It was announced at the close of the forenoon meeting that I would
address the congregation this afternoon upon the subject of Celestial Marriage; I do so with the greatest pleasure.
In the first place, let us inquire whether it is lawful and right,
according to the Constitution of our country, to examine and practice
this Bible doctrine? Our fathers, who framed the Constitution of our
country devised it so as to give freedom of religious worship of the
Almighty God; so that all people under our Government should have the
inalienable right—a right by virtue of the Constitution—to believe in
any Bible principle which the Almighty has revealed in any age of the
world to the human family. I do not think, however, that our
forefathers, in framing that instrument, intended to embrace all the
religions of the world. I mean the idolatrous and Pagan religions.
They say nothing about those religions in the Constitution; but they
give the express privilege in that instrument to all people dwelling
under this Government and under the institutions of our country, to
believe in all things which the Almighty has revealed to the human
family. There is no restriction nor limitation so far as Bible
religion is concerned, or any principle or form of religion believed
to have emanated from the Almighty; yet they would not admit
idolatrous nations to come here and practice their religion, because
it is not included in the Bible; it is not the religion of the
Almighty. Those people worship idols, the work of their own hands,
they have instituted rights and ceremonies pertaining to those idols,
in the observance of which they, no doubt, suppose they are
worshipping correctly and sincerely, yet some of them are of the most
revolting and barbarous character. Such, for instance, as the offering
up of a widow on a funeral pile, as a burnt sacrifice, in order to
follow her husband into the eternal worlds. That is no part of the
religion mentioned in the Constitution of our country, it is no part
of the religion of Almighty God.
But confining ourselves within the limits of the Constitution, and
coming back to the religion of the Bible, we have the privilege to
believe in the Patriarchal, in the Mosaic, or in the Christian order
of things; for the God of the patriarchs, and the God of Moses is
also the Christians' God.
It is true that many laws were given under the Patriarchal or Mosaic
dispensations, against certain crimes, the penalties for violating
which, religious bodies, under our Constitution, have not the right to
inflict. The Government has reserved, in its own hands, the power, so
far as affixing the penalties of certain crimes is concerned.
In ancient times there was a law strictly enforcing the observance of
the Sabbath day, and the man or woman who violated that law was
subjected to the punishment of death. Ecclesiastical bodies have the
right, under our Government and Constitution, to observe the Sabbath
day or to disregard it, but they have not the right to inflict
corporeal punishment for its nonobservance.
The subject proposed to be investigated this afternoon is that of
Celestial Marriage, as believed in by the Latter-day Saints, and which
they claim is strictly a Bible doctrine and part of the revealed
religion of the Almighty. It is well known by all the Latter-day
Saints that we have not derived all our knowledge concerning God,
heaven, angels, this life and the life to come entirely from the books
of the Bible; yet we believe that all of our religious principles and
notions are in accordance with and are sustained by the Bible;
consequently, though we believe in new revelation, and believe that
God has revealed many things pertaining to our religion, we
also believe that He has revealed none that are inconsistent with the
worship of Almighty God, a sacred right guaranteed to all religious
denominations by the Constitution of our country.
God created man, male and female. He is the Author of our existence He
placed us on this creation. He ordained laws to govern us. He gave to
man, whom He created, a helpmeet—a woman, a wife to be one with him,
to be a joy and a comfort to him; and also for another very great and
wise purpose—namely, that the human species might be propagated on
this creation, that the earth might teem with population according to
the decree of God before the foundation of the world, that the
intelligent spirits whom He had formed and created, before this world
was rolled into existence, might have their probation, might have an
existence in fleshly bodies on this planet, and be governed by laws
emanating from their great Creator. In the breast of male and female
He established certain qualities and attributes that never will be
eradicated—namely, love towards each other. Love comes from God. The
love which man possesses for the opposite sex came from God. The same
God who created the two sexes implanted in the hearts of each love
towards the other. What was the object of placing this passion or
affection within the hearts of male and female? It was in order to
carry out, so far as this world was concerned, His great and eternal
purposes pertaining to the future. But He not only did establish this
principle in the heart of man and woman, but gave divine laws to
regulate them in relation to this passion or affection, that they
might be limited and prescribed in the exercise of it towards each
other. He therefore ordained the Marriage Institution. The marriage
that was instituted in the first place was between two immortal
beings, hence it was marriage for eternity in the very first case
which we have recorded for an example. Marriage for eternity was the
order God instituted on our globe; as early as the Garden of Eden; as
early as the day when our first parents were placed in the garden to
keep it and till it, they, as two immortal beings, were united in the
bonds of the new and everlasting covenant. This was before man fell,
before the forbidden fruit was eaten, and before the penalty of death
was pronounced upon the heads of our first parents and all their
posterity, hence, when God gave to Adam his wife Eve, He gave her to
him as an immortal wife, and there was no end contemplated of the
relation they held to each other as husband and wife.
