Last Sunday evening I asked the privilege from the Bishop to give a
little lesson to the young, and to the old and middle-aged about the
young. It is something new for me to ask for the privilege of
speaking, for my weakness has generally led me to decline speaking
when asked to do so; but inasmuch as I have assumed the task, I trust
I shall be assisted by that Spirit that illuminates the understanding,
and that it will on this occasion dictate things which will be for our
good.
I have heard some say that they thought we made too much fuss and talk
about the rising generation; but when we take into consideration the
circumstances in which we are placed as Latter-day Saints, we shall
see that this is not the case. We are connected with the kingdom of
God, established in these last days never to be cast down again. We
are not connected with a system of religion which is to expire when we
expire, but with one which is to exist when we are gone, and there is
a prospect of a great many of us departing this life before very many
years more pass away. There are thousands and tens of thousands of us
who embraced the Gospel soon after the Church was organized by the
Prophet Joseph Smith, and who are now arriving at an age when we must
naturally expect that we will not live long upon the earth, hence, in
the minds of all such who reflect, there is an anxiety about the
young. Why? Because they have an anxiety about the kingdom of God
being perpetuated; they have an anxiety about the young, realizing
that the responsibility of bearing off this kingdom and its principles
must shortly rest upon their shoulders, when they will have to preach
the Gospel and to administer the laws and ordinances of the kingdom of
God, and to bear off its principles while they shall live upon the
earth, hence the anxiety of the old members of the Church to know that
their children are in a position to be able to perform the duties
devolving upon them as well as, if not better than, their
predecessors.
We have around us a multitude of children growing up. We are in the
habit of calling them children and of treating them as such, and all
the time our speeches to them are as if directed to children; but all
of a sudden it has come to our notice that some of these children have
arrived at the years of accountability. Some of our sons, for instance, are as old as we were ourselves when we went forth to preach
the Gospel, and we see around us a multitude of young men and women
who were baptized when they were eight years old, and who, almost
unnoticed, have arrived at years when they begin to think and act for
themselves. Among them are those who have a knowledge, by the gift of
the Holy Ghost, that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
is the Church and work of God, and perhaps a great proportion of them
have this knowledge. Then, there are a great many of them who say they
have not this knowledge, but they believe "Mormonism" is true because
father and mother say it is; that is, they believe it by education and
not by conviction and through understanding it for themselves. Among
these children to which I am referring is a small number who have come
in contact with certain influences, and who are becoming skeptical and
unbelieving as to the principles of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
We may shut our eyes to these things, but they are facts, and the
question is, How shall we treat them? If we knew that two Gentiles
were in this meeting, we would so arrange our discourse as to be
suitable to them, and let all the rest of the congregation, who
already know these principles, sit and listen. But it appears to me
that we have to take a new departure in regard to our preaching. We
must adapt ourselves to circumstances, and remember that there are
those amongst us of the kind I have mentioned. It is true our children
have been raised and grounded, as it were, in the principles of
"Mormonism:" they have grown up and have scarcely heard anything else.
It is not these little ones here that I am so much concerned about,
but it is the young men and the young women, from sixteen to
twenty-two or twenty-three years of age, who go out in life for
themselves. Perhaps the sisters go to service in various parts of the
city and among various kinds of people; and the young men, they go to
learn trades—learn to be carpenters, masons, blacksmiths, or some
other occupation. They have to go out in life, and they meet with a
great many influences now that were not to be found in our midst years
ago; for amongst us now are those who are straining every effort to
undermine the education that we have been giving to our children. When
I say education, I mean the religious training which we have been
giving them. There are men in our midst who consider they have a
mission to perform, and that mission is to undermine our religion.
There are many amongst us now who do not believe in and who care
nothing about our religion. Some of these have come to dig in the
mountains, to extract the silver and get a fortune; they care nothing
about religion of any kind. There are others here who consider they
have a mission to undermine "Mormonism," and who think the only way
for them to do that is by undermining the education of our young
people. They say, "We can only reach the young, so far as faith in
"Mormonism" is concerned; but if we succeed in making the rising
generation skeptical, "Mormonism" will be a thing of the past and
almost forgotten in the next generation." There is a class of
so-called religious men whose aim is to make our young folks
skeptical; there is the apostate, who is either an infidel or a deist,
working to accomplish the same object; there is also the Gentile, who
is a deist or a free thinker, and does not believe in God or in
a life hereafter; and they all feel that it is their special mission
to undermine what we have been doing during the last twenty years to
establish in the minds of the rising generation the truth of the
principles which we have espoused, and which we know to be true.
