In rising to address you this afternoon, brethren and sisters, I crave
an interest in your faith and prayers, that I may be led to speak upon
those subjects and to advance those ideas that shall be instructive to
you and adapted to your circumstances and condition.
I have acted in the ministry since my boyhood, but whenever I am
called upon to speak I do so with great diffidence and fear. I do not
know that the feeling can ever be conquered entirely, in fact, I do
not know that I wish that it could; for if a man could arise and feel
perfectly capable, in and of himself, to speak to the edification of
the people, judging by my own experience in the matter, I imagine that
he would have but very little aid from the Lord. But if he rise
depending upon the Lord, and not upon his own strength, the Lord has
promised to render that aid unto his servants that is necessary to
enable them to testify to the truth, and to cleanse their garments of
the blood of this generation.
There is no lack of topics or subject matter in dwelling upon the work
we are engaged in; the range is an extensive one; but it needs the
Spirit of God to select, out of the variety of subjects which it
presents, those points, doctrines, and counsels that should be touched
upon to edify the people in the circumstances which surround them. The
older I grow, the more convinced I am that we as a people and as
individuals need practical instructions in what may be termed our
everyday duties. It is delightful to reflect and speak upon, and to
sit and have held up before our minds the course pursued by those who
were our predecessors in the Gospel. It is also equally
delightful, when inspired by the Spirit of God, to contemplate the
future with its great events, which the prophets foresaw, and
concerning which they have written so much.
As a generation, we live in a busy, stirring time—a time that is full
of important events, one treading upon the heels of another so rapidly
that we have scarcely time to contemplate the past—even the past of
our own history; and we have but little time to look forward to the
future, only as it is necessary to comfort and to cheer us. The work
of God is rushing forward with extraordinary speed, and the Lord is
operating in a most signal manner to bring to pass his great and
marvelous designs and purposes; and to no eyes are these things
clearer than to those of the Latter-day Saints, especially those whose
minds are enlightened by the Spirit of God, and who seek for the
inspiration thereof to guide them in their everyday affairs.
It has been frequently remarked that we as a people are entirely too
egotistical; that we imagine that God, in his operations and dealings
with the children of men, has selected us and made us the peculiar
recipients of his blessings to the exclusion of the rest of the human
family. I have heard it very frequently remarked, when conversing with
persons respecting our views and doctrines, that we confine our
attention entirely too much to ourselves and the little work with
which we are identified, forgetting that we are but a small handful of
the great human family. I have also heard it remarked that it was
entirely too much to expect that a people, so insignificant as we are
numerically, should anticipate the great results that we speak about
very frequently, and which, from the writings of ancient prophets and
of those who have lived contemporaneously with us, we are led to
anticipate will be fulfilled in our case. Men say, in speaking of us:
"Do you Latter-day Saints, who in Utah and the adjoining Territories
number probably one hundred and fifty or two hundred thousand, and it
may be a few hundred thousand elsewhere, recollect; or do you ever
consider, that the nation of which you form an integral part, numbers
forty millions, and that there are hundreds of millions of human
beings scattered over the face of the earth who are not of your creed?
Do you recollect that you are very contemptible in point of numbers,
influence and wealth and everything that constitutes greatness in the
earth?" If we were disposed to forget these things there are those
around us with whom we are brought into frequent contact, who take
great and especial pains to remind us of our insignificance, so that I
think there is no real danger of our entirely forgetting it. But
though we are few in numbers, we declare that the oracles of God are
with us, and that he has chosen the Latter-day Saints to be his
peculiar people and has placed upon them his name, or the name of his
Son Jesus Christ, and has called us to be ministers of life and
salvation, to be the thunders of a new order of things on the earth,
and to be the means in his hands, as we firmly believe and testify, of
effecting a wonderful revolution in affairs. Yet, while believing
this, the Latter-day Saints are not so uncharitable as to imagine that
they are the only ones with whom God is dealing, or that they are the
only people over and towards whom his providences are being exercised.