By and by, after this marriage had taken place, they transgressed the
law of God, and by reason of that transgression the penalty of death
came, not only upon them, but also upon all their posterity. Death, in
its operations, tore asunder, as it were, these two beings who had
hitherto been immortal, and if God had not, before the foundation of
the world, provided a plan of redemption, they would, perhaps, have
been torn asunder forever; but inasmuch as a plan of redemption had
been provided, by which man could be rescued from the effects of the
fall, Adam and Eve were restored to that condition of union, in
respect to immortality, from which they had been separated for a short
season of time by death. The Atonement reached after them and brought
forth their bodies from the dust, and restored them as husband and
wife, to all the privileges that were pronounced upon them before the
Fall.
That was eternal marriage; that was lawful marriage ordained by God.
That was the divine institution which was revealed and practiced in
the early period of our globe. How has it been since that day? Mankind
have strayed from that order of things, or, at least, they have done
so in latter times. We hear nothing among the religious societies of
the world which profess to believe in the Bible about this marriage
for eternity. It is among the things that are obsolete. Now all
marriages are consummated until death only; they do not believe in
that great pattern and prototype established in the beginning; hence
we never hear of their official characters, whether civil or
religious, uniting men and women in the capacity of husband and wife
as immortal beings. No, they marry as mortal beings only, and until
death does them part.
What is to become of them after death? What will take place among all
those nations who have been marrying for centuries for time only? Do
both men and women receive a resurrection? Do they come forth with all
the various affections, attributes and passions that God gave them in
the beginning? Does the male come forth from the grave with all the
attributes of a man? Does the female come forth from her grave with
all the attributes of a woman? If so, what is their future destiny? Is
there no object or purpose in this new creation, save to give them
life, a state of existence? Or is there a more important object in
view, in the mind of God, in thus creating them anew? Will that
principle of love which exists now, and which has existed from the
beginning, exist after the resurrection? I mean this sexual love. If
that existed before the Fall, and if it has existed since then, will
it exist in the eternal worlds after the resurrection? This is a very
important question to be decided.
We read in the revelations of God that there are various classes of
beings in the eternal worlds. There are some who are kings, priests,
and Gods, others that are angels; and also among them are the orders
denominated celestial, terrestrial, and telestial. God, however,
according to the faith of the Latter-day Saints, has ordained that the
highest order and class of beings that should exist in the eternal
worlds should exist in the capacity of husbands and wives, and that
they alone should have the privilege of propagating their
species—intelligent immortal beings. Now it is wise, no doubt, in the
Great Creator to thus limit this great and heavenly principle to those
who have arrived or come to the highest state of exaltation,
excellency, wisdom, knowledge, power, glory, and faithfulness, to
dwell in His presence, that they by this means shall be prepared to
bring up their spirit offspring in all pure and holy principles in the
eternal worlds, in order that they may be made happy. Consequently, He
does not entrust this privilege of multiplying spirits with the
terrestrial or telestial, or the lower order of beings there, nor with
angels. But why not? Because they have not proved themselves worthy of
this great privilege. We might reason, of the eternal worlds, as some
of the enemies of polygamy may reason of this state of existence, and
say that there are just as many males as females there, some
celestial, some terrestrial, and some telestial; and why not have all
these paired off, two by two? Because God administers His gifts and
His blessings to those who are most faithful, giving them more
bountifully to the faithful, and taking away from the unfaithful that
with which they had been entrusted, and which they had not
improved upon. That is the order of God in the eternal worlds, and if
such an order exists there, it may in a degree exist here.
