I appreciate very highly the privilege that I have this morning, and
that I have had during this Conference, in meeting with the Saints; it
is the first Fall Conference I have had the opportunity of attending
for sixteen years. These are, indeed, precious privileges which God,
our Heavenly Father, has given unto us; these opportunities which we
now have of assembling ourselves together and dismissing the cares
that press us from week to week and month to month, casting them aside
to concentrate our minds and our thoughts upon the things of His
kingdom, devoting our attention to those heavenly principles which
have produced so much happiness and peace in our midst. It is good for
us to thus devote a portion of our time to the worship of our God. I
do not know how the Conference felt; but, for myself, after the vote
was taken yesterday to continue our Conference a week or a month if it
were necessary, or as long as the servants of God should feel inclined
to continue it, I experienced a great relief in my feelings; I felt
that that restraint was removed which had, to a certain extent,
oppressed us, with the view of hurrying through the business and
getting done by this evening. I thought that it was right, and I felt
a spirit of freedom that I had not experienced before, and I presume
that all the Saints felt alike on this subject. There is nothing more
important for us to attend to than that which we are engaged in
today. We cannot think of anything that is of greater importance to
us, as individuals and as a people, than this service. It is a
delightful work—a labor of love that our Heavenly Father has
guaranteed unto us the privilege of performing. The organization that
we now behold, the wonderful fruits and results which have attended us
from the beginning, and that are so delightful to contemplate today,
have all sprung from the service that we are now engaged in. We may
devote time, as it is necessary we should, to the labors of this
life—to plowing, to sowing, to harvesting, to building settlements, to
accomplishing the labors that devolve upon us of a temporal character;
these labors are important and necessary, but they are no more
necessary than those that we are now engaged in; they are no more
necessary than that we should assemble ourselves together frequently
to listen to the word of God, to be instructed in the principles of
life and salvation by those who have been our fathers in the Gospel.
It is necessary that we should examine ourselves, bring ourselves to
the light of truth, to learn whether we are taking the right course:
like the mariner, when he returns to port, he compares his ship
chronometers with the correct time on shore, to see whether
they have been keeping true time and are in good condition to enter
upon another voyage, to enable him to obtain his bearings correctly,
that he may not lose himself when he is on the trackless ocean. We can
come to Conference in this manner and examine ourselves like men
returning from a mission after an absence of years among the nations.
They come back desirous of comparing themselves with their brethren in
Zion, saying, like Paul of old, that they have indeed not run in vain;
ascertaining for themselves that the Spirit that they have been
possessed of, and the course that they have taken, are the Spirit and
course that their brethren in Zion have been possessed of and taken.
There is a great deal of profit to be derived from associations of
this character. It is necessary that we should be brought very
frequently to a sense of our condition, of our dependence upon God, of
our relationship to him, of the obligations that rest upon us as his
children, and servants, and handmaidens. We cannot do this as we
should when we neglect opportunities like this; but, when we come
together and our hearts are filled with prayers and anxious desire
before God for his Holy Spirit to be poured out upon us, we then can
see if we have erred, if we have gone astray, if we have done anything
wrong and displeasing in the sight of our Father. These things are
brought to our minds, and we see ourselves in the light of the Holy
Spirit, we renew our strength before the Lord, and our determinations
to go forth and serve him with greater diligence and faithfulness in
the future than we have done in the past.
There is a mine of wealth in the Gospel of Jesus Christ that is yet
comparatively undiscovered by us. We see the world around us digging
here and there, and wandering over valleys and mountains in search of
hidden treasures; they spend their days and nights in searching for
those things and in planning by what means they can obtain them; but
we have, in the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ which has been
revealed unto us, an inexhaustible mine of wealth that is eternal.
There is room for us to continually exercise every faculty of our
minds and of our bodies in searching out the deep and inexhaustible
riches of the Gospel of Jesus Christ which has been committed unto us.
