I am about to do the very thing I did not intend to do this afternoon,
that is, speak to the people. I have absented myself from your
meetings now for some time, feeling that if I came here my spirit
would be drawn out to such a degree that I would perhaps be under the
necessity of talking to you; I will venture, however, to use my lungs
for a few minutes, and present a few words of counsel to the
Latter-day Saints.
There is a Scripture which reads, "For what man knoweth the things of
a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? Even so the things of
God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God." This is as true a saying
as there is in the Bible. And on one occasion Jesus said, "If any man
will do my will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God,
or whether I speak of myself." Brother Geo. Q. Cannon, who has just
spoken, has testified to the word. I have made these quotations to
confirm and strengthen what he has said. There are people enough here
to publish to the world that there is a man who testifies that he
knows that God lives, who knows that Jesus is the Christ, the Savior
of the world. I also testify to the truth of these things. I have
proven to my satisfaction, according to the best knowledge I can
gather, that man can be deceived by the sight of the natural eye, he
can be deceived by the hearing of the ear, and by the touch of the
hand; that he can be deceived in all of what are called the natural
senses. But there is one thing in which he cannot be deceived. What is
that? It is the operations of the Holy Ghost, the Spirit and power of
God upon the creature. It teaches him of heavenly things; it directs
him in the way of life; it affords him the key by which he can test
the devices of man, and which recommends the things of God. The
sayings which I have quoted I have proven to be true, and I bear
testimony to them. The Latter-day Saints have done likewise. Not only
the Saints who are present, and who gathered to Zion, but those of
every nation, continent, or island who live the religion taught by our
Savior and his Apostles, and also by Joseph Smith; they also bear the
same testimony, their eyes have been quickened by the Spirit of God,
and they see alike, their hearts have been quick ened, and they
feel and understand alike, and there are no disputations among them
with regard to the doctrines of the Savior.
Men begin to apostatize by taking to themselves strength, by
hearkening to the whisperings of the enemy who leads them astray
little by little, until they gather to themselves that which they call
the wisdom of man; then they begin to depart from God, and their minds
become confused. But all who keep the faith are of one heart and one
mind, and this testimony is so confirmed to all that we cannot be
mistaken. If we ask the Father, in the name of Jesus, for such and
such favor, and it be granted to us, should we not acknowledge God in
this? If we hearken to the whisperings of the Spirit of God, we shall
feel ourselves under obligations to do so. In consequence of our
obedience to the will of the Father, we know for ourselves, and our
knowledge is confirmed as we continue to apply the commandments of God
in our everyday life.
Brother Cannon speaks of Christians. We are Christians professedly,
according to our religion. People have gathered to themselves certain
ideas, and laid them down as systems, calling them religion, all
professing to believe and obey the Scriptures. Their religions are
peculiar to themselves—our religion is peculiar to God, to angels, and
to the righteous of time and eternity. Why are we persecuted because
of our religion? Why was Joseph Smith persecuted? Why was he hunted
from neighborhood to neighborhood, from city to city, and from State
to State, and at last suffered death? Because he received revelations
from the Father, from the Son, and was ministered to by holy angels,
and published to the world the direct will of the Lord concerning his
children on the earth. Again, why was he persecuted? Because he
revealed to all mankind a religion so plain and so easily understood,
consistent with the Bible, and so true. It is now as it was in the
days of the Savior; let people believe and practice these simple,
Godlike traits, and it will be as it was in the old world, they will
say, if this man be let alone he will come and take away our peace and
nation. Why? Because—"Shall I quote Scripture? If I do not, I will
make a little." Because it takes away their bread and butter, takes
away their salaries; they become no longer able to impose upon the
people, and to lead them blindly along, while they themselves feast
and fatten upon the labors of these whose souls they profess a
watchcare over. They say, "We shall be broken up, we shall have to
raise our own wheat and potatoes, make our own butter and cheese, and
we cannot bear it, and we will not, we'll drive this religion from the
earth." This is really all the reason there is. A man rises up and
says, "I understand the philosophy of a good many sciences, and I
cannot believe as you Latter-day Saints do." All your philosophy, even
every iota of it which is true, belongs to the religion of the
Latter-day Saints; and I say to all such, if you believe the truth,
you believe just as the Latter-day Saints believe. It is said in this
book (the Bible) that God made the earth in six days. This is a mere
term, but it matters not whether it took six days, six months, six
years, or six thousand years. The creation occupied certain periods of
time. We are not authorized to say what the duration of these days
was, whether Moses penned these words as we have them, or whether the
translators of the Bible have given the words their intended meaning.
