When we meet together on an occasion like the present, our thoughts and
reflections vary as much as our countenances. We meet for the avowed
purpose of worshipping the Lord and we expect to receive instructions
from those who address us. I always consider it a very great privilege
to assemble with the Saints of God. We have met to partake of the
Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, and we should endeavor to draw away
our feelings and affections from things of time and sense; for in
partaking of the Sacrament we not only commemorate the death and
sufferings of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, but we also shadow
forth the time when he will come again and when we shall meet and eat
bread with him in the kingdom of God. When we are thus assembled
together we may expect to receive guidance and blessings from God,
from whom, the Scriptures inform us, "every good and perfect gift
pro ceeds;" and in him, we are also informed, "there is no
variableness nor shadow of turning." In our assemblies they who speak
and they who hear ought to be under the guidance and direction of the
Lord, the Fountain of Light. Of all people under the heavens we,
Latter-day Saints, do continually realize the necessity of leaning
upon God; for I look upon it that, no matter what intelligence may be
communicated, no matter how brilliant the speech and edifying the
ideas communicated may be, they will not benefit those who hear unless
they are under the guidance and inspiration of the Spirit of God, for
the Scriptures say, "The light shineth in the darkness, but the
darkness comprehendeth it not." This is precisely the case in our
preaching in the world. We go among the wicked, but they do not
understand us; they understand not the truth, the light of revelation,
nor the power of God. The Elders now going forth into the world are
pretty much in the same position as those who went forth in former
times on the same mission. It is said of Jesus that "He came to his
own, but his own received him not; but as many as did receive him to
them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to as many as
believed on his name, which were born not of the flesh, nor of the
word of man, nor of man, but of God;" born of the Spirit of God, and
hence they became new creatures in Christ Jesus. Having partaken of
the Holy Spirit and received the forgiveness of their sins, they were
brought into relationship with him, they became the offspring of
Heaven and members of the family of God. This was the position that
the Saints of God enjoyed in former times; and this is the position
that we occupy today. The Apostle says the Saints were heirs of God
and joint heirs with Jesus Christ; and he says further, that if we
suffer with him we shall also reign with him that both may be
glorified together.
It is very difficult for men of the world to understand these
principles, and only by the light of revelation can they be
comprehended. We are told that a portion of the Spirit of God is given
to every man to profit withal; and if men improve upon that, and are
honest and full of integrity, when they hear the truth they realize
and understand it; it is to them life and health and salvation. Hence
Jesus said, "My sheep hear my voice and know me and follow me; but a
stranger will they not follow, because they know not the voice of a
stranger."
It is very pleasant for those who comprehend it to reflect upon the
relationship they sustain to God and his kingdom and to each other;
but these things have no charms for men of the world, whose minds are
not enlightened by the Spirit of truth, and who, consequently, do not
comprehend the Gospel or the power of God. The principles of the
Gospel, to the unbeliever, have neither worth nor efficacy; but with
us, who believe them, they comprehend everything pertaining to the
well-being of man in time and eternity; with us the Gospel is the
Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end; it is interwoven with all
our interests, happiness and enjoyment, whether in this life or that
which is to come. We consider that, when we enter into this Church and
embrace the new and everlasting covenant, it is a lifelong service
and affects us in all the relationships of time and eternity; and as
we progress, these ideas which, at first, were a little dim and
obscure, become more vivid, real, lifelike, tangible and clear to our
comprehensions, and we realize that we stand upon the earth as
the sons and daughters of God, the representatives of heaven. We feel
that God has revealed to us an everlasting Gospel, and that associated
with that are everlasting covenants and relationships. The Gospel, in
the incipient stages of its operations, begins, as the Prophet said it
should, to "turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and the
hearts of the children to the fathers." We no longer have to ask, as
in former times, "Who am I?" "Where did I come from?"
