In rising to address the congregation this afternoon, I do so, as I
always do, with very great pleasure. It always affords me
gratification to contemplate the things pertaining to the Church and
kingdom of God, and to the interests of humanity on the earth. I love
to speak of these things, I am always pleased to hear of them, and I
am as willing to listen to the truth when emanating from some person
else as I am to communicate it to others, as it may be made manifest
to me. I feel as our Elders generally do—that we are seeking to
communicate—not our own special ideas, or any peculiar theory that we
may have entertained; but, under the guidance of the Almighty, that we
may instruct and teach as we may be led and guided by the Spirit of
the living God. I feel, as it is expressed in the Scriptures, "That it
is not in man to direct his steps," and it is not especially in man to
teach things pertaining to eternity, or to the everlasting welfare of
the human family, unless he be under the guidance and direction of the
Almighty, and feels that he is simply an instrument in His hands to
unfold and develop certain principles that are made manifest unto him.
I feel always willing to hear, to teach, to receive instruction, or to
communicate unto others those principles that are calculated to
promote their happiness and well-being in time and in eternity. These
things lie at the foundation of the happiness of the human family;
they emanate from God, our Father, in whom, we are told, "we live and
move and have our being," and upon whom we are dependent for all the
blessings we enjoy, whether they pertain to this world or the world to come. Ignorant of all true principles without inspiration from
him, we feel at all times that it is necessary for us to be under his
guidance and direction, and to seek for the aid of his Holy Spirit,
that we may be led and taught, instructed and directed in all of our
acts and associations in life, that we may be prepared for any events
that may transpire, associated with the affairs of this world or
relative to the world to come. We look upon ourselves as eternal
beings, and that God is our Father. We are told in the sacred record
of truth that he is the God and Father of the spirits of all flesh—of
all flesh that has lived, that now lives or that will live; and it is
proper that we should have just conceptions of our relationship to
him, to each other, to the world wherein we live, to those who have
existed before us, or to those who shall come after us, that as wise,
intelligent beings, under the inspiration of the Almighty, we may be
able to conduct our steps so that our pathway in life may be such as
to secure the approval of a good conscience and of God, angels and
good men; and that whilst we live upon the earth we may fulfil in an
honorable manner the measure of our creation, and, obeying our
Creator, feel that he is indeed what the Scriptures represent him to
be, and what we believe him to be—"the God and Father of the spirits
of all flesh."
There is a feeling generally extant in the world that God is a great
and august personage who is elevated so high above the world, and is
so far separated from humanity that it is impossible to approach him,
and although the Christian religion, under whatever form it may be
practiced, teaches mankind to pray unto God in the name of the Lord
Jesus Christ, yet it is very few who suppose that their prayers amount
to anything, that God will listen to their supplications, or that they
will prove of any special benefit. A feeling of this kind tends more
or less to unbelief instead of faith in God, and hence we find very
few men in our day who act as men of God did in former days, that is,
seek unto him for guidance and direction in the affairs of life. If we
examine what is termed the sacred history of the Bible, we shall find
that in the various ages of the world, until soon after Christianity
was introduced, there was a feeling among men to call upon God and to
have their prayers answered—a feeling that if they would approach the
Most High and call upon his name in faith, he would answer their
supplications and give unto them wisdom, intelligence and revelation
for the guidance of their feet in the pathway of life; and it was not
based as it is now, generally, upon some old theories, or upon
communications made unto others; but if we trace the records of
Scripture through, we shall find that men generally sought for
themselves guidance and direction and revelation adapted to the
peculiar circumstances in which they were placed.
If we go back to the time when Adam first made his appearance on the
earth, the Lord God we are told communicated with him, gave him
certain commandments, told him what he should do and what he should
not do; and when he transgressed the law, we are told that he heard
the footsteps of the Lord in the garden, and he heard his voice
speaking unto him, and when, at the dictum of the Almighty, he was
expelled from the paradise in which he lived, an angel was placed
there as a guardian to prevent his return.