Such a thought has never entered into the hearts of those who are
intelligent and reflecting in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. It is true that we believe and testify that we have
been called to proclaim the everlasting Gospel in its ancient purity
and simplicity, with the plenitude of its gifts and graces as enjoyed
in ancient days; and that we have been called to lay the foundation of
that work which is destined to grow, increase and spread until it
fills the whole earth from north to south, from east to west. Yet we
do not on this account arrogate to ourselves all the kindness, mercy,
care, and goodness which God dispenses to his creatures on the earth;
but we firmly believe that in every nation, and among every kindred,
tongue and people, and, in fact, in every creed on the face of the
wide earth of ours there are those over whom God watches with peculiar
care and to whom his blessings are extended; and we believe that his
providences are over all the works of his hands, and that none are so
remote, friendless and isolated that they are not the objects of his
care, mercy and kindness. This is our belief; and when we see the
events which are taking place at the present time in Europe, when we
hear of revolutions and wars, of nation rising against nation, of the
various judgments and calamities as well as the various kindnesses and
mercies that are bestowed upon and extended to the inhabitants of the
earth, and to the various nationalities into which they are divided,
we see in all these things the hand of our kind and beneficent
Creator; we see his providences, we behold his going forth, and we
acknowledge his goodness; and we also think that we can discern his
overruling care and providence for the bringing to pass the great
events of which he has spoken, which will eventually result in the
emancipation of our race from the thralldom of evil under which it
groans.
It is true, as I have already re marked, that God has called us out of
the nations to be his peculiar people; but we are not the only ones
who will be so called. The message which came to us and which we
received and were made glad thereby, is sent to every kindred, tongue
and people on the face of the whole earth. It has gathered us out to
be the pioneers in this great work; but the call is not ended nor the
period arrived when it shall no longer be proclaimed by our being
gathered together. It is still in force, and has to be carried
throughout earth's wide domain, until the reverberation thereof shall
be heard in every land, and men of every nationality, tongue and creed
shall have heard and had a chance to receive or reject the glad
tidings of salvation which have been committed unto us.
The dealings of God with our own nation, the singular events which are
transpiring at the present time on the continent of Europe, the
revolutions that are taking place in Asia, and the wars and commotions
that seem to convulse most of the nations of the earth, have all for
their object, as we believe, the preparation of the way by which this
great message can be carried more freely, and its principles declared
more thoroughly to all the inhabitants of the earth. The Prophets
looked down to the days of the future and they saw in vision that God
would perform a great and mighty work in the midst of the inhabitants
of the earth. They wrote about it, and some of the finest writing in
the Bible contains glorious allusions to the last days, when God
should stretch forth his arm in mighty power in the midst of his
people and accomplish a great and marvelous work—a work that should
be a wonder in the eyes of all people. The religious sects of
Christendom, for hundreds of years, have looked forward to the
accomplishment of these predictions, and the hope of this has cheered
them in their operations, labors, expenditures, and in every effort
they have made for the redemption of the race and its enlightenment in
the principles of Christianity. To accomplish the fulfillment of the
predictions contained in the Bible they have used every means in their
power; but they have not met with the success which they desired.
Still, so firm has been their faith in these predictions, that they
have persevered, although the result of their labors, take it as a
rule, has not been of a cheering character. Tract societies, Bible
societies, missionary societies, and societies of almost every kind
and description have been organized with the best of motives, and with
vast expenditures of means, for the purpose of fulfilling the
predictions of the prophets concerning the inhabitants of the earth.