"What am I doing
here?" or "What is the object of my existence?" for we have a
certainty in relation to these things. It is made plain to us by the
fruits of the Gospel—by the truths which God has revealed through the
medium of revelation by the inspiration of the Almighty, that we are
"saviors on Mount Zion and that the kingdom is the Lord's." We know
that this is not merely a nominal matter, but that it is what the
French sometimes call an Actua ite—a thing that positively exists. We
know that God our Father lives, we know that Jesus Christ our Savior
lives, and that he is our Great High Priest; and that, "though dead,
he ever lives to make intercession for us." We know that God has
revealed unto us the everlasting Gospel in all its fullness, richness,
glory and power. We know something about the world we live in, and the
relation that we sustain to it, and it to us. We know something about
our progenitors, and God has taught us how to be saviors for them by
being baptized for them in the flesh, that they may live according to
God in the spirit. We know that when our wives are sealed to us for
eternity we shall have a claim upon them. This is no phantom, but a
reality; it is not only a principle of our faith, but it is a
principle of knowledge, and we expect to renew our associations in the
eternal worlds, just as much as we expect, when we lay ourselves down
to rest at night, to rise in the morning refreshed and invigorated. We
know that while we are mortal beings, and subject to decay, we are
also immortal beings and shall live forever. We know that the
priesthood with which we are associated in this world is also an
everlasting priesthood and will administer in this world and the world
to come—in time and in eternity. As rational beings we are seeking to
act, in all our operations in life, with reference not only to time
but to eternity; and we know, as others have known, that after the
"earthly house of this tabernacle is dissolved we have a building of
God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens; which the
Lord, the righteous Judge, will give to us, and not to us only, but to
all who love the appearing of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." It
is the knowledge of these things and of many more of a similar nature
that leads us to pursue the course that we do. It is this which
prevents us from bowing to the notions, caprices, ideas and follies of
men. Having been enlightened by the spirit of eternal truth, having
partaken of the Holy Ghost, and our hope having entered within the
veil, whither Christ, our forerunner, has gone, and knowing that we
are the children of God and that we are acting in all things with
reference to eternity, we pursue the even tenor of our way
independent of the smiles and careless of the frowns of men. There is
nothing associated with our religion that we can barter away, no
principle that we have to dispose of—there is nothing in this world
that can purchase it; its price is above rubies, it is more valuable
than fine gold. It contains principles that lay hold of eternal life; and being in this position, we, as rational, intelligent
beings, fear God and know no other fear. There is nothing in this
world that can be brought into competition with the principles of
eternal truth, and he who barters away the least particle of that
truth is a fool, though he may not comprehend it.
We stand, then, really in an important position before God and before
the world. God has called us from the world. He has told us that we
are not of the world. We have all been baptized into one baptism, and
have all partaken of the same Spirit, even the Spirit communicated
through the ordinances of the Gospel. We have been called from the
world for the express purpose of being the representatives of heaven,
that the Lord might have a people to whom he could communicate his
will, purposes and designs, and through whom he might spread forth the
principles that dwell in his bosom; that we might partake of the same
Spirit that dwells in Christ and among the angelic throng; that it
might permeate our bodies and be exhibited in our acts and lives
before our families and the world, that the spirit and mind that dwell
in Christ should grow, spread and expand until all that come under its
influence might be leavened with the same leaven until they become one
lump of righteousness, virtue, truth and intelligence.
In entering this sacred relationship with God we have assumed the duty
of carrying out in our midst the order of things that exists in
heaven, that when we shall be transplanted from the earth to the
heavens we may be prepared for the associations that we shall meet in
the celestial kingdom of our God. We have entered into eternal
covenants with God that we will be his people and that he shall be our
God, and that, for us and ours, we will serve the Lord; that as a
people, as a Territory, as a Church, we will yield obedience to the
laws of God, bow to his scepter, acknowledge his authority, and do the
things which he requires at our hands, so that, as God exists eternal
in the heavens, the same principles of eternal life may dwell in us,
that we may become gods, even the sons and daughters of God.
These are some of the ideas that we have in reference to God and our
relationship to him. God is our Father, we his children, and we all
ought to be brethren; we ought to feel and act like brethren, and
while we are striving to serve the Lord our God with all our hearts,
minds, souls and strength, we ought, at the same time, to seek to love
our neighbor as ourselves; we ought to feel interested in his welfare,
happiness and prosperity, and in anything and everything that will
tend to promote his temporal and eternal good. Our feelings towards
the world of mankind, generally, ought to be the same as Jesus
manifested to them. He sought to promote their welfare, and our motto
ought ever to be the same as his was—"Peace on earth and good will to
men;" no matter who they are or what they are, we should seek to
promote the happiness and welfare of all Adam's race.
Perhaps there has never been a greater exemplification of this
feeling, however little it may have been understood, than by the works
of our Elders. They have not been governed by sordid feelings in any
of their operations or ministrations. Believing in God, they have put
their trust in him. They have trusted him for their food and for their
raiment in traveling to the ends of the earth without purse of scrip,
to proclaim to a fallen world the great principles that have been
revealed from heaven for the salvation of the human family.