From the accounts that we have in our possession of events that took
place soon after that time, we learn that the Lord
communicated his will unto others, and there was a man called Enoch, a
very remarkable personage, whose history is very brief indeed,
considering the important events that transpired during his day. We
are told that he walked with God, had communication with him, and that
"He was not, for God took him." Our recent revelations give us
information pertaining to this same man—that he gathered together a
people, that he taught them the principles of the Gospel, that he
gathered together all who would listen to the principles of truth
previous to the flood, and that he and his city were translated, or as
the account of the Bible says—"He was not, for God took him."
By and by another event transpired. The people became excessively
wicked and corrupt, so much so, that, as the Scriptures informs us,
"Their thoughts were only evil, and that continually;" and in
consequence of this the Lord decreed that he would destroy the people
from the face of the earth. But before he did it he gave revelation
unto Noah, telling him that the destruction of all flesh upon the
earth had been decreed by the Almighty in consequence of the
wickedness of the people; and Noah had special revelation given to him
adapted to the circumstances which surrounded him, and the age in
which he lived. He was not told to build a city, to preach the Gospel
and gather the people as Enoch had done; but he was told that the
wickedness of all flesh had come up before the Almighty and that he
had determined to destroy them with a flood; and Noah, believing in
God and in the revelation which he gave unto him, according to the
testimony of the Scriptures, built an ark, and gathered into that ark
himself and wife, his sons and their wives, and two—male and fe male—of
the various kinds of beasts, birds and creeping things that dwelt on
the face of the earth. History records the coming of the flood, the
destruction of the world by it, and the preservation in the ark of
those who had listened to the word of God and to whom he communicated
his will.
Subsequent to this time a variety of singular circumstances transpired
and there existed many prominent characters both good and bad,
worshipers of God and worshipers of idols. We find that after the
re-peopling of the earth after the flood men set to work to build a
tower, and the Lord confused their languages and scattered them from
hence, throughout all the earth. About this time a singular kind of
personage appeared on the stage of action, named Abraham. He had been
taught by his father to worship idols; but the Lord had manifested
himself to him on certain occasions and instructed him in the true
religion. He did not teach him as he taught Enoch, or as he had taught
Noah; the circumstances of Abraham were different from those of Enoch
and Noah, and if Abraham had the history of their times, as he
unquestionably had, for Abraham was contemporary with Noah and Noah
with Adam, and must have been acquainted with the events which had
transpired, from the days of Adam at least from information given by
Adam to Noah and by Noah to himself, he would know that the
revelations they received were not applicable to his case, but he
needed revelation from God for his own guidance and direction, that he
might be led aright, and that he might be able to instruct his
children after him in the path they should tread, in the principles,
doctrines and ordinances that should be according to the mind and will
of God.
There is something humorous in a history that we have in relation to
this personage. The priests of those days offered sacrifices to their
gods, and, like the priests of these days, they were generally opposed
to new revelation from God. Abraham's father had instructed him in the
doctrines of these idols, and had sought to induce him to have faith
in them and in their power, authority, and dominion, telling him what
great personages they were. But Abraham, inspired by the Lord, went on
a certain occasion into the temple of these gods and smote them right
and left, upsetting and breaking them in pieces. His father came in
and asked what he had been doing, what great sin this was that he had
committed, why he was so sacrilegious in his feelings and so wicked as
to seek to destroy these gods? Said he, "Father, I did not do anything
to them, they quarreled among themselves and went to work fighting and
knocked one another down, broke one another's heads and knocked off
one another's arms and legs." "Oh," said his father, "my
son do not
tell me anything of that kind, for they are made of wood and they
could not move or stir from their place nor knock one another down; it
has been some other agency that has done it." "Why, father," said he,
"would you worship a being that could not stir or move, that had hands
and could not handle, that had legs and could not walk, a mouth that
could not speak, and a head and it was of no use? Would you worship a
being like that?" But nevertheless our history informs us that the
priests were angry and stirred up his father against him. But the Lord
inspired Abraham to leave there. The Bible tells us the Lord said to
him: "Get thee up from thy father's house, from the land wherein thou
wast born, and go up to a land I will show unto thee, and which I will
afterwards give unto thee for an inheritance." And we are told that
"he went up, not knowing whither he went."