We have already partaken to some extent of this wealth; we already
have realized to some extent its richness, its abundance; and what we
have already obtained of it should be an incentive to us to be still
more diligent and persevering in seeking with earnestness and faith
unto God to give unto us of his power, and more and more of his
Spirit, and of that wealth which He alone possesses, that we may go on
increasing in eternal riches on earth to be prepared to enjoy them
throughout eternity. That man is truly rich, whatever his worldly
circumstances may be, who improves the opportunities he has, and who
seeks with all diligence to obtain all the blessings that pertain unto
the holy religion of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. There are
those, however, whom I have met with, who profess to be good
Latter-day Saints, who seem to be satisfied with the profession of
their religion, who seem to be satisfied with the fact that what is
called "Mormonism" is superior to everything else that is taught among
men. I presume they are of that class of whom President Young has
spoken—men who have been compelled to bow in submission to the truth,
because they could not contradict nor gainsay it; and that they have
become connected with this system has seemed to be enough for
them; but is it enough?
In one sense it ought to be enough for us to know that we have
received the truth and be satisfied with it, yet we should continue to
seek with energy and with faith to partake of those blessings and of
that power which our Father and God has to bestow upon us. If we would
seek to be possessed of these things with the same diligence the world
seeks for earthly riches, there is not a soul within the sound of my
voice but what will be refreshed, filled, and satisfied with the
blessings God will bestow upon him or upon her. It is a characteristic
of the Gospel of Jesus Christ to not be easily exhausted; on the
contrary, it is always attractive. You hear it today, as you heard it
thirty years or thirty-five years ago, and it possesses as many charms
and as many attractions now as then; repeating it does not wear it
out—does not make the subject threadbare—does not deprive it of its
interest; but, on the contrary, its interest increases as years roll
over our heads; as they pass by our interest in the work of God, and
our love for it, and our appreciation of its greatness, increase. In
this respect it differs from everything else we know of; it satisfies
every want of man's nature. Is there a want you can think of, is there
anything, in fact, connected with man's existence here, spiritual or
temporal, mental or physical, that the Gospel of Jesus Christ does not
satisfy? If there is, I have failed to discover it. It comprehends
everything; it gives light and it gives intelligence, it gives wisdom
upon every department of human life, it satisfies every longing desire
of the soul.
Before the Gospel reached you, my brethren and sisters who have
received it since you were of mature years, there were wants that
existed which now no longer exist; there were long ing desires which
you indulged in, and which were ungratified by that which you could
obtain from the world, that are today gratified to their fullest
extent; there is no desire of your heart, there is no feeling of your
soul, that cannot be satisfied legitimately and consistently with your
nature in the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. You know how you were,
those of you who embraced the Gospel in Babylon—you know how you were
when the Gospel found you; there was, to quote a familiar expression,
an aching void within you. There were desires of your soul, or of your
spirit, which could not be gratified by the chaff and husks fed unto
you by the so-called teachers of the day; there were aspirations for
knowledge, for truth, and for God, that nothing could satisfy; you
sought in vain for their gratification; you searched on the right hand
and on the left, you inquired here and there, but you could not get
the knowledge you needed; there was no one who could give you the
satisfaction you yearned after; but no sooner did you hear the truth,
no sooner did you hear the sound of the everlasting Gospel, and the
voice of a man endowed with the Priesthood, than you felt that you had
found the pearl of great price, you felt that the desire of your heart
was about to be gratified, and that if this religion proved true, if
these statements and testimonies could be relied upon, then that which
you had so long sought for and desired was within your grasp.
Men may strive to repress these yearnings and desires after knowledge,
as priests and teachers do today throughout the earth; they may
ridicule and deny their existence, but there is that within us, as
children of God, which speaks louder and has more force, potency, and
effect than the traditions of our fathers or the teachings of our
former priests and teachers ever had; there is the voice of
nature, there is the voice of heaven in our hearts, which calls for
revelation from God, which calls for knowledge, which calls for
certainty, which calls for something that is tangible and that can be
relied upon, and which man with his man-made systems and with his
fooleries, cannot gratify nor supply by any means in his power. We
hear men constantly talk about the delusion that exists here, and
about the folly of men seeking for revelation and knowledge from God.