When the sons and daughters of the Most High God come forth in the
morning of the resurrection, this principle of love will exist in
their bosoms just as it exists here, only intensified according to the
increased knowledge and understanding which they possess; hence they
will be capacitated to enjoy the relationships of husband and wife, of
parents and children, in a hundred fold degree greater than they
could in mortality. We are not capable, while surrounded with the
weaknesses of our flesh, to enjoy these eternal principles in the same
degree that will then exist. Shall these principles of conjugal and
parental love and affection be thwarted in the eternal worlds? Shall
they be rooted out and overcome? No, most decidedly not. According to
the religious notions of the world these principles will not exist
after the resurrection; but our religion teaches the fallacy of such
notions. It is true that we read in the New Testament that in the
resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are as
the angels in heaven. These are the words of our Savior when he was
addressing himself to a very wicked class of people, the Sadducees, a
portion of the Jewish nation, who rejected Jesus, and the counsel of
God against their own souls. They had not attained to the blessings
and privileges of their fathers, but had apostatized; and Jesus, in
speaking to them, says that in the resurrection they neither marry nor
are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God.
Now, how are the angels of God after the resurrection? According to
the revelations which God has given, there are different classes of
angels. Some angels are Gods, and still possess the lower office
called angels. Adam is called an Archangel, yet he is a God. Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob, no doubt, have the right to officiate in the capacity
of angels if they choose, but still they have ascended to their
exaltation, to a higher state than that of angels—namely, to thrones,
kingdoms, principalities and powers, to reign over kingdoms and to
hold the everlasting Priesthood. Then there is another order of angels
who never have ascended to these powers and dignities, to this
greatness and exaltation in the presence of God. Who are they? Those
who never received the everlasting covenant of marriage for eternity;
those who have not continued in nor received that law with all their
hearts, or who, perhaps, have fought against it. They become angels.
They have no power to increase and extend forth to kingdoms. They have
no wives, no husbands, and they are servants to those that sit upon
thrones and rule over kingdoms, and are counted worthy of a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory. These, no doubt, were the kind
of angels Jesus had reference to when speaking to those ungodly
classes of beings called Sadducees and Pharisees, one of which denied
the doctrine of the resurrection altogether.
There is a difference between the classes of angels called celestial,
terrestrial and telestial. The celestial angels have not attained to
all of the power and greatness and exaltation of kings and priests in
the presence of God; they are blessed with glory, happiness, peace and
joy; but they are not blessed with the privilege of increasing their
posterity to all ages of eternity, neither have they thrones
and kingdoms, but they are servants to those of the highest order. The
angels of the terrestrial and telestial orders, while possessing a
degree of happiness and glory, are lower than those of the celestial
order. We might inquire, have angels not also these affections which
belong to the higher class of beings, inasmuch as they are resurrected
beings? Yes, but herein they have lost, through disobedience, the
privilege of attaining to the higher glory and exaltation. They have
affections and desires that never can be gratified, and in this
respect their glory is not full.
I am talking, today, to Latter-day Saints; I am not reasoning with
unbelievers. If I were, I should appeal more fully to the Old
Testament Scriptures to bring in arguments and testimonies to prove
the divine authenticity of polygamic marriages. Perhaps I may touch
upon this for a few moments, for the benefit of strangers, should
there be any in our midst. Let me say, then, that God's people, under
every dispensation since the creation of the world, have, generally,
been polygamists. I say this for the benefit of strangers. According
to the good old book called the Bible, when God saw proper to call out
Abraham from all the heathen nations, and made him a great man in the
world, He saw proper, also, to make him a polygamist, and approbated
him in taking unto himself more wives than one. Was it wrong in
Abraham to do this thing? If it were, when did God reprove him for so
doing? When did He ever reproach Jacob for doing the same thing? Who
can find the record in the lids of the Bible of God reproving Abraham,
as being a sinner, and having committed a crime, in taking to himself
two living wives? No such thing is recorded. He was just as much
blessed after doing this thing as before, and more so, for God
promised blessings upon the issue of Abraham by his second wife the
same as that of the first wife, providing he was equally faithful.
This was a proviso in every case.
When we come down to Jacob, the Lord permitted him to take four wives.
They are so called in Holy Writ. They are not denominated prostitutes,
neither are they called concubines, but they are called wives, legal
wives; and to show that God approved of the course of Jacob in taking
these wives, He blessed them abundantly, and hearkened to the prayer
of the second wife just the same as the first. Rachel was the second
wife of Jacob, and our great mother; for you know that many of the
Latter-day Saints by revelation know themselves to be the descendants
of Joseph, and he was the son of Rachel, the second wife of Jacob. God
in a peculiar manner blessed the posterity of this second wife.