But there has been a power lacking, there has been an influence
wanting; there has not been that union, blessing of heaven and that
providential combination of circumstances necessary to bring to pass
the results desired. Man may toil, labor and expend his means and
forces, and may bring to his aid all the wisdom of which he is the
possessor to bring about divine results; but unless God give the
increase, as the Scriptures say, his labors will be fruitless. This
has been signally fulfilled in the results which we see around us at
the present time in Christendom, for their efforts have not been
crowned with success. Travel through the most Christian nations
today, and there is no disguising the fact that they are the most
deeply steeped in wretchedness and wickedness. It is true that men
live in the midst of these things until they become so accustomed to
them as to accept them as a necessary condition of affairs. They may
say it has been so from the beginning and will be so to the end, and
to attempt to change this and to introduce a state of society without
evil is utopian, it never can be effected. They accept the
wretchedness, degradation, poverty, prostitution, and all the numerous
evils that abound in the nations of which they are members, as
something that cannot be removed—as the necessary consequence of our
existence here on the earth. But the prophets have predicted that a
time shall come when our race shall be emancipated from these evils,
and when there shall be nothing to hurt or destroy in all the holy
mountain of the Lord; when swords shall be beaten into ploughshares
and spears into pruninghooks; when nation shall no longer rise
against nation, and war shall be learned no more. The prophets have
predicted that the time shall come when the knowledge of God shall
cover the earth as the waters cover the mighty deep; and when man need
no longer say to his neighbor, "Know ye the Lord," but when all shall
know him, from the least unto the greatest. There is no doubt that, if
anything in the Scriptures is true, these predictions are, and that
they will be verified to the letter. But man, in his efforts to bring
about this time, has labored without the concurrence of heaven,
without the divine blessing resting upon his labors. He has run before
he was sent; in his zeal he has undertaken measures for which he had
no warrant. What, then, shall cure or bring the means of cure to our
race? What shall ameliorate the condition of the human family? What
scheme shall be adopted to bring to the earth the blessings which we
are told it is our privilege to enjoy, at some period or other? Shall
man seek to bring this about without divine aid? Shall he
undertake to effect these great changes and bring to pass this great
deliverance without seeking the aid of the Supreme Being, who created
the earth and the inhabitants thereof? Or shall he in humility bow
himself in the dust, and await the dispensation of truth from heaven,
await the bestowal of the light and knowledge necessary to enable him
to accomplish these mighty works; and then, in faith, plant and water
and wait upon God to give the increase?
I think that the course that we as a people have taken, is the course
which all should take; I think it is the only proper and legitimate
course for any individual and people to take. Men may say that we are
deluded and that we deceive ourselves; they may say that our system is
one of imposture. Whether this be so or not matters but little to the
point in question; the course that we have taken, whether our system
be divine or not, is the course which all should take. What we have
done we have claimed to do under the inspiration and direct guidance
of heaven. Every move that we have taken since our Church was
organized, on the 6th of April, 1830, we claim has been by inspiration
and under the guidance of the Almighty. On the day I have named our
Church was organized by revelation. On that day the Church was
organized and ministers chosen; Elders were endowed with, or ordained
to, the Priesthood. They were sent forth by revelation, and commanded
to go to this place and the other place, to this and to that land by
revelation from the Lord. A message was given unto them, not from the
Bible, or Book of Mormon; not from any written record, not a copy or
transcript of some message carried by some previous generation of men;
but an original message, direct to them, to be conveyed by them to
their fellow creatures; a perfectly original message, so far as this
generation was concerned, delivered to them by the Almighty; and they
were sent forth to proclaim it to the inhabitants of the earth.
They were commanded by revelation to gather together. A place was
designated as a place of gathering. Circumstances favored the
procuring of that place; but they were not allowed to remain in it.
They were driven forth, and again they were guided by revelation to
another place, and again they were driven forth and compelled to
abandon their homes; and again another place was designated to which
they should go; again they were driven forth, and again they were
directed what to do, and they came to this land, guided by revelation,
inspired by the Almighty, not knowing where they were going. Thousands
started out on the plains without having the least idea where they
would stop; they launched forth on the trackless prairies without any
location ahead of which they knew anything; and when they reached here
they settled by revelation; and since then, in our movements, in our
settlements of various localities, in all our labors at home, going to
the nations of the earth or returning therefrom; in our migrations, in
sending out colonies, and in every variety of labor which we have
performed we claim to have been guided by the spirit of revelation;
and mark, my brethren and sisters, the wonderful results.