There is something very peculiar about this little history, so far as
we have it in the Bible. I think I see this man of God rising up,
after he had incurred the displeasure of the priests and his father,
and had slain these gods, making preparations to leave his native
country. I fancy I see some of his neighbors coming to him, and
saying: "Abraham, where are you going?" "Oh," says he,
"I do not
know." "You don't know." "No." "Well,
who told you to go?" "The Lord."
"And you do not know where you are going?" "Oh, no," says he,
"I am
going to a land that he will show me, and that he has promised to give
me and my seed after me for an inheritance; and I believe in God, and
therefore I am starting." There was something very peculiar about it,
almost as bad as us when we started to come off from Nauvoo: we hardly
knew where we were going, but we could not have rest, peace or safety
among the Christians, consequently we left them and started off to the
Rocky Mountains, under the direction of God, hardly knowing whither we
went, just as Abraham did, and I do not think we were any bigger fools
than he, for he went just about as we did, not knowing whither he
went.
Afterwards the Lord gave him a son, for when He was an old man, and
his wife Sarah was seventy years old, they were childless, and at this
advanced age the Lord gave them a son. There had been no event of that
kind ever transpired before in the history of the Bible, and if it
were the Bible they had to look at, it would have been of no use to
them, for they could not get any instruc tions there how they
were to act; but he feared God and put his trust in him, and the Lord
gave him revelation. The angel of the Lord, we are told, visited
Abraham and his wife, and told her she should have a son. Sarah was a
good deal amused at it, and laughed over the matter, for she was about
seventy years old and thought it rather strange that she should have a
son at that age, and she laughed at the idea, as many of our old
sisters would unquestionably do now if they were told such a thing. It
seems all very natural when you look at it just about as it is. And
when the angel asked her why she laughed, she lied and said: "I did
not laugh," she did not want to have it known that she laughed at what
the Lord said. "Nay, but," said he, "thou didst laugh." And as
the
time came round, lo and behold she had a son and called his name
Isaac. And after this the Lord seemed determined to try Abraham and
see whether or not he would be faithful to him and obey him in all
things. He had obeyed him in breaking up those Gods, and in leaving
his father's house and going up to a land that he had shown unto him,
and the Lord was determined to try him to the uttermost, and see
whether he would obey him yet further. "Now," said he, "Abraham, take
thy son, thine only son Isaac, and go to a place that I will indicate,
and offer him up as a burnt offering before me." That was a curiosity,
it had something odd and strange about it. It was not really what you
would call philosophical; it was not in accordance with any principles
that we could understand anything about, in our day; and it would have
been difficult for Abraham to have reasoned it out why he should be
called to offer up his son as a sacrifice. Nothing of the kind had
ever transpired before as a precedent; no such thing written in the
Bible that had taken place among men before. In offering up his only
son there was something very peculiar, not especially as a sacrifice,
but it came in contact with every parental feeling which he must
necessarily have felt for his only child. This, in and of itself,
rendered it one of the most severe and painful trials that could be
placed upon man; but there was something else connected with this
which was explained by the Prophet Joseph Smith, who, when speaking of
these things, said God was determined in these days to have a tried
people as He had in former times, and that he would feel after their
heartstrings and try them in every way possible for them to be tried;
and if he could have invented anything that would have been more keen,
acute, and trying than that which he required of Abraham he would have
done it. But that, no doubt, was one of the greatest trials that could
have been inflicted on any human being. Notice the old gentleman
tottering along with his son, brooding over the promises of God and
the peculiar demand now made upon him. Says he: "Isaac, let us go up
into the mountain here, and offer a sacrifice to the Lord." And he
took him along; they ascend the mountain, they gather together some
rocks and together build an altar; they gather the fuel and place it
on that altar; and when everything is prepared Isaac says: "Father,
here is the altar and here is the wood, but where is the sacrifice."
