If the brethren and sisters will give their attention, I will try to
talk a few minutes. I preach a great deal to the people; but the
exertion of addressing such large congregations as assemble here in
the city bears a little too much on my stomach and lungs, especially
when laboring under a severe cold as I am at present.
A few of us have recently been on a visit South. We visited twenty
settlements, and, in eleven days, held twenty-seven meetings; and
universally there was a good turnout, the largest meetinghouses
being always filled to overflowing. It is a tolerably easy matter to
speak to the people in a small house, much more so than to address a
congregation like this.
We found the people very much engaged in their religion, and striving,
apparently, to put in practice the faith that they profess. Still, it
is a difficult matter to establish the principles of the kingdom of
God in the hearts of the people. This is for the want of
understanding. Our traditions are strong upon us. We have been taught that, if we will believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, repent of
our sins and exercise faith in his name, all will be well with us and
we shall be brought into the presence of our Father and God. This was
our former tradition. But there are Latter-day Saints who have almost
come to the conclusion that if they believe in the Lord Jesus Christ,
repent of their sins, and are baptized for the remission of them and
have hands laid upon them for the reception of the Holy Ghost, and
partake of the Sacrament or Lord's Supper, they have accomplished just
about all that is required of them in order to establish the kingdom
of God on the earth. Herein lies the difficulty which the servants of
God have to encounter. The people come short of understanding
precisely the order of the establishment of the kingdom of heaven;
consequently it is a labor that needs a great deal of attention, and
one that requires the influence of the Priesthood over the minds of
the people to get them to draw nigh unto God and His cause.
As we have just heard remarked, in relation to the love of the world,
a great many Latter-day Saints, after receiving the Gospel, seem to
run well for a time and then turn again to the love of the world in
its awful, fallen state, lusting after the things that are perishable.
Still, if they could but understand true doctrine and correct
principles, they would find that there is nothing pertaining to the
elements of this earth, but what, in and of itself, is good and of
God. Some may exclaim, "Sin excepted." To this I would say that God
permits sin, or it could not be here. All the creations are His work
and they are for His glory and for the benefit of the children of men;
and all things are put into the possession of man for his comfort,
im provement and consolation, and for his health, wealth, beauty and
excellency.
We should also understand what to do with the things which God has
placed in our possession. We should also desire to understand and
should seek to know the object for which the earth was framed; and
then we wish to comprehend His object and design in placing His
children on it. We should also desire to understand how our Heavenly
Father wishes us to act now we are here; how we should devote our time
and talents, our daily labor and whatever means He puts into our
hands, for the building up of His kingdom on the earth. We want to get
the Saints to think of these things. If we could only get to the
affections of the people and could plant within them the principles of
the kingdom of heaven, it would be an easy matter to bring their hands
to join in the establishment of the Zion of God upon the earth. But,
herein lies our labor. The weakness and shortsightedness of man are
such, and he is so prone to wander and give himself up to the
groveling things of the world, having had so little knowledge with
regard to God and godliness for hundreds of years, that it is
literally a breaking up of the fallow ground of his heart to prepare
him to see the holy city that the Lord will establish.
The Latter-day Saints gather together for the express purpose, they
say, to establish Zion. Where is Zion? On the American continent.
Where is the gathering place? For the present, in the mountains. What
are you going there for? To help to build up Zion.
We find a great many trying to be Saints and endeavoring to understand
how they may be of the most benefit in building up the kingdom of God
on the earth. My brother Joseph says it is an easy matter to
be a Saint. So I say. And taking another view of it, again, it is a
hard matter. This is true. It is not an easy thing to serve God and
mammon. If the Saints comprehend what they have to do in order to
establish Zion, and go to work with ready hands and willing hearts to
accomplish the labor, they will find it a comparatively easy matter;
but unless there is a unity of action on the part of those who are
engaged in the work it is not very easily performed. When there is a
great work to be accomplished, and there are but few hands to perform
it, the burden weighs very heavily on those who are engaged in it. If
we have a farm of six hundred acres to fence, and there is only one
man engaged in getting the poles and lumber from the canyon, we find
it a slow and tardy work; but if we have a hundred men engaged it is
much easier and pleasanter; if a thousand, still more so. So it is in
regard to establishing the kingdom of God in the hearts of the
children of men. It is not a very hard matter to prevail on a person
to put his treasure where his heart is. Our difficulty is in not
understanding the principles of the kingdom of heaven sufficiently to
enter into it with our whole hearts.
Many of our brethren who have come here when in their own land worked
underground, and probably seldom saw the light of day, but spent year
after year of their lives digging out coal. If you chanced to ask
them, "Are you ever going to America?" the answer would invariably be,
"Yes, I am going to Zion." If you asked the wife and children would
they like to go to Zion, the reply would be, "Yes, with all our
hearts. We would do anything to get there; if necessary we would be
the slaves of those of our brethren who have gone there if we could
only go." Yet these same persons when they reach here are not
satisfied. If you ask them if this is Zion, they will say, "I do not
see much that looks like Zion." When they received the work perhaps
their minds were open to see Zion in its beauty and glory; but when
they come here and call this Zion they feel disappointed. They have
not the least idea in relation to establishing this kingdom. They
thought they were going to a Zion whose towers would reach the clouds,
with streets paved with gold and the Tree of Life growing on every
block. They say, "I do not like this place; I am not exactly suited
with it." What do you want? "I do not know exactly what I want; I want
something else; I do not like this place." The disposition of some of
these murmurers reminds me of the children of some families I have
seen while traveling in the world. It is something like this:
"Darling, will you have a piece of bread and butter?" "No, ma'am,
I
don't want it." "But, my dear, shall I put some honey upon it?"