Instead of condemning the old patriarch, He ordained that Joseph, the
firstborn of this second wife, should be considered the firstborn of
all the twelve tribes, and into his hands was given the double
birthright, according to the laws of the ancients. And yet he was the
offspring of plurality—of the second wife of Jacob. Of course, if
Reuben, who was indeed the firstborn unto Jacob, had conducted
himself properly, he might have retained the birthright and the
greater inheritance; but he lost that through his transgression, and
it was given to a polygamic child, who had the privilege of inheriting
the blessing to the utmost bounds of the everlasting hills—the great
continent of North and South America was conferred upon him. Another
proof that God did not disapprove of a man having more wives than one,
is to be found in the fact that Rachel, after she had been a
long time barren, prayed to the Lord to give her seed. The Lord
hearkened to her cry and granted her prayer; and when she received
seed from the Lord by her polygamic husband, she exclaimed, "The Lord
hath hearkened unto me and hath answered my prayer." Now do you think
the Lord would have done this if he had considered polygamy a crime?
Would He have hearkened to the prayer of this woman if Jacob had been
living with her in adultery? And he certainly was doing so if the
ideas of this generation are correct.
Again, what says the Lord in the days of Moses, under another
dispensation? We have seen that in the days of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, He approved of polygamy and blessed His servants who practiced
it, and also their wives and children. Now, let us come down to the
days of Moses. We read that, on a certain occasion the sister of
Moses, Miriam, and certain others in the great congregation of Israel,
got very jealous. What were they jealous about? About the Ethiopian
woman that Moses had taken to wife, in addition to the daughter of
Jethro, whom he had taken before in the land of Midian. How dare the
great lawgiver, after having committed, according to the ideas of the
present generation, a great crime, show his face on Mount Sinai when
it was clothed with the glory of the God of Israel? But what did the
Lord do in the case of Miriam, for finding fault with her brother
Moses? Instead of saying, "You are right, Miriam, he has committed a
great crime, and no matter how much you speak against him," He smote
her with a leprosy the very moment she began to complain, and she was
considered unclean for a certain number of days. Here the Lord
manifested by the display of a signal judgment, that He disapproved of
anyone speaking against His servants for taking more wives than one,
because it may not happen to suit their notions of things.
I make these remarks and wish to apply them to faultfinders against
plural marriages in our day. Are there any Miriams in our congregation
today, any of those who, professing to belong to the Israel of the
latter days, sometimes find fault with the man of God standing at
their head, because he not only believes in but practices this divine
institution of the ancients? If there be such in our midst, I say,
remember Miriam the very next time you begin to talk with your
neighboring women, or anybody else against this holy principle.
Remember the awful curse and judgment that fell on the sister of Moses
when she did the same thing, and then fear and tremble before God,
lest He, in His wrath, may swear that you shall not enjoy the
blessings ordained for those who inherit the highest degree of glory.
Let us pass along to another instance under the dispensation of Moses.
The Lord says, on a certain occasion, if a man have married two wives,
and he should happen to hate one and love the other, is he to be
punished—cast out and stoned to death as an adulterer? No; instead of
the Lord denouncing him as an adulterer because of having two wives,
He gave a commandment regulating the matter, so that this principle of
hate in the mind of the man towards one of his wives should not
control him in the important question of the division of his
inheritance among his children, compelling him to give just as much to
the son of the hated wife as to the son of the one beloved; and, if
the son of the hated woman happened to be the firstborn, he
should actually inherit the double portion.
Consequently, the Lord approved, not only the two wives, but their
posterity also. Now, if the women had not been considered wives by the
Lord, their children would have been bastards, and you know that He
has said that bastards shall not enter into the congregation of the
Lord, until the tenth generation, hence you see there is a great
distinction between those whom the Lord calls legitimate or legal, and
those who were bastards—begotten in adultery and whoredom. The latter,
with their posterity, were shut out of the congregation of the Lord
until the tenth generation, while the former were exalted to all the
privileges of legitimate birthright.
