I have been called upon, but a few minutes ago, to address the
congregation who are here assembled, which I desire to do through your
united faith and prayers in my behalf. Without the assistance of the
Spirit of the Lord it is impossible for any person, in a religious
capacity, to edify and instruct his fellow beings. But, if we have the
Spirit of the Lord, however imperfect our abilities may be, we are
sure to edify and enlighten the people, and the person also who speaks
will be edified; for it is written in the Book of Doctrine and
Covenants, "He that speaketh, as well as those who hear, will be
mutually edified together," if the Spirit of the Lord is
poured out from on high upon us. It is said in another revelation that
"the Spirit of the Lord is given by the prayer of faith." Faith is
required on the part of the people to obtain all blessings of a
spiritual nature. And in order to have faith it is important that we
should do the will of God, otherwise our faith will be very weak
indeed. He that doeth his master's will, and has within him the desire
to work righteousness, can approach the Lord in faith; but if we do
not keep his commandments, and have not this desire, and do not do his
will, our faith becomes exceedingly small indeed.
It is, in my estimation, very similar to what we see transpire here on
the earth, between parents and children. When children become
rebellious, and do not perform the will of their parents, it is with a
very small degree of confidence that they come before their parents
and seek for any kind of favor or blessing. They come trembling,
doubting. They know that their conduct has been such as to prevent
them from receiving favors which they especially desire. Sometimes,
perhaps, the father will grant the petition of a rebellious son, when
he has sufficient confidence to offer up a petition to his parent. But
if that rebellious son has so far strayed from the parent that he has
no confidence to approach him, and does not offer up any petition to
the parent, it is very doubtful about the parent's taking into
consideration his wants, in some respects, and bestowing the favors
which he really desires. So it is between us and our heavenly Father.
Sometimes people, through their transgressions, through their
disobedience, through their rebellion to the principles that God has
revealed, may have lost their faith to that degree that they will not
go before their Father, will not pretend to ask him for a favor,
thinking that their transgressions are too great, and that the Lord
will not favor them. In this condition it is doubtful indeed if the
Lord takes into consideration their peculiar wants, and the especial
blessings which they would be glad to receive.
How many are the commandments and instructions which God has given to
this people? We have been blest in this generation with an abundance
of the manifestations of the spiritual blessings of the kingdom.
Perhaps there never was a people since the world began that have had
as much information, in so short a period of time, from their
organization, as what the Church of the Latter-day Saints have had.
When we take into consideration this one book, the Book of Mormon,
which God has, in mercy, brought forth, and the information that is
contained therein, and combine this information with the Jewish record
of the Old and New Testament, and then in connection with these two
books, the revelations that are contained in the Book of Doctrine and
Covenants; all the information that is, and that has been given from
time to time in that book. Then, in addition to these three books, all
the revelations that God has delivered to us by the mouths of his
servants from time to time, some of which have been published, others
have not been published, but are still considered by this people as
sacred as the things that are published. I say when we take into
consideration this flood of light and intelligence that has burst
forth upon the world, in the period of about forty years, we may say
that we have been blest so far as light and information are concerned,
far beyond any other people with whom we are acquainted. It is
true we have not the full history of all the various dispensations,
and all the manifestations of the mercy and goodness and power of God
among those different peoples and nations in ages past. We could not
say of a certainty how much information God may have imparted in those
dispensations. We read in some revelations what God has given about
the organization of ancient Zion. In the seventh generation from the
creation—from the days of Adam—we read about the preaching of Enoch.
How he went forth and prophesied to the nations. How he built up the
Church among the various nations. How they built up Zion. In the
history of this ancient Zion, we find that Enoch continued his
preaching in righteousness, three hundred and sixty-five years, before
Zion was prepared for a translation. How much was revealed during that
time we do not know, no doubt much was given; but I doubt whether
there was one hundreth part of the information communicated, during
the first forty years of the existence of ancient Zion, which has been
communicated to us, as a people, in our day.
Sometimes we find it to be the case, that God manifests his goodness
and mercy to a people, not in the way of revelation, but in the way of
power, without much information. We find this to be the case among
ancient Israel. They had been slaves in Egypt for a long period. They
had been taught, from their childhood up, to work mortar and make
brick, and toil and labor for the Egyptians—their taskmasters. During
this period of time they had not the opportunity of learning much.