What would the feelings of a father be under such circumstances? Says
he, with a heart gushing with sorrowful emotions, "My son, God will
prepare himself a sacrifice," and finally the old man gave his son to
understand that he was the sacrifice, and he bound him and placed him
on the wood upon the altar, and lifted the knife to strike the
fatal blow, and while his arm was outstretched the Lord spake, saying:
"Abraham, lay not thine hand upon the lad, for the Lord shall provide
thee a sacrifice," and he looked round and found a ram in a thicket,
and he placed it on the altar and offered a burnt offering before the
Lord. The Lord then took him aside and said: "Lift up thine eyes
eastward, westward, northward and southward, for to thee and to thy
seed after thee will I give this land; and thy seed shall be as
numerous as the stars in the heavens, and like the sand on the sea
shore so shall they be innumerable; and in blessing I will bless thee,
and in multiplying I will multiply thee, and in thee and in thy seed
shall all the families of the earth be blessed." The Lord proved him
and found him faithful in all things. That was a severe test to human
nature; but there were other ideas crowding on his mind that were ten
thousand times more formidable than these paternal feelings which
gushed and welled up in his bosom when told to offer up his son as a
sacrifice. What was it? Why the Lord had told him that he would make
of him a nation and a multitude of nations, and that he should be the
father of many nations, and yet he told him to go and offer up his
only son. And he was an old man and his wife an old woman; and it was
not only the idea of taking the life of his son that was crowding upon
his mind, but the cutting him off in regard to posterity and the
promises that God had made to him in regard to the magnitude of the
peoples that should arise from him, or from his loins, and leaving
him, as it were, a dry root, helpless, hopeless, tottering on the
grave without any heir. Paul very justly remarks that in the midst of
all these things, "he staggered not through unbelief, but was strong
in faith giving glory to God; believing that he from whom he had
received him, as it were from the dead, would be able, if he had even
slaughtered his son, to raise him from the dead." He was strong in
faith, says Paul, "giving glory to God." He had had the visions of his
mind unfolded in regard to the future; he had looked through the dark
vista of future ages. Inspired by the spirit of revelation he
contemplated the purposes of God as they rolled forth in all their
majesty and glory and power, and considered that He was to be one of
the great actors in this great world drama that should be exhibited in
the after ages or time, and in the eternities that were to come. Jesus
said of him, "Abraham saw my day and was glad." But he saw in this,
apparently, all his hopes blasted; but notwithstanding he had faith
and confidence in God, and he stood there like the beaten anvil to the
stroke, or the sturdy oak defying all storms and blasts and
influences. He was strong in faith, giving glory to God. Nothing but
the spirit of revelation could have given him this confidence, and it
was that which sustained him under these peculiar circumstances.
He then told him that, by and by, his seed should go down into bondage
in Egypt, and should remain there four hundred years, and that then
they would be delivered. He also made promises concerning his
posterity, telling him they should inherit that land; and yet,
singular to say, notwithstanding these revelations and promises from
the Lord, several thousand years after, when Stephen was referring to
these promises, he said, "he gave him none inheritance in it, no not so
much as to set his foot;" but he told him that he would "give it to
him, and to his seed after him, for an everlasting inheri tance." And as we have to do with a truthful God, and with eternal
things, we expect that these promises will be literally fulfilled, and
that God will accomplish all things that he spoke to him pertaining to
his seed. But there was one peculiarity about this that I wish to
notice in connection with others—that when God gave revelations to the
human family in the different ages of the world it was particularly
adapted to the circumstances in which they were placed. They were not
dependent, as Christians are now, simply on the Bible or upon some old
revelation, from which they could learn many great things, but they
could not learn what was necessary, what plan it was proper for them
to adopt under the peculiar circumstances in which they were placed.
