As this day's services may be considered introductory to our
Conference, which will commence tomorrow, I have been requested to
make a few remarks. I cannot say whether they will be few or many, but
let this be as the good Spirit of the Lord will. I am very happy to meet
with my brethren in Salt Lake City, and from the adjoining
settlements, and I presume, ere our Conference shall come to a close,
all the Branches of Zion throughout the Territory will be duly
represented here.
I have come from a point about one hundred and forty miles southeast
of here. The people of my immediate field of labor, I am pleased to
say, are generally healthy. There is some little sickness among our
children, and some of them have been called away; but as a general
thing, among the adult population, there is good health. We have had a
peculiar season, yet very passable crops, and a most beautiful time to
gather them. This year, so far, we have had peace with the Indians,
for the first time for quite a number of years, and I do assure you
that it is a relief to us. The Indians had an idea that they could do
with us as seemed them good—prey upon our substance and murder our
men, women and children whenever they felt like it, and the military
of the Government would wink at it, because they thought the
Government wanted to get rid of us; anyhow, they seemed to entertain
little fear with regard to the consequences of the crimes which they
committed amongst us. But last year, when General Morrow and a few
companies stationed here at Camp Douglas, came and paid us a visit, it
rather led the Indians to think that it was not altogether as they had
considered it, and though there was no fighting done, from the fact
that the Indians retreated, and hid themselves, yet the presence of
the soldiers was a protection to us while we gathered the most abundant
harvest that ever crowned the labors of our people in that section, and
it was a very good thing, and the Indians begin to think, perhaps, that
the soldiers would chastise them if they did not behave well. But from
the sudden and unexpected recall of the troops from our county, and the
apparent unwillingness of the Government to grant us any
com pensation for years of military service rendered in the defense of
our settlements, in which time, nearly one hundred of our men, women
and children, were mercilessly slain by the red-skins, besides
hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of stock driven off by
them—some of our people were foolish enough to think that the Indians
were more than half right in their views. Be this as it may, it is all
in a lifetime, and will come out right in the end. I feel thankful that we have had peace with the
red-men, and that no particular depredations have been committed by
them since, with the exception of a dozen or twenty horses which they
have stolen.
We are not mining in Sanpete County. I do not know whether there are
any mines there or not; we do not trouble ourselves a great deal about
that, and consequently we are not afflicted with people who will
dabble with mining, some of whom, when disappointed, will resort to
stealing and other crimes. We have not that class amongst us, and I am
glad of it, yet the more men who come amongst us with good and honest
hearts, the better. It matters little whether they are Jews or
Gentiles, if they possess honest hearts, we are apt to convert them
and bring them into the Church. That has been the case up to the
present time, and the consequence is, there are very few outsiders
there.
The Cooperative stores established in our various settlements are a
great blessing to us. They bring whatever we want, right to our doors,
and although the dividends are not very great in favor of the
stockholders, the benefits resulting from the establishment of these
institutions afford us ample remuneration for the advance of the
capi tal necessary to commence the business. We do not increase
rapidly in wealth, but we increase a little all the time, especially
when the Indians let our stock alone. Our Cooperative Institutions
are doing a very safe and good business. I do not think that any of
them in Sanpete County are very much in debt to the parent institution
in this city. I have cautioned them against it, and advised them to
pay fairly and squarely, and not to trust their goods out, but to do a
close, safe and secure business, that every person may be accommodated
with what he wants; and if they should not happen to have what we need
in every store at the time, they will kindly bring us whatever we sent
for, especially when we give them the money to operate with. This is
all that we can expect. Our books are open, and have never been closed
against the admission of capital. Stock is for sale in every
institution in Sanpete County, from twenty-five cents and upwards, and
our little boys and girls, taking advantage of the opportunity thus
presented, put in two bits once in a while, and by and by it gets up
to five, seven, eight or ten dollars; and they can get a share, and
there is quite an effectual door open for our youngsters to begin and
show their financial accommodation to the people.
Well, brethren and sisters, I will say nothing further about the part
of the county from which I came, but I will make a few remarks upon
the idea of our being a peculiar people. You know that we are regarded
as such, and if we look upon ourselves from a proper point of view, we
shall readily admit that in this respect outsiders have given us an
appropriate name; for we are a peculiar people whom God has chosen to
serve and honor him. But the form of government of this people a great
many have taken serious exceptions to: they think that one man is
armed with too much power, and sways an influence over so many that it
becomes a dangerous power and should be suppressed. I was reading, a
few weeks ago, a statement made by a reverend gentleman living in
Provo, and the most serious thing he had to complain of—and he
complained of a great many things—was the one-man power which exists,
and is tolerated and sustained in Utah.