Now, if it has taken all the knowledge that we have, all the testimony
that we have received from the Almighty, to carry us through to the
present moment; if it has taken the power of the Holy Ghost and the
Spirit of God to enable us to stand and resist the various opposing
influences by which we have been assailed since we obeyed the Gospel,
it will take the same testimony and the same understanding to enable
the rising generation to carry off this kingdom triumphantly in spite
of all the combined opposition that may be brought against it. Hence
the necessity, my brethren and sisters, of being exercised about the
young, and hence the reason that they should have a knowledge of the
principles of truth that we have received, that when we are departing
this life we can lay our hands upon them and bless them, and set them
apart for the work that we have about closed. Then the fathers in
Israel can say—"Here are our sons, who will carry out what we have
begun;" and the mothers can say—"Here are our daughters, who will
carry out what we have commenced." Under such circumstances the
feelings of the dying will be those of joy and pleasure, for they will
know that they are leaving behind them a multitude upon whose hearts
is ineffaceably impressed the conviction of the divinity of this work.
I am pleased when I hear a young man or young woman testify that they
know this is the kingdom of God; but I should not be pleased to hear
them testify that they did know if they did not; I should not be
pleased to hear them say they believed if they did not believe. It
might cost me sorrow to hear my son or my daughter, or your son or
your daughter, say, "I do not know that 'Mormonism' is true,"
or "I do
not believe it is true," or to see them in a kind of betwixt and
between state of mind, not knowing what to believe; but at the same
time I would rather they would honestly say just what is the fact,
than to have them hypocritically say one thing and mean another. I
would not like to see this among children or among men and women. But
if a person is really sick and we can find out what the disease is,
then we can apply the remedy; if, however, the patient insists that he
is not sick, and that nothing is the matter with him, we cannot touch
him. Hence I say, if we know the circumstances in which we are placed,
we know what remedy to apply. A young man or young woman will ask this
question, for instance, which is very natural—"Father, I hear you say
that all the sects in the Christian world are wrong except the
'Mormons;' but yet I find, when I attend the Episcopal, Roman Catholic
or Methodist church, that they quote from the very same Bible which
you quote from. How is it that they are wrong?" Do you recollect,
brethren and sisters, how we were when first the Gospel reached our
ears? One of the first questions that we asked of the Elder who
preached to us was—"You say that 'Mormonism' only is right, but
how is
it that all these other sects and parties, who say they believe in
God, the Bible and Jesus Christ, are wrong and you only are right?"
This was a kind of a mystery to us, it caused a query to arise
in our minds, and we could not exactly understand it. This brings to
my remembrance a figure that was very frequently used by the Elders
when preaching the Gospel in the old country in early days. To explain
this seeming mystery to the minds of the new converts, they would
liken the Gospel and Church of Jesus Christ and its organization, to a
watch with all its complicated machinery, including wheels, pivots and
pins, face, fingers and mainspring. All these properly combined will
correctly tell the time of day. "But," said the Elders, "Suppose a man
comes along and takes one of these wheels away, and another man takes
another wheel, and another takes another wheel; another man takes a
pin, and another another pin; another man takes a pivot, and another
takes another pivot; one takes the face, another takes a finger, and
another takes another finger, and so on, until finally the whole watch
is divided up, say among six hundred different people, everyone of
whom says—"I have got the watch, and I can tell the time of day." Says
the watchmaker—"Do you think I am such a fool as to believe that any
of you can tell the time of day? A watch cannot tell the time unless
it is combined and united together, every wheel and pivot in its
place, with the mainspring in good order. It takes the whole machine
to tell the time of day, and when a man says—'I have got the watch,'
and he has only got a wheel, a pivot, or a pin, the face, mainspring,
or case, he does not tell the truth, whether he knows it or not."
So it is, my young friends and brethren and sisters, in regard to the
Bible; every religious sect takes that part of it which suits them,
and they all say they believe in it, and they have got the plan of
salvation. For instance, one sect or party will take faith in Jesus
Christ, and say that is all that is necessary for the salvation of
man. Another sect will perhaps take baptism, and say that faith and
baptism are necessary for salvation, and throw away something else;
and thus you find the whole Christian world, although professing to
believe in the same Savior and in the same Bible, opposed to each
other. And then the "Mormons" come along and they say—"All
these sects
are wrong and we are right." They say to the sects—"Why, you have not
got the watch, you have only got one of the wheels, one of the pins or
fingers, or you have only got the case, and there is nothing in it,
and it requires the case with all its contents properly arranged to
tell the time of day correctly; in other words, if you would teach the
people how to be saved in the kingdom of God, you must teach them to
obey every principle of the plan of salvation." That is precisely what
the Elders of this Church do, and that makes the grand distinction and
difference between them and the so-called religious teachers of the
day.