Again, under that same law and dispensation, we find that the law
provided for another contingency among the hosts of Israel. In order
that the inheritances of the families of Israel might not run into the
hands of strangers, the Lord, in the book of Deuteronomy, gives a
command that if a man die, leaving a wife, but no issue, his brother
shall marry his widow and take possession of the inheritance; and to
prevent this inheritance going out of the family a strict command was
given that the widow should marry the brother or nearest living
kinsman of her deceased husband. The law was in full force at the time
of the introduction of Christianity—a great many centuries after it
was given. The reasoning of the Sadducees on one occasion when
conversing with Jesus proves that the law was then observed. Said
they, "There were seven brethren who took a certain woman, each one
taking her in succession after the death of the other," and they
inquired of Jesus which of the seven would have her for a wife in the
resurrection. The Sadducees, no doubt, used this figure to prove, as
they thought, the fallacy of the doctrine of the resurrection, but it
also proves that this law, given by the Creator while Israel walked
acceptably before Him, was acknowledged by their wicked descendants in
the days of the Savior. I merely quote the passage to show that the
law was not considered obsolete at that time. A case like this, when
six of the brethren had died, leaving the widow without issue, the
seventh, whether married or unmarried, must fulfill this law and take
the widow to wife, or lay himself liable to a severe penalty. What was
that penalty? According to the testimony of the law of Moses he would
be cursed, for Moses says, "Cursed be he that doth not all things
according as it is written in this book of the law, and let all the
people say Amen." There can be no doubt that many men in those days
were compelled to be polygamists in the fulfillment of this law, for
any man who would not take the childless wife of a deceased brother
and marry her, would come under the tremendous curse recorded in the
book of Deuteronomy, and all the people would be obliged to sanction
the curse, because he would not obey the law of God and become a
polygamist. They were not all Congressmen in those days, nor
Presidents, nor Presbyterians, nor Methodists, nor Roman Catholics;
but they were the people of God, governed by divine law, and were
commanded to be polygamists; not merely suffered to be so, but
actually commanded to be.
There are some Latter-day Saints who, perhaps, have not searched these
things as they ought, hence we occasionally find some who will say
that God suffered these things to be. I will go further, and say that
He commanded them, and He pronounced a curse, to which all the
people had to say amen, if they did not fulfill the commandment.
Coming down to the days of the prophets we find that they were
polygamists; also to the days of the kings of Israel, whom God
appointed Himself, and approbated and blessed. This was especially the
case with one of them, named David, who, the Lord said, was a man
after His own heart. David was called when yet a youth to reign over
the whole twelve tribes of Israel; but Saul, the reigning king of
Israel, persecuted him, and sought to take away his life. David fled
from city to city throughout all the coasts of Judea in order to get
beyond the reach of the relentless persecutions of Saul. While thus
fleeing, the Lord was with him, hearing his prayers, answering his
petitions, giving him line upon line, precept upon precept; permitting
him to look into the Urim and Thummim and receive revelations, which
enabled him to escape from his enemies.
In addition to all these blessings that God bestowed upon him in his
youth, before he was exalted to the throne, the Lord gave him eight
wives; and after exalting him to the throne, instead of denouncing him
for having many wives, and pronouncing him worthy of fourteen or
twenty-one years of imprisonment, the Lord was with His servant David,
and, thinking he had not wives enough He gave to him all the wives of
his master Saul, in addition to the eight he had previously given him.
Was the Lord to be considered a criminal, and worthy of being tried in
a court of justice and sent to prison for thus increasing the
polygamic relations of David? No, certainly not; it was in accordance
with His own righteous laws, and He was with His servant, David the
King, and blessed him. By and by, when David transgressed, not in
taking other wives, but in taking the wife of another man, the anger
of the Lord was kindled against him and He chastened him and took away
all the blessings He had given him. All the wives David had received
from the hand of God were taken from him. Why? Because he had
committed adultery. Here then is a great distinction between adultery
and plurality of wives. One brings honor and blessing to those who
engage in it, the other degradation and death.
After David had repented with all his heart of his crime with the wife
of Uriah, he, notwithstanding the number of wives he had previously
taken, took Bathsheba legally, and by that legal marriage Solomon was
born; the child born of her unto David, begotten illegally, being a
bastard, displeased the Lord and He struck it with death; but with
Solomon, a legal issue from the same woman, the Lord was so pleased
that He ordained Solomon and set him on the throne of his father
David. This shows the difference between the two classes of posterity,
the one begotten illegally, the other in the order of marriage. If
Solomon had been a bastard, as this pious generation would have us
suppose, instead of being blessed of the Lord and raised to the throne
of his father, he would have been banished from the congregation of
Israel and his seed after him for ten generations. But,
notwithstanding that he was so highly blessed and honored of the Lord,
there was room for him to transgress and fall, and in the end he did
so. For a long time the Lord blessed Solomon, but eventually he
violated that law which the Lord had given forbidding Israel to take
wives from the idolatrous nations, and some of these wives
succeeded in turning his heart from the Lord, and induced him to
worship the heathen gods, and the Lord was angry with him and, as it
is recorded in the Book of Mormon, considered the acts of Solomon an
abomination in His sight.