We find, in continuing the history of these things, that after the
children of Israel had been in Egypt for a length of time, God sent
them a deliverer—he raised up Moses and inspired him with the
principle of revelation, told him he had a work for him to do, that he
was to deliver Israel from the bondage that had been placed upon them
by the Egyptian kings. Moses shrank from the responsibility, and told
the Lord that he was a "man of stammering tongue and of slow speech,"
and that he was not competent to perform a work of such magnitude. The
Lord told him never to mind, it would be all right, that he would
provide a spokesman for him in Aaron his brother, and Aaron should be
a mouthpiece to the people, and Moses should be as a god to Aaron and
dictate him in the course that He should take. And this very Moses
gives us an account of all the histories that we have in relation to
the dealings of God with the human family from Adam's day until the
time in which he lived. There was something peculiar about the mission
that he had. He was sent on several occasions to present himself
before the Egyptian king with a message from the Lord that he should
let his people Israel go, and in these various messages you will find,
just as I stated before, the revelations that he had were adapted to
the particular circumstances he was placed in. He was not told to
build a city as Enoch had been, and to gather a people together to be
translated; he was not told to build an ark, as Noah did; he was not
told to leave his father's house and go to a strange land, as Abraham
was; he was placed in other circumstances—he was going to be the
deliverer of Israel from Egyptian bondage, and to lead them to that
land which God had promised Abraham, and consequently he had to have
direct communication with the Lord—revelation to guide him in the
course that he should pursue in the work that he had to perform. The
result was that after many revelations he took Israel out of Egypt, he
brought them into the wilderness, he passed them through the Red Sea,
and he went upon the mountain, conversed with God and received from
him tables of stone written by his own hand for the guidance of the
people, and was under the direction of the Almighty in all his moves.
He built an ark, not according to his own judgment or wisdom, not
according to anything that he read of in the Bible, nor according to
any previous revelation or communication; but the Lord told him to see
"that he made all things according to the pattern that he had shown
him in the mount," and he did so. And the people traveled on through
that wilderness, and were there for forty years, a pillar of fire
leading them by night and a cloud by day; and when that pillar of fire
or cloud rested they rested, when it lifted up they moved, and
followed its guidance. And Aaron went and ministered in the Tabernacle
and approached before the Holy of Holies, and all these sayings,
doings and events that then transpired were under the immediate
revelation, dictation and guidance of the Almighty. The Lord at that
time desired to make of Israel a great nation, a kingdom of priests.
They had the Gospel preached unto them in the wilderness, so Paul
tells us, but they were rebellious, wayward and stiffnecked. It was
the design of the Almighty to lead them into the presence of God, that
they might see him as Moses did, and as the seventy Elders of Israel
did, that they might converse with him and obtain intelligence from
him, and be under his special guidance and direction; but they could
not endure the Gospel, and therefore we are told "the law was added
because of transgression." What was it added to? Why, to the Gospel.
What was the Gospel? A principle of revelation; it always was. It was
the same Gospel that Jesus had that was revealed to them. The
Scriptures tell us that it "brings life and immortality to light;" and
whenever in any age of the world men had a knowledge of life and
immortality, of the purposes of God and his future designs, and of the
future estate of mankind, it came through the Gospel, for it is the
Gospel that brings life and immortality to light; and wherever the
Gospel exists, there exists a knowledge of life and immortality; and
wherever a knowledge of life and immortality does not exist the Gospel
does not exist. The children of Israel, then, were placed under the
law—a schoolmaster, we are told, "a yoke that neither they nor their
fathers were able to bear." This Peter tells us.