Have we had wealth? Have we had societies organized to aid us? Have we
had popularity with or popular support from the nation? No, we have
had nothing of the kind. We have stood alone, with none to aid,
sustain, or comfort but God. Instead of aid from our fellow creatures we have had persecution; instead of comfort we have had
reviling; instead of words of encouragement, we have, as it were, had
deep damnation poured out upon our heads. We have had adverse
circumstances to contend with, but we have also had that which is
better than all the world can bestow—the aid of heaven, divine
concurrence; we have had a combination of circumstances to aid us in
accomplishing the objects for which we started out. The result is, we
are in these valleys today—a people of varied nationality, of varied
creeds and modes of education, and a people as utterly diverse in
their original traditions and habits as men and women of our color
could be. And yet, what do we see? Why, throughout all this range of
valleys a people homogeneous, dwelling together in peace, love and
union, and enjoying all the blessings promised to the people of God in
the last days. I say all the blessings, but not in their fullness. We
are but imperfect yet; we are not prepared for these blessings in
their fullness; but so far as we are progressed and are prepared, they
have been bestowed upon us; and today we present to the eyes of the
world one of the most remarkable spectacles that can be seen.
Men may say, "Pooh, pooh, you Latter-day Saints are nothing! You are
too contemptible for notice!" But our acts show that there is a power
and an influence with us that the inhabitants of the earth elsewhere
do not possess. We are looked upon as a social phenomenon in the
earth; we are diverse from every other people; and our community is
the object of attention and I may say of respect that its numbers do
not entitle it to. Men from afar cannot cross the continent without
coming to visit the Latter-day Saints. Why is this? It is because
there is a feel ing throughout the earth that there is something
remarkable connected with us, that we are not as other people are.
What is it that distinguishes us from our fellows? What is it that
distinguishes us from the average American, Englishman, Scandinavian,
German, Swiss, Italian, or Frenchman, or from the average Asiatic?
There is something; they feel it and we feel it; and that distinction
is, we believe in revelation, we profess to be guided by revelation.
We are peculiar when compared with the rest of the world, because all
our movements are under divine guidance. We claim this, and we act
upon it; we seek for it, and God bestows it upon us. It is our
testimony, at least, that he bestows it upon us, for we see the
results. We see what is not witnessed anywhere else on the earth.
As I have already said, tract, Bible and missionary societies have
been formed, and the wealth of the nations has been poured into the
hands of religious people, and spent lavishly and without stint, for
the salvation of the human family; but where on the face of the earth
can you find the fruits to be witnessed before me today, and that can
be seen throughout the Territory of Utah. Why is this? Because, as I
have said, they have labored without the concurrence of heaven; they
have run before they were sent. But unto us, scattered, isolated
individuals, this message from God came, and there being a spark of
divinity within us, we received it and embraced it, and have
endeavored to live up to it, and God has blessed us and our labors.
But after all, what we have done is very little.
I have told you what has been remarked here, time and time again,
probably you have heard it, respecting our insignificance. I feel most
sensibly that, so far as numbers are concerned, we are a very
insignificant people. But I will tell you a remark, which I believe is
credited alike to the late Mr. Stephen Girard and to Commodore
Vanderbilt, both great financiers, that the hardest money they ever
earned was the first five hundred dollars they saved. Now the hardest
thing in building up a people is to gain a foothold. We have gained
this; we have gained and organized the first hundred thousand people.
We have achieved a position that will render our future progress more
rapid than in years past and gone. I fully expect to see the progress
of this work in the future much more rapid than it has been in the
past. I see the providence of God laboring to bring this about. Not to
build up a people distinct from all the rest of the earth; not to
build up some little, narrow sect or denomination; but this work and
Gospel is to embrace within its fold all Earth's children, every son
and daughter of God on the earth. That is its mission, and it will
accomplish it. But it will spread with increased rapidity from this
time forth. The foundation and cornerstones have been laid in tears,
blood, and in much sorrow, but they are laid firmly, cemented by the
sufferings, toils, faith and endurance of this people for the past
forty years; and I trust that they are laid so deep that they will
never be torn up, shaken or disturbed; and that upon them will a
superstructure be reared of such strength, beauty and symmetry that it
will be the joy and pride of the whole earth.