Let us now come to the record in the Book of Mormon, when the Lord led
forth Lehi and Nephi, and Ishmael and his two sons and five daughters
out of the land of Jerusalem to the land of America, the males and
females were about equal in number. There were Nephi, Sam, Laman and
Lemuel, the four sons of Lehi, and Zoram, brought out of Jerusalem.
How many daughters of Ishmael were unmarried? Just five. Would it have
been just under these circumstances to ordain plurality among them?
No. Why? Because the males and females were equal in number and they
were all under the guidance of the Almighty, hence it would have been
unjust, and the Lord gave a revelation—the only one on record I
believe—in which a command was ever given to any branch of Israel to
be confined to the monogamic system. In this case the Lord through His
servant Lehi, gave a command that they should have but one wife. The
Lord had a perfect right to vary His commands in this respect
according to circumstances as He did in others, as recorded in the
Bible. There we find that the domestic relations were governed
according to the mind and will of God, and were varied according to
circumstances, as he thought proper.
By and by, after the death of Lehi, some of his posterity began to
disregard the strict law that God had given to their father, and took
more wives than one, and the Lord put them in mind, through His
servant Jacob, one of the sons of Lehi, of this law, and told them
that they were transgressing it, and then referred to David and
Solomon, as having committed abomination in His sight. The Bible also
tells us that they sinned in the sight of God; not in taking wives
legally, but only in those they took illegally, in doing which they
brought wrath and condemnation upon their heads.
But because the Lord dealt thus with the small branch of the House of
Israel that came to America, under their peculiar circumstances, there
are those at the present day who will appeal to this passage in the
Book of Mormon as something universally applicable in regard to man's
domestic relations. The same God that commanded one branch of the
House of Israel in America, to take but one wife when the numbers of
the two sexes were about equal, gave a different command to the hosts
of Israel in Palestine. But let us see the qualifying clause given in
the Book of Mormon on this subject. After having reminded the people
of the commandment delivered by Lehi in regard to monogamy, the Lord
says, "For if I will raise up seed unto me I will command my people,
otherwise they shall hearken unto these things;" that is, if I will
raise up seed among my people of the House of Israel, according to the
law that exists among the tribes of Israel I will give them a
commandment on the subject, but if I do not give this commandment they
shall hearken to the law which I gave unto their father Lehi. That is
the meaning of the passage, and this very passage goes to prove that
plurality was a principle God did approve under circumstances when it
was authorized by Him.
In the early rise of this Church, February, 1831, God gave a
commandment to its members, recorded in the Book of Covenants,
wherein He says, "Thou shalt love thy wife with all thy heart, and
shalt cleave unto her and to none else;" and then He gives a strict
law against adultery. This you have, no doubt, all read; but let me
ask whether the Lord had the privilege and the right to vary from this
law. It was given in 1831, when the one-wife system alone prevailed
among this people. I will tell you what the Prophet Joseph said in
relation to this matter in 1831, also in 1832, the year in which the
law commanding the members of this Church to cleave to one wife only
was given. Joseph was then living in Portage County, in the town of
Hiram, at the house of Father John Johnson. Joseph was very intimate
with that family, and they were good people at that time, and enjoyed
much of the Spirit of the Lord. In the forepart of the year 1832,
Joseph told individuals, then in the Church, that he had inquired of
the Lord concerning the principle of plurality of wives, and he
received for answer that the principle of taking more wives than one
is a true principle, but the time had not yet come for it to be
practiced. That was before the Church was two years old. The Lord has
His own time to do all things pertaining to His purposes in the last
dispensation; His own time for restoring all things that have been
predicted by the ancient prophets. If they have predicted that the day
would come when seven women would take hold of one man, saying, "We
will eat our own bread and wear our own apparel, only let us be called
by thy name to take away our reproach;" and that, in that day the
branch of the Lord should be beautiful and glorious and the fruits of
the earth should be excellent and comely, the Lord has the right to
say when that time shall be.
Now supposing the members of this Church had undertaken to vary from
that law given in 1831, to love their one wife with all their hearts
and to cleave to none other, they would have come under the curse and
condemnation of God's holy law. Some twelve years after that time the
revelation on Celestial Marriage was revealed. This is just
republished at the Deseret News office, in a pamphlet entitled,
"Answers to Questions," by President George A. Smith, and heretofore
has been published in pamphlet form and in the Millennial Star, and
sent throughout the length and breadth of our country, being included
in our works and published in the works of our enemies. Then came the
Lord's time for this holy and ennobling principle to be practiced
again among His people.