Then there were other Prophets after Moses who
appeared on the stage, such
as Job, Elijah, Elisha, Isaiah, Jeremiah and many others, who had
communication with God and received a knowledge of his will and
purposes, and prophesied under the inspiration of the Almighty and
testified of events that should afterwards transpire. To these men
we are indebted for the Bible, that is, for the Old and New Testaments;
to them and their revelations, to the communications that they had,
the ministering of angels and the opening visions, and the unfolding
of the purposes of God, and the various histories and dealings of God
with the people; to them are we indebted for the Bible that we
Christians of the present day talk so much about. To these men who
made this Bible we are indebted for any knowledge that they had about
God; and that Gospel, we are told, brings life and immortality to
light.
We are now sometimes told by people here, at this present day, that we
have the Bible to go by. Indeed? We have the Bible, have we? Yes. Who
made that Bible? Did the Christians? No, they did not. The early
Christians had something to do with making the New Testament
Scriptures, but not the Old Testament; and then, as I have told you
heretofore, these men always had revelation given them adapted to the
peculiar circumstances in which they were placed. But you read the
Bible through, and you will find that the Scriptures that are given to
us are simply an account of revelations, communications, prophecies
and the ministering of angels, and the power of God made manifest to
the ancient people of God who had the Gospel. What! Do you mean to
say, then, that all these men had the Gospel? I most assuredly do, for
without that they could not have had a knowledge of life and
immortality. Did Abraham have it? Yes, if Paul told the truth, he did.
What does he mean when he says, "God, foreseeing that he would justify
the heathen through faith, preached before the Gospel unto Abraham?"
What does he mean when he tells us about Moses and the children of
Israel? Says he: "We have the Gospel preached unto us as well as they;
but the word preached unto them did not profit them, not being mixed
with faith in those who heard it; wherefore the law was added because
of transgression." What was it added to? Why, to the Gospel, for they
had the Gospel before, and the law was added not as a peculiar kind of
a blessing that some people speak of, but as a peculiar kind of a
curse—the law of carnal commandments—"a yoke that we nor our fathers
were able to bear." And when Jesus came, what did he bring? Why, the
Gospel, and with that Gospel light and revelation and communication
with God, and ministering of angels and the gifts of tongues and
healing and prophecy, and the power of God made manifest among the
people as it was in former times. Life and immortality were again
brought to light, the heavens were again unveiled, angels ministered
to man, and they had a knowledge of things to come. The law was added
because of transgression, and when the Gospel came, it came not to do
away with the law or the Prophets, but to fulfil them. It was not a
law of carnal commandments and ordinances, but "the law of the spirit
of life in Christ Jesus, which makes us free from the law of sin and
death;" the law of the Gospel whereby men were adopted into the family
of God, and became "heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus Christ,"
that "if we suffer with him," as he once said, "we shall also reign
with him, that both may be glorified together." It was a thing that
adopted them into the family of God, and made them heirs of God and
joint heirs with Christ his Son, and one of the principles of eternal
life, and like all other revelations, was adapted peculiarly to the
position that they then occupied. It was called the Gospel, and there
was a Priesthood connected with it, and what was that called? Why, the
Melchizedek Priesthood. What did the Melchizedek Priesthood do? It
held the keys of the mysteries of the revelations of God. And who was
Christ? He was a Priest forever after the order of Melchizedek. And
what did he introduce? The Gospel. And who was Melchizedek? A man that
blessed Abraham we are told, and to whom Abraham paid tithes of all
that he possessed; and Paul tells us that, "Verily the less is blessed
of the greater," and this Melchizedek was greater than Abraham was,
although Abraham was the father of the faithful. What kind of a thing
did Jesus introduce when he came? He introduced the Gospel; he had the
Priesthood after the order of Melchizedek. What did Melchizedek have?
Why, the Priesthood after the order of the Son of God, if you please.
If Christ's Priesthood was after his order, the Melchizedek Priesthood
must be after the order of the Son of God. And if Christ introduced
the Gospel, Melchizedek had the Gospel, and Melchizedek blessed
Abraham, and he had the Gospel preached to him, so says the Bible that
the Christians profess to believe in.