I wish to speak a few words in relation to the one-man power, and in
the first place I will say that it is what every aspirant, politician
and statesman labors to acquire. I do believe that Mr. Grant, as good
a man and as brave a soldier as he is, if he could get the hearts of
all the people so that they would rally round his standard and sustain
and uphold him, it would be the pride and joy of his heart. But if any
man is thwarted in the desires of his heart in this respect, that is
no reason why he should oppose others in gaining influence over his
fellow men. All men love money, you know, more or less, hence they are
digging here in the mines to obtain it. I have no fault to find or
censure to bestow upon them for this operation; they are anxious to
obtain money. Some only get a little, very little, while others,
perhaps, make their millions. Now let me ask, Should the few who are
fortunate and gain their millions be cast out and crushed because of
their financial power, because they have struck a good lead and have
been successful, by the many who have gained only a few dollars, or
who, perhaps, have lost instead of gained? If then, this
principle is to be tolerated in financial matters, why not when
applied to influence and power in general?
I read that, in the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.
It seemed to be a kind of one-man power that was engaged in the very
act of rolling creation into existence. I do not know how much of
Democracy or of Republicanism there was in the beginning, I was not
there that I know of, or if I was it is so long since that I have
forgotten it. Judging by the accounts we have of matters then, the
government was a kind of one-man power; and if we look at things as
they really are, we shall find that sin entered the world, and death
by sin and that was by one man. Oh, that was grievous! That drew a
veil of gloom over the face of creation. That was one-man power. By
and by we read of another one-man power that came along and
counteracted this, and that was the Lord from glory—another kind of
one-man power.
Now, while I compare these things with the present order of things
which exists throughout our world, I do not wish to be understood as
depreciating our own government, for it is the best earthly government
in existence upon the face of the earth. It was ordained, organized
and suffered for a wise purpose in God our heavenly Father, which,
perhaps, I may be able to exhibit to you ere my remarks shall come to
a close; but be this as the Lord will, I do not wish to say one word
against our government; it is a good government, it answers the times
and fills a vacuum that perhaps nothing else could. But I am looking
at matters as they were from the beginning.
You know Jesus, when the Jews asked him about divorce and mar riage,
told them that Moses permitted them, for certain causes, to put away
their wives; but he also told them that it was because of the hardness
of their hearts that Moses permitted this, but that from the beginning
it was not so. Now whether it was because of the hardness of men's
hearts, or because of the softness of them, I am not going to say, but
I want to show the order of things as they were in the beginning, and
as they emanated from the bosom of the Almighty. That which was first
must be last, and that which was last must be first—a similar order of
things, redeemed, rescued and brought out of chaos, and returned to
the Father as they came from him, for he will accept nothing unless it
be what he gave; for, said the Savior, "Every plant that my heavenly
Father hath not planted, shall be rooted up." Hence, he will receive
nothing only what he gave. He gave us immortal spirits, he sent them
down here to be tabernacled in the flesh, and he expects that they
will return to him, and they all will in some grade, return to him
who gave them.
