I am aware that Brother Franklin D. Richards' request to the children
to come to meeting this afternoon has produced a little excitement;
but we are very happy to see the people together. My remarks will be
to parents as well as to children. I will commence by saying that if
each and every one of us who are parents will reflect upon the
responsibilities devolving upon us we shall come to the conclusion
that we should never permit ourselves to do anything that we are not
willing to see our children do. We should set them an example that we
wish them to imitate. Do we realize this? How often we see parents
demand obedience, good behavior, kind words, pleasant looks, a sweet
voice and a bright eye from a child or children when they themselves
are full of bitterness and scolding! How inconsistent and unreasonable
this is! If we wish our children to look pleasant we should look
pleasant at them; and if we wish them to speak kind words to each
other, let us speak kind words to them. We need not go into detail,
but we should carry out this principle from year to year in our whole
lives, and do as we wish our children to do. I say this with regard to
our morals and our faith in our religion.
Now let me call the attention of parents to another subject worthy of
their notice—that is, the use of proper language. Take us as a people
and we are not overstocked with language; there are very few highly
educated men in the Church to which we belong. We have a few learned
men and a few good scholars among the women, but they are scarce. Now,
parents, and I wish you to remember this, should never permit
themselves to speak improperly before a child, or to use
language that would not be commendable in an orator. If you have not
such language at your command, then use the best you have. It is true
that to use that which we are in possession of to advantage is a
peculiar gift. We see some who can use language, apparently, to their
entire satisfaction, and yet they have no great store of language at
their command; but still they have the happy faculty of conveying
their ideas with greater propriety than others who are literary in
their tastes and have been highly educated. There is considerable in
making choice of words. For instance, if we were to address a man who
had been disobedient and needed chastisement we would use very
different language from that which would be used if addressing a child
or a lady. If you wish to impress on the minds of individuals or an
audience anything that you desire them to remember, you will have to
use language accordingly. I have heard it observed that language
should be used according to the merits or demerits of the case under
consideration; this will do under some circumstances. I wish to
impress upon myself, as well as upon my brethren and sisters, the
propriety of never using language to a child that we should dislike to
hear them use in refined society. If we have a choice set of words at
our command we should always use them when speaking to our children,
even from the time they commence to talk. If we do this, the effect
will be very pleasing in after years, for when our children enter into
polite and refined society, instead of being mortified and having to
call them to one side to correct their unrefined language, the
elegance and propriety of their mode of expression will be a source of
gratification and pleasure. If a child has to be corrected for the use
of improper or inelegant language, it might reply, "Mother, or father,
I am using words that you taught me."
Carry out this principle, not only in language, but in all the affairs
of life; and let us always set an example before our children that is
worthy of their imitation and highest admiration. If we do this, we
shall have occasion to rejoice and be exceeding glad, for we shall
have influence over them and they will not forsake us.
There is a passage in this good book (the Bible) said to have been
written by a very wise man, which says—
"Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will
not depart from it."
To make a community thoroughly understand these words, a great deal of
explanation would be necessary. To illustrate, I ask myself, am I
capable of bringing up a child in the way that he should go? The
answer is right here—I am not. Why not? Because I have not that light
and intelligence in my possession and that command over myself to give
to a child a suitable impression under every circumstance and in every
place, when I address him or require anything of him. I would not
speak discouragingly of myself or of my brethren and sisters. We know
a great deal, but when we compare our knowledge with the fountain of
knowledge it is very small; when our light is compared with the
fountain of light it is very small, and consequently I can say that I
am not prepared to bring up a child in the way he should go; and yet I
probably come as near to it as any person that lives. How is it with
my brethren and sisters? They are capable of bringing up their
children a great deal better than they do, that is certain. If we do
as well as we know how—use all the faith and intelligence in
our possession, and seek to gain more, we will be able to bring up our
children in such a way that very few of them will ever depart from the
right path. I want you to remember this. If we will do just as well as
we know how, never missing an opportunity of giving a word, a look or
a principle that will do good to the rising generation, never
permitting ourselves to be overtaken in fault, but preserving
ourselves in the integrity and patience of our souls, there are very
few of the rising generation with us that will depart from the words
of life. As for those who are old amongst us, their traditions and
prepossessed notions, imbibed in childhood, cling to them like a
garment, or like something glued to them; and they govern them to a
great extent, and it is almost an impossibility for old people to get
rid of their traditions; but it will be very different with our
children if we train them according to the will of God that has been
revealed to us as a people. We have the Old and New Testaments; the
Book of Mormon, giving an account of the aborigines of our country,
the visit of the Savior to and the organization of his Church on this
continent, the same as to his brethren on the land of Palestine. Then
we have the Book of Doctrine and Covenants; in addition to these three
books, we have the history, discourses and sayings of the Prophet
Joseph, and the history, sayings and discourses of the Elders of
Israel, and also the experience we have gained in this Church. Combine
these, and I think we cannot come to the conclusion that we are
ignorant and do not know anything; although I say that, in comparison
with the fountain of all knowledge, our knowledge is small and
trifling. But if we will do as well as we know how, we will be able to
teach our children sufficient doctrine, truth and principle, that they
will actually grow up into Christ, our living head.