There must be a little leisure granted that the mind may be taught,
instructed and educated; but it seems that their whole education for
two or three generations, or for a long time after they were brought
into bondage, was given to them by their task-masters—how to form
bricks or adobies, or whatever it might be—hard labor. If they had a
little leisure, instead of using it in treasuring up the knowledge of
God, they needed it to recuperate their physical systems, that they
might rest from their labors, and go again and drudge on the morrow.
This seems to have been the condition of Israel in the land of Goshen,
in Egypt. Consequently, when Moses went down to Egypt, he found an
ignorant people. It is true they kept up the form of the Priesthood
among them. Before the Priesthood of Aaron was confined to that
particular tribe, we have an account of this Priesthood being in
existence. After they were led through the Red Sea, before the Lord
set apart Aaron and his sons, before he confined the Priesthood to
Levi, when the children of Israel came and camped before Mount Sinai,
we recollect that there was a strict law given. The Lord told them
that he was about to descend on Mount Sinai, and he charged the people
that they should not break over certain bounds lest they should
perish, for if any person or beast should touch the Mount, they should
be stoned to death. The people, being ignorant and not fully
acquainted with the strictness of the commandments of the Most High, a
curiosity was excited, and some of the congregation, when Moses went
up to Mount Sinai, wanted to draw near, and the Lord sent Moses down
to charge the people again a second time. And the Priests were
commanded that they should not break through lest they should perish.
What Priesthood? Not a Priesthood that was confined to Levi, or to the
descendants of Aaron, or to Aaron himself; but it was a
Priesthood that existed among Israel. That same Priesthood that is
mentioned in one of the revelations in the Book of Doctrine and
Covenants, where in speaking of the two Priesthoods, it says that they
continue together in the Church of God, in all generations, when God
has a people upon the face of the earth; not confined to any special
lineage, so far as the Priesthood is concerned. Go down and charge the
Priests, that they do not break through. This organization may have
existed through all the period of the slavery of the children of
Israel, for several generations, although we cannot suppose that they
had been fully instructed. They had no printed records as we have.
They had not a large collection of books, in the form of Jewish
Bibles, to which to refer for information. They had not a large
collection of books similar to the Book of Mormon, for printing was
not then known. If any of their scribes found a little leisure to
write off some of the revelations, it would be only a stray copy or
two that would be in the hands of the children of Israel. We can
therefore see the difference between them and the Latter-day Saints.
They were permitted to enjoy, in a special manner, the power of the
Almighty in their midst. This shows that in some of the dealings of
God, he manifests his power, if he does not manifest his revelations.
There is a great deal of danger when the people see a great deal of
power existing in their midst. For the want of experience and
information, for the want of more knowledge, there is a liability to
sin against all of this power that may be made manifest in their
midst; and this would bring sudden destruction. This is no doubt the
reason why God did, in so short a time, send forth such swift
judgments upon the heads of the children of Israel. They had seen the
manifestations of his power while they were in Egypt; they passed
through the Red Sea, and then beheld the glory of God upon Mount
Sinai. If they would suffer themselves to reject this power thus made
manifest, it brought speedy destruction upon them.
When Moses was on the Mount, they made a golden calf. We no doubt are
led to wonder why it was, while the glory of God rested on the Mount,
and while the Lord was thus showing forth his omnipotent power—we are
led to wonder why it was—that they should build golden calves, and
fall down and worship them. It was because of their ignorance. This
glory appeared to them on the Mount like a natural phenomenon. Some
natural cause, perhaps, was assigned. They saw the clouds as we see
clouds upon our mountains. They might have thought that there was a
volcanic eruption on the Mount, and concluded there was no God in it;
and therefore, that they needed to make gods of their own finger
rings, and fall down and worship them.
The consequence was that the Lord sent Moses down out of the Mount
again. And he threatened that he would destroy the whole nation, and
make of Moses a great nation. But Moses quoted the promises that the
Lord had made to their fathers, and the Lord concluded to hearken to
the words of Moses and spare the people. Moses went down, and as he
drew near, he heard a great noise, and he saw them dancing around a
golden calf, and they were stripped naked. And thus they had turned
their hearts away from the Lord.
Now instead of bearing all this, the Lord inspired Moses to say to the people, let those who are on the Lord's side come forth;
put every man his sword by his side, and go in and out from gate to
gate throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every
man his companion, and every man his neighbor. And there fell of the
people that day about three thousand men. On this occasion great
destruction came on them, because of their transgression. It was among
a people that had been enlightened only by miracles, signs and
wonders. We find this to be the case throughout all the sojourn of the
children of Israel in the wilderness. They would become rebellious;
and the Lord had to send forth judgments, miraculous judgments upon
them from time to time. Their carcasses fell in the wilderness.