Well, the Savior of the world came to counteract the acts of the first
Adam. And what was the nature of the work he had to do? Why, to bring
life and immortality to light, to resurrect the dead, and to implant a
hope of eternal life in those who trusted in him; and this, be it
known to you, was accomplished by one-man power. Ye Roman soldiers who
guard the tomb, ye Jews, who had a temporary triumph by the death of
him whom ye crucified, know that the angel of God descends, the stone
is rolled away from the door of the sepulcher, the Lord of glory
rises, the dark curtain of death is rolled away and gives place to
life and immor tality, which dawn upon the world, in the person
of the resurrected Savior. This was produced by one-man power. Said
this one man in view of the responsibilities that were upon him, and
smarting under the pangs that he endured—"Father, if it be possible,
let this cup pass from me, nevertheless, not my will, but
thine be done." Why did not that one-man power resist the mind of his
Father and say—"Do you think I am going to lay down my life, to
sacrifice my existence to please you? No, I have an independent mind
and will and I am resolved to gratify them." That would have been in
accordance with the ideas of our day, but it did not correspond with
the program of the Eternal Father, and the object of his only
begotten Son in coming to this world was to accomplish and carry out
his part of that program, "Not my will, by thine be done." This
should be the feeling of the Latter-day Saints in relation to the
requirements of heaven upon them. "Not my will, by thine, Oh God, be
done." If the world reproach you for submission to the will of God,
refer them to the Savior, whose motto was, "Not my will, by thine be
done." How much honor and glory does the Savior of the world enjoy at
the present time? It is beyond the conception of mortal man. But how
much would he have enjoyed, and who among us would have had salvation
had he faltered in his hour of trial
and said—"I will not submit to this sacrifice?" Despise not this
one-man power, for before I come to a close I shall endeavor to show
to you that every son and daughter of Adam will be compelled to bow to
it, and the more they fight against it, the harder it will be for them
to submit to it in the end. Take it kind of moderately, then, and look
at it in its true light.
Now my friends and brethren, I want to tell you that our country is a
republic, and not a despotism, although some say it is rapidly
approaching to that. I cannot tell how that is, I am not much of a
politician, and do not give myself a great deal of concern about it.
But I comfort myself with the idea that the Lord rules anyhow, and
that he will, in time, have all things as he designs to have them, and
hence I take little interest in politics. But one thing I will say,
that is, that when the Government of the United States, although it is
republican, has any very difficult task to perform, in which the
interests of the country are largely at stake, it casts off
republicanism and adopts despotism. Perhaps you may think that is
slander, by I will suppose a case to illustrate the truth of my
proposition. For instance, the fate of the nation is suspended upon an
important battle about to be fought. Now, what kind of a government
prevails in that army? The most vital consequences hang upon the issue of the battle, and that issue
depends, to a very great extent, upon the orders of the commanding
General being carried out. He issues his orders, and his subalterns
are required to carry them out rigidly. The soldiers who constitute
the army must submit in every respect, they have not the right, by
virtue of their own opinion, to file off and deviate, in the least
degree, from the orders of the commander. The same is true of the
subaltern officers, and if any of them should adopt such a course they
are subject to be tried by court-martial and possibly to be executed.
Where is the republicanism or democracy in this? I tell you that when
it come to a vital point republicanism has to be laid aside,
and the one-man power has to be strictly obeyed.
Go, if you please, on board the ships of war of the United States, and
what kind of government will you find there? There again the one-man
power is absolute. I recollect reading an anecdote of General Jackson,
when defending New Orleans against the British. He put the city under
martial law, and in so doing some said he exceeded the bounds of his
authority. I cannot say whether he did or not, I do not care whether
he did or not; any way he saved the city and obtained a victory. But
in preparing for defense he took cotton bales out of the warehouses
and made a breastwork of them. A certain planter came to New Orleans
at that time, and hearing that his cotton bales had been taken by the
General, he made a terrible ado about them, and finally went to the
commander-in-chief of the American forces and requested that they be
returned. Said General Jackson—"Have you any cotton bales in our
breastworks?" "Yes, sir, I have so many, and they have been taken from
the place where they were deposited without my permission." The
General turned to an officer standing by, and said he—"Sergeant,
furnish this man a musket and an outfit." The articles were brought.
"Now, sir," said General Jackson, "if you have any cotton bales here,
step into the ranks and defend them." That was one-man power, and it
was a noble exercise of it, it showed that the commanding general had
the interest of the country at heart. You see, whenever there is a
vital question at stake, and matters of life and death are involved,
the one-man power has to be introduced in spite of everything, and
that is all right.
Well, we expect that the work of God in the last days will be more
important and will involve more vital questions than any other that
has ever been undertaken or accomplished on the earth, and
consequently the one-man power will be most loudly called for in
connection with it, and Heaven seeing this has given power and
influence to his servants. Have they got it by the sword or by
oppression? No, but they secure it just as the sun secures its
votaries. In the cool or cold season of the year, the reptiles and
many animals seek protection in dens and caves and they are not
allured therefrom by the lightning's flash or the thunders of heaven,
but when the rays of the glorious sun again warm and revivify the face
of nature, these animals and reptiles again come forth to bask in his
enlivening rays. So it is with the servants of the living God. They do
not obtain influence over the hearts of the children of men by the
sword or musket, but it is the light of truth, distilling like the
dews of heaven, and warming the hearts of those who love truth that
gives this influence, and you and I like to be under it. When I have
been in the cold shade and chilling winds, I like to come out to the
friendly sunshine, it is just as natural for me as it is to live, and
this is the reason why the Latter-day Saints rally under the influence
of the one-man power. There is the light: there are the rays that warm
the heart, cheer the affections, open up prospects for the future, and
make life agreeable.