The man must be an idiot who talks so; he who makes such assertions
does not understand the human character. If he had studied himself he
would have seen that there was something within himself which claimed
more than that which man can give—that there was a voice within him
which demanded and called loudly for truth—tangible, reliable
truth—something that could be understood and that came from God. If
this were not so, why do we see so many men running hither and thither
after knowledge, after spirit rappers, astrologers, fortune tellers,
and phrenologists, to tell them their fortunes and reveal something
relating to the future; they will do anything that will give them any
idea of their future. These may be the perversions of the feeling, yet
you see the manifestations of this want cropping out in various forms
all over the earth, among every people, and even among the heathen.
When it is not governed by truthful principles, it is found running
astray, and leading men and women astray who are guided by it.
Wherever human nature exists, there is found a desire for the
knowledge of truth, a want of that which pertains to God and to
eternity, and this want or desire cannot be repressed. There is no
power on earth that can repress it; men's traditions may stifle it;
but when the spirit is allowed to operate freely and unrestrained, it
breaks through all these barriers, and brushes aside these cobwebs to
seek for truth—pure truth as it comes from the Eternal; and when it
once obtains a taste from the fountain of truth, and can drink freely,
it is refreshed, and the one great desire of the heart is satisfied.
This is as it has been with us, my brethren and sisters; hence the
contentment that prevails through our valleys and settlements; hence
the peace that is to be observed in our families. Peace broods over
Zion; there is life and buoyancy in the hearts of the children of
Zion. Why is this? It is because we have received that which we have
desired; because we are living in harmony with the laws of our being;
it is because the wants of our nature are being gratified through the
Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. If there be any among us who are not
satisfied, if there be any among us who are wandering hither and
thither, looking for something that they do not have, they are the
ones who have committed sin and transgression; they are the ones who
have grieved the Spirit of God; they are the ones who have forfeited
their claims upon God for his Spirit and his love, and they go with
their souls unsatisfied, seeking for contentment but finding it not.
If there be any among us who are thus seeking, they form a class that
is distinct from the faithful, humble Saints of God who live their
religion and work righteousness.
It should be a cause of thanksgiving and gratitude with us that God,
our Heavenly Father, in the abundance of his goodness and mercy has
revealed unto us his everlasting Gospel; that in his kindness he has
sent his Holy Angels from the heavens, with the truth, and the power,
and authority to administer the truth, and the ordinances per taining to the truth, unto the inhabitants of the earth. Yes, God in
his mercy has visited our planet, where darkness reigned, where
confusion and ignorance had spread their dread consequences, and all
were like the blind groping for the wall, when the voice of God
sounded from the heavens and broke the long silence that had existed
for so many generations. Brother Brigham has said that, in his young
days, when he looked at the inhabitants of the earth he was reminded
of an ant hill in a state of excitement, with the ants running hither
and thither without aim or purpose. Now, this was the condition of
ourselves and fathers when the sound of the everlasting Gospel came to
the earth. The inhabitants of the earth were running hither and
thither, and there was no one to guide them, no one to control them,
no voice to be heard among the children of men saying with authority,
"Here is the way, walk ye in it;" there was none to say, "Thus saith
the Lord;" not a voice inspired of God, to be heard from pole to pole,
from east to west; but all were ignorant, all were confused, all were
dark. But since the Gospel has been restored, since it was received by
Brother Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and preached to the people, and
they listened to the testimony of God, what a charge has taken place
in the character of some portion of the population of the globe since
that time.
There are principles and qualities that have been and are being
developed for the last thirty-five years, that were supposed to have
no existence among men; it was supposed that they had disappeared,
that they never would be restored again. The key of knowledge through
which the Apostles wrought such wonders in the days in which they
lived was no longer to be found among men; but as soon as the Holy
Priesthood was restored to Joseph Smith—for he received the power and
authority from heaven, and through him the principles of heaven were
restored to the earth—then what a change we behold! From the midst of
the chaos that existed, order has been produced; from the midst of the
strife that everywhere prevailed, union has been brought to light;
from the midst of confusion and war, peace has been established; and
we see qualities developed now in the midst of our fellow men which we
supposed never could have existed again. What is this attributable to?