"No, I
don't like it." "Well, then, will you have a little mince pie, love?"
"No, I can't eat it." This is about how the matter stands.
The Saints are full to overflowing with the words of eternal life, yet
they do not know what to do with them; and when we come to preach, it
seems as though the people were surfeited with much doctrine,
persuasion and counsel, and they do not like it very well. This was
evident by the many vacant seats this morning. There ought to be ten
thousand persons at these meetings, both in the morning and afternoon.
But how many do you see? The tabernacle not half filled. Why not come
to meeting and fill all the seats. I do not like to see this lack of
interest in attending meetings. Those professing to be
Latter-day Saints have the words of life and do not know it; the
brethren read from the Book of Life and they do not know it, and the
words of God are given them in great abundance and they trifle with
them. Is this the fact? It is. If the people would live their
religion, there would be no apostasy and we would hear no complaining
or faultfinding. If the people were hungry for the words of eternal
life, and their whole souls even centered on the building up of the
kingdom of God, every heart and hand would be ready and willing and
the work would move forward mightily and we would advance as we should
do.
It is frequently remarked that there is too much of a sameness in this
community. True, we do not have the variety they do in the world,
drinking, carousing, quarreling, litigation, etc. But if you want a
change of this kind, you can get up a dog fight. I think that would be
about the extent of the quarreling you want to see. It would be as
much as I would desire to witness. I have seen enough of the world,
without even desiring to behold another drunken man. I never wish to
see another lawsuit. I feel perfectly satisfied without it.
If the people would like something by way of a change, I will propose
something to them, as I did to sister Horne, the President of the
Female Relief Society in the 14th Ward, who was at Gunnison, about one
hundred and thirty miles south of this place, when we were there. I
invited her, when she returned, to call the sisters of the Relief
Society together, and ask them to begin a reform in eating and
housekeeping. I told her I wished to get up a society whose members
would agree to have a light, nice breakfast in the morning, for
themselves and children, without cooking something less than forty
different kinds of food, making slaves of themselves and requiring
three or four hired girls to wash dishes. Prepare your breakfast
something like they do in England, bread and butter, a little cheese,
a few eggs, food that is light and nutritious, and which does not
require so much labor in cooking; and instead of tea, if you cannot
drink cold water, make a bowl of water gruel or meal porridge and you
will save dirtying three or four dishes, knives and forks, or spoons,
to each individual that sits at the table.
This would be something to change your feelings and the fashions of
society. Will you do it? If you want something new, try this; and when
dinner time comes, don't pile the table full of roast meat, boiled
meat and baked meat, fat mutton, beef and pork; and in addition to
this two or three kinds of pies and cakes; neither urge the children,
the father and everyone at the table to eat and gorge themselves till
they are so full that when night comes they will want a doctor. This
will do for a change.
When we go on a trip to the settlements and stop at the brethren's
houses, it is, "Brother Brigham, let us manifest our feelings towards
you and your company. I tell them to do so, but give me a piece of
johnnycake; I would rather have it than their pies and tarts and
sweetmeats. Let me have something that will sustain nature and leave
my stomach and whole system clear to receive the Spirit of the Lord
and be free from headache and pains of every kind. If I can experience
this, it will suit me. What do you say to it, sisters? Do you want a
revolution? They want one in France; but you need not go to France to
have a revolution of this kind. Yet in that country there are
about twenty-four millions who never eat any flesh meat at all.
The Americans, as a nation, are killing themselves with their vices
and high living. As much as a man ought to eat in half an hour they
swallow in three minutes, gulping down their food like the canine
quadruped under the table, which, when a chunk of meat is thrown down
to it, swallows it before you can say "twice." If you want a reform,
carry out the advice I have just given you. Dispense with your
multitudinous dishes, and, depend upon it, you will do much towards
preserving your families from sickness, disease and death.
If this method were adopted in this community, I will venture to say
that it would add ten years to the lives of our children. That is
worth a great deal.
If you want a little of something more—if you want another revolution,
let us go to and say we will wear nothing but what we make; and that
which we do not make we will not have.
If the people are inclined to complain about cooperation, let them do
so. I have a constitutional right to eat sweetmeats if I choose, so
long as I raise them and they belong to no one else; or a piece of
johnnycake or wheat bread. This is my legal right and yours also. I
have a right to wear a hat that my wife or daughters or my sister has
made, and I need not be called in question for doing so. I have a
legal and constitutional right, and so have my sisters, to set their
table out in a morning with a little plain food on it if they choose
so to do. Let the people eat as I used to eat when I was a child. If
meat were cooked at all, it was on one plate; and if I had any it was
off that plate. I can go to thousands of houses that are making the
knives and forks and clothing for you and me that will not have a
knife on their table at meal time. Have you ever seen any such thing?
