Inasmuch as I am a missionary, and have been called of God to proclaim
the gospel, I rise here to bear my testimony in connection with my
brethren whom you have heard speak this day. We hear the testimony of
brethren brought up in the Church, as well as the testimony of those
who receive the gospel in other lands and gather with the Church. They
all agree that this is the truth—the gospel of life and salvation.
These brethren are going to preach, because they have got the truth
and the world are destitute of it. One of the brethren said he was
going after truth. I would correct him, and say he has got truth, and
is going to carry to others who have it not. You are not going to
England, Scotland, or to the Continent for truth, but to carry truth
to people who sit in darkness and in the regions of the shadow of
death. I am a missionary called to preach the gospel, and I am going
on a mission; not that I have been lately converted, but I feel to go
and strengthen my brethren, and I am going on a preaching tour for
that purpose. There is no place on this earth where greater good can
be done than here, preaching the gospel to this people and getting
them to be Saints indeed. I would say to my young friends and to the
middle-aged brethren, though I believe all who are going may be called
young men, that if you go on a mission to preach the gospel with
lightness and frivolity in your hearts, looking for this and that, and
to learn what is in the world, and not having your minds riveted—yes,
I may say riveted—on the cross of Christ, you will go and return in
vain. Go forth weeping, bearing precious seed, full of the power of
God, and full of faith to heal the sick even by the touch of your
hand, rebuking and casting out foul spirits, and causing the poor
among men to rejoice, and you will return bringing your sheaves with
you. If you do not go in this way your mission will not be very
profitable to yourselves nor to the people. I wish you to bear this in
mind. We do not send these elders forth for political purposes; we
have nothing to do with the political world. Neither do we wish them
to go for two or three years to learn what is transpiring in the
scientific world. If they wish to study the sciences, they can do that
at home. We have an abundance of scientific men among us. If you wish
to know what is going on in theaters, do not go to theaters to learn,
but wait until you come back to our own. I am simply giving you a word
of counsel. This is as good a time to do it as when you assemble
together to receive your parting blessing. We do not send you for any
of these purposes, but to preach the gospel. Let your minds be
centered on your missions, and labor earnestly to bring souls to Christ.
I would like to impress upon the minds of the brethren, that he who
goes forth in the name of the Lord, trusting in Him with all his heart
will never want for wisdom to answer any question that is asked him,
or to give any counsel that may be required to lead the people in the
way of life and salvation, and he will never be confounded worlds
without end; while he who trusts in the wisdom of man, or leans on the
arm of flesh, is weak and blind, and destitute of the principles that
will lead the Elders of Israel to victory and glory. Go in the name of
the Lord, trust in the name of the Lord, lean upon the Lord, and call
upon the Lord fervently and without ceasing, and pay no attention to
the world. You will see plenty of the world—it will be before you all
the time—but if you live so as to possess the Holy Ghost you will be
able to understand more in relation to it in one day than you could in
a dozen days without it, and you will at once see the difference
between the wisdom of men and the wisdom of God, and you can weigh
things in the balance and estimate them at their true worth. I can say
also to the brethren and sisters, no matter what you are doing—working
in the garden, plowing, sowing, going to the canyon, building houses,
laying rock or adobies, attending to your household affairs in the
kitchen, the washroom, in the parlor, or in your bedchambers, live
continually so that you may have the Spirit of the Lord with you and
the counsel of God within you, that you may be able to give a word of
counsel, instruction, and comfort to the disconsolate, to strengthen
the weak, and to confirm the wavering, and spend every day of your
lives in doing good. Unless we take this course it is useless to talk
about being Latter-day Saints, the redemption of Zion, or the
establishment of the Kingdom of God, for nothing short of the wisdom
and power of God and the Holy Ghost will ever enable any people on the
face of the earth to redeem Zion, and to establish the kingdom of God
in these latter days.
A great many things were said while we were assembled in a Conference
capacity. We are composed of such material, and our organization and
education are of such a nature, that a great many things have to be
said to us continually. Like children, there is no day but we need
instruction, and if we do not live so that we may have the Holy Ghost
within us continually we need to be taught by our friends around us
how to build up the Kingdom of God, to sanctify ourselves, to prepare
for the coming of the Son of man, and for the accomplishment of the
great work of the latter days. The work in which we are engaged should
be interesting to every soul that has named the name of Christ; it
should be first and foremost, morning, noon, and night, with us every
day of our lives. Our religion should be first with us all the time.