Well, then, if this has been the way of God's dealing with the human
family in all ages, it would seem that he would continue to deal with
men on the same principle now.
John the Revelator speaks of a time when "an angel should fly
in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting Gospel to preach to
those who dwell on the face of the earth, and to every nation,
kindred, tongue and people, crying with a loud voice, Fear God and
give glory to him, for the hour of his judgment is come." Who was it
that saw this? Why John, on the Isle of Patmos. But didn't he have the
Gospel? Yes. But he saw that a certain power would arise that would
make war against the Saints and overcome them, that they should be
given into the hands of this power to a certain time. Then he tells us
afterwards that, after all these events should have transpired, and
all the apostasy and the rising of "Mystery, Babylon," the "Mother of
Harlots," and the abominations that should exist on the face of the
earth, says he, "I saw another angel flying in the midst of heaven
having the everlasting Gospel to preach to them that dwell on the face
of the earth." What do you mean by the everlasting Gospel? Why, the
same Gospel that Jesus taught, the same Gospel that Abraham, Moses,
Enoch and Adam had—that everlasting, eternal, unchangeable principle
that brings men into relationship with their God, unveils the heavens
and the purposes of God to the human family, and leads them in the
paths of life. "I saw another angel flying through the midst of heaven
having the everlasting gospel to preach unto those who dwell on earth,
to every nation, kindred, tongue and people, crying with a loud voice,
Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is come:
and worship him that made the heaven, the earth, the seas, and the
fountains of waters." This was the declaration of John.
Now, then, an event like this was to transpire; the everlasting Gospel
was again to be introduced to man upon the earth. Joseph Smith came
forward telling us that an angel had administered to him, and had
revealed unto him the principles of the Gospel as they existed in
former days, and that God was going to set his hand to work in these
last days to accomplish his purposes and build up his kingdom, to
introduce correct principles, to overturn error, evil, and corruption,
and to establish his Church and kingdom upon the earth. I have heard
him talk about these things myself. I have heard him tell over and
over again, to myself and others, the circumstances pertaining to
these visions and the various ministrations of angels, and the
development of the purposes of God towards the human family. And what
does he do? Bring us something different? Yes, in many respects, but
not different in regard to our connection with God. Different as
regards the age in which we live and the circumstances with which he
was surrounded, but not different as it regards bringing men to a
knowledge of God. He taught precisely the same principles and doctrine
and ordinances that were taught by Jesus and his disciples in their
day. He organized Apostles; he had Prophets in his Church. He told
them that inasmuch as they would do right and keep his commandments,
they should have the gift of the Holy Ghost. He led them forth and
baptized them, just as John and the disciples of Jesus did. He
baptized them in the name of Jesus for the remission of their sins,
and told them they should receive the Holy Ghost. He organized his
Church precisely upon those principles; but it was a different
dispensation—"the dispensation of the fulness of times, when God would
gather together all things in one," prophesied of by Paul; when his people should be gathered, as the Scriptures say, from the
east, the west, the north and the south; when he would take "one of a
city and two of a family and bring them to Zion and give them pastors
after his own heart, that could feed them with knowledge and
understanding." It was a dispensation to prepare the people for the
events that should transpire on the face of the earth, that they might
no longer be led astray by the cunning craftiness of men whereby they
lie in wait to deceive, but be led by the spirit of revelation and
brought into communication with God. Hence the people that I see
before me today—the major part of this congregation and the people
that inhabit this Territory, have been brought together under these
auspices, by the preaching of the everlasting Gospel, by being
baptized in the name of Jesus for the remission of sins, having hands
laid on them for the reception of the Holy Ghost; and they have
received of that Spirit, and they know for themselves of the truth
that they have received, and consequently they cannot be twisted about
by every wind of doctrine. They know and appreciate the truths they
have received, and they have faith in God, for the Gospel they have
obeyed leads them to a knowledge of God, whom to know is life
everlasting.