Says one, "It is attributable to imposture and delusion." So they said
in the days of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ; but, let them say as
they please, we enjoy these fruits; for, whereas we lived in strife,
we now live in peace; whereas we lived in confusion, we now live in
the midst of good order; whereas we lived in ignorance, we now live in
the midst of knowledge, we bask now in the light of eternity, in the
rays of that light which surrounds the throne of God our Heavenly
Father, and our souls are satisfied, and we can rejoice and be glad,
and thank God from morning until night for having bestowed upon us his
everlasting truth. Why should it not be so?
We are taught to believe that the Gospel is the power of God unto
salvation to every soul that believes. Salvation from what? "Oh," says
one, "salvation to our souls." It is the power of God unto
salvation—the salvation not only of our spirits, but of our bodies. In
ancient days it saved the Jews, the Greeks, and the Barbarians from
error, from evil of various kinds, and it will in like manner save us.
In heaven, we believe, it produces order, peace, and happiness; and we
expect, when we leave here, to go to a sphere where, under the
influence of the Gospel, every good quality of our nature will
be developed. Why should we not receive, by the application of those
heavenly principles to us and our lives here on the earth, the same
results? They have produced them in days gone by, they are producing
them now, and will continue to produce them as long as we live in
accordance with them.
Now, my brethren and sisters, there is nothing left for us to do but
to be faithful to that which has been revealed unto us. The evidences
which we have received are of that character that we will be under the
heaviest condemnation unless we live agreeably to the principles God
has given unto us. We cannot plead, as many can, that we are ignorant;
we cannot make excuses of this kind, for we are not ignorant; we are
in the enjoyment of knowledge. We never went to prayer in our lives,
in secret, and supplicated God in faith for the blessings that we
needed, that we did not receive the desires of our hearts, and we
arose from our knees feeling that God was with us, and that his Spirit
and power were near unto us, and resting upon us. There never was a
time, from the day that we became Latter-day Saints to this day, that
we have asked in humility and meekness for any blessing and have had
to arise from our knees dissatisfied and empty; but we have always
received those blessings that have been necessary for us when we have
asked in faith. What a blessed and glorious privilege is this! When we
are in trouble, in the midst of affliction, and harassed by our
enemies, we can go unto Him, who is the Author of our being, unto Him
who created all things, who has the power to control our enemies, and
pour out our souls in prayer and in supplication, and feel that the
record has been made, that the incense of our hearts has ascended
acceptably unto God, and is treasured up there, and held in
remembrance by his Holy Angels in his presence. What a glorious
privilege is this that we have, as a people and as individuals, no
matter how bowed down in sorrow, no matter how deep the affliction
that may be around us, this is an unfailing source of strength that
God has given unto us, and to this may be attributed the wonderful
preservations that we have experienced from the beginning.
How diligently our enemies have sought to destroy us, to destroy the
Holy Priesthood from the earth and kill the Lord's anointed! How often
has it seemed that they were just upon the point of closing upon us,
when it seemed that no earthly power that could be exerted could save
us from destruction! To whom shall we attribute these wonderful
deliverances which we have experienced? Shall we attribute them to
mortal power? Oh, no; we have learned too well how weak and futile is
mortal power. But what is it attributable to? To the faith that God has
implanted in us through the revelation of the truth unto us. It is
attributable to his having rent the veil of darkness that has covered
the earth and revealed himself unto us. It is attributable to His
having opened up the channel of communication between Himself and us.
Yes, there is a channel of communication between this people, the men
and women who compose this people, and the throne of our Father and
God; and our prayers have ascended acceptably in His ears, and they
have been registered on high, and they will be answered in their time.