Now to illustrate this. You attend a church or a chapel, and you
perhaps hear a minister preach from the 16th chapter of St. Mark's
Gospel, where the Apostles are commanded to go and preach the Gospel
to every creature, with the promise that he that believeth and is
baptized shall be saved, &c. Some of our young people have not read
the Bible a great deal. It is true that many of them who attend Sunday
school do read it, but as a general thing the class I am referring
to do not attend Sunday school. They consider that they are too
old, that they know too much, or that it is rather humiliating to
associate with children; and, with a few exceptions, those I mean are
not of the kind who have read the Bible; but you will find, no matter
how much it may chagrin us to admit it, that they would rather read
the Ledger, Bowbells, or some other book of that character, than the
Bible, and consequently when they hear a sectarian minister quote from
it, that he that believeth in Jesus shall be saved, they take it for
granted that he is reading the Bible, when, if they had read and
studied its pages for themselves, they would know that he only quotes
part of it. Is it not singular that sectarian ministers, as a general
thing, manage to forget that little word "baptism" when exhorting
sinners to repent and be saved? Is it not singular that the divines of
the day, as a general thing, although they have made the Bible their
study, and have gone to college on purpose to study how to explain its
contents, should stop short and say, "He that believeth shall be
saved," leaving out all about baptism?
What is the difference, in this respect, between the "Mormon" and the
sectarian teacher? The "Mormon" teacher reads the whole of it—the text
and the context, and he declares to the people that he that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved; and he that believeth not shall be
condemned. Is it not singular that men professing to be servants of
God and ministers of salvation, when they quote Scripture, should only
quote part of it? This is the course pursued by the ministers of
nearly every denomination in Christendom. One will take a pivot or a
wheel, and leave all the rest of the machinery; another will do the
same, and so on, and if we were to examine the whole, we should
perhaps find that all of the principles of the Gospel are scattered
amongst them, but all of them reject some portions of it.
On the day of Pentecost, when a large multitude of people where
assembled at Jerusalem, the Apostles of the Savior, who had been
endowed with power from on high, plainly and unmistakably declared
unto them the way of life and salvation. In answer to the earnest and
anxious inquiries of many on that occasion, Peter, the chief of the
Apostles, said—"Repent and be baptized, every one of you, for the
remission of your sins, and you shall receive the Holy Ghost," &c. But
how is this Scripture quoted by those who take only one wheel or
pivot? They say—"Repent and be saved;" or, Believe in Jesus and be
saved;" but somehow or other, either through a defective memory, or
from some other cause, they fail to quote the rest of it.
Here is the difference between the sectarians and us who are called
"Mormons." We take the whole chapter, we want the whole watch. We know
we cannot tell the time correctly if we only take a part of it, and
we know we cannot get full salvation in the celestial kingdom of God
unless we obey the whole Gospel, which is the power of God unto
salvation unto all who believe it enough to obey it.
The Apostle Paul, in writing to the Corinthians, lays down the
organization of the Church, as established by its founder, Christ. He
says that in the Church are placed Apostles, Prophets, Evangelists,
Pastors and Teachers. What for? For the work of the ministry, for the
edifying of the body of Christ, and for the perfecting of the Saints, until we all come to the unity of the faith. The Apostle also
says that there are in the Church a diversity of gifts, such as
tongues, the interpretation of tongues, healing, knowledge, faith,
wisdom, &c. Now, how much does a sectarian pick out of this when he
quotes it? He takes Pastors and Teachers, but he throws away Apostles,
Prophets, gifts, helps, tongues, healings, &c.; in fact, he claims to
have the whole watch, when, at the same time, he has but one little
pin or pivot, and throws away the principal part of the machinery.
