We used to sing and hear a song entitled: "There is a good time
coming, wait a little longer." It appears to me that we are now
enjoying one of the good times in these meetings. I realize that it is
so, for one, and I doubt not that the good Saints of Cache Valley also
appreciate the same. If we can only preserve in ourselves that freedom
of spirit which will enable us to comprehend the present, as it really
is, we may rejoice indeed in knowing that the good time has overtaken
us. It is not with us now as it has been, when scantiness and even
hunger have been in our habitations. At present, so far as the
comforts of life are concerned, the people are enjoying a competency
of food and raiment, house and home, kindred and friends. While these
things have come forward to us, the means of advancement in every
sphere of usefulness are in reach. The imple ments to accomplish more
labor are in our hands. They have overtaken us and are overtaking us,
and will continue to do so, by means of which the amount of good which
the Saints have been enabled to do in any given time in the past, is
very small compared with the measure of good which they will be
enabled to accomplish in the future. A little while ago it was not
oftener than once in six months that we heard from the States. It is
only a little while since it took us three and four months to travel
from the States to this place, now it is only a matter of as many
days. Once it took all of six months to hear from the old countries,
say London; now we hear that "yesterday, President George A. Smith
attended Conference with the Saints in London."
By these things we can see that we have come upon times when, if we
are up to the scratch, we live very fast. It is no vain, untrue
or humorous saying that we are living in a fast age. In matters of
intelligence and business transactions we live weeks in a day, if we
wisely direct our time and energy, when compared with those who have
preceded us.
When we contemplate this, and the rapidity with which Divine
Providence is rolling on the events of the latter dispensation,
crowding upon our attention the great labors and considerations of
this latter-day work, it certainly does seem necessary that we
preserve in ourselves that life and activity that we can come up to
the standard of his readiness to direct and dispose of us, that we may
be able to receive his word and the counsels of his servants and
execute and carry them out. I am very sure that the good people of
this county do not think they are likely to get out of business since
President Young told them, yesterday, that they might soon see a
Temple close by here on the bench. The good work seems to be advancing
upon the hands of the Saints, mills, railroads and telegraphs, are
coming to our relief and aid.
I should like to say a few words upon the subject of Tithing, and I
believe I will just touch upon it. It is a subject that was talked
about yesterday with some emphasis and importance, and one that has
seemed to present features of more than ordinary interest to my mind
for some time back. People of all denominations are very ready to say
that the "earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof," and I do not
suppose we could find a Saint in all Israel, or in these valleys of
the mountains at any rate, but what would utter that sentiment and
think he did it with real good Christian cordiality. But when we come
to con sider the matter as it really is, we find that our feelings and
actions do not after all exactly coincide with this expression. I
heard a man say, but a few days ago, "I bought such a piece of land—I
paid for it and it is mine." I wonder if that man, just then, thought
the earth was the Lord's? I do not think he thought that particular
patch was. It is one thing for us to acknowledge with our lips and to
consider in our hearts, that the earth is the Lord's and the fullness
thereof, but it is quite another thing for us to realize it, and to
place ourselves in a true and proper attitude on that question,
dealing with the Lord our God in relation to it with the justice,
sincerity and propriety that we would with each other here on the
earth.
If a man has obtained possession of a piece of land and put up a house
thereon, and he rents that to another person, he actually does expect
that that person will pay him the rent due for the use of it. It is
one of the plainest business transactions of life; and the man who
occupies that house and land can hardly feel to say—"The earth is the
Lord's and the fullness thereof;" instead of saying that, he
says—"This house and piece of land belong to that man, and I have to
pay him rent for it." These things make us realize our bearing and
position one with the other in regard to business transactions.
But who is it that has placed the earth and its surrounding elements
subject to the powers, governments and inhabitants of the earth? It is
he who created them, and he it is who says that the earth and its
fullness are his; and when we look at this matter and consider it
carefully there is something about the subject of Tithing that
commends itself strongly to our attention; and if we will be
honest with ourselves and honest, with our God we must look at it in a
very different light from what many do.
When the Bishop or his clerk goes round to settle up Tithing, he finds
a class of persons who act as though they felt it their bounden duty
to get the figure of their Tithing down to the lowest possible
scratch; and when they have done this they feel thankful that they
have got off with paying so little, without any regard whatever to
the figure they should have paid. Well, it is not given to the
Bishops exactly to tell a man—"You must pay so much." There is the
greatest possible liberality manifested, so as to give every man an
opportunity to act upon his own agency in saying what he has made and
what he has done with the means which have been placed in his hands,
and what he ought to pay as interest or Tithing, so that when the Lord
brings these matters to adjudication, we shall be judged out of our
own mouths.