The labors of the Elders of this Church have not been confined to this
land, but they have extended to England, Scandinavia, some little in
France, a very little in Prussia, some in Switzerland; but vast fields
yet lie before us that we have not touched, and to which this message
must go. The throes of revolution which Europe is now undergoing I
look upon as the premonitory signs of that freedom that shall soon
dawn on that continent. Then the Elders of this Church will go
through Germany, France, Italy and Spain, and through every land in
Europe; for the "sick man" will yet open his doors to hear the Elders
of Israel, and Russia will unfold her gates and give them free
entrance, and they will go forth declaring the glad tidings which God
has given unto us to the oppressed of all nations, proclaiming unto
them that God has established a government which will be the means of
restoring to the earth the blessings for which mankind have sighed,
panted and labored for ages in vain.
When the mind, inspired by the Spirit of God, contemplates the future,
and sees the immense field which is widening before the Elders of this
Church, I, for one, feel that it ought to stir up every one of us to
the most energetic and resolute preparation for the great labor that
is fast devolving upon us, and that we live to discharge. Our own land
will yet be convulsed with revolution, for it contains within itself
the seeds of dire misfortunes, which will yet come upon the unhappy
Republic. We may deplore, mourn over and regret that such things do
exist; but they do nevertheless, and we should be blind indeed did we
shut our eyes to the fact, and fail to prepare ourselves for their
accomplishment. There is before this people, connected with our own
country, a destiny that is so glorious when we contemplate it in the
future, that it is enough to dazzle and oppress the mind of man at the
immensity of the labor that lies before us.
It may be said that this is all very foolish to think of or to talk
about; but it is no more foolish than it would have been, when
driven, peeled and scattered, we were coming out of Illinois, to have
said we should yet lay the foundation of a great State, such as we now
behold in these mountains. I tell you, my brethren and sisters, that
God has given to this people qualities which, in the contest of races,
must tell. There are qualities connected with the Latter-day Saints,
and principles connected with their system that, persecute and crush
them out as you may, as long as the men live who bear the authority,
and so long as the principles have a believer and practicer in the
world, must live, survive, and have influence in the midst of the
earth and upon the populations thereof. There is no disguising this
fact! Little plotters, such, for instance, as the "ring" in this city,
may fix snares and nets, and arrange toils, and think they are going
to stop the work of God, ensnare the feet of the servants of God, and
do wonderful things! Puny drivellers! They would raise their impious
hands and tear down the throne of Jehovah, and attempt to impede the
progress of his work; but, like others who have preceded them, they
will be covered with shame and confusion and go down to dishonored
graves, while the people whom they seek to oppress will continue to
rise and increase in strength and power by the practice of those
qualities which God has given unto us through revelation, until their
influence will be felt, not only in Utah Territory, but from sea to
sea, and give them time enough, and it will be felt throughout the
length and breadth of the earth, and thus will the sayings of the
prophets be fulfilled.
How else could they be fulfilled? Can you imagine any better plan than
this that you begin to see unfold before us? Can you think of any
other way by which these predictions will be fulfilled? I cannot. It
is simple, natural and scriptural, and perfectly Godlike in my sight,
and according to my limited ideas.
But as a people, we should endeavor, in the midst of all our troubles,
difficulties, trials and temptations, to remember that we are God's
people; that he has called us to be his, and we should put our firm
faith and trust in him and leave him to work out the results. And, my
brethren and sisters, if we are faithful to the truth which he has
revealed to us, he will bring to us greater salvation than we ever
conceived of, and will work out ways of deliverance of which we have
never dreamed; for his word, which cannot be recalled, has gone forth
through his ancient servants; and he is pledged to his servants in the
days in which we live; and he is pledged to us, to sustain this work
and to give it power and influence, and a foothold in the earth. And
there never was a people who prayed with greater unanimity for any one
thing, than do the Latter-day Saints that God will deliver his people
from the hands of their enemies and give them the victory. These
prayers will be heard and answered upon our heads, and, as I have
said, we will see deliverance and salvation such as we never dreamed
of.