Coming to this tabernacle to worship and do the will of God for one
day in the week, and following our own inclinations and doing our own
will at all other times, is a folly; it is useless, and a perfect
burlesque on the service of God. We should do the will of God, and
spend all our time for the accomplishment of His purposes, whether we
are in this tabernacle or elsewhere. We are often told that, so far as
the principles of our religion are concerned, we are one. Our brethren
here are going on missions to Scandinavia, Germany, and perhaps to
places where the gospel has never been preached before, and some, per haps, to the antipodes of others, yet in the proclamation of
the principles of the gospel I do not expect there will be any
variation. They will go north, south, east, and west, and they will
all take up the scriptures of truth contained in the Bible, Book of
Mormon, and Book of Doctrine and Covenants, and each one will
corroborate the testimony of the other in establishing the truth of
the gospel of the Son of God, and all will exactly agree. Yet, when we
are gathered together, there are as many minds as there are persons in
regard to the affairs of everyday life and the managing of financial
affairs. Now, the people of God are being gathered together expressly
to become one with regard to the things of this world.
I would like to be understood, if I could explain myself. We never
shall become one to that extent that we shall look alike or possess
precisely the same mental power and ability; this is not the design of
Heaven. But we expect to become one in all our operations to bring
forth the fullness of the Kingdom of God on the earth that Jesus may
come and reign King of nations as He does King of Saints. Shall we
call this a union for political purposes? I say it is good policy for
people to be of one heart and mind in all their operations. I have
frequently looked at the inhabitants of the earth and seen how their
feelings, dispositions, and pursuits differ; no two, scarcely, can
agree. If two men enter into partnership, say in the banking business,
or in mercantile business or manufacturing, it is very seldom that
they agree a great while. Their minds will run in different channels
with regard to business matters, and one will not be trammeled with
the ideas of the other, so each resolves to take his own course. If
you wish for a per fect example of this, I can tell you where to find
it: just as quick as warm weather comes you see these little red and
black ants on the hills. You will see them running in every direction,
but it is seldom that two of them take the same course; they will run
against each other, tumble over each other, and, finally, rob each
other. This is a perfect example of the course pursued by the
inhabitants of the earth.
I would say that it is good policy if we can be agreed in all matters.
To illustrate, suppose we want to go and quarry rock out of the
granite mountain here; we are building a huge fabric and we want some
columns, say sixty feet high, five, six, seven, or eight feet through
at the base, and perhaps four or five feet through at the top. Let one
man undertake such a work, and how long would it take him? But let us
be united in the undertaking, and we can soon have our columns
quarried, hauled, and erected. Suppose there was a union of effort in
every political and financial matter undertaken for the benefit of the
whole people, who cannot see the good that would result? We have tried
this to some extent in relation to our markets here; but suppose we
were fully agreed on the point, we could demand a fair price for our
products, and we need not be imposed upon by traders and traffickers.
If we were agreed, we could supply ourselves from distant markets, say
with our clothing, at a far less cost than now. Suppose, as was said
at Conference, that we dispense with the luxuries of tobacco, tea,
coffee, and whiskey, how much could we save? If we had the money on
hand that we have spent on these needless articles during the year
that is past, we should have abundance to donate to the missionaries
to land them in their fields of labor.
The people, perhaps, will turn round and say—"We pay our tithing, and
that is all we feel to do." If you do, you do more than the people did
some years ago. At that time we found that in the staple article of
wheat, of which there is more paid on tithing than anything else in
the Territory, that we did not receive one bushel in a hundred of that
which was raised, to say nothing one in ten. The people are not
compelled to pay their tithing, they do as they please about it, it is
urged upon them only as a matter of duty between them and their God.
This little moiety that is now paid on tithing is used to bring the
poor here, to find them houses to live in, bread to eat, and wood to
burn, when we can get the brethren to bring it in on tithing, but that
is an article pretty hard to get. Now, suppose we had a little more of
this surplus on hand, could we not help the brethren on their way to
preach the gospel to the nations? Yes, we could. Some of them will
leave families that will probably be destitute, and if we had means
on hand we could donate to help them, and to prevent them from running
continually to the Bishops. The Bishops have nothing in their hands,
the tithing is used up, it has gone to sustain the poor, the
Priesthood, and the Public Works. Yet when they go to a Bishop he has
to look round to procure them a house, some wood, or some wheat or
flour on tithing. But suppose we had the money on hand that we have
spent on these useless articles which have been referred to the case
would be different. When I begin to talk about these things I see so
much that I can tell but very little. To see the slackness,
slothfulness, and neglect of duty in taking care of the things which
God gives to us. We may say we have abundance—more than we need—but
will we give it to those who need it? No, but it is wasted in buying
articles for which there is no real need. The people here seem to be
perfectly lost, and cannot imagine what they do want. They are not
clogged with every luxury, to be sure; they are not over surfeited
with riches, for they are not rich; but they are comfortable, and they
spend their substance for naught, for that which neither enriches the
soul nor builds up the Kingdom of God.