Now I want to show you that we have all got to obey it. If you can get
rid of death and scale the walls of eternity without passing through
the dark valley of the shadow of death, then perhaps you may escape
this one-man power; but if you cannot do that, you cannot es cape it. I will quote you Scripture to show that such is the
case. In the last day, the Lord will gather the inhabitants of the
earth, just as a shepherd gathers his sheep; and in the process of
gathering some will be gathered who may be likened to goats, while
those who love to do the Master's will may be called the sheep. A
separation will take place between the sheep and the goats, the sheep
will be put on the right hand, and the goats on the left. It may be
said that goats are very good, their skins are useful and their flesh
is fit for food, but still they are goats, they are not sheep, they do
not produce wool, and they are separated from the sheep. So the people
of the whole world will be separated, and the righteous, or the sheep,
will be placed on the right, and the wicked, or the goats, on the
left. When that separation time comes, we will see who will obey and
who will not obey the one-man power. Says the Lord, the Righteous
Judge, to those on the right hand—"Come ye blessed of my Father, and
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world."
Do you think they will need any urging to obey? I do not think they
will. I hope I shall be among them. I shall be happy to see you there
too. "Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for
you from before the foundation of the world." Oh joyful invitation! A
heavenly influence rests upon us, and the light of joy beams upon our
countenances. He now turns to the goats, and instead of saying to
them, "Come, ye blessed of my Father," they hear the dread sentence,
"Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting punishment, prepared for
the devil and his angels." Do you think they will go? I am inclined to
think they will be compelled to go; I think they will have to obey
this one-man power.
Now, do not be displeased, jealous, or angry, because God has selected
men and placed them in the front rank to plead the cause of Zion. Let
God have his own way, and it will be better for you and better for us
all. The old Prophets were very singular men, they liked to have
things their own way, because they had their commissions from heaven,
and they liked to execute them, and God bore them out in it.
The other day I sent a note, a friendly warning to the New York Sun.
It was published and, I believe, copied in to some of the papers
published in this city, and yesterday I was reading the objections to
it in one of them. I will tell you what their reasoning made me think
of. When I was between six and seven years old, fatherless and
motherless, I was kicked and cuffed about the world, and grew up a
good deal like a wild plant, with very small opportunity for
cultivation, except that which I have accomplished by my own efforts.
When I was a little fellow, I recollect there was a man by the name of
Michael Hughes, who professed that, on a certain day, some six weeks
from that time, the world would come to an end. It disturbed me, for I
was only six years old, and I turned every way to get comfort and
consolation; there was quite an excitement among grown people upon the
subject. There was a certain lady teaching school in the neighborhood,
by the name of Miss Pindison, and I remember I sat down to reckon in
my own mind whether her school would be out by the time this man said
the world would come to an end, and I came to the conclusion that it
would not come to an end because Miss P—'s school would not be out.
And when I read the wonderful arguments in this city paper
about railroad communication and the interests which the same would
call into action, and the influence they would have in overturning
"Mormonism," I could not help thinking about my childish conclusions
in regard to the end of the world and the lady's school. The Lord does
not care so much about railroads; I do not think he will delay the
accomplishment of his purposes to accommodate any railroad
institution, but he will do all he desired regardless of this, that or
the other.
Now, my brethren and sisters, in the midst of all the conflicting
scenes that transpire around us, the mining operations, speculations
and worldly pride and vanity which are multiplying on every hand,
remember the words of the Savior—"Except ye are one ye are not mine."