Sometimes a terrible plague would break out, and the only way that
Aaron could stay the plague was to get between them and the plague,
and offer up sacrifices. The flying serpents that infested that great
wilderness would destroy them, and the only way there was to be
healed, was to look upon a brazen serpent. And, after all, what was
their information? What was their knowledge concerning the things of
the kingdom of God? The very knowledge that they had when they came
forth out of Egypt, the knowledge of the Gospel, of its first
principles—even that knowledge seems to have been taken from them, and
a law of carnal commandments given to them instead.
The Lord, in this dispensation, is beginning to operate a little
differently from what he has done in former ages. In the first place
he performs some small miracles, such as unstopping the ears of the
deaf, and causing the lame to walk, the dumb to speak, some fevers to
be rebuked, some plagues to be stayed, and devils and unclean spirits
to be cast out. Instead of coming down upon a mountain, and causing
the earth to shake by his power; and instead of showing forth a pillar
of fire by night, and a cloud by day, he has taken a different
course: "First, give the people knowledge, give them understanding,
show unto them the principles of my Gospel, the principles of my law,
make them strong in the knowledge of God, and show forth but very
little power in their midst." This seems to be wisdom, that we may
have knowledge proportionate to the power that is made manifest, that
when he does show forth his power, we may turn not our hearts away
from him. In the beginning of this work it seemed to be necessary that
certain persons should be raised up to bear witness to the Book of
Mormon—of its divinity, that the work might be commenced. But did the
Lord continue to send forth his angels? Oh, no. After he had raised up
three witnesses in 1829, angels' visits became more scarce, because
the people were not prepared for them. Even these three witnesses were
not prepared for a day of trial; for they turned from the Lord, and
fell into transgression, and did not keep the commandments of God.
What was the matter with them? They had greater power made manifest in
their midst, than they had knowledge to keep them in the faith. If
they had had more knowledge, it would not have overthrown them. We
find that Oliver Cowdery, David Whitmer, and Martin Harris beheld the
plates that were translated, and heard the voice of the Lord out of
heaven, proclaiming in their ears that the translation had been
performed by the gift and power of God. And they put their testimony
in writing, and it went forth. But this was too great a power for the little knowledge that they had. And the consequences were that
they had trials, and these trials overpowered them. But we never have
heard that these witnesses have denied their testimony. Because they
were not all the time beholding the power of God made manifest, they
fell away. Now this should be a lesson to the Latter-day Saints, that
when we do see some small miracles wrought, we should strive to
strengthen ourselves up in the spirit of our religion, with light and
knowledge and information—to gain all that we possibly can, that we
may be spiritually strengthened; a miracle is external to the senses,
and has only an exciting effect upon the mind. Unless it is
accompanied by the Spirit of the living God in the heart, what are we
benefited? We are able to bear testimony to what our eyes have seen,
but where are we benefited, unless the Holy Ghost is shed forth in
our hearts?
Moreover, God has determined that in our day he will manifest his
power again. When I say our day, I ought to say in the days of this
last dispensation of the fullness of times. Before it closes up, it
will turn out to be one of the most magnificent eras ever manifested
to the world, so far as power is concerned. The Lord has taken this
method for forty years past, to prepare us for what is coming. And if
we will treasure up what the Lord has given, and suffer his will to be
written in our hearts, and printed on our thoughts, and give heed to
the teachings and counsel of the living oracles in our own midst, we
will be prepared, that when the day of power does come, we shall not
be overthrown.