There never has been a prayer offered up in faith, meekness, and
humility, from the day this Church was founded until now, but has
reached the ears of the Lord, and is registered in His presence, and
will be fulfilled, sooner or later, upon the earth we inhabit,
upon our posterity, and upon the wicked who have afflicted us. Is not
this a glorious consolation? Do not your hearts swell with gratitude
and thanksgiving to God when you reflect upon this? It has been as a
wall of strength surrounding us; it has been greater than the
munitions of rocks and the lasting hills that have been reared like a
mighty bulwark around our homes. The prayers of the faithful servants
of God, which have been exercised from the beginning in behalf of
Zion, have been a tower of strength. Shall we call ourselves
Latter-day Saints, and fail to appreciate and make a right use of the
privileges and blessings which our God has given unto us? If we do, we
are unworthy of them; and if we continue to do so, the privileges and
the blessings which we may enjoy will be withdrawn from those who do
so and given to those who appreciate them, and who are more worthy of
them. You may depend upon that, as surely as you may depend that night
will come in the course of a few hours when the earth has performed
its diurnal revolution.
If I were to ask you today, my brethren and sisters, what you would
take for your standing and your privileges as Latter-day Saints, is
there anything that you could name? Is there anything on earth that
would be sufficient in your estimation to induce you to barter off the
standing you have in the Church of God and the privileges you enjoy as
members of his Church? There is nothing. You would say, if the wealth
of the world were to be laid at your feet in exchange, you would spurn
it as a thing of naught. But Satan does not tempt us in that style; he
knows better. He understands our nature more perfectly than this. The
experience he has gained in the past has enabled him to understand the
best way of approaching the human heart, how he can best beguile us
and insidiously lead us astray by temptations that are most effective.
If a man who was in the enjoyment of the Spirit of God one year ago
had been told that yesterday, on the 7th of October, a trifling
temptation would be presented to him of a certain character (and that
at the time he would think contemptible) and he would yield to it, he
would be astonished; he would scarcely believe it. "What! Will I
barter the wealth that God has given me, the wealth of the Gospel, the
wealth of freedom which is contained in it? What! Will I barter the
joy, peace, and happiness that I now have for so contemptible a
temptation as that? Will I do it? No; I will not." Yet the year passes
away and the 7th of October comes to hand, the temptation is
presented, and the man who thought himself so impregnable in the
truth, and thought that he could not be tempted and seduced from it,
falls a victim, and to what? To the wealth of the world? No; but to
something that is so truly contemptible, mean, and low, that it is a
matter of astonishment to everybody who knows him how he could be
overcome by it.
By this we see the power of Satan, the knowledge of Satan, and his
cunning. He understands the avenues through which he approach us best;
he knows the weaknesses of our character, and we do not know the
moment we may be seduced by him, and be overcome and fall victims to
him. Our only preservation is in living near to God, day by day, and
serving him in faithfulness, and having the light of revelation and
truth in our hearts continually, so that, when Satan approaches, we
will see him and understand the snare that he has laid for us, and we
will have the power to say, "O no; God being my helper, I will not
yield to it; I will not do that which is wrong; I will not
grieve the Spirit of God; I will not deviate from the path that my
Father has marked out for me; but I will walk in it." Can we do this
without the light of the Spirit? No; we cannot see where the path upon
which we have entered will lead to; we cannot tell what the results
will be; but when the light of the Spirit of God illuminates our minds
and we are enlightened by it, we plainly see the results; and if we do
not see them at the time, the Lord soon reveals them to us, and shows
us that if we continue to take that course we will grieve his Spirit
and fall victims to the adversary.
As I said in the beginning of my remarks, there is wealth in the
Gospel of Jesus Christ of which we have little knowledge today. There
is an eternity of truth and knowledge, principle after principle, law
after law, until every quality of our nature, of that Godlike nature
which we have inherited from our Father and God, shall be fully
developed; until we shall be made capable of associating with God and
angels through eternity. The Gospel that has been revealed unto us
contains the principles that will bring this about. As we progress in
it we will receive additional knowledge, additional light and
intelligence, and our souls will be more and more satisfied. I rejoice
exceedingly in this, I thank my God for it, because my soul is
satisfied in this Gospel, and I know it would not have been anywhere
else. I know there is every good thing for us if we will live the
religion of the Lord Jesus.