How is it with you, my brethren and sisters? Can you call to mind any
circumstances that have transpired in the midst of this people that
could have been avoided, and that should put you on your guard? Yes,
plenty of them, if you will only reflect. I asked one man, for
instance, how he lived. "Oh," said he, "I hardly know how; I can
hardly sustain my family." "How many have you in family?"
"Eight of
us." "And what do you have a day?" "Three dollars."
Perhaps here is
another man who gets five dollar a day, and he is poor; and another
one who has a hundred cattle running on the prairie, and he is living
on a dirt floor; he is not able to buy a few boards to make a floor.
Go through the country and you will see numbers living, year after
year, on dirt floors, and unable to procure a little sand and lime to
plaster the walls of their dwellings, and at the same time, perhaps,
they have hundreds and hundreds of animals running on the prairie.
What economy!
You recollect that I asked a few questions at Conference as to the
amount paid out last year for those needless articles—tea, coffee, &c.
Will one hundred thousand dollars pay for the tobacco that the Elders
of Israel chewed and spit out? It will not and the tea that was drunk
will perhaps cost a hundred thousand more, and the coffee will
amount to pretty near the same sum. As for the sugar, I should say,
continue to purchase that, and let the children have it, not to live
on it alone, but in connection with other nutriment, for you should
understand that our food is composed of three staple articles—sugar,
starch, and glue, consequently sugar is good. But to train your
children to drink tea and coffee at two, three, or four years old is
very pernicious and injurious. You mothers and daughters in Israel who
are taking this course, how do you expect to live to accomplish the
work the Lord has assigned you? Why you will not live half your days;
you will come short of it, as much as the wicked. Is this true? It is
verily true. You get up in the morning and have your cup of tea, your
fried ham, your cold beef and mince pies, and everything you can
possibly cram into the stomach, until you surfeit the system and lay
the foundation for disease and early death. Says the mother—"Do eat,
my little daughter, you are sick; take a piece of pie, toast, or meat,
or drink a little tea or coffee; you must take something or other."
Mothers in Israel, such a course engenders disease, and you are laying
a foundation that will cut off one-half or two-thirds of the lives of
your children; and yet a more healthy country than ours cannot be
found upon the face of the earth, if the people would learn to live
prudently.
In foreign lands you may find districts where many of the people do
not have, probably, more than two-thirds of what they need to eat—and
they live thus from year to year—yet you will find them much more
healthy than they who gorge themselves continually. Take the
Americans, say in the old Granite State where I have traveled, and to
look at their surroundings out of doors you would not think they had
more than one bean to a pint of water, but go into their houses and
you will find beef, pork, apple pie, custard pie, pumpkin pie, mince
pie, and every luxury, and they live so as to shorten their days and
the days of their children. You may think that these things are not of
much importance; no more they are, unless they are observed, but let
the people observe them and they lay the foundation for longevity, and
they will begin to live out their days, not only a hundred years, but,
by and by, hundreds of years on the earth. Do you think they will
stuff themselves then with tea and coffee, and perhaps with a little
brandy sling before breakfast and a little before going to bed, and
then beef, pork, mutton, sweetmeats, and pastry, morning, noon, and
night? No; you will find they will live as our first parents did, on
fruits and on a little simple food, and they will never overload the
stomach.
Let the people be temperate in their food, then go to work and clothe
themselves. Ladies, why can you not make your own bonnets as well as
buy them? Will you go to work and do it? I know not. You can do as you
please. Will you dispense with your frills, ruffles, bows, and
nonsense? To correspond with the ladies the gentlemen ought to have
one half of their hats covered with feathers and the other half with a
cockade, and frills up and down the sleeves of their coats and the
legs of their pantaloons. Still, we see some who wear homemade. I
noticed one young man, who is going on a mission, and who spoke here
today, with a suit of homemade cloth on. We can make our own cloth
and then wear it. We can learn how to raise and improve our stock, how
to raise our grain, fruit, and vegetables, we can raise our
own wool and flax and make it into cloth, and in fact we can learn to
raise and make all that we need, and this is one of the great objects
to be attained to in the gathering of the Saints together. As for your
surplus means, you can lay it away, and when a call is made you can
donate to assist the elders who are sent on missions to the nations of
the earth, and help to sustain their families while they are away.