Did you ever think of these things my brethren and sisters? If you
would read the Bible and New Testament you would get an understanding
of them just as we did. How was that? Most of us were trained to read
the Bible, and when we heard the Later-day Saints preach we
said—"This is different from anything we ever heard before. The Bible
seems like a new book, we never knew there were such things in it. Our
ministers never taught us these principles, and when we mention them
to them they say they are done away, and no longer needed;" in other
words they say that a watch does not need a mainspring now; it was
necessary 1,800 years ago for a watch to have a mainspring and a
variety of wheels and pins all united together in one case, but now it
is not necessary, for you can tell the time of day with one of the
fingers, or a pin, or with the empty case. We who had read the New
Testament, when we heard the Elders explain the organization of this
Church, could at once see that it was in accordance with the Scripture
pattern, and that it was different to the churches of Christendom; but
the reason that our young men and women are sometimes in a quandary
when they hear sectarians preach is because they have not read the
Scriptures, and hence when they hear a man in a pulpit make an
assertion, they are not able to tell whether he quotes the whole or
only a part of the passage, and hence the necessity for them to make
themselves more acquainted with the Bible.
When I was about seventeen years of age I first heard this Gospel
preached by Elder Orson Pratt. He quoted from the Acts of the
Apostles, and although I had another word of testimony within me that
what he said was correct, that he was a servant of God and that Joseph
Smith had had the ministration of angels, when he quoted from the
Scriptures I could not say whether it was so or not, because I had
never read the Bible. I had never been allowed to read it, for reasons
which I stated this afternoon, but I went home directly and read the
Bible, and found that what he said was true. Then I went to another
place of worship and I heard a man quote the same chapter, but somehow
or other he failed to quote the whole passage, and quoted only a
little bit of it. This led some of us to investigate, and we did so
just as we would any other branch of knowledge. No young man would
think of reading Robinson Crusoe in order to make himself acquainted
with geography, neither would he read the history of Scotland in order
to master algebra; and no young man or young woman would think of
studying any branch of science or art by reading novels. But if they
really desired to acquire any branch of knowledge they would, of
course, procure works that treated on that subject, and make it a
matter of earnest study. I knew a man who did nothing but study
grammar from the time he was fifteen years old until he was
twenty-five. They used to call him "Old Syntax" for a by name. So it is with our young—they must not expect to study
"Mormonism" by
reading novels, but they must read the Bible, Book of Mormon, Doctrine
and Covenants, Millennial Star, Orson Pratt's Works, the Voice of
Warning and many others. These are the works our children must study
if they ever find out for themselves the truth of the principles of
"Mormonism." And besides doing this, they must also pray unto the
Almighty for the testimony of his Holy Spirit. How did we, now growing
old in the work, get a knowledge of its truth? Many of us, after
hearing the testimony of the servants of God, went into our closets,
and some of us labored for months with the Almighty before we obtained
that knowledge. We prayed "Lord, if the testimony of this man is true,
make it known unto us, by some means or another;" and we finally
received impressions which induced us to repent and be baptized, and
we had hands laid upon us for the gift of the Holy Ghost; and still we
labored, and prayed, and contended for the faith once delivered to the
Saints, until God in his mercy manifested himself unto us in such a
manner that we knew this was his work and kingdom.
Now, if a young man rises and bears testimony that he knows this is
the kingdom of God, perhaps some other young man may make fun and say,
"How do you know it?" Perhaps he cannot explain, for the revelations
of God to the mind and soul of man cannot always be explained, any
more than Columbus could explain when he asserted there was a vast
continent that had not then been discovered, or than the philosopher
could explain to unbelievers that the globe was round and not flat;
they could not understand it without studying natural laws as he had
done. The testimony of the Holy Ghost and the Revelations of God give
knowledge to the mind of him upon whom they are conferred but he
cannot explain their operations to others. In the Scriptures we are told
that the things of man are known by the spirit of man, and the things
of God only by the Spirit of God, and the promise to those who obey
the Gospel is that they shall know for themselves of its truth, and
this is the only condition on which the fulfillment of this promise
can be obtained. Said Jesus—"Do my will and you shall know of the
doctrine, whether it is of God, or whether I speak of myself."
Our children were baptized when they were eight years old, but that
was more by our agency that theirs. The gift of the Holy Ghost was
conferred upon them, and that Spirit is within them, and if they
understood its whisperings and dictates I believe that they would
admit they know a great deal more than they now think they do; and if
they would heed its teachings it would lead them in the way of eternal
life. But there is a great difference between the "Mormons" and the
rest of the religious world when we come to the fundamental principles
of all religion, namely, belief in God. The sectarian world say that
they believe in God, but that he has neither body, parts nor passions,
and yet there are three persons in the godhead—Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost. If you were to attend the Sabbath schools of our friends who
are not of us, you would probably hear these principles taught. But
this is not in accordance with the Bible, for that teaches that God
made man in his own image. If you want to know what the Almighty looks
like, look at man, only he is in a fallen condition and clothed with
humanity. Jesus said that he was the express image and likeness
of his Father. The "Mormons" believe this, but the sectarians believe
in a God without body, parts and passions; they believe in Jesus
sitting at the right hand of a God without body parts and passions;
they believe in a God who loves the righteous, and who is angry with
the wicked every day, but yet he has neither body, parts nor passions.