I recollect very well the feelings that were manifested here, I think
it was last summer but one, by a scientific gentleman, who came into
our city, and for the first time was brought into contact with us. He
had known up when he was a boy in Illinois; now himself a professor in
one of the Illinois colleges, and a man of some note in the scientific
world. He had seen or heard something of our persecutions, and while
in conversation with me he remarked, "Mr. Cannon, when I looked upon
this beautiful valley and saw these pleasant homes, and your
people dwelling in contentment and peace, my heart was filled with
inexpressible sadness; I could not repress my emotions, my eyes
suffused with tears, and I wished from the bottom of my heart that you
were somewhere else rather than within the confines of the United
States, somewhere where you would not be subject to persecution; for I
know the intense bigotry and hatred of feeling that are entertained
towards you, and I know that it only awaits a fitting opportunity to
reenact the scenes that you have endured in the past." I appreciated
the kindness of feeling which prompted the remarks, but told him that
I viewed things differently from him. I was fully aware of the feeling
of which he spoke, and knew that it existed in certain quarters; but I
was also aware of one thing, which he (being an infidel) probably did
not understand, and that was—there was a God in heaven who ruled,
overruled and controlled all circumstances for the accomplishment of
his own designs. I further remarked, "Suppose we were away from here,
outside the confines of the United States, do you think we could live
in any spot on the earth without attracting attention? Do you think
that a people such as we are could go to any land, or into the
greatest desert on the earth, and live there any length of time
without attracting the attention of the world as much as we do now?
Why, the thing is impossible. When we came to this region it was as
much out of the way as any place on the earth could be. But after
coming here we demonstrated that the soil of these valleys, by being
watered artificially, would produce crops; and the result of our
experiment, for experiment it may be called, is that all this interior
basin, formerly looked upon as an irreclaimable desert, is a choice
land. The world once convinced of this, and population came to us, and
the railroad came across the continent, and we find ourselves right in
the center of the great transcontinental highway. If we were to go
into any other land it would be the same—we should attract population
and wealth, and the eyes of mankind would be directed towards us; and
were we to leave here we could not find a place where we should be
more secluded than we have been here; "but," said I, "we don't
calculate to leave here; we think we have got to the right spot, and
we calculate to remain, and the Lord will deal with those who seek to
deal with us." He felt that there might be some destiny about it, but,
being an unbeliever in God, he did not know anything about it, and did
not allow himself to have any faith concerning it. Still he saw that
we were a remarkable people, and said there might be a great future in
store for us, some destiny, of which he and others, who merely looked
on, might be very ignorant.
It is a truth, my brethren and sisters, there is a great destiny in
store for the Latter-day Saints. Men may fight this work and persecute
the people who sustain it; they killed Joseph, and thought they had
destroyed the cornerstones, as it were, of the fabric; and like the
men mentioned in the parable, having killed the heir, they thought
they could possess the vineyard, but they soon found out their
mistake; and so it will be with every move that is made against the
work of God—those with whom they originate will find they have made a
great mistake. They will be disappointed in the results of their
labors and operations, for God has spoken and his word will be
fulfilled and this work will increase and progress. And the day will
come, though, as I have said, we may regret and deplore it, yet
the day will come, and I would like the thought to be fastened, if
possible, so deeply in every heart that when persecution and annoyance
come upon us, you will not forget it—when the Latter-day Saints will
be the only well-governed people on this continent, and in their midst
will be found the only place where constitutional government will be
preserved in its old purity and integrity. I know that this sounds
strange, because the idea is that the "Mormons" are the most
despotically governed people on the face of the land. But I know that
there is not another people today under the light of the sun, from
the Atlantic to the Pacific, or from the Gulf of Mexico to the
Canadas, who are so free in every sense of the word, men and women, as
the Latter-day Saints, and who have greater liberty to do that which
is right in their own eyes.
I see the clock, and I am reminded that it is time to quit. May God
bless you, my brethren and sisters, and let his peace and preserving
care be over you, in the name of Jesus. Amen.
- George Q. Cannon