I have a few words to offer to my brethren and sisters, and all who
hear me, concerning the experience of the minds of the children of
men, especially in their transit from evil to good. We vary very
materially in our dispositions, reflections, in the impulses of our
minds, and in our perceptive faculties. There is a great variety of
operations upon the minds of the inhabitants of the earth, and the
people are unacquainted with them, for they do not lay them to heart,
contemplate and realize them, consequently they cannot look upon them
as they are. These remarks of mine are the result of reflections upon
the sayings of our brother who has been speaking to us, and telling
his experience when he received the Gospel. He told us that, though
his perceptive faculties were so quickened that he could read the
Bible understandingly, this did not satisfy him; he must have a storm.
I make use of this term to express my idea of what he desired and so
earnestly sought for. He must have an experience like a rushing,
mighty wind, or he could not be satisfied. In reading the sayings of
the ancients, we find that they looked sometimes for the Lord to come
in a storm. Sometimes you will see the storm pass, and the Lord is not
there. The winds blow terribly, but the Lord is not there. A terrible
tempest comes along, in which the lightnings flash and the thunders
bellow almost enough to shake the mountains down. Is the Lord there? No, he is not there. But by and by you hear a small, still
voice saying, "Peace, peace." The Lord is there, and this is his
voice. It will satisfy some, but others, like our brother, want a
testimony like a rushing, mighty wind.
I will give you a little of my experience, not merely at the time that
I concluded to forsake sin and embrace peace, and righteousness, but
since then. My experience in this kingdom as a man, as an intelligent
being, concerning the philosophy of this world and mankind, and all
things pertaining to the earth, teaches me a great many little items
that are passed over unnoticed by most of the people. My conclusion
with regard to a sound religious experience is simply this: If I am
convicted of sin I am made sensible of wrong. If this wrong exists
within me, my good judgment teaches me that I should take that and put
it away from me; turn it out of doors; it would teach me to say, "I
do not want you, you are not good for me; you produce sorrow,
mourning, affliction, and all manner of grief and pain. Go out of
doors, I do not want you, you are evil. I will adopt truth and correct
principles and plant them within me instead of that which will destroy
me." Being convinced of all this, what course shall I pursue, if I
desire to procure a sound experience—one that is genuine and will
endure, and prove to God and all the heavenly host, also to my family
and neighbors, that I am sorry for sin? I will forsake it, and will
not let it dwell within me, but will do all I can to banish it from
me. Would this be a proof? Yes. Then let my actions correspond with
the confession of my mouth; and if I have discovered this fountain of
evil within me, I must lay a foundation to be free from it. Do I wish
to wait until the Lord speaks from heaven to me? No, the Lord has
planted within me knowledge and wisdom to distinguish between right
and wrong, and if I wait until his voice comes from heaven to tell me
that I am a sinner, or until he gives me some particular manifestation
of approval on my attempting to forsake evil, I may wait a great
while. I do not know how much he thinks of me, nor whether, if I
sought such a manifestation, he would come the first night I knelt
down to pray, or the second, third, or fourth, or whether I should
have to continue a week, two weeks, or for months. I do not know
anything about this; but my judgment having convinced me that I am
wrong, I do not want the Lord to speak from the heavens. I will ask
any intelligent being that dwells on the face of the earth if it is
necessary to wait until the Lord comes like a rushing, mighty wind, or
like an earthquake or tornado? I do not see any necessity for it. If I
find an evil in me today I must try and get rid of it; and if I find
another tomorrow I must get rid of it; and how long must I continue
to do so? Just as long as God gives me intelligence; not for a day,
week, or year, but for my whole life; and if I exist for ninety-nine
years, or for nine hundred and ninety-nine, I do not expect there will
be an hour in which I will not be under the necessity of endeavoring
to put evil from me if I find it within me, and to grow and increase
in the principles of truth and righteousness. By taking this course I
know, in and of myself, that I am forsaking my sins, and do not want
the Lord to manifest it unto me. I know that if the plants of sin and
death are permitted to grow within me they will prove my utter
destruction, unless I tear them up root and branch, and throw them
away. The Lord has bestowed upon me and upon every intelligent being on the earth, wisdom sufficient to comprehend this, and I do not
want the Lord to come in the storm, the thunder, lightning, or
whirlwind to tell it to me. I know that I must uproot the plants of
evil that are within me, and in their place engraft plants of truth
and virtue, and these will grow up within me to eternal life. Is not
this reasonable? Is this not a true principle? Yes, and the whole of
man's experience, science, and wisdom proves it. I may take, for
instance, the beautiful machinery of my watch, and neglect to clean it
or wind it up; I may take out the mainspring, the hairspring or the
main cog-wheel, and then say, "Keep time for me," and it would be no
more inconsistent than to say, "I have naturally within me, through
the fall, the principles of death, and they reign within me, and I
seek not to put those principles away from me, but wait for the Lord
to manifest to me that I am born of him and he is delighted with me."