We have not time to read the revelation this afternoon; suffice it to
say that God revealed the principle through His servant Joseph in
1843. It was known by many individuals while the Church was yet in
Illinois; and though it was not then printed, it was a familiar thing
through all the streets of Nauvoo, and indeed throughout all Hancock
County. Did I hear about it? I verily did. Did my brethren of the
Twelve know about it? They certainly did. Were there any females who
knew about it? There certainly were, for some received the revelation
and entered into the practice of the principle. Some may say, "Why was
it not printed, and made known to the people generally, if it was of
such importance?" I reply by asking another question. Why did not the
revelations in the Book of Doctrine and Covenants come to us in print
years before they did? Why were they shut up in Joseph's cupboard
years and years without being suffered to be printed and sent
broadcast throughout the land? Because the Lord had His own
time again to accomplish His purposes, and He suffered the revelations
to be printed just when He saw proper. He did not suffer the
revelation on the great American war to be published until some time
after it was given. So in regard to the revelation on plurality; it
was only a short time after Joseph's death that we published it,
having a copy thereof. But what became of the original? An apostate
destroyed it; you have heard her name. That same woman, in destroying
the original, thought she had destroyed the revelation from the face
of the earth. She was embittered against Joseph, her husband, and at
times fought against him with all her heart; and then again she would
break down in her feelings, and humble herself before God and call
upon His holy name, and would then lead forth ladies and place their
hands in the hands of Joseph, and they were married to him according
to the law of God. That same woman has brought up her children to
believe that no such thing as plurality of wives existed in the days
of Joseph, and has instilled the bitterest principles of apostasy into
their minds, to fight against the Church that has come to these
mountains according to the predictions of Joseph.
In the year 1854, before his death, a large company was organized to
come and search out a location, west of the Rocky Mountains. We have
been fulfilling and carrying out his predictions in coming here and
since our arrival. The course pursued by this woman shows what
apostates can do, and how wicked they can become in their hearts. When
they apostatize from the truth they can come out and swear before God
and the heavens that such and such things never existed, when they
know, as well as they know they exist themselves, that they are
swearing falsely. Why do they do this? Because they have no fear of
God before their eyes; because they have apostatized from the truth;
because they have taken it upon themselves to destroy the revelations
of the Most High, and to banish them from the face of the earth, and
the Spirit of God withdraws from them. We have come here to these
mountains, and have continued to practice the principle of Celestial
Marriage from the day the revelation was given until the present time;
and we are a polygamic people, and a great people, comparatively
speaking, considering the difficult circumstances under which we came
to this land.
Let us speak for a few moments upon another point connected with this
subject—that is, the reason why God has established polygamy under the
present circumstances among this people. If all the inhabitants of the
earth, at the present time, were righteous before God, and both males
and females were faithful in keeping His commandments, and the numbers
of the sexes of a marriageable age were exactly equal, there would be
no necessity for any such institution. Every righteous man could have
his wife and there would be no overplus of females. But what are the
facts in relation to this matter? Since old Pagan Rome and
Greece—worshippers of idols—passed a law confining man to one wife,
there has been a great surplus of females who have had no possible
chance of getting married. You may think this a strange statement, but
it is a fact that those nations were the founders of what is termed
monogamy. All other nations, with few exceptions, had followed the
Scriptural plan of having more wives than one. These nations, however,
were very powerful and when Christianity came to them,
especially the Roman nation, it had to bow to their mandates and
customs, hence the Christians gradually adopted the monogamic system.
The consequence was that a great many marriageable ladies of those
days, and of all generations from that time to the present, have not
had the privilege of husbands, as the one-wife system has been
established by law among the nations descended from the great Roman
empire—namely, the nations of modern Europe and the American States.
This law of monogamy, or the monogamic system, laid the foundation for
prostitution and the evils and diseases of the most revolting nature
and character under which modern Christendom groans, for as God has
implanted, for a wise purpose, certain feelings in the breasts of
females as well as males, the gratification of which is necessary to
health and happiness, and which can only be accomplished legitimately
in the married state, myriads of those who have been deprived of the
privilege of entering that state, rather than be deprived of the
gratification of those feelings altogether, have, in despair, given
way to wickedness and licentiousness; hence the whoredoms and
prostitution among the nations of the earth, where the "Mother of
Harlots" has her seat.
