There is a large congregation of people before me who profess to be
Latter-day Saints, though they are few in number when compared with
the people at large. But those who are here, are here because of our
religion. It is very seldom that you find a person in our midst, who
is one of our citizens, who has come here with any other object than
to serve God, be numbered with His Saints, help to build up Zion and
establish peace and righteousness upon the earth. We look upon each
other as though we ought to be Saints indeed; but while we are looking
at our brethren and sisters we are very apt to behold their faults
instead of their virtues. We are all liable to err; we are subject to
weaknesses and liable to go astray; to do that which we should not do,
and leave undone that we should do. This seems to be interwoven with
the nature of all mankind through the fall. Still, we are here as
Latter-day Saints; we have assembled ourselves together to become one;
to become the people of God, the children of Zion, the
children of light. We are here for the express purpose of separating
ourselves from the world and establishing that order of government
that we read of in the Holy Scriptures; and we desire to see the glory
of Zion upon the earth that has been spoken of by the Prophets of God.
The mass of the people in Christendom are taught to believe in the
Bible, and they are taught to believe that Jesus is the Christ, the
Redeemer and Savior of the world. This is the tradition of our
fathers. This has been taught to us. And the Christian world have
sought to understand enough with regard to the plan of salvation to
prepare them to enjoy the happiness and bliss of a world where
righteousness reigns triumphant. A portion of the Christian world say
they are preparing for the Millennium and the Second Advent of the
Savior; but their lives and conduct do not agree with their
professions. They are taught to believe the sayings of Jesus and the
Apostles and Prophets, sufficient to die by, and that they may be
prepared to enjoy heaven hereafter; but they have no idea of making a
heaven here on earth, of building up the Kingdom of God, that Jesus
can come and receive his own. Our traditions have been to try and get
through this world having religion enough and belief enough in Christ
so that we could leave it and go where we could enjoy heavenly bliss
forever. The Christian world have very limited ideas with regard to
the Kingdom of Heaven on the earth. We as Latter-day Saints have
confessed before Heaven, before the heavenly hosts, and before the
inhabitants of the earth, that we really believe the Scriptures as
they are given to us, according to the best understanding and
knowledge that we have of the translation, and the spirit and meaning
of the Old and New Testaments.
We have confessed before angels and men, and have acknowledged by our
acts that we believe most assuredly that Jesus has called upon us as
his disciples—those who will receive the truth, obey His commandments,
observe His precepts and honor His laws, to come out from among the
wicked, to separate ourselves from sinners and from sin. If we have
not confessed this by our acts as well as by our faith, then we are
mistaken concerning the gathering of ourselves together. But we have
confessed it, and we do believe it, and it is for us to live according
to that which we acknowledge. We acknowledge the covenant under which
we live; we believe it, and are honest in our belief; and we will
honor that covenant by obedience to the laws of God. If we do not, our
words and our actions contradict each other. By our acts, by our
coming together, by our leaving our homes, our friends and our
birthplaces that were dear to us according to the customs and belief
of the world, we have declared our desire to serve the Lord. We have
left the graves of our fathers—as our natives here would say, who lay
great stress on birthplaces as well as many civilized nations; many
have left fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters; and some have
left husbands and some have left wives and children: what for? Because
they believed in the words of Jesus and His Apostles, as well as in
the Prophets and in the testimony of the Prophet Joseph and the Elders
who have been sent unto them. This people have confessed this, and
have shown to the world that they are honest in their belief; and that
they are willing to carry out in their lives the spirit and meaning of
this faith. Is not this the situation of the Latter-day
Saints? It is. This is our profession before the Heavens and all the
inhabitants of the earth. Yet when we examine the feelings, views,
wishes, desires and aspirations of this people, we see them wandering
after almost everything but that which they should possess. With all
these professions, and our willingness to forsake fathers, mothers,
sisters, brothers, wives and children, houses and homes, and the
comforts of life for the gospel's sake, we are yet far from aspiring
to the holiness and the purity and perfection of Latter-day Saints.
That people should forsake everything on the earth that would
naturally be dear to them, of a worldly nature, for righteousness'
sake, and then fall into a deeper vortex of folly and sin than they
were in before, is astonishing.
My mission to the people is to teach them with regard to their
everyday lives. I presume there are many here who have heard me say,
years and years ago, that I cared very little about what will take
place after the millennium. Elders may preach long discourses
concerning what took place in the days of Adam, what occurred before
the creation, and what will take place thousands of years from now,
talking of things which have occurred or that will occur yet, of which
they are ignorant, feeding the people on wind; but that is not my
method of teaching. My desire is to teach the people what they should
do now, and let the millennium take care of itself. To teach them to
serve God and to build up His Kingdom is my mission. I have taught
faith, repentance, baptism for the remission of sins, and the laying
on of hands for the reception of the Holy Ghost. These principles you
were taught in foreign lands. You are teaching them to your children.