I do not care if I live my whole lifetime without a testimony from the
Lord; not that he leaves his children thus; he has never been so
hardhearted, so austere a master as to leave one of his children with
full purpose of heart to serve him and do his will without a witness
of his approval. But, suppose he were disposed to do so, I am under
obligations, on the principles of right and wrong, to forsake evil,
and to plant within me every principle of purity and holiness, whether
or not the Lord manifests unto me that I am his son and that he is
pleased with me. I am not pleased with myself if I imbibe and cherish
death and destruction; but let me cherish life and salvation, that
that promotes the happiness of mankind, and life, peace, and
tranquility within myself and all around me, and I shall have my own
approval and the ap proval and blessing of the Lord whether he tells me
so, in so many words, or not.
I am under obligation to take a course which will sustain life within
myself and others, on rational principles, without any special
manifestation from God. You can all see this; but some think if they
do not receive some special manifestation from God that he has
accepted them, they are rejected of him. Do you not all know that you
are the sons and daughters of the Almighty? If you do not I will
inform you this morning that there is not a man or woman on the earth
that is not a son or daughter of Adam and Eve. We all belong to the
races which have sprung from father Adam and mother Eve; and every son
and daughter of Adam and Eve is a son and daughter of that God we
serve, who organized this earth and millions of others, and who holds
them in existence by law. Now suppose he does not tell us that he
particularly loves us and thinks so much of us; or that he delights in
Brother James or William, or in Sister Susan or Nancy more than in any
other being on the earth, what of it? I do not know that I shall
inquire of the Lord whether he loves me or not. I do not know that I
have ever taken pains to ask him. I have professed religion somewhere
near fifty years, and I do not know that I ever asked the Lord whether
he loved me or not. I want to take a course that I can love purity and
holiness. If I do this, then I love the Lord and keep his
commandments, and that is enough for me. If he is not disposed to like
me as well as he did John, "the beloved disciple," who leaned upon his
breast on a certain occasion, and tells me to sit yonder instead of
here, it is all right, I am as satisfied to sit there as here. I want
to preserve my identity and to increase in intelligence, and
if I can do this I do not know that I care, particularly, with regard
to how much, in weight or measure, the Lord loves me or does not love
me. There is one fact that I do know, he will love me all he should.
If I take a course to love him and keep his commandments I am for life
and duration, I am for eternity, for I take that course which will
preserve myself.
Many men and women who have obeyed the Gospel, and have not received
from the Lord these striking testimonies, will say, "Well, I really do
not know that I can tell whether the Gospel is true or not." To all
such I say, then you are no philosopher at all, for upon the rational
principles of common philosophy you can tell whether it is true or
not. Does it contain the seeds of life? Does it promote the plants and
yield the fruits of life, or does it produce the plants and yield the
fruits of death? You can ask these questions and readily answer them
for yourselves. Not that I wish to make a mere historical convert, or
a people who believe historically, mathematically, or philosophically;
but I know and understand that the Lord never leaves his children
without a witness. Now I will tell you a witness which would be enough
for me—I read the Bible, diligently and faithfully, and if I could
have found a church and people organized according to the pattern
contained in its pages I should have been satisfied that that was
God's Church and people, and that would have been witness enough for
me. But I will give you a little of my experience in my early days
with regard to the religious sects. From my youth up their cry was,
"Lo here is Christ, lo there is Christ;" no, "Yonder is Christ;"
"Christ is not there, he is here," and so on, each claiming that it
had the Savior, and that others were wrong. I used to think to myself,
"Some one of you may be right, but hold on, wait awhile! When I reach
the years of judgment and discretion I can judge for myself; and in
the meanwhile take no course either with one party or the other." When
I would make known my views and feelings with regard to their confused
state they would call me an infidel. I would say to them, "All right,
I am an infidel in a great many things." I read the Bible, and
especially the New Testament, which was given as a pattern for the
life of Christians, whether as a church or individuals, and this was
my inward inquiry, "Is there a church on the earth organized according
to the pattern Jesus left?" No. Is there an Apostle left on the earth?
Not one. Is there a prophet, which the Scriptures inform us were
placed in the Church for its edification? Not one. Is there an
evangelist? No. Is there the gift of healing? We cannot find any such
thing, with all their cries of "Lo here, lo there, and lo yonder."