Now let us say a few words with regard to human nature and its
proneness to wander into evil. You go, for instance, to the river and
commence to throw sticks and shavings into the water, and they will go
downstream; and a great effort or a very powerful wind will be
required to make a small boat, vessel, bark, or even a board that the
children play with, go upstream. The same is true of small streams.
Cast anything into them, and it goes downstream. We are taught in
these books that, through the Fall, we have partaken so much of the
nature of the enemy—he has so much influence in the flesh of every
person, that we have to enter into a warfare, and we have to summon
all our force and to use every effort to propel our bark upstream, or
to put down iniquity in our own hearts and inclinations. I will pause
right here, and refer to what brother George Q. Cannon was saying this
morning to the children. Said he, "My boys, do not chew tobacco
because you see others do it; do not smoke a cigar because you see
others do it; my little girls, do not drink tea because you see mamma
do it." Now let me give you a comparison. Ask these little boys, if
they saw two parties, one on the right hand praying to the Father in
the name of Jesus, and the other on the left with a cigar in his
mouth, puffing away as vigorously as possible, which they would be
most inclined to imitate, and you will find they will instantly choose
that which is evil. They are not inclined to pray; there seems to be a
kind of a dread or terror about it, and they say, "We do not know how
to ask the Father for blessings, and we do not think we could pray,
but give us a cigar and we can puff as well as anybody." This
is only a comparison, but it furnishes a correct illustration of the
facility with which evil habits are acquired, and how quick children
as well as parents are to go astray, how quick their feet are to run
into by and forbidden paths. But if parents will continually set
before their children examples worthy of their imitation and the
approval of our Father in heaven, they will turn the current, and the
tide of feelings of their children, and they, eventually, will desire
righteousness more than evil. This disposition will not be acquired in
one day, week or year; but let parents spend their lives in teaching
good, in good words and good looks and in the continual exercise of
their faith in God, and their children will finally feel that they
would rather be Christians than sinners.
Have we any proof of this? Yes. We have brethren here who have
traveled a good deal, and who have been in the Church a good many
years. If they could only think of them they could count over people
by the hundred and the thousand who have left this Church; but you now
see many of their children coming to Zion; and get into conversation
with them and you will hear them say, "I have come to see what you,
Latter-day Saints, are doing. My father was formerly a member of your
Church; but he left and died in Vermont, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Rhode Island, Maine, England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, or somewhere
else. My parents taught me to believe the Gospel, and, although they
were cut off from the Church, it has never left me. When I read the
Bible I find that they taught me the truth. If I go to meeting among
the sectarians, I gain neither light nor knowledge; but what my
parents taught me has had an influence upon me through my life from my
childhood up, and now I have come to see what you, Latter-day Saints,
are doing." And the children and grandchildren of those who
apostatized years and years ago, will come up to Zion by hundreds and
thousands, impelled by what their parents taught them in childhood.
This is another comparison. We are not quite all going to apostatize;
a great many have died in the faith, and a great many have
apostatized, but their posterity will come to Zion and believe the
truth. Our children will have the love of the truth, if we but live
our religion. Parents should take that course that their children can
say, "I never knew my father to deceive or take advantage of a
neighbor; I never knew my father take to himself that which did not
belong to him, never, never! No, but he said, 'Son, or daughter, be
honest, true, virtuous, kind, industrious, prudent and full of good
works.'" Such teachings from parents to their children will abide with
them forever, unless they sin against the Holy Ghost, and some few,
perhaps, will do this.