Now, that there is a day of power coming, every Latter-day Saint, who
is acquainted with the predictions of the Prophets, is certain. He is
expecting that it will come in the time specified in those
revelations. God has said to us, in the Book of Doctrine and
Covenants, that when the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled, then
cometh the day of my power. "Thy people will be willing," says one of
the ancient Prophets, "in the day of thy power." The Elders of this
Church have gone forth among many nations. They rejoice in the power
that is made manifest, in some measure. God has said that they should
go and preach the Gospel to all nations of the earth; and that signs
should follow them that believe. In my name they shall do many
wonderful works. In my name they shall cast out devils, speak in other
tongues; and the eyes of the blind shall be opened. The Elders have
found this to be true. As far as the people have had faith, they have
seen this power, in some measure, displayed. But this cannot be said,
comparatively, to be the day of his power. When the day of the power
of the Lord shall come, then will be a time when not only the sick,
the lame and the blind, but also the very elements will be wrought
upon by the power of God, as the Lord has spoken, and be subservient
to the commands of his servants. Will the waters be divided? O yes. We
are told, in the prophecies of Isaiah, that when the house of Israel
shall return to their own country, he will strike the river Nile, in
the seven great channels, by which it enters into the Mediterranean
Sea. Instead of taking them above these seven different channels, he
will make a road through the seven channels of the river Nile; and the
people of Israel will go again dry shod, as they did anciently. In the
eleventh chapter of Isaiah, and the 15th verse, we read that "the Lord
shall utterly destroy the tongue of the Egyptian Sea," not the
main body of the sea. Those who are acquainted with the north portion
of the Red Sea know there are two prongs, one is called the tongue of
the Egyptian Sea; and the children of Israel shall go through dry
shod, and through the seven channels of the river Nile, as did Israel
in the day that they came up out of the land of Egypt.
Here will be a miracle wrought greater than that of speaking in
tongues or the healing of the sick—more convincing in its nature. When
this is done together with many other things, the children of Israel
will no longer feel themselves under the necessity of referring to the
day when the Lord wrought wonders as they came up out of the land of
Egypt. You know it has been a saying with the Jews some thousands of
years, that the God of Israel lives. "We do not worship the kind of
god which you heathens worship. We worship that God that divided the
waters, that came down on Mount Sinai." They always refer back to
miracles four thousand years old, that their God is a God of miracles.
This ancient proverb is to be done away, in modern Israel. Instead of
referring back to ancient miracles, it will be said, "The Lord liveth
that brought the children of Israel from the land of the north, and
from the countries he has driven them to the land of their fathers."
That will be the time when Israel will be willing. All Israel will be
willing to acknowledge the power and glory of that God whom they
serve. It seems that the Lord is going to enact over again, a thing
that he did after they came through the Red Sea. After they came
through the Red Sea, the Lord brought the children of Israel into the
wilderness, and kept them there forty years, so that all the people
perished except Joshua and Caleb. When the Lord brings the people of
the House of Israel, in the latter days, instead of taking them direct
to the land of Palestine, he brings them forth into the wilderness
again, which you will find recorded in the 20th chap. Ezekiel. "I will
bring you into the wilderness, and plead with you face to face." Now
if the Lord did plead with them face to face in the wilderness of the
land of Egypt, and gave them revelations there, if his presence, at
first was with them, and was not taken from them at the first, so will
he do again—he will plead with them face to face.
I do not think, however, that they will, in the latter days, so far
transgress, as to bring upon themselves the curse that came on their
fathers, in ancient times; for then he took from them the glories of
the covenant of the Gospel, and introduced another covenant, the
covenant of the law. The first tables of stone, we are informed by the
inspired translator, contained, not only many instructions for the
government of the people, but revelations containing the Gospel of the
Son of God; the principles of the higher law, that were calculated to
cause all who obeyed the same, to enter into his rest, which rest was
the fullness of his glory. These tables were broken to pieces, because
of the worship of a golden calf. The first covenant was broken. And
when Moses went into the mount a second time, the ten commandments
were the only things that were contained on the second tables, that
were on the first. But in addition to that, was added the law of
carnal commandments. Hence the Gospel was taken away. Its higher
ordinances were withheld. The higher Priesthood was withheld. The sys tem that was intended to make them a kingdom of Priests was
withheld. And they were left with the law of carnal commandments. A
law by which they could not live. Statutes which were not good, and
judgments whereby they could not live. But in the latter days we have
reason to believe that the children of Israel will never experience
such a curse as this. That the presence of the Lord will not be
withdrawn from them as it was then. But coming again to the 20th
chapter of Ezekiel, we find that after the Lord has brought them into
the wilderness, we are informed that "he will bring them into the
bonds of the covenant, not the law of carnal commandments, but into
the bonds of the new and everlasting Covenant" that will be renewed
for them. That will be something binding. "I will bring them into the
covenant, and purge out the rebellious that shall be among you." They
shall not enter into the land of promise, he will not let them get in.
God did these things in ancient times, and foretold what he would do
in the latter days.