Now this is the position; it is just the same as they had in former
days. The Gospel that they had in any age of the world was to lead men
to God; the Gospel that we have, and that we have taught to you, is to
lead you to God, to righteousness, to virtue, purity, integrity, to
honor, to revelation, to a knowledge of the ways of God, and of his
purposes pertaining to you and your families, to your progenitors and
your posterity; pertaining to this world and that which is to come. It
is a revelation adapted peculiarly to the position that we occupy in
these last days. How very remarkable many Scriptures are on these
points, "I will take one of a city and two of a family." And what will
you do with them? "I will bring them to Zion." And what will you do
with them there? "I will give them pastors after my own heart that
shall feed them with knowledge and understanding." Not with theories,
ideas and uncertainties; not with the dogmas of men, but with the
knowledge of God, with revelation, with an understanding of the
principles of eternal truth. And this is why we are assembled here as
we are on the present occasion. What shall we do then? We will live
our religion and keep the commandments of God. Cultivate the spirit of
revelation that you have then, as the Scriptures said formerly, "As
many as are led by the Spirit of God are the sons of God." Another
passage, in speaking of certain individuals, tells them that they have
received an unction from the Holy One, and they know all things, being
instructed and taught by the Spirit of eternal truth. This is what the
Bible speaks of in former times. "And ye need not," says he, "that any
man should teach you, save the Anointing that is within you, which is
true and no lie." Let men feel the anointing of the Spirit of the Lord
and that Spirit will lead them into all truth, will bring things past
to their remembrance and it will show them things to come, as it did
in former times.
I remember Joseph Smith speaking to me upwards of thirty years ago.
Says he: "Brother Taylor, you have received the Holy Ghost. Now follow
its teachings and instructions. Sometimes it may lead you in a manner
that may be contrary al most to your judgment; never mind,
follow its teachings, and if you do so, by and by it will become in
you a principle of revelation, so that you will know all things as
they transpire."
How does that agree with the other—"You have received an unction from
the Holy One and know all things, and need not that any man should
teach you, save the Anointing which is within you, which is true and
no lie?"
We have been taught and instructed in many principles that the world
know nothing about, and that we know nothing about, and that Brother
Young knew nothing about, nor Brother Joseph, nor the Twelve, that
nobody knew anything about until God communicated it; and you, under
the influence of that Spirit, know of a truth and rejoice in the
truth, and the truth has made you free; and when you hear men talking
about how bad they feel for you because of your fanaticism, what do
you feel like? Say you; "Poor things, you do not know what you are
doing." Preserve your pity for yourselves and your children; keep your
high, exalted notions, if you have any, for we are satisfied with
ourselves and our principles. We know in whom we have believed, and no
power can overturn us. We have been baptized into one baptism, we have
partaken of the same spirit; we are all built up together in the faith
of the everlasting Gospel, and our progress is onward, onward, onward,
until the kingdoms of this world shall become the kingdoms of our God
and his Christ, and he will reign with universal empire, until error
and folly, and vanity and corruption, and wickedness of every kind
will fail and dissolve before the rays of eternal truth which God has
revealed, and in which he will continue to reveal, until the Kingdom
of God shall prevail and extend throughout the wide world. We are
happy we live, and we rejoice in the blessings that we have received,
and we pray our Heavenly Father to keep us faithful.
I will tell you the only thing I am afraid of about the Saints is that
they will forget their God and that they will not live their religion;
then again I have not that fear, because I know the generality of them
will. I know this kingdom will not be given into the hands of another
people. I know that it will continue to progress and continue to
increase in spite of all the powers of the adversary, in spite of
every influence that exists now, or that ever will exist on the face
of this wide earth. God is our God, and he will bring off Israel
triumphant.
May God help us to be faithful and to keep his commandments, in the
name of Jesus, Amen.