There is scarcely a child in Israel but is looking forward with
anxiety to the time when he or she will be baptized. These things we
understand alike. We have been baptized and have had hands laid upon
us for the reception of the Holy Ghost. We have been taught to
exercise faith, and to enjoy the gifts of the gospel. What has to be
taught now? How to live. Have they to be taught to send for the Elders
when they are sick, and that the prayer of faith will heal them? They
understand these things. We are to be taught with regard to our everyday
life in a temporal point of view.
Some may think they have the privilege of going to the gold mines or
doing as they please, without being instructed concerning their
temporal duties; that no person has a right to interfere with their
temporal matters. Yet we have been performing labors year after year
from the beginning, of various kinds, that the people have not seemed
to think have had anything to do with temporal matters. I commenced
such labors in the beginning of my career in the ministry. When the
people believed and received the gospel, I commenced my temporal
labors. They were baptized, which is a temporal work. By the laying on
of hands—another temporal labor—they received the Holy Ghost. When
they received that Spirit they saw they were to be gathered out from
among the wicked. They saw the judgments of God were to be poured out
upon the ungodly. This they saw in the vision of their minds. They saw
the Saints were to be gathered out, understanding this by the Spirit
which they had received. What had to be taught to them then? To gather
up their little substance; if they had a farm or possessions, to sell
them; and gather up with their families and friends and substance, to
the land of Zion. And where is the land of Zion? It is
wherever the finger of the Lord has pointed out for His people to
gather to. That is the place to go to. I recollect a lady asking me in
Canada, in 1832 or '33, how large Jackson County was; and when I said
30 miles square, said she, "Suppose the whole world would embrace your
doctrine, how would they get into Jackson County?" My reply was that,
"Jackson County, in that case, would cover the whole world. Zion will
expand as far as the necessity of the case requires it. You need not
fear but there will be room for you, if you believe and gather with
the Saints."
We commenced teaching the people the doctrine of Jesus, and then we
commenced to build up the Kingdom of Heaven on the earth. We commenced
this years ago. Have we been successful? In part, we have. A few have
been gathered together, but our work is not accomplished. The Lord
never could teach His people while they were among the wicked how to
live by themselves, how to unite their efforts and their whole power
for the establishment of His Kingdom. This kingdom is not of the
world, says Jesus. It is different from any other kingdom that is now
upon the earth; and while the people of it are mixed with the people
of other nations and kingdoms, the Lord could never teach them how to
establish His Kingdom. He must get them away from the wicked; gather
them out; bring them into a place He has reserved for them to gather
together, where He can teach them of His laws.
As I said once to my brethren in the school of the Prophets—I have
not asked you, I dare not ask you to fulfil almost the first
requirement of the Kingdom of Heaven, almost the simplest principle,
and one of the first things that should be observed. I have not asked
the people yet to perform this great labor, I will say it is a great
labor, and if I were to refer it to you, you would say the same. You
may ask what it is? It is to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart,
with all thy mind and with all thy strength, and thy neighbor as
thyself. Now, is this not almost one of the first requirements that
God has made of His people? and I have not yet required it of the
people. Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and then speak evil
of thy neighbor? No, no! Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and
speak that which is not true? No, oh, no! Love the Lord thy God with
all thy heart, and take that which is not thy own? No, no, no! Love
the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and seek after the riches of the
world and forsake your religion? No! Love the Lord thy God with all
thy heart and take His name in vain, curse and swear? No, never! If
the love of God was really in the hearts of all who call themselves
Latter-day Saints, there would be no more swearing, no more lying, no
more deceiving, no more speaking evil of one another, no more running
after the ungodly nor dealing with the enemies of Zion, no more
running after the gold mines; nothing would be sought after only to
build up the Kingdom of God. This we have not yet asked. But we do ask
some things. Let us forsake those sins that are so grievous, and let
us try to do right before the Heavens and with each other. Look at the
Elders of Israel today; how many of them are gone to hunt gold.
Hundreds of them are running off to Cheyenne to get work on the
railroad. Where are their crops, their flocks and their families? All
left, that they may get a little wealth.
We have been crying to the people for years and years to cease
their trading and trying to speculate with the enemies of this people.
We have said to them, "Store up those things that the Lord gives to
us, these are years of plenty, these are the days when the abundance
of the blessings of Heaven are upon the soil we occupy; treasure up
your wheat or our traders will take our flour and carry it to our
enemies." But our elders will go and borrow money of strangers for the
sake of speculating. Is this a fact? I do not know how it is here in
Bountiful, but it is so in other places. Bountiful is a good and
suggestive name; is it an appropriate one? Have you here an abundance
of flour? If so, I will call upon you for some for the Public Works.