I am not saying this with a design to deride, or anything of the kind,
but I am simply stating facts as they are. The "Mormons" believe these
things just as the Bible tells them; they believe that God is a great
and exalted Being, filled with knowledge and understanding, that he
created this earth, but not out of nothing. One of the principles
taught by the religious world of Christendom, is that the earth was
made out of nothing, in six of our days. No wonder, as Brother Maeser
said the other Sunday evening, that people consider that science and
religion are opposed to each other. True science and true religion are
not opposed to each other; false religion and true science are opposed
to each other, and it is this very fact which has caused infidelity to
spread with such rapidity of late years. As men become acquainted with
the laws of nature, which are the laws of God, they are compelled to
lay false religion aside, and consequently they say religion is all
nonsense. For instance, the chemist finds that he cannot bring one
particle of matter from nonentity neither can he annihilate one
particle, therefore he disbelieves in the world being created out of
nothing. When a man descends into the bowels of the earth and, through
science, becomes acquainted with the laws which govern the materials
there contained, he understands that the earth could not be made out
of nothing; he also understands that it could not be made in six of
our days, and consequently, rather than throw aside science, the truth
of which he can demonstrate, he throws religion to one side, the truth
of which he cannot demonstrate. But if he were in possession of true
religion he would not have to throw it away, neither would he have to
abandon his science because they would harmonize.
We Latter-day Saints do not believe the world was created out of
nothing, but that it was created just upon the same principle that a
builder creates a house, that is, there is matter in existence and he
organizes it and changes its condition suitable to the circumstances
that he wishes to use it for; the builder changes the bricks, lumber
and other material into a house or other structure; the Almighty by
his power and wisdom takes existing matter and combines it and makes a
world; and he places the stars and the sun and moon in the firmament,
giving to each the laws by which its movements are governed. If we
understand it we should see that it was all done upon true scientific
principles. Scientific truth and God's truth are just the same, hence
when a man becomes acquainted with science or the laws of nature he
has to throw away his belief in a God without body, parts and
passions, and in the estimation of the religious world, he becomes an
infidel. But suppose he were to obey the Gospel as taught by the
Latter-day Saints, what would be the consequence then? His science and
religion would help and sustain each other, and would enable him to
bear testimony to the wonderworking hand of God, not only in revealing
the true principles of salvation, but also in revealing the laws of
nature or the principles of science, and he would embrace both as
emanations from the same great Deity.
Here, my young brethren and sisters, is another great distinction and
difference between the Latter-day Saints and the rest of the Religious
World, and if you were to study the Bible sometimes—I do not say it is
necessary to throw away every other book and study the Bible only—you
would come to an understanding of these principles for yourselves,
then you would know why your fathers and mothers declare that they
know "Mormonism" is true.
I have endeavored to drop a few hints, to show the necessity of our
young people taking a course by which they may attain the same
realizing sense of the truth of the Gospel and work of God which their
seniors possess. If a son or a daughter belonging to anyone of us
should say—"Father, I know you have always taught me to believe that
Joseph Smith was a true prophet, and you say that God has revealed it
to you, but he has not revealed it to me and I do not know it," shall
we get mad at them, and resort to coercion in order to make them
believe as we believe? No, we may be sorry to hear them make such an
avowal, but we must neither get mad nor use harsh language towards
them, for that might drive them to do that which we are so anxious to
prevent. We must treat them as men and women, or as rational,
intelligent beings, and reason with them, and labor with and pray for
them just as much as if we were sent to preach the Gospel to the
world. That is the course I believe we, the fathers and mothers of
Israel, should pursue with the rising generation.
I have said all I desire to say on the present occasion. May God bless
us! May the spirit of the Gospel rest upon our young, that they may be
led to investigate its principles and come to an understanding thereof
for themselves, that they may be prepared for the responsibilities that
will rest upon those who will succeed us in carrying on the work of
the Lord, and be enabled to bear it off triumphantly is my prayer in
the name of Jesus. Amen.
- William C. Dunbar