We have been brought here as the beginning of the great latter-day
kingdom—brought from the nations—established in these lofty regions of
our continent—in these mountain valleys. We have been brought here,
and instructed, and taught for many years. In what? Not in a law of
carnal commandments. I think I will take a portion of that back. I
will say that we have been instructed in the law, the principles of
the new and everlasting covenant, which has not as yet been taken from
us; but in addition to that, because of the hardness of our hearts, we
are deprived of some blessings that pertain to this new and
everlasting covenant. Do you wish to know what blessings have been
withheld from us, that pertain to the higher law? I will tell you. In
the year 1831, soon after God first established this Church, when he
took his servant, Joseph, the Prophet, and many of the first Elders of
this Church, and brought them together in the western boundaries of
the State of Missouri, and pointed out to them where the city of the
New Jerusalem should be built, and where the Temple should be located,
certain laws were revealed. These laws, if adopted, were calculated to
make this people of one heart and mind, not in doctrine alone, not in
some spiritual things alone, not in a few outward ordinances alone,
but to make them one in regard to their property. God pointed out
certain laws in 1831, and which were more fully revealed in 1832, and
in 1833, he told us what the order of the kingdom was, in regard to
our property. Now what was the law? The Lord ordained that every man
who came up from the churches abroad to that choice land, where the
Zion of God is to be built in the latter days should consecrate all
his properties. In what way? How consecrate it? In what form? Now in
this Territory we have had a form of consecration, some have complied
with that form, but where is there a man who has been called upon to
comply with it in reality. The law was, consecrate all of your
properties, whether it be gold, or silver, or mules, or wagons, or
carriages, or store goods, or anything that had any wealth in it—all
was to be consecrated, to come to the Lord's store house. Agents were
appointed to receive these consecrations. Not consecrate to any man,
or to these agents, but consecrate to the Lord, for his storehouse.
Now, I ask, did not that make us all equal? Supposing that a man came to Jackson County, with five hundred thousand dollars, and
another came with five dollars. If both of these persons consecrated
all that they had, would they not stand on a platform of equality?
Both of them worth nothing at all. So far as property is concerned
they were equal. Now after this consecration, what then? We were not
counted really worthy to receive bonafide inheritances immediately,
but I will tell you what we were counted worthy of, we were worthy of
being the Lord's stewards, as you will read in many places in the Book
of Doctrine and Covenants. What is a steward? Is he a bona-fide owner
of property? No. If I were called upon to be a steward over a certain
farm or factory, the business is not my own, I am only as an agent or
steward to take charge of the concern, and act upon it, as a wise
steward, and to render up my account to somebody. The Book of
Covenants informs us that it is required at the hand of every steward
to render an account of his stewardship, both in time and in eternity.
To whom? To those whom God selects and appoints. If it be the first
presidency of the Church in connection with the Bishop; then these are
the proper agents to whom a strict account of that stewardship must be
rendered. But how do we become stewards? Let us inquire into this. How
were the people, after they have consecrated as the law required—how
were they to become stewards? The Lord's agents, the Bishops, that had
a knowledge of the things of God, were to purchase lands by this
consecrated property, from the General Government, or from
individuals, as the case might be. They were to purchase wagons,
mules, and all that was requisite to carry on mechanical business, and
stores, according to the amount of property consecrated and put into
their hands. This was to be done by the Lord's agents, and those whom
they should call upon to assist. When all this land, and tools and
machinery, and horses, and sheep, and so forth, are procured out of
the Lord's money; what then? Does every man receive an exact equality,
or amount of this property? No. Why not? Because some men have more
ability for managing a stewardship than other men. Some men perhaps
all their lifetime have been accustomed to carrying on great
establishments and know how to conduct great establishments. Is it to
be supposed that such a man would be limited to the same amount of
stewardship as the man who has fifty acres of land? It may require
twenty, or a hundred times the amount of stewardship to be placed in
the hands of such a man, than what is required of other stewards who
manage farming only. Does not that make them unequal? No. They are
all stewards. The property belongs to the Lord. But, inquires one,
does not this man of great capability have more of the luxuries of
life? No. Because he has to give an account of his stewardship to
the Bishop, and if this man of high capability has made at the end of
the year a hundred thousand dollars, he is required to hand in an
account to the Bishop, at the end of the year, and if there have been
made a hundred thousand dollars, clear gain, does the man own it? No.
It is brought to the Lord's store house. The poor man that has gained
fifty dollars extra from his farm hands in his fifty dollars and an
account of his stewardship. If the man that has handled a five hundred
thousand dollar stewardship has used it improperly, the account will
show. "I have done thus and so. I have purchased such and such
machinery." If he has laid out his stewardship for self-aggrandizement
or unwise purposes, another man is placed in his stead. And the poor
man who has gained his fifty dollars, if he has purchased any thing
that is unwise and unnecessary, and he has limited himself to that
fifty dollars as clear gain, he will be moved out of his stewardship.