There is not, today, on this wide world, an example of
disinterestedness and self-abnegation equal to that which has been
exhibited by the Elders of this Church for the last thirty-five years,
and not only by the Elders, but by their wives. I see men around me in
every direction who have traveled thousands and thousands of miles
without purse or scrip, to preach the Gospel to the nations of the
earth. They have traversed plains, mountains, deserts, seas, oceans
and rivers; they have gone forth trusting in the living God, bearing
the precious seed of eternal life. It is true they have not been
comprehended or understood by the nations, but that does not alter the
fact. Many who went forth in their weakness have returned rejoicing,
bringing their sheaves with them, as trophies of the victory of the
principles of eternal life that they themselves had communicated. I
say there is not another instance on record today of like
disinterested, affectionate regard for the welfare of the human family
as has been manifested by the Elders of this Church. I have traveled
thousands and hundreds of thousands of miles to preach the Gospel
among the nations of the earth, and my brethren around me have done
the same thing. Did we ever lack anything necessary to eat, drink and
wear? I never did. God went with his Elders, and they have gathered
together his people as they are here today. They have been seeking to
carry out the desire of the Lord and the wish of the Almighty in
regard to the human family. They were told to go trusting in the name
of the Lord, and he would take care of them and go before them, and
that his Spirit should go with them and his angels accompany them.
This is all true; and these Elders have preached to you, in your
various homes and tongues, those principles which God revealed from
heaven, and you were influenced by dreams and visions and by the
Spirit of the Lord to give heed to their words, for, like the words of
the Apostle of old, they came to you, "not in word only, but in power,
in rich assurance and in demonstration of the Spirit of the Lord," and
you realized it and rejoiced in it, and you were led to cry,
"Hallelujah! for the Lord God omnipotent reigns. Thanks be to the God
of Israel who has counted us worthy to receive the principles of
truth." These were the feelings you had and enjoyed in your far
distant homes. And your obedience to those principles tore you from
your homes, firesides and associations and brought you here, for you
felt like one of old, when she said, "Whither thou goest I will go;
thy God shall be my God, thy people shall be my people, and where thou
diest there will I be buried." And you have gathered to Zion that you
might be taught and instructed in the laws of life and listen to the
words which emanate from God, become one people and one nation,
partake of one spirit, and prepare yourselves, your progenitors and
posterity for an everlasting inheritance in the celestial kingdom of
God.
It is no dream or phantom that has brought us here; we have had to do
with realities all the way through. And then you who have been brought
in have partaken of the spirit of Zion and have helped to teach others
the way of life and to lead them in the paths of righteousness; and
now we are not only trying to teach the world, but our children, our
youth, our young men and women in the same principles, that when we
leave this stage of action they, inspired by the Spirit of revelation
which flows from God, may bear off his kingdom triumphant.
This is the feeling that permeates this people. With all our
weaknesses, and we are weak; with all our follies, and we are very
foolish; with all our infirmities, and we are very infirm, we are
trying to do the will of God, and to prepare ourselves for an
inheritance in his kingdom, to save our progenitors and to pour
blessings on our posterity. These are the feelings by which we are
actuated; and it is not only in one, but it is in all, more or less,
according to the proportion of the Holy Spirit they enjoy. Witness now
the First Presidency of this Church. Who could labor more arduously
than they? Where is there a man in existence today, of the years of
President Young, that takes upon himself the amount of care, anxiety,
and travel that he does? There are very few of our young men who
would have liked to undertake such a trip as he is now engaged in.
Right in the worst possible season of the year, with bad roads and bad
weather and all kinds of unfavorable circumstances, to travel a
journey of five or six hundred miles and back! What for? To look after
the welfare of Zion, to promote the interests of Israel, to help to
build up and establish the Church and kingdom of God on the earth, to
fulfill the behests of his Lord and Master, and try to carry out the
things which God requires at his hands. He feels the importance of
those things that Jesus spoke to Peter about after Peter had denied
his Lord. Said Jesus—
"Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these? He saith unto
him, Yea, Lord, thou knowest that I love thee. He said unto him, Feed
my lambs. He saith unto him again, the second time, Simon, son of
Jonas, lovest thou me? He saith unto him, Yea, Lord, thou knowest that
I love thee. He saith unto him, Feed my sheep. He said unto him the
third time, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me? Peter was grieved
because he said unto him the third time, lovest thou me, and he said
unto him, Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love
thee. Jesus saith unto him, Feed my sheep."