To the elders who are going to preach I will give another word of
counsel—try and maintain yourselves as much as you can. You are going
where thousands of the people die annually of starvation. Do not go
and beg of them, but rather give to them. I have told everyone of my
boys not to depend on the people, but when they get a dinner from the
poor, instead of taking the last crumb or morsel they have, leave
something with them to enable them to supply their wants. I have known
many sisters, and perhaps there are some of them here today, who,
when times were far better than they are now, would pinch themselves
for a whole week in order to provide a comfortable dinner or supper
for an elder who would visit them, at the same time they, probably,
did not have more than one-half, or at most two-thirds, of what was
necessary to sustain themselves. The Elders of Israel should go forth
calculating to help the people both temporally and spiritually, but
some of them have done nothing but beg from the time they left here
until their return. For brethren to leave a country like this, where
labor is plentiful and means so easily acquired, and go and ask alms
of the poor in other countries is a shame and disgrace. I want the
missionaries to remember this and lay it to heart, if they will. Go
and preach the gospel, and help the honest-in-heart to gather, that
they may aid in building up Zion, for that was the design of the Lord
when He said, through the Revelator John, "Come out of her my people
that ye be not partakers of her sins and that ye receive not of her
plagues."
Take the people in the east, west, north, and south who have obeyed
the gospel, and, so far as the spiritual gifts are concerned, they are
all of one heart and one mind, but not one soul knows how to build up
Zion. Not a man in all the realms and kingdoms that exist knows how to
commence the foundation of the Zion of God in the latter days without
revelation. If the people in the world could sanctify themselves and
prepare themselves to build up Zion they might remain scattered, but
they cannot, they must be gathered together to be taught, that they
may sanctify themselves before the Lord and become of one heart and of
one mind. By and by the Jews will be gathered to the land of their
fathers, and the ten tribes, who wandered into the north, will be
gathered home, and the blood of Ephraim, the second son of Joseph, who
was sold into Egypt, which is to be found in every kingdom and nation
under heaven, will be gathered from among the Gentiles, and the
Gentiles who will receive and adhere to the principles of the gospel
will be adopted and initiated into the family of Father Abraham, and
Jesus will reign over His own and Satan will reign over his own. This
will be the result.
Now, Latter-day Saints, only think how far short we come of being what
we ought to be. Some will indulge in a little falsehood here and
there, evil, folly, nonsense, wickedness, lies, deception, arrogating
to themselves that which does not belong to them. We are gathered
together expressly to expose the wickedness that is in our hearts. How often, in looking over the congregations of the Saints, I
can pick out a man here and a woman there guilty of these things.
Here, probably, is a brother who has been a deacon in the Baptist or
Presbyterian church for thirty or forty years, and was just as good a
man as there was in the world, but gather him home with the Saints,
and though his whole judgment is convinced that the gospel is true,
and he believes it with all his heart, yet he will deceive and lie a
little and take that which is not his own. "Did you ever know those
who have been deacons in the sectarian churches guilty of such
things?" Yes, many of them, who have been considered flaming lights
there, yet, when they gathered with the Saints, according to the words
of the prophets, they have spued out the iniquity that was in them,
and revealed the secrets of their hearts to their neighbors. If John
should drop his axe in the canyon, and Benjamin should come along,
although he had been a preacher, he would pick up that axe and keep
it. I have seen many such things. Such practices, if not repented of
and forsaken, will canker the very souls of those who are guilty, and
will deprive them of the glory that will be enjoyed by honest and
virtuous men and women.
When Jesus was preaching on these principles, and showing how strict
and pure in their lives they must be who are counted worthy to be
brought into the presence of the Father and the Son, be crowned with
crowns of glory, immortality, and eternal life, and become Gods, even
the Sons of God, I do not wonder that His disciples cried out, "Who,
then, can be saved?" Said Jesus, "Strait is the gate and narrow is the
way that leads to the lives to come and few there be that find it."
This is the rendering in the new translation. As Jesus said to the
disciples so I say to the Latter-day Saints—"Strait is the gate and
narrow is the way that leads to the lives to come and few there be
that find it." I know you might turn round and say: "Brother Brigham,
do you expect to find it?" I expect to try; and when I get through I
expect the Lord to do what He pleases with me. I have not asked where
He is going to place me, nor what He will do with me, nor anything
about my crown or mansion. I only ask God, my Father, in the name of
Jesus, to help me to live my religion, and to give me ability to save
my fellow beings from the corruptions of the world, to fill them with
the peace of God, and to prepare them for a better kingdom than this.
That is all I have inquired about. What the Lord will do with me, or
where He will place me, I do not know, neither do I care. I serve, and
have implicit confidence in Him, and I am perfectly satisfied that we
will all receive all we are worthy of. May the Lord help us to live so
that we may be worthy of a place in His presence. Amen.