At the end of the first year all these stewardships are made equal
again; it is all consecrated unto the Lord's storehouse, they are all
on an equal footing again. Then, again, during the year before these
accounts are rendered up, if they are wise stewards there will be no
advantage, each one will be on his guard all the time lest his
stewardship is not approved of.
That is the order of heaven. That is the ancient order, and it was the
order instituted in the year 1831. What did the Lord say about those
who would not comply with his order? Some of our eastern farmers, when
they left their homes in Vermont, or in the State of New York, and
came up and saw the beauty of that land, and the depth of the soil,
and the beautiful timber in Jackson County, they forgot that they were
to be the Lord's stewards, and began to think that they could use
their own property, instead of complying with the law of consecration.
"What a blessing it will be, said they, if I can buy up this land at a
dollar and a quarter, per acre; for I can sell it out for a hundred
times as much and make myself a rich man; I will not sacrifice my
property." These were some of the feelings that filled the hearts of
some. But the Lord sent up a revelation, given through his servant
Joseph, in Kirtland, warning the Saints against their receiving their
stewardship without complying with this law of consecra tion. That if
they would not comply with it, their names should be blotted out, and
the names of their children; their names should not be had on the book
of the law of the Lord. That they should perish, &c. We find that the
people did not comply, and hence the Lord, in about two years and four
or five months, suffered our enemies to be stirred up against us, and
the Saints were driven from the land. They were driven forth, in the
bleak cold month of November, to wander whithersoever they could for
protection. What was the reason? The Lord tells us, he suffered this,
because of our transgressions. The Lord informed us, that there was
covetousness in our midst, and "for this reason I have suffered them
to be removed." The Lord commanded us to purchase all of that land,
but instead of doing this, many were holding fast to their dollars,
and thought that the Lord intended to cheat them out of their
property, and they said—"We'll see what the Lord will do for his
people. If he will show forth his power, by and by, when all gets to
be pleasant, we will take our property and go and settle down among
the Saints." They did not believe what the Lord required, hence they
were scattered from synagogue to synagogue. In one of the revelations,
says the Lord, "I will remember them in the day of my power, when the
time shall come, but they shall suffer tribulation for a little
season. And when they have been sufficiently chastened, they who
remain shall return with their children to build up the waste places
of Zion."
I have related these things that we may understand wherein we have
once had the privilege of complying with the celestial law in regard
to our property, and wherein a great princi ple has been put
out in our midst. In all of our wanderings the celestial law has never
been put in practice, as regards our property. But the Lord has not
left us any more than he did the children of Israel, when they were
rebellious. Instead of entirely casting them away, and denouncing
them and rejecting them as his people, he still gave ancient Israel a
law. Instead of entirely rejecting us, he gave us another law. One
inferior to the celestial law, called the law of Enoch. The law of
Enoch is so named in the Book of Doctrine and Covenants, but in other
words, it is the law given by Joseph Smith, Jr. The word Enoch did not
exist in the original copy; neither did some other names. The names
that were incorporated when it was printed, did not exist there when
the manuscript revelations were given, for I saw them myself. Some of
them I copied. And when the Lord was about to have the Book of
Covenants given to the world it was thought wisdom, in consequence of
the persecutions of our enemies in Kirtland and some of the regions
around, that some of the names should be changed, and Joseph was
called Baurak Ale, which was a Hebrew word; meaning God bless you. He
was also called Gazelum, being a person to whom the Lord had given the
Urim and Thummim. He was also called Enoch. Sidney Rigdon was called
Baneemy. And the revelation where it read so many dollars into the
treasury was changed to talents. And the City of New York was changed
to Cainhannoch. Therefore when I speak of the Order of Enoch, I do not
mean the order of ancient Enoch, I mean the Order that was given to
Joseph Smith in 1832-3-4, which is a law inferior to the celestial
law, because the celestial law required the consecration of all that a
man had. The law of Enoch only required a part. The law of
consecration in full required that all the people should consecrate
everything that they had; and none were exempt. The law of Enoch
called upon certain men only to consecrate.