There is this difference between God and Satan in the treatment of
mankind. Satan is perfectly reckless as to what the consequences may
be of anything he may give to the children of men. He will heap
temptation upon temptation before them, give them honor, riches, and
position, and, if necessary, he will give them revelation. What for?
To damn them. He does not care anything as to what may become of them;
but he offers them all he can control without judgment or
discrimination. God does not do so. What is the course God has taken
with us from the beginning to the present time? Is there a parent in
the congregation who has watched as carefully over his children as God
has over us? Is there a parent in the congregation who has withheld
improper blessings as carefully from them as God has from us? He has
watched over us tenderly and kindly, giving us a blessing here and a
blessing there, a revelation here and a revelation there, a precept
here and a precept there, as we could bear them, developing our
experience, and knowledge, and our wisdom, leading us gently and
safely in the path that will bring us into his presence. This is the
difference between God and Satan; but I can only give you a little
idea of it. Our Heavenly Father is a loving and a kind and beneficent
Parent. He, himself, has trod the path we are now treading. He is
familiar with every step of the road, with all the meanderings of this
life; for he has had the experience in it. He knows how to guide us
and how to time his blessings to our wants; and when you feel
impatient and dissatisfied because he does not give you more than you
now have, and when you are afflicted and bowed down in sorrow and
pain, let the reflection enter into your hearts to comfort you, that
our Father and God, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, trod the path we
are now treading, that there is no affliction and sorrow that we are
acquainted with, or can be, that the Lord has not already had an
experience in; and he knows our condition, he knows what is good for
us. If we need a gift and a blessing, he knows when to bestow
it upon us. This ought to comfort us; it ought to cause us to
rejoice and be glad, and our hearts to be filled with thanksgiving
continually before the Lord our God for his abundant mercy and
kindness unto us his children.
Can we think of anything that would be good for us, or that we ought
to possess, that Satan can offer unto us, that we will not obtain if
we are faithful? Will he present unto us a good outfit by going to
California or to any other place? If we are only patient, and abide
our time, and serve God faithfully, he will bestow on us far more than
that. There is no good thing that may be presented to us that we
cannot obtain in the Gospel. We may let our minds range over the earth
and think of the greatness and glory possessed by kings and
potentates, these things are all embraced in the Gospel as a reward
for the Saints, who will enjoy even greater blessings than these
through their faithfulness. We talk about kings and nobles, and we
have admired their glory; but the day is not far distant when there
will be thousands of men in Zion holding more power, and having more
glory, honor, and wealth than the greatest and the richest of the
nobles of the earth. The earth and its fulness are promised unto us by
the Lord our God, as soon as we have the wisdom and experience
necessary to wield this power and wealth. Shall we not be patient,
then, and diligent when we have so much assistance given unto us?
Shall we not plod unwearingly and unmurmuringly forward in the path
God has marked out for us, when we have the help, the comfort, and the
consolation which he gives us day by day?
We are not working for that which is in the distance, and toiling for
the reward that is far removed, and that we have to look forward to;
but we are receiving our reward as we go along, even the rich
blessings of heaven, day by day and hour by hour, and we rejoice in
them; and if we are houseless and friendless—that is, so far as the
world is concerned—we have within us a wealth of comfort and joy that
the world know nothing of; they cannot give it, they cannot take it
away, for it comes from God. Why should we not be encouraged, then,
under these circumstances? If the Latter-day Saints conduct themselves
so as to receive condemnation, their condemnation will be most severe,
for they have light, they have knowledge, they have blessings the
superior of which no other people that we have any account of ever
received in the same length of time on the earth. Well, I rejoice in
these things. I do not wish to occupy your time any longer. My prayer
is, that God will bless you and us all, and enable us to appreciate
the great salvation he has committed unto us, for Christ's sake.
Amen.
- George Q. Cannon