The matter of Tithing is one that the churches of the world have taken
up as well as the Saints, even the Church of England has an idea that
its members should pay Tithing. They have learned this from the Church
of the living God. The institution of Tithing is one which is
emphatically binding upon us, and is as essential to our salvation and
exaltation in the kingdom of God, so far as temporal things are
concerned, as the ordinance of baptism for the remission of sins, and
the laying on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost are in the
spiritual part of the Gospel. Take it into account and consider it
when and how you may, and you will find that the man or men, who
consider Tithing of no moment, and who think they have obtained a
blessing in shirking the payment thereof, will dry up and taper off in
their faith, and before they know it they and their household will be
suffering in the darkness of the world, in sin and transgression.
The law of Tithing is an obligation laid upon all the people of God.
It has been so in every age, and we have no account of the prosperity
and progress of God's people without Tithing being a standing law in
their midst, which they continually observed. That is not all, my
brethren. The Church of the Lord had this among them before ever the
Gentiles knew what it was to assess and collect taxes, and it is from
this that they learned to do so. The law of Tithing was in the
household of faith, the Church of God on the earth, before the old
Babylonish nations were founded, and they as well as the sectarians
have learned pretty much all they know from the people of God at one
time or another. Tithing is an institution which has prevailed from
the beginning, and it looks to me as though it was the consideration
required by the Lord—the Creator of the earth, from men who dwell upon
it, as a material something by which they may acknowledge to him, in
deed and in truth, that the earth is the Lord's and the fullness
thereof, and by means of which they can restore to him, in the order
of his appointment that which is his.
The brethren sometimes say—"I pay my Tithing. This is mine. I have
given so much." Yours, is it? How is it yours? Was it not read here to
us yesterday—"Will a man rob God? Yet ye have robbed me. But ye say,
Wherein have we robbed thee? In tithes and offerings." If we have
withheld and kept back any portion of our Tithing, then have we
robbed God, for that full tenth is not ours in any sense of the
word, it is the Lord's, and if we keep it from him we rob him of that
which is his. We should keep correctly in our minds and understandings
that which is ours and that which is the Lord's. When the sons of God
shouted, and the morning stars sang together for joy at having the
earth prepared to come and dwell upon, to pass through this state of
existence, did we not then realize that it was being prepared for us,
but that it was his, and that we were coming to dwell upon it as his?
Shall we forget this obligation and position? Let us be careful not to
do so.
President Smith alluded to the potency of this law of Tithing, and the
terrible consequences of disobeying it as illustrated in the present
condition of scattered Israel, who prospered as a nation when they
brought their tithes and offerings into the storehouse of the Lord.
And how terribly and emphatically did President Young portray the
readiness with which, at his will and pleasure, the Lord could turn
these streams, for the watering of our beautiful valleys, into the
earth, and cause these delightful hills and plains to become as barren
as Judea. I think we ought to look at this subject more carefully, and
if possible in its true light. The more I see and think of it the more
there is about it new to me, and the more there is to make me feel
that therein lies an obligation between us and our God that we should
consider and be careful to discharge.
If there is any man amongst you who wants to take a wife, does he not
have to obtain a certificate from his Bishop that he pays his Tithing?
If any of you want to be baptized in the font in the house of the Lord
for the generations of your dead, do you not need a certificate from
your Bishop that you pay your Tithing? And if we want any of the
blessings necessary for our exaltation we shall find it so, and more
so as we advance in the future. We fathers in Israel, we heads of
families, looking towards the patriarchal office and desiring to stand
at the head of our generations forever, ought to think, not only about
ourselves, but about those who will come after us. If our record shows
that we have been faithful in all things, and have never forgotten to
pay our Tithing, our posterity can come to the house of the Lord and
ask, as a right, for the blessings they need for themselves or their
dead.
I think if we will all consider this matter in the light in which the
Scriptures, the revelations of divine truth hold it, and the light in
which modern revelation and the teachings of the Priesthood hold it,
we shall discover in the law of Tithing an immense and eternal weight
of blessing and glory, and instead of wishing to avoid, shirk and
narrow it down to the least admissible figure, we shall desire to add
to and enlarge it, that it may be for us and our children a source of
honor, exaltation and blessing forever.
Brethren and sisters I rejoice with you, more and more, all the day
long in the principles of the Gospel. I desire to be more and more
useful in helping to promulgate them in the earth. I have pleasure in
the labors of the Church. I rejoice exceedingly in the advancement of
the cause of truth, and realize that we have to be wide awake in order
to keep track of, and along with, the purposes, plans, devices and
providences of God, that we may work with him, that he may work
with and through us in bringing to pass his purposes, and the great
and glorious events connected with his work in the last days.
That we may so live as to be able and pliant instruments in his hands,
ready to do every good word and work, in bringing again Zion,
establishing righteousness and truth in the earth, and hastening the
day for the return thereto of the presence and glory of God, is my
desire in the name of Jesus. Amen.
- Franklin D. Richards