How ever, God created the world. If I were a sectarian I would
say, according to their philosophy, as I have heard many of them say
hundreds of times, "God created all things out of nothing; in six days
he created the world out of nothing." You may be assured the
Latter-day Saints do not believe any such thing. They believe God
brought forth material out of which he formed this little terra firma
upon which we roam. How long had this material been in existence?
Forever and forever, in some shape, in some condition. We need not
refer at all to those who were with God, and who assisted him in this
work. The elements form and develop, and continue to do so until they
mature, and then they commence to decay and become disorganized. The
mountains around us were formed in this way. By and by, when they
shall have reached their maturity, the work of disintegration and
decay will commence. It has been so from all eternity, and will
continue to be so until they are made celestial.
Some of our scholars who have acquired a little smattering of
knowledge rise up and say, "I am an infidel, I do not believe in God."
Well, then, as the Psalmist says, "The fool has said in his heart
there is no God." I make the application of the Psalmist. You do not
know your right hand from your left. How do you happen to know that
this (the right hand) is the right hand, and that this (the left) is
the left hand? Simply because it has been handed down from parent to
child until this day. Were it otherwise one might say, This (the left
hand) is my right hand, and this (the right) is my left hand. Where
did Professor Morse obtain his knowledge of electricity, and its
application over the telegraph wire? He got it from the God of Heaven,
who is the source of all intelligence; from him proceeds the knowledge
of mechanism and of philosophy in all its phases.
What do men and women who turn away from the faith, as they
occasionally do, turn to? To an empty sound, from a reality to a
shadow. They reject a knowledge of the eternal principles by which the
heavens are, were, and will be; they turn to the follies and weakness
of man and yield to the influences of the devil, who, with the third
part of the hosts of heaven, rebelled against the Father and was cast
out of heaven. What is the ultimate result of this downward course
which some are pursuing? The beautiful organization they now possess,
will decrease in beauty, and continue to decrease until the elements
of which it is formed dissolve and return to their original state,
just like the action of these mountains, which, in their time decay,
and return to mother clay. They who turn away from the Gospel of the
Son of God, which we preach, turn away from the origin of all truth,
from light into darkness, from wisdom to folly, until they are known
no more forever; this is the end of apostasy. What has already become
of those who, during our short existence as a Church, have come out
against us, politically, judicially, or otherwise, those who have
raised their puny arms to destroy the kingdom of God from the earth?
They have become powerless, like the dew before the rising sun; they
have vanished away, their names are almost forgotten; and if this is
not the case with all, it will be. For Zion must be established on the
earth, and God, in his power and might, will accomplish it, and none
can stay His purposes. He will gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth,
and we will assist him.
I testify that Jesus is the Christ, the Savior and Redeemer of the
world; I have obeyed his sayings, and realized his promise, and the
knowledge I have of him, the wisdom of this world cannot give, neither
can it take away.
To you, my brethren and sisters, I wish to give a little counsel. And,
here, let me say, that after I have revealed to you the mind and will
of God concerning you, I am not held responsible for the performance
of your duties. Cease your folly and wickedness, cease running after
Babylon, and let your young people cease their Sunday and midnight
excursions, and everything that savors of Babylon; for soon she must
fall, she will pass away, the victim of her own wickedness, and it
behooves you to watch and pray, lest peradventure you should be lost
with her. I also say, Cease speaking evil one of another, and cease
being dishonest. Masters, deal honestly and justly with those whom you
hire, who are called servants. Servants, deal honestly and uprightly
with those who employ you, who are called masters, that confidence and
the spirit of brotherhood may be kindled, where now, in too many
instances, the desire to take advantage exists.
We are making an effort, by way of petitioning the City Council, to
close the drinking saloons that disgrace our city. How do the people
feel about it? Are there any Latter-day Saints who would not lift up
both hands against this evil and say, "God be thanked if we can stop
the drunkenness in our streets?" No, not one. Are there any, whether
"Mormon" or non-" Mormon," who claim to have the fear of God
in their
hearts, but who ought to lend us their full support in suppressing it?