If you should have visits here from those professing to be Christians,
and they intimate a desire to preach to you, by all means invite them
to do so. Accord to every reputable person who may visit you, and who
may wish to occupy the stands of your meetinghouses to preach to you,
the privilege of doing so, no matter whether he be a Catholic,
Presbyterian, Congregationalist, Baptist, Freewill Baptist,
Methodist, or whatever he may be; and if he wishes to speak to your
children let him do so. Of course you have the power to correct
whatever false teachings or impressions, if any, your children may
hear or receive. I say to parents, place your children, as far as you have an opportunity to do so, in a position or situation to
learn everything in the world that is worth learning. You will
probably have what is called a Christian Church here; they will not
admit that we are Christians, but they cannot think us further from
the plan of salvation as revealed from heaven than we know them to be,
so we are even on that ground, as far as it goes. But, as I was
saying, you may have professing Christians come here to take up their
residences in your midst; and I want to say to parents and children,
that, so far as the Christian nations are concerned, I will take
America, for instance, and on the score of morals—honesty, integrity,
truthfulness and virtue, you will find people by hundreds of thousands
just as good as any Latter-day Saints, as far as they know. They are
the ones we are after. The Lord told us to go and preach the Gospel
without purse and scrip. What for? To hunt up the honest ones who are
now mixed up with all the nations of the earth and gather them
together; and we have done so, as far as we have had the opportunity
and privilege. And after we are gathered we are none too honest, any
more than the inhabitants of the world generally are, and they hardly
know the meaning of the term. Still, according to the light they
possess, I mean the Christian world, thousands and millions of them
are honest, virtuous and true, and I fellowship them as far as they do
right. Is this strange? No, it is not. I wish that all the Latter-day
Saints were as good, according to the knowledge they possess, as
thousands and millions of the sectarian world are; and I will not skip
even the heathen world, for many of them are as good and honest,
according to the light they possess, as men and women know how to be.
Now, then, if our brethren of the Presbyterians, Methodists or any
others visit here and want to preach to you, certainly let them
preach, and have your children hear them. They will tell you to keep
the Sabbath and to love your father and mother; they will tell you to
be true, honest, industrious, to be faithful to your studies, to read
the Bible and all good books, to study the sciences, &c., which is all
good, and as far as such teaching goes just as good as it can be. If
they want to come and teach your children in the Sunday school, I say
let them do so, most certainly. We have scores of thousands of their
books distributed among the Sunday schools throughout our Territory.
Some Latter-day Saints think they are not exactly what they ought to
be; but we are using them in our schools Sundays, Mondays, Tuesdays,
Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, from one year's end to
another.
I say, parents, do not be afraid of having your children learn
everything that is worth learning. I can pick hundreds and thousands
of children in this Church whom I could teach with greater ease, and
so could a man from college, than their parents could be taught. I can
get at their senses better; they are quick and apprehensive and can
learn sooner. And if any of our Christian brethren want to go into our
Sabbath schools to teach our children, let them do so. They will not
teach them anything immoral in the presence of those who are in charge
of the schools; they wait until they get behind the door in the dark
before they commit immoral acts, and very few of them will, even then.
But in their Sunday schools they teach as good morals as you and I can
teach.
I want to say that we are for the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth; we are pursuing the path of truth, and by and by
we expect to possess a great deal more than we do now; but to say that
we shall ever possess all truth, I pause, I do not know when. We
receive light and truth from the fountain of light and truth, but I am
not at liberty to say, and do not know that we shall ever see the time
when we shall possess all truth. But we will receive truth from any
source, wherever we can obtain it.
Next week the great camp meeting that has been so long contemplated is
to commence in the city of Salt Lake, where, I have heard it
whispered, there are so many of the "Mormons" to be converted. I am
going to permit every one of my children to go and hear what they have
to say. When we come to the sciences of the day the knowledge of the
sectarian world is very extensive; the same is true of their morality;
but when we come to read out of the Book of Life the words of the
Almighty to the people, and compare them with the knowledge of the
sectarian world, I am reminded of the words of Geo. Francis Train
concerning a certain gentleman. Said he, "I want you to sit down and
tell me all you know in five minutes." They can tell all they know
about God, godliness, heaven, earth, and the exaltation of man to the
Godhead in five minutes, for they do not know anything. Our children
can see this, and I want them to see it. If there is any man among
them that does know anything about the plan of the Almighty for the
redemption and exaltation of man, I hope and pray that I may have the
privilege of seeing him. I recollect when I was young going to hear