There is nothing, nor has there been for a long time, to supply the
public hands, only what I furnish out of my private storehouse. If
you have an abundance of beeves and flour and butter and eggs, and
other things, will you furnish something for the Public Works? But if
you are as they are in many other places, many of you have not got
breadstuffs to last you one week. If one-half have breadstuffs to last
them till harvest, it is more than they have in other places. Yet we
have asked the people to save their wheat against such a year as last
year or this year. Here are the devouring insects ready to take
everything that we have. These are things the people have got to be
taught to observe. There are certain rules in life and certain
principles to be observed by this people. They must cease trading with
those who would destroy us. To be called out from the wicked, and then
take a course to call the wicked to us, how inconsistent it is! If the
Lord were to say, "I will let the wicked drive you again, and I will
call you to another place, where there is no one to disturb you;" how
long would it be until the course taken by many would call the wicked
in among us again, to seek to destroy us? The Latter-day Saints must
stop this course, or they will bring evil upon themselves, and we will
have to leave. These are the things we have to learn. We have the
privilege of choosing now. It is in our hands, it is within our power,
whether we will stay in these mountains and build up the Zion of our
God, or make the wicked and ungodly fat by our labor and give them our
possessions. This many are doing, by running in debt to our enemies,
and pursuing a course that is wrong. If they do not cease it they will
have cause to weep and mourn.
All Latter-day Saints enter the new and everlasting covenant when they
enter this Church. They covenant to cease sustaining, upholding and
cherishing the kingdom of the devil and the kingdoms of this world.
They enter into the new and everlasting covenant to sustain the
Kingdom of God and no other kingdom. They take a vow of the most
solemn kind, before the heavens and earth, and that, too, upon the
validity of their own salvation, that they will sustain truth and
righteousness instead of wickedness and falsehood, and build up the
Kingdom of God, instead of the kingdoms of this world. When we came
here to these valleys, who were here to trouble us? Nobody; but we
have fed those who would destroy us, opened our houses and farms to
them, to speculate and trade and traffic and get gain, and what do we
make by it?
Now, some of my brethren may ask, "Brother Brigham, do you expect to
dictate me where I shall sow my wheat, and when I shall sow it, and in
similar matters?" I have said and will say again, if Brother Brigham
had time to be in every house he would teach them how to keep
house. How many sisters set up their stockings by guess work, and do
not know the number of the yarn and the number of the needles to use?
In this matter I would instruct many of the sisters, if they would not
take umbrage at me for doing so. The sisters ought to know about
housekeeping and the brethren who farm about farming, but they need to
be taught. Learn to be neat and cleanly in all that you do. Do you ask
me if I am going to dictate you in such matters? If I am not to
dictate you, you are not to be saved in the kingdom I calculate to be
saved in. If I know something that you do not understand it is my duty
to teach you; and if you know something that I do not know, it is your
duty to communicate your knowledge to me, till we become perfect by
increasing in knowledge. Brethren, we have many things yet to learn.
Many of the brethren south are ruined by running in debt; men of
handsome property, which will go for comparatively nothing because of
their vain imaginations.
Ye Latter-day Saints, learn to sustain yourselves, produce everything
you need to eat, drink or wear; and if you cannot obtain all you wish
for today, learn to do without that which you cannot purchase and pay
for; and bring your minds into subjection that you must and will live
within your means. When we, as a people, can come to understand that
we can live by ourselves, then we can live of ourselves, without any
outside world. We did live so when we first came here. Were there any
stores to go to? Were there places to go to where money could be
hired? Did we live? Yes. Were we healthy? Yes. Much healthier, as a
people, than we are now. Did we grow and increase? Yes; and as soon as
we had time to till the earth and reap a crop, we produced wheat and
corn and potatoes. We turned our cattle on to the range to make our
beef. We had plenty of wheat. We began to make our clothing here. We
drove in sheep and we took care of the wool, and made it into cloth. I
brought a carding machine with me. It was the only one in the
Territory for years, and it carded up a great deal of wool. We made up
this wool into cloth and wore it. When the gold came, then merchants
came and the spirit of speculation came. Then men ran to the gold
mines to get money; and then was the rush to the stores. Says the
husband "I must have a suit of broadcloth and a fine pair of boots;"
while the wife and daughters said they must have nice bonnets and
dresses; and this has been continued until we have involved ourselves.
Are you going to be dictated in these matters? Yes, or you will sooner
or later leave the Kingdom of God and go somewhere else. Is it hard to
say this to the people? Is it infringing upon their rights? They
have the privilege to choose the good or to choose the evil. It is as
manly and as praiseworthy for an individual to make the choice to do
good, work righteousness and love and serve God—it is more noble, than
to choose the downward road. One or the other will be the choice of
every individual. Do not trifle with evil, or you will be overcome by
it before you know. Our business is to build up the Zion of God on the
earth. Do you think you will do it and go hand in hand with the
wicked? No, never. I know you may say, and say truly, according to the
parable spoken by Jesus to his disciples, when the bridegroom was
coming, the cry was, "Go ye out to meet him," but while he tarried,
they all slumbered and slept. And when they awoke with the
cry, "the bridegroom is here," there were foolish virgins among them
who had no oil in their lamps. He did not say that they would be among
the ungodly. It is among those who are the bride, the Lamb's wife,
that the foolish are to be found. But he never has instructed us to
call on the ungodly, and those who would mob us, to make foolish
virgins. Some may quote the parable of the wheat and the tares and say
they must grow together. Let me tell you, the tares will be in the
field, and many will think they are wheat, until harvest comes; but at
no time has the Lord said, bring the wicked and ungodly among my
people to scourge them; for they are capable of bringing upon
themselves all the evil necessary to perfect the good. The Lord bless
you: Amen.