Yes, plenty of you have!
I have frequently related a circumstance that transpired while I was
in England. After I recovered from the sickness which distressed me
during the voyage across the ocean, my appetite became unusually good.
I was invited to what is known in that country as a tea party.
Fourteen of us sat down at the table, which was about two and a half
feet across; but not a knife, fork, plate or spoon could be seen, with
the exception of the plate in the middle of the table, with some
beautiful ham upon it, swimming in the gravy. I said to myself, "I
would like a piece of that ham if I had any way to eat it; but I have
no plate nor knife and fork." By and by a native elder set down his
cup on one knee, his bread and butter on the other; and putting his
hand in his pocket, pulled out his knife, opened it, and reaching over
his bread and butter, took a piece of ham and slipped it onto his
bread. I said to myself, "I can do that as well as you;" but I took
out my knife before I put down my cup, reached over to the plate and
took a fine piece of ham; although I was afraid I would get a little
gravy on my clothes in doing so. If I had had a plate it would
certainly have been much better; but I got along very well without
even greasing my clothes. "Now," said I, "that is worth money to me;
I
have learned something." In about five minutes after the tea table was
deserted by the guests, everything was cleared away and the sister was
ready to visit with us. It did not take her two hours to fuss around
to wash plates and see that the servants did not break them,
fixing furniture and so forth as we do here.
If you want a revolution go to work to improve yourselves and give
your minds something to act upon instead of looking at the faults of
others. We are a poor, feeble set and have hardly eyes to see; and
many of those who have eyes see not, but are constantly watching the
weaknesses and follies of each other. Endeavor with all your mind and
strength to improve yourselves and ask your sisters and brethren to
improve their lives. I am preaching to you practical religion. Learn
to take proper care of your children. If any of them are sick, the cry
now, instead of "Go and fetch the Elders to lay hands on my child!"
is, "Run for a doctor." Why do you not live so as to rebuke disease?
It is your privilege to do so without sending for the Elders. You
should go to work to study and see what you can do for the recovery of
your children. If a child is taken sick with fever give it something
to stay that fever or relieve the stomach and bowels, so that
mortification may not set in. Treat the child with prudence and care,
with faith and patience, and be careful in not overcharging it with
medicine. If you take too much medicine into the system, it is worse
than too much food. But you will always find that an ounce of
preventive is worth a pound of cure. Study and learn something for
yourselves. It is the privilege of a mother to have faith and to
administer to her child; this she can do herself, as well as sending
for the Elders to have the benefit of their faith.
We have come here to build up Zion. How shall we do it? I could tell
you how if I had time. I have told you a great many times. There is
one thing I will say in regard to it. We have got to be united in our
efforts. We should go to work with a united faith like the heart of
one man; and whatever we do should be performed in the name of the
Lord, and we will then be blessed and prospered in all we do. We have
a work on hand whose magnitude can hardly be told. We have now to go
to and save ourselves according to the plan provided for our
salvation, the Savior having done for us all that he can, except to
impart unto us grace to aid us in our lives, and to save our families,
friends, ancestors, and the nations that have lived before us and
those that may come after us, that all may be brought unto God and be
saved, except the sons of perdition. This is the labor we have before
us.
Brother Joseph was speaking about prayer. I will say a word with
regard to prayer. It matters not whether you or I feel like praying,
when the time comes to pray, pray. If we do not feel like it, we
should pray till we do. And if there is a heavy storm coming on and
our hay is likely to be wet, let it come. You will find that those who
wait till the Spirit bids them pray will never pray much on this
earth; for they always find a little something else to do, and become
like some who wait for the Spirit to bid them pray, consequently they
never pray. Such people would come to meeting and look at each other
and then, when they had stayed as long as they felt inclined, address
their brethren with—"Good bye, I am going home," and then leave. But
when the time comes to have prayers, let them be made, and there will
be no danger.
Let us be humble, fervent, submissive, yielding ourselves to the will
of the Lord, and there is no danger but that we shall have His Spirit
to guide us. If we will open our lips and call upon our Heavenly
Father, in the name of Jesus, we will have the spirit of
prayer. I have proved this to be the best way. If we do everything in
the season thereof, attending to our prayers and daily labors in their
proper order and all at the right time, all will go well.
In regard to the things of this world, we should learn what they are
for, and then use them wisely. To be proud and lifted up is the height
of folly. It is beneath the intelligence and understanding of the man
of God ever to be filled with foolish and vain desires. If we wish to
exult, let us exult in our God; if we desire to be proud, let our
pride be in our Heavenly Father; if we desire happiness, let us be
humble and faithful in obeying the commandments of the Almighty and He
will dispense every blessing to us. This is my constant prayer. I
desire to live so that His Spirit may be with me continually; and I
ask you to do so in the name of Jesus, and he will bless you. Amen.