"Are there any who speak with tongues?" No. Any that prophesy? No, we
do not believe in prophecy. anyone who has received the Holy Ghost,
and speaks and preaches by its influence? "Why the Holy Ghost is not
given in these days," say all those who say, "Lo, here is Christ," and
"Lo, there is Christ!" Well, I used to say, "I am an infidel, for I do
not believe anything of this; when you bring me a people built up and
believing according to the New Testament I will believe that they are
right. When you find such a people you will find the people and Church
of God, with all the gifts and graces of the Gospel in their midst;
and you will find the kingdom of God on the earth." They labored with
me, but finally declared that I was an infidel, for I could
not believe in their doctrines and principles. Yet I have been at many
of their meetings and seen their modes of conversion. As I have said
to my friends here, in speaking about Spiritualism, I have seen the
effects of animal magnetism, or some anomalous sleep, or whatever it
may be called, many a time in my youth. I have seen persons lie on the
benches, on the floor of the meetinghouse, or on the ground at their
camp meetings, for ten, twenty, and thirty minutes, and I do not know
but an hour, and not a particle of pulse about them. That was the
effect of what I call animal magnetism; they called it the power of
God, but no matter what it was. I used to think that I should like to
ask such persons what they had seen in their trance or vision; and
when I got old enough and dared ask them, I did so. I have said to
such persons: "Brother, What have you experienced?" "Nothing."
"What
do you know more than before you had this; what do you call it—trance,
sleep or dream? Do you know any more now than before you fell to the
earth?" "Nothing more." "Have you seen any person?"
"No." "Then what is
the use or utility of your falling down here in the dirt?" I could not
see it, and consequently I was an infidel to this. But I said then as
I say now—"Show me a church that God has organized, and you will find
Apostles to rule, govern, control, dictate, and give counsel. You will
find prophets, evangelists, pastors, teachers, governments, helps, and
diversities of tongues. When the Church and kingdom of God is upon the
earth you will find all these things and you will also hear
prophesying therein.
I will now return again to our experience here. In Christendom the
people are taught by the priest, by father, by mother, by president,
prince and king, that the Bible is true and that Jesus is the Christ;
and they inherit this belief, and if it is a true principle to believe
in Jesus, they inherit it without the use of their judgment and
reasoning faculties. And when you find a church organized according to
the New Testament pattern it does not require any particular
manifestation to prove its truth, for we are taught from our youth up
to acknowledge the New Testament and we cannot help it. It is
interwoven into our very natures; I do not know but it is the warp and
the filling, both. In consequence of this we have a holy reverence for
and a belief in the Bible, though we may not believe in the actions of
all those who profess to believe in it. As it was observed by my
brother, "He loved religion;" and for myself I can say that I have
always had a holy reverence for the truth. I have had a divine
reverence for it from my youth, but, not for the conduct of all those
who profess to be Christians.
Well, how can you know when you have passed from death unto life? You
had the witness right here from our brother, according to the
testimony of the Apostles, "By this ye shall know ye have passed from
death unto life, if ye love the brethren." Our brother said he loved
that poor Elder who preached the Gospel to him, although he could not
gain admittance into a decent house. Nobody would receive an Elder of
Israel, nobody would receive a messenger bearing the words and keys of
eternal life and salvation to the nations, but a poor widow on a back
street where our brother was ashamed to go. It put me in mind of the
harlot Rahab. She alone would receive the spies sent out by Joshua,
the servant of God. Do you not think she was blessed? I think so; and
I think the poor widow who received and gave an asylum to the
Elder referred to by our brother was blessed also, for his words were
life, light, and peace; and he said that he loved him, and by this he
might have known that he had passed from death unto life.
Now, to our experience again. Suppose you obey the ordinances of the
Gospel, and do not speak in tongues today, never mind that. Suppose
you do not have the spirit of prophecy, no matter. Suppose you do not
receive any particular gift attended by the rushing of a mighty wind,
as on the day of Pentecost, there is no particular necessity that you
should. On the day of Pentecost there was special need for it, it was
a peculiarly trying time. Who believed on Jesus? Look at his poor
disciples! When Jesus was on trial, Peter, the chief of the Apostles,
dare not own him, and denied him through fear. There was not a man or
woman to stand up and say, "This is the Christ; don't you crucify him.
He is Christ, the Savior of the world, be cautious how you handle that
man." There was not one to say anything of this kind. It was a very
peculiar time, and some special and powerful manifestation of the
power of the Almighty was necessary to open the eyes of the people and
let them know that Jesus had paid the debt, and that they had actually
crucified him who, by his death, had become the Savior of the world.
It required this at that time to convince the people; but when the
doctrines of Christianity became popular it was no longer necessary. I
do not need this; do you? No. Do you believe the truth? If you do,
embrace it in your lives. What next? Prove to the Lord, to all the
heavenly host, and to the inhabitants of the earth, that you live
according to the law of the holy Gospel that God has revealed for the
salvation of the children of men. This will show that you are honest
and sincere, and that you are worthy of life eternal in the celestial
kingdom of God.
God bless you. Amen.