Now did the people keep this second law—inferior to the first? The
Lord picked out some of the best men in the Church, and tried them if
they would keep it. "Now I will," says he, "try the best men I have in
the Church, not with the celestial law, but they shall consecrate in
part, and have a common stock property among them." And in order to
stir them up to diligence, he fixed certain penalties to this law,
such as, He shall be delivered up to the buffeting of Satan; sins that
have been remitted shall return to him and be answered upon his head.
How did they get along then? The Lord tells us that the covenant had
been broken. And consequently it remained with him to do with them as
seemed to him good. Many have apostatized since that day. Sidney
Rigdon for one, Oliver Cowdery for another, and John Johnson for
another. Why have they apostatized? They did not comply with the
covenant that they made in regard to the law given to Joseph Smith,
that was afterwards called the law of Enoch.
Did the Lord forsake us then? No, he had compassion upon us—still
looked upon us as the latter-day kingdom—did not take the kingdom from
our midst, but continued to plead with us and bear with the
infirmities of the people. "Now I will, says he, "try them with
another law." So in the year 1838, he gave us another law, called the
law of Tithing. Let me name now some of the conditions of Tithing,
according to that law. The Lord gave a commandment that the
people that came up—gathered with the Saints—should consecrate, not
all their property, but all their surplus property, and after they had
consecrated all their surplus property, there should be a certain
portion, not called surplus, which they should retain; and out of this
that is not called surplus property, they should try to make an
income, and if they could make an income, they should consecrate
one-tenth part of that income.
Now of you who have been in this Territory for twenty or twenty-six
years, how many have complied with this law of Tithing? How many have
had surplus property, over and above one-tenth part? How many would
come here with fifteen or twenty thousand dollars' worth of property,
and pay one-tenth, as though this was surplus. Is that the law of
Tithing? If it is, I do not understand it. If I understand the law of
Tithing, it requires a man who has fifteen, or twenty, or fifty
thousand dollars, when he comes up to Zion, to go up to the Lord's
agent, the Bishop, and say, "I have so much money, and so much of a
family; now tell me, Bishop, how much of this is surplus property? Oh,
says one, that ought to be left to our own judgment. Our own
judgment! Who in the world among all the Latter-day Saints would have
any surplus property if it is left to his own judgment? How many in
Ogden have given surplus property today? Go throughout all this town
and ask them if they have surplus property. "Oh, no, I have not quite
enough to carry on my business according to my own mind. I have a
manufacturing establishment here, I wish I had a few thousand dollars
more than I have to put in it. I want twenty thousand dollars more. I
have no surplus property." Some man starts another business, and he
has no surplus property. And you may go through all the towns and
villages and not find a man who has surplus property. He could not be
found. Then I should judge, that the men to determine what is surplus
property, and what is not, are those men whom God has ordained to this
power, namely, the Bishops, who have a knowledge of these things by
the power of the Holy Ghost, and by virtue of their calling. The
President of this Church will be prepared to say whether a man has
surplus property or not, and let him specify, and the man be
satisfied. This is the law of Tithing, inferior to the full law of
consecration, and also inferior to the law of Enoch.
Now for the other portion of the law of Tithing. Say a man comes here
with fifty thousand dollars and it is judged by proper authority that
forty thousand is surplus. He goes to work with the remaining ten
thousand and gets him a farm and home, and enters into some other
business, and makes not only a sufficiency for support, but finds at
the year's end that he has made a thousand dollars: he has to pay
one-tenth of that, that is a hundred dollars. This is really the
meaning of the word Tithing. But the surplus property, the forty
thousand dollars, are consecrated as is required in the former part of
the first paragraph of the revelation on Tithing.