No doubt some of you have had vessels containing a little oil, and you
may have dropped in, by accident or design, a few drops of water, and
then, in the same vessel, you have had oil and water, but no matter
how much you shook them, they would not unite. Why? Are they not both
liquids? Yes, but they will not unite, because they are dissimilar in
their natures, and there can be no chemical union between them. I have
heard men say, and correctly too, no doubt, that they were thankful
they had a name and a standing in the Church of the living God. I am
thankful for the same today. But is that all? I want to show you that
here is a man, for instance, who is required to pay his Tithing, and
says he—"I will pay just enough to save my skin, to save my name and
character, I will not pay a full Tithing, but just enough to whip the
devil round the stump." Here is another man who comes up and pays a
full Tithing of everything that he has. Let those two men sit down and
talk Tithing matters over together, and will their spirits run together? Are they not in the same
vessel—the same Church? Yes. Well, do their hearts, spirits and
interests unite? No, they are like the oil and the water in the same
vessel—they are distinct and they will not amalgamate. This will serve
to illustrate a great many other things which, for want of time, I am
not disposed to follow out. But one thing I will name, and that is in
regard to plural marriage. A great many men say—"Oh, well, I can get
along, I can live, and I believe I shall only have one wife." Well,
that is your privilege, nobody compels you to take more than one; but
with the commandment of the Lord before us like a blaze of light, can
we disregard it and serve him acceptably? If we can, then why not
retain those laws and commandments in heaven, and not send them down
here to earth? These commandments are sent for our good, for our
salvation and exaltation. Here is a woman who, in speaking of
celestial marriage says, "It will do very well for others, but it will
not do in my house;" "it may do
very well for somebody else, because her feelings are not quite so
fine as mine, she has been differently raised from what I have." I do
not know that the Lord will pay any particular respect as to how we
are raised, and how fine and delicate our feelings may be, or how
coarse and uncultivated they may be. I believe that if we submit to
the law of heaven, that law has power to refine us and to fit us for
immortality and eternal life. That is my opinion. Now hear this good
sister, she says—"It will not do for me, I am not going to submit to
it." Another sister says—"I am willing to submit to the law of
Christ." Let these two sisters come together and talk over the
law of marriage, and see whether their spirits will run together. They
will no more run together than water and oil will unite.
Says Jesus, "Except ye are one, ye are not mine." Here is a black man
and a white man, raised in the same house, but is that any argument
that they are both white or both black? No, it is no argument
whatever. Under the sound of my voice today there may be the best men
that ever lived, and there may be, for aught I know, just as bad as
ever lived. I hope not. But then, because we are within the walls of
this house, does that signify that we are blended together in heart
and spirit? No, no more than it proves that oil and water will unite.
If I understand it correctly, we have to be blended together, united
together completely in heart and spirit. I recollect once a man coming
to me with a watermelon in his hand. It looked so green, good and
fine, thought I—"We will have a feast on this watermelon." But as he
came near I caught a glimpse of it somehow, and discovered that it had been
plugged and the inside taken out, so that instead of a watermelon, he
was bringing a mere shell. There was the appearance of a watermelon,
but, alas! there was no meat in it, it had all been dug out. Now, it
is not the form of the union that the Savior wants among his people;
that will not suffice; it is the marrow, the fatness we want, and then
we can be melted into one, and this is what the Savior meant when he
said, "Except ye are one ye are not mine." But tares will grow in the
same field with the wheat, yet remember that tares are not wheat,
neither is water oil. Come what will, life or death, or whatever it may
be, never mind, trust in God, and he will bring you out all right.
I am thankful for this privilege of saying a few words. I hope I have
done no harm, and that I have not said anything that is contrary to
the will of God, or to the feelings of the pure in heart, for they are
just as sacred to me as the law of God, and I do not want to
unnecessarily offend the ungodly; but I am not so particular to spare
or shield them. I want to tell the truth, and bear a faithful
testimony. I have been in this Church about forty-three years—almost
from the beginning, for I was baptized the 31st of October, 1831, and
ordained the same day and sent to preach the Gospel, and more or less,
most of the time since, I have been engaged in that work. I used to be
very active and spry, but now I have got to be old and clumsy, and I
cannot travel about much. I have to be very careful of myself and keep
rather moderate and still. I yet enjoy life, and have very good
health, but an inclination of blood to the head causes a flush on my
countenance, which some may regard as an indication of better health
than I enjoy. But you know all men try to put the best side out, and
the women too; and if nature, in her operations, has caused a flush of
health to bloom on my countenance, it is only following the fashions
of the day—putting the best side out. God be thanked that it is as
well as it is.
Heaven bless you, is my prayer in the name of Jesus. Amen.