Well, we have a shepherd who, together with his associates, is feeding
the sheep of God, and they, unitedly, are watching after their
interests, well-being and happiness, and trying to carry out the will
of our Heavenly Father; and while God is operating in the heavens, the
Holy Priesthood is operating here to build up and establish his
kingdom and introduce righteousness upon the earth.
As I said before, the Elders are engaged in the same thing, and have
been all the time. How many have been to the United States this last
season visiting among their friends, associations and acquaintances,
and preaching the Gospel wherever they had an opening? How are they
looked upon? Hear their statements when they return. They are looked
upon, by the people generally, as impostors or deceivers. The people
do not seem, any more than the Jews in former times, to understand the
day of their visitation, nor to comprehend the laws of life nor the
relation that they sustain to God; and if ten thousand Elders were
sent throughout the United States and Europe, the people would treat
them and the principles they bear with contempt and utter
carelessness; they do not understand the rich gems of eternal truth
when they are laid before them, and they call our good evil, and their
evil good. They do not know the difference, neither do they understand
the day of their visitation. They possess not the Spirit of God; they
are wallowing in the mire of sin and groping in the darkness of unbelief and death.
Is this speaking harshly? Some perhaps will say it is. I cannot help
that, it is true. Are there men among them who seek to do good? Many.
Are there philanthropists among them? Yes, scores and hundreds of
them. Are there high-minded, honorable, intelligent men in their
midst? Yes, thousands of them. But do they know the truth? No, they do
not, and there are very few of them that have the hardihood to stand
up for what they consider to be right, for they fear that by so doing
they would be compromised in some worldly point of view; it would not
be populist, so they say, "Better let it alone." Do we understand
their position? Yes. Do we hate them? No, we wish to do them good, and
would teach them every good principle that we possess; we would lead
them in the path of life and show them the way to God; we would
introduce them into the kingdom of God, but they cannot see it, and
unless a man is born again, the Scriptures tell us that he cannot see
the kingdom of God. Sometimes I hear people talk and see them write
about the kingdom of God; but all they talk and all they write proves
to me that they are not born again, and consequently they cannot see
the kingdom of God any more than a blind man could see the faces
before me if he were standing where I am. Jesus told Nicodemus that
"except a man be born of water he cannot see the kingdom of God; and
except he be born of the water and of the Spirit he cannot enter the
kingdom of God." People unenlightened by the spirit of truth can see
the kingdoms of the world, and they can reason upon their
organization, their power and weakness, and upon the justice or
injustice of the policy they pursue; but when it comes to the kingdom
of God there is a current associated with that which they are not
acquainted with, and principles which they cannot comprehend; they see
depths which they cannot fathom, and they grope in the dark and are
entirely ignorant concerning the purposes of Jehovah.
Well, we who comprehend these things, look at them in another light;
we are acquainted with their philosophy; we are acquainted with their
status and position. We know ours, they know theirs, but they cannot
comprehend us, for we are told, emphatically, in the Scriptures, that
the world by its wisdom knows not God. And as it was in former times,
so it is today, and the world by its understanding cannot find out
God. Man, by philosophy and the exercise of his natural intelligence,
may gain an understanding, to some extent, of the laws of Nature; but
to comprehend God, heavenly wisdom and intelligence are necessary.
Earthly and heavenly philosophy are two different things, and it is
folly for men to base their arguments upon earthly philosophy in
trying to unravel the mysteries of the kingdom of God.
Standing, then, in the position that we do, it is for us to try to
obtain a closer connection and union with our Heavenly Father and with
the Holy Priesthood, and to comprehend more and more the laws of life
and the things pertaining to the work of God. We are here to save
ourselves, to learn the laws of heaven, and to save our progenitors,
that they may participate with us in the rich blessings of the Gospel.
If we answer the ends of our creation in these respects we shall not
live and die as the tool lives and dies; but, while the world is
overwhelmed with crime, wickedness and malign influences, we may help
to introduce and establish principles which God will approve, which
all the good and virtuous will love and admire and which will
be approbated by the holy angels; and may organize ourselves so that
we may be prepared to associate with the intelligences around the
throne of God. Let us, then, keep the commandments of God, live our
religion, be humble and faithful, cleave to the Lord our God,
cultivate his Holy Spirit, that it may dwell and abound within us,
that it may be as a well of water springing up to eternal life; and
that its refreshing, invigorating streams may spread around us
wherever we go, that we may be prepared for glory, salvation and an
eternal inheritance in the celestial kingdom. May God help us to
attain to this, in the name of Jesus. Amen.