Lorenzo Dow preach. He was esteemed a very great man by the religious
folks. I, although young in years and lacking experience, had thought
a great many times that I would like to hear some man who could tell
me something, when he opened the Bible, about the Son of God, the will
of God, what the ancients did and received, saw and heard and knew
pertaining to God and heaven. So I went to hear Lorenzo Dow. He stood
up some of the time, and he sat down some of the time; he was in this
position and in that position, and talked two or three hours, and when
he got through I asked myself, "What have you learned from Lorenzo
Dow?" and my answer was, "Nothing, nothing but morals." He could tell
the people they should not work on the Sabbath day; they should not
lie, swear, steal, commit adultery, &c., but when he came to teaching
the things of God he was as dark as midnight. And so I lived until,
finally, I made a profession of religion. I thought to myself I would
try to break off my sins and lead a better life and be as moral as I
possibly could; for I was pretty sure that I should not stay here
always. Where I was going to I did not know, but I would like to be as
good as I know how while here, rather than run the risk of being full
of evil. I had heard a good deal about religion, and what a good nice
place heaven was, and how good the Lord was, and I thought I would try
to live a pretty good life. But when I reached the years of, I will
say, courage, I think that is the best term, I would ask questions. I
would say, "Elder, or Minister, I read so and so in the Bible, how do
you understand it?" Then I would go and hear them preach on the
divinity of the Son, and the character of the Father and the Holy
Ghost and their divinity, and, I will say, the divinity of the soul of
man; what we are here for, and various kindred topics. But after
asking questions and going to hear them preach year after
year, What did I learn? Nothing. I would as lief go into a swamp at
midnight to learn how to paint a picture and then define its colors
when there is neither moon nor stars visible and profound darkness
prevails, as to go to the religious world to learn about God, heaven,
hell or the faith of a Christian. But they can explain our duty as
rational, moral beings, and that is good, excellent as far as it goes.
This has been my experience in the Christian world, and I want our
children to go and hear all there is to hear, for the whole sum of it
will be wound up as I once heard one of the finest speakers America
has ever produced say, when speaking on the soul of man. After
laboring long on the subject, he straightened himself up—he was a fine
looking man—and said he, "My brethren and sisters, I must come to the
conclusion that the soul of man is an immaterial substance." Said I,
"Bah!" There was no more sense in his discourse than in the bleating
of a sheep or the grunting of a pig. I palliated the facts partially,
however, so far as he was concerned, by attributing my lack of
comprehension to my own ignorance. This reminds me that I once heard
Mr. Lansing preach a most elaborate discourse. It was in the morning,
and when the meeting was dismissed and the people had come out, Deacon
Brown says to Deacon Taylor, "What a sermon we have had!" Deacon
Taylor says, "Yes, yes!" Deacon Brown says, "That is one of the most
profound discourses I ever heard Mr. Lansing deliver;" and so they
continued talking until one of them said at last, "I did not
understand a word of it." The other Deacon replied, "Neither did I."
Their verdict was a just one, for the discourse consisted of fine,
beautiful words and nothing else, I saw and heard nothing to give me
the least clue to anything pertaining to God, heaven, or the designs
of the Creator with regard to the earth and its inhabitants. But as I
did not understand a word of it, I supposed that was on account of my
ignorance, until I heard the Deacons say that they did not, and then I
concluded that I knew as much as they did. For this reason I say, go
and learn all they know. Their catechisms are good; but if you come to
the things of God I will be bound that we have children who, if they
dare open their mouths and converse, would place them in water they
could not fathom. Yet I say, go and see and hear them and learn what
they know, then you can discriminate and discern, and will be able to
understand why the Lord called upon Joseph Smith to come out and
declare his will, and why he bestowed upon Joseph the Priesthood and
its keys and powers. You will then learn, my little boys and girls,
that the world of mankind scarcely know anything about the Bible. Ask
them concerning the character of the Savior and they will expatiate
and expound hour after hour, but they will tell absolutely nothing. I
presume that there are sisters here who have asked ministers what a
certain Scripture meant, and in reply they have talked, talked,
talked, and wound up by saying, "Great is the mystery of godliness,
God manifest in the flesh. Sister, I cannot tell you." Have you ever
heard sisters and children ask questions of this kind? Yes, and so
have I many times, but they have failed to obtain one particle of
knowledge from their religious teachers. Why? Because they did not
possess it. They did not know that Jesus was the express image of his
Father, although they had read it in the Bible; they did not know that man was made in the image of his God, although they have
read it hundreds of times in the book they profess to reverence and
believe in so much. They cannot realize it. When and how will they
realize it? When they submit themselves to the Lord, and ask the
Father in the name of Jesus to give them revelation by the Holy Ghost.
No man can call Jesus the Christ except it be revealed from heaven to
him.