No, not one. A gentleman, well known to you, told me that he had
occasion to wait fifty minutes on one of our streets, near a beer
saloon, and during that time he counted six women come out, three or
four of them had either children in arms, or walking by their sides.
What do you think of that, sisters? It is a disgrace to the name of
lady. Is it any more a disgrace in woman than in man? Yes, because he
is by nature coarser and more prone to such wickedness than she is.
Woman is altogether of a finer nature, and has stronger moral
inclinations; it is not natural for her to indulge in wickedness that
man takes common delight in. It is a disgrace and a burning shame in
an Elder in Israel to allow himself to become intoxicated; and
further, it is shameful in an Elder to frequent and help sustain these
saloons, these sinkholes of vice. How would the Savior, were he to
come among us, regard such men who are supposed to be engaged in the
work of building up Zion? It would be fair to believe that, as he
disposed of the moneychangers who contaminated the Temple, by as he
said, turning it into a den of thieves, so likewise the Elder, who
would lend his influence to turn Zion into a den of drunkards and
gamblers, should be cast out as one unworthy to be engaged in so
important a work. The devil has sent his emissaries among us, some of
whom come in the form of lawyers, doctors and ministers, and others as
saloon keepers and gamblers, and as "gentlemen" whose politeness and
affability are peculiarly striking. Their special mission seems to be
directed to the young of both sexes, to decoy and lead them astray. To
the young man they say, "Come, take a drink;" or, "Don't be so
unwise as to allow yourself to be governed by this one-man power; be
free and use your liberty, let everybody know that you are a free man
and that you have a mind of your own." And turning to our
girls—"Won't
you take a ride, young lady?" She thinks him so nice, he lets her
drive. "O, how lovely this is, don't I look pretty?" "Won't
you accept
an invitation to a dance, to the Lake, or to the Gardens, etc.?" Such
courtesies, when accepted, are the beginning of sorrow. There are but
two roads, one is the way of life, glory and excellency, and crowns,
and kingdoms, immortality and eternal lives; the other is drunkenness,
debauchery, beautiful manners in the light, but shameful conduct in
the dark. "O!" say they, "don't you think we are wise? Why, we
are
very wise, we have studied and been to college." Yes, I know the
extent of your wisdom. I know, too, the road you are traveling; it
leads down, down, down, until you become as nothing, returning to
native element, and losing your identity—you are lost forever and
forever. These are they who have sinned away the day of grace, and
denied the Lord, who bought them.
As for supporting the one-man power, as the world term it, I can say
that I never asked a man to vote for me, or to use his influence in
any way to further my individual interests. All I have ever asked of
the Latter-day Saints is, to do the will of our Father in heaven. And
in this, as in all other things, you have the perfect liberty to do as
you please. I can say, as was once said from this stand, God and one
man are a great majority; and God and the Latter-day Saints who are
valiant for the truth, and who live according to the revealed will are
an overwhelming majority, and they will live and reign upon this earth
when it shall be redeemed from its fallen condition, while their
opponents will sink down to perdition.
Some of our young men rise up and say, "I don't believe as my father
believes, I can't see it, and I shall do as I please." This is your
right, to do as you please, your free agency is given to you for that
purpose. But while you avail yourselves of this liberty, which is so
much abused and misunderstood, be careful that you do not defeat your
own desires; for these words are as true today as they were when the
Apostle Paul uttered them: "Know ye not, that to whom ye yield
yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey;
whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness."
I believe in the one-man power. Who is that man? Our Father in heaven,
God, the eternal Father, who is in all, knows all, and who made all
that is in heaven, and who brought this world and all its living
creatures into existence. He is the supreme "man." I serve, believe in
and wish to obey in all things. It is my right and privilege to thus
believe, and all who choose to differ from me have the privilege to do
so. I want to continue in that course that will secure to me an
exalted salvation. What, to be near to the Lord? I do not know, nor do
I upon this point give myself any trouble. It is pure and righteous
principles I seek, and we must associate them with our everyday life
until they become part and parcel of our existence; for this brings us
happiness, no matter where we are. It is a pleasure for a person to
drink good cold water when extremely thirsty; but when he has
satisfied himself, the extent of his enjoyment is realized, and so it
is with all our natural blessings or pleasures. But how
different with regard to the principles of eternal life! Of them we
drink and drink again, and still we thirst for more. These are the
principles which alone can make us happy—without them we are
miserable in time and will be through all eternity. God bless you.
Amen.