in the Southern
States; the same in England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, France,
Denmark, Germany, the islands of the sea, and the different parts of
the earth wherever this seed has been sown and the Elders have gone
forth in the name of Jesus Christ bearing the precious seeds of
eternal life. Wherever that has rested in good hearts it has produced
the same results, giving the same signs, if not the same degree of
evidence, and this has cemented and united us together; it is the
little leaven that begins to leaven the whole lump; it is a part of
the Spirit of God—a living spark that is struck from the fire of his
eternal blaze that has made itself manifest on the earth; it is the
still small voice that whispers peace to the soul—the thing that Jesus
spoke of when he said—
"My peace I give unto you, my peace I leave with you: not as the world
giveth, give I unto you. You believe in God, believe also in me. In my
Father's house are many mansions: I go to prepare a place for you,
that where I am, there you may be also."
They feel the peace that passeth all human understanding. They possess
the Spirit of God, though they cannot always tell the whys and
wherefores. It is not because a man is learned and polished after the
learning of this world that he knows, but because he comprehends and
listens to the whisperings of the Spirit of God speaking peace to his
bosom and giving him understanding that he is accepted of his Heavenly
Father—"I in thee, and thou in me," &c. It is this which has drawn us
together—this that has cemented and united us, that has led us from
our homes to the position we now occupy in these mountains.
An Elder whose mind was darkened once came to me to tell me that
something was seriously wrong in the Church. How am I to believe you?
said I. I was told by you one year ago that if I were to obey the
Gospel I should know of the doctrines whether they were of God. I have
obeyed and I know for myself, and am no longer dependent upon your
testimony, and you cannot make me now unknow it. No matter what your
ideas and notions are, now I know for myself. God is our teacher; he
has organized his Priesthood and government upon the earth, which is
the cementing influence that unites this people together, and as the
Lord said formerly, "If you are not one you are not of me." I remember
on a certain occasion in Liverpool we were told not to say anything
about the gathering. A lady came to me and said she had had a singular
dream. "I dreamed," she said, "that the whole Church was going off to
America, and that you were there; we were going on board of a ship and
leaving for America." What was the reason of this singular dreaming?
She had embraced the Gospel, and it revealed certain things to her
that she could not know in any other way. "Your old men shall dream
dreams," &c. Can you keep people in the dark in relation to these
things? No. And when a people live their religion, and all the Quorums
of the Church are walking up to their privileges, then a certain
ancient aphorism would be correct, "The voice of the people is the
voice of God," and the voice of God is the voice of the people—it
would suit either way. It is upon this principle that we are united;
and hence, no matter where this people come from nor what their former
views and prejudices, they may have been different in regard to many things and opposed each other previously in politics,
governments, rights, morals, religion, and theories, yet they will all
agree now that they know this to be the Work of God.
The Gospel of Jesus Christ produces the same results among all people
and in all generations, and if they cannot fully understand the whys
and wherefores about it, they feel a good deal as the man did about
Jesus and the child that had been healed. When Jesus had healed the
child, some of the righteous people said, "Come, now, give God the
glory: for we know this man is a sinner." The man replied, "Whether he
is a sinner or not I cannot say: but I do know that this child was
blind, and now he sees." So with the people of this Church, they know
that, whereas they were once blind, now they see. Having partaken of
this, what can separate us? "Shall life, or death, or principalities,
or powers, or things present, or things to come, or anything on earth,
in heaven or hell, separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ
Jesus our Lord." Hence the secret of the union of this people.
One of the most irrefragable proofs of the Divinity of this Work is
found in one thing—that everything that has been spoken by Joseph
Smith in relation to these things has thus far been literally
fulfilled, and you are his witnesses, as also is the Holy Ghost that
bears witness of him. What next? Why, it is as it was in former times,
"All are yours; and you are Christ's; and Christ is God's," we are one
with him, and one with the Father. "I in thee, and thou in me, that
they all might be one, as I and the Father are one." This is the
reason we are found together in a religious capacity, and why we are
not disunited like the rest of the world. This is the reason why we
are united politically, because this is bound to follow. You get some
thousands of people together and they are obliged to be governed by
law, and form themselves into a body politic. We have been kicked and
cuffed and abused almost all the day long, yet we are not much hurt,
so far. We are here, and all is right, all is well, and we are bound
to grow and increase.
Do you think the Lord, and the holy Prophets that have existed on this
and on the other Continent, and the Gods in the eternal worlds have
started this thing to end here? No. It is simply a nucleus of light,
of intelligence, of truth, of virtue, of correct principles, of the
holy Priesthood, of the revelations of God, and of something that has
got to spread and to grow, increase and expand until it becomes a
great nation and fills the whole earth; until all that has been spoken
of by the holy Prophets shall be fulfilled in relation to these
matters; until error shall give place to truth, wrong to right; until
corruption and tyranny shall give place to justice and equity: instead
of man bearing rule and having his own way, "God shall be king over
the whole earth: and his name one;" "and unto him every knee shall
bow, and every tongue confess that Jesus is the Christ, to the glory of
God the Father." We are only just commencing in this Work, which will
grow, and spread, and increase, and no power on this side of hell
shall stop its onward progress; it is onward, onward, onward, until
the purposes of God and all he has designed shall be fulfilled and
accomplished.
This is truly a great Work—a Work with which God and angels and Saints
that have lived before us, and the souls that are beneath the altar
praying unto God for the accomplishment of these things, are engaged
in. The heavens and the earth, at the present time, are in
communication, and God is our judge, our ruler, our lawgiver,
our guide and director to lead us on in the ways of life, and no
matter about events that may transpire; no matter whether our path is
very rough and rugged or smooth, it makes little difference: it is for
us to do right, maintain our integrity, honor our calling and magnify
it and honor our God and one another, obeying faithfully those who are
placed over us. Do I know that Brigham Young is called of God to lead
this people? I do, upon the same principle that I knew Joseph Smith
was. What can any of us do without God, without his law and without
the principles of eternal truth?
I pray that we may be enabled to work righteousness and be exalted
into heavenly places in Jesus Christ! That we may fear God in our
hearts, do the thing that is acceptable to the Most High, prepare
ourselves for a celestial inheritance and an exaltation in his
kingdom, in the name of Jesus Christ: Amen.