I will say to my young friends, my little brothers and sisters, go and
learn everything you can. I say to parents, do not be afraid one
particle! These children will learn something that we as parents know
and understand already, and it is very grievous for us to realize that
it is the truth. Joseph, our Prophet, was hunted and driven, arrested
and persecuted, and although no law was ever made in these United
States that would bear against him, for he never broke a law, yet to
my certain knowledge he was defendant in forty-six lawsuits, and every
time Mr. Priest was at the head of and led the band or mob who hunted
and persecuted him. And when Joseph and Hyrum were slain in Carthage
jail the mob, painted like Indians, was led by a preacher. And now
they follow us up and want us to learn of them, when, so far as the
characters of God and Jesus are concerned and the errand of Jesus into
the world, our youth know better than the whole sectarian world. In
coming to Utah to teach the "Mormons" the way of life, the Christians
are but carrying coals to Newcastle. What is the use of going to
"Mormon" settlements to teach the people temperance and sobriety, or
to teach them the Bible? No more use than in going to Newcastle to
sell coal. There is no other people in the world that believe in and
practice the Bible as strictly as the Latter-day Saints. None but the
Latter-day Saints properly believe in the Lord Jesus Christ; no other
people acknowledge him and keep his commandments; and yet they follow
us up, their object, professedly, being to convert us to Christianity,
but in reality it is to induce us to apostatize until they get the
upper hand, that the Priesthood may again be destroyed from the earth.
But never mind, let them go ahead, we shall see whether Christ or Baal
will be king of the earth, and whether Baal will reign several
thousand years longer. We shall find it out by and by.
I am saying this to parents, to those who have been in the midst of
Christendom and have seen its workings; to women who have sat up night
after night, for hundreds of nights, to watch their houses and keep
the mob, led by priests, from slaughtering their husbands and families
and destroying their property. Perhaps I ought to keep silent rather
than say these things, but that would not be justice. Facts are facts
and we cannot help it. I hope they will prove a little different in
time to come. But with the exception of the infidel portion of it, the
sectarian world has hewn out to itself broken cisterns that will hold
no water; the priests have got their creeds, systems, and
organizations, they live on the people, and they are afraid that, if
truth be proclaimed, their craft will fall. Go to the infidel portion
of the world and we are all right; for if they refuse to receive our
doctrines they will talk and reason like men of intelligence. But with
many of those professing to be Christian teachers it is very
different, and in my secret estimate of the characters and attainments
of many of them I have come to the conclusion that their forte is
ignorance and impudence.
I will take another turn in my remarks, and will say if we
were known by the world as we are, truly and honestly, I will not
except the Christians nor their priests; if we were known by them as
we know them, there is not a priest but would pray for the Latter-day
Saints. The infidel world would also pray for us, and so would the
political and moral world. But they do not know what the Lord is doing
through us; they are ignorant, and in their ignorance they lift
themselves up against God and his Anointed, for they have no eyes to
see, ears to hear, nor hearts to understand. But some are becoming
acquainted with us, and this has its influence. What is the object of
the Lord Almighty in calling this people as he has done? This question
may be answered in a very few words—it is nothing short of restoring
to the midst of the children of men every truth, every good, all
knowledge and everything lovely and beautiful for time and eternity,
saving all that will or can be saved and exalting his children to
thrones, and to crown them with crowns of glory, immortality and
eternal lives. Do you see what is going to be the result of the course
the Lord is pursuing with this people and with the world? You see some
who formerly obeyed the Gospel leaving us occasionally. Where are they
going? Is there anything else that will satisfy them? Not on this
earth; they either remain faithful to the Gospel or go to infidelity.
This is the fact. When men go from this Church they become infidels.
They can say they believe in this, that or the other; they may turn to
Spiritualism, bogusism, Emmaism or anything else; no matter what, but
they must be infidels or else acknowledge the Lord Jesus Christ.
The doctrine that we preach is the doctrine of the Bible, it is the
doctrine the Lord has revealed for the salvation of the children of
God, and when men, who have once obeyed it, deny it, they deny it with
their eyes wide open, and knowing that they deny the truth and set at
naught the counsels of the Almighty.
I have spoken quite awhile to you, my brethren and sisters. I have
been teaching parents some things with regard to their children; now I
wish to say to the children, obey your parents, be good, never suffer
yourselves to do that which will mortify you through life, and that
will cause you to look back with regret. While you are pure and
spotless preserve yourselves in the integrity of your souls. Although
you are young you know good from evil, and live so that you can look
back on your lives and thank the Lord that he has preserved you, or
has enabled you to preserve yourselves, so that you have no misconduct
to regret or mourn over. Take this course and you will secure to
yourselves an honorable name on earth among the good and the pure; you
will maintain your integrity before heaven, and prove yourselves
worthy of a high state of glory when you get through with this world.
God bless you. Amen.