How many of the Latter-day Saints have complied with even the least
thing that God has given in property matters? Perhaps a few, and no
doubt many have done well; and others have been careless; not feeling
to rebel against God, but a little too careless or indifferent about
paying one-tenth of their income. Now is this right? Can we be
prospered as a people? Ought we not to be ashamed if we cannot
comply with one of the lesser laws? It seems to be the last law, in
regard to property, that God has given to save this people. We ought
to ask ourselves, "Am I fulfilling this law? Am I preparing myself for
the day when God shall require me to enter into the higher law?" I
will say that the day will come, and is not far distant, when this
higher law will be carried into effect, not only in theory but in
practice. At present, God has eased up on the law in part, that is
there is a revelation given in the year 1834, on Fishing River, in
which the Lord says, "Let those commandments which I have given,
concerning Zion and her law, be executed and fulfilled after her
redemption." That is as much as to say, "You are not prepared to keep
them. If I do not now relieve you in some measure from the
responsibility, they will bring you under great condemnation." The
revelation does not say that we shall not enter into that order, but
we are not bound by penalties so to do. Now I believe that before the
redemption of Zion, there will be a voluntary feeling to carry out the
celestial law. I found my belief on the prophecies that are given in
the Book of Doctrine and Covenants. The Lord has said that before Zion
is redeemed she shall be as fair as the sun, clear as the moon, and
her banners shall be a terror to all nations. And that it is needful
that Zion should be built up according to the law of the celestial
kingdom, or I cannot receive her unto myself. He cannot receive her
only as she is built up according to the full law of consecration. All
the Zions that have ever been redeemed, from all the creations that
God has made, have been redeemed upon that principle. And God has told
us in the revelation given to ancient Enoch, "I have taken Zion to
mine own bosom out of all the creations that I have made." Now if he
has done this—if he has selected Zions, he has done it from the
different worlds, by the celestial law; and they are sanctified by the
same law, and they dwell in his bosom—that is under his council and
watch care, in the presence of his glory, exalted before him, all
redeemed by the same law, hence partakers of the glory, the same
exaltation, the same fullness in the eternal worlds. Therefore if the
latter-day Zion would be counted worthy to mingle with the ancient
Zion of Enoch, caught up before the flood, if they would be counted
worthy, when the Zion of Enoch comes, to be caught up to meet them,
and to fall upon their necks and they to fall upon the necks of the
Latter-day Saints, and if they would enjoy the same glory, the same
exaltation with ancient Zion, they must comply with the same law. "I
cannot receive Zion to myself," saith the Lord, "unless built up by
this law."
There will be a great preparation before the redemption of Zion.
Supposing we should all be returned, say this fall, or next year, to
Jackson County. Say a large majority should be returned to the land of
our inheritances, in Missouri, and in the regions round about, and it
should be said to us, "Go ye my sons and build up Zion according to
the celestial law, through the consecration of the property of my
Church, as I have commanded," would you be prepared to do this work?
Have you an experience in it? Have you learned the lesson by
experience? No, no; years after years have passed away since that law
was given, the then middle-aged are now tottering to their graves; the
youth have grown to be men, and the law has not been practiced in our
midst. We have the mere letter of the law. The theory has been
in existence, but who has practiced upon it? Will you take us in our
ignorant state? While we have been every man for himself, and
accumulating all that he could grasp, and almost neglecting the lesser
law of Tithing, could it be expected that the Lord would say to a
people thus situated, and without experience in these things, go back
to Jackson County? There must be a preparation here; and it would not
surprise me, if the Spirit of the Lord should come upon the Presidency
of this people, and we should be told to enter into the higher law
pertaining to our property. The Lord wishes to put it out of the power
of every man to be lifted up above his brother or his sister, so far
as wealth or property is concerned, by making his people equal,
keeping them equal; not by a division of property, but upon the
principle of stewardships. That keeps them equal. There is no chance
of their becoming unequal. It is out of their power to be unequal. If
a man loses all that he has by fire, and all his stock should die, the
fact is, he is just as rich as all the others, because he is a
steward. He owns nothing, neither do they. "But," inquires one, "shall
we never become bona fide possessors?" Yes. As we now see, children
may be acting for their father, but still they are considered in the
mind of the father as being the inheritors of his property at a
certain time; so with the Latter-day Saints. They may be made
stewards, but the time will come when they shall be bona fide
inheritors. The revelation tells us when that time shall come. That
when the seventh angel sounds his trumpet, and after the people have
proved themselves in their stewardships, and when Jesus comes in his
glory, they shall be made possessors, and be made equal with him.
Consequently, when the Lord promised to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the
land of Canaan, it was no testimony that they should enter in
possession of that land the next day after the promise was made. They
had to wander about in it, and prove their worthiness until the time
should come when they should come forth from their graves, and the
earth should be transfigured and cleansed from the curse, then they
should be made possessors. So with the Latter-day Saints. The Lord
said on the 2nd of January, 1831, "I design to give to you a land of
promise upon which there shall be no curse, when the Lord shall come:
behold this is my covenant with you, that you shall receive it for an
inheritance, while the earth shall stand, and possess it again in
eternity, no more to pass away." This did not mean that we should come
in possession at that time, or in 1831; but when we had proved
ourselves as wise stewards, and had rendered up the account of our
stewardship, and had been accepted, then we should receive an
inheritance, not only in time, but while eternity should endure.
Amen.