When the religious Reformers came out, some two or three centuries
ago, they neglected to reform the marriage system—a subject demanding
their urgent attention. But leaving these Reformers and their doings,
let us come down to our own times and see whether, as has been often
said by many, the numbers of the sexes are equal; and let us take as a
basis for our investigations on this part of our subject the censuses
taken by several of the States in the American Union.
Many will tell us that the number of males and the number of females
born are just about equal, and because they are so it is not
reasonable to suppose that God ever intended the nations to practice
plurality of wives. Let me say a few words on that. Supposing we
should admit, for the sake of argument, that the sexes are born in
equal numbers, does that prove that the same equality exists when they
come to a marriageable age? By no means. There may be about equal
numbers born, but what do the statistics of our country show in regard
to the deaths? Do as many females as males die during the first year
of their existence? If you go to the published statistics you will
find, almost without exception, that in every State a greater number
of males die the first year of their existence than females. The same
holds good from one year to five years, from five years to ten, from
ten to fifteen, and from fifteen to twenty. This shows that the number
of females is greatly in excess of the males when they come to a
marriageable age. Let us elucidate still further, in proof of the
position here assumed. Let us take, for instance, the census of the
State of Pennsylvania in the year 1860, and we shall find that there
were 17,588 more females than males between the ages of twenty and
thirty years, which may strictly be termed a marriageable age. Says
one, "Probably the great war made that difference." No, this was
before the war. Now let us go to the statistics of the State of New
York, before the war, and we find according to the official tables of
the census taken in 1860, that there were 45,104 more females than
males in that one State, between the ages of twenty and thirty
years—a marriageable age, recollect! Now let us go to the State of
Massachusetts, and look at the statistics there. In the year 1865,
there were 33,452 more females than males between the age of twenty
and thirty. We might go on from State to State and then to the census
taken by the United States, and a vast surplus would be shown of
females over males of a marriageable age. What is to be done with
them? I will tell you what Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New York
say. They say, virtually, "We will pass a law so strict, that if these
females undertake to marry a man who has another wife, both they and
the men they marry shall be subject to a term of imprisonment in the
penitentiary." Indeed! Then what are you going to do with these
hundreds of thousands of females of a marriageable age? "We are going
to make them either old maids or prostitutes, and we would a little
rather have them prostitutes, then we men would have no need to
marry." That is the conclusion many of these marriageable males,
between twenty and thirty years of age, have come to. They will not
marry because the laws of the land have a tendency to make
prostitutes, and they can purchase all the animal gratification they
desire without being bound to any woman; hence many of them have
mistresses, by whom they raise children, and, when they get tired of
them, turn both mother and children into the street, with nothing to
support them, the law allowing them to do so, because the women are
not wives. Thus the poor creatures are plunged into the depths of
misery, wretchedness and degradation, because at all risks they have
followed the instincts implanted within them by their Creator, and not
having the opportunity to do so legally have done so unlawfully. There
are hundreds and thousands of [unmarried] females in this boasted land
of liberty, through the narrow, contracted, bigoted State laws,
preventing them from ever getting husbands. That is what the Lord is
fighting against; we, also, are fighting against it, and for the
reestablishment of the Bible religion and the celestial or
patriarchal order of marriage.
It is no matter according to the Constitution whether we believe in
the patriarchal part of the Bible, in the Mosaic or in the Christian
part; whether we believe in one-half, two-thirds, or in the whole of
it; that is nobody's business. The Constitution never granted power to
Congress to prescribe what part of the Bible any people should believe
in or reject; it never intended any such thing.
Much more might be said, but the congregation is large, and a speaker,
of course, will weary. Though my voice is tolerably good, I feel weary
in attempting to make a congregation of from eight to ten thousand
people hear me, I have tried to do so. May God bless you, and may He
pour out His Spirit upon the rising generation among us, and upon the
missionaries who are about to be sent to the United States and
elsewhere, that the great principles, political, religious and
domestic, that God has ordained and established, may be made known to
all people.
In this land of liberty in religious worship, let us boldly proclaim
our rights to believe in and practice any Bible precept, command or
doctrine, whether in the Old or New Testament, whether relating to
ceremonies, ordinances, domestic relations, or anything else, not
incompatible with the rights of others, and the great revelations of
Almighty God manifested in ancient and modern times. Amen.