I am here in this Ward, especially to talk to you, my brethren and
sisters. I think I have been here only once before—at the dedication
of this house. I have a few things to say to you, which I hope and
expect will be received and appreciated according to their merit.
Perhaps quite a portion of this little congregation have left their
homes, their friends, the lands of their nativity for the Gospel's
sake, for the sake of their own salvation and that of their families
and friends who would go with them. I will appeal to the experience of
my brethren and sisters who have received the Gospel, and ask them
this question—Is not the Gospel dearer to us than anything else and
all else on this earth? I think I can answer for all Latter-day
Saints, and say, "Surely it is." We hope for life, salvation and
exaltation; we have the privilege of the Gospel and the ordinances of
the house of God, while the inhabitants of the earth, with the
exception of comparatively a very few, have not as yet availed
themselves of this privilege. We preach the Gospel to the people, but
they are so erroneously traditionated and so ignorant with regard to
the facts pertaining to the revelations and will of God to the
children of men, that they turn aside from it and think it no evil in
so doing. They are so educated that they can neglect the Gospel, and
feel measurably justified. This is an item of experience that we could
bring before ourselves and others more fully than, perhaps, it would
be prudent for me to spend the time to do this evening. But the Gospel to us is all in all. To know the will of God, and do it, is
the happiest life that intelligent beings, the children of our Father
in heaven, can live. There is no other condition in life that produces
the same amount of good feeling, peace, happiness, joy, comfort,
contentment and intelligence that the service of the Lord will bring.
If a person is very poor and the love of God is within him, he feels
rich and happy, and can measurably do without food, that is, longer
and better than they can who do not have this experience of the love
of God within them.
The person who enjoys the experience of the knowledge of the kingdom
of God on the earth, and at the same time has the love of God within
him, is the happiest of any individuals on the earth. We, who believe
in and have obeyed this Gospel, look forward with the anticipation of
obtaining a great amount of knowledge and wisdom. When we embraced the
Gospel, the spirit opened up to our minds the fact that the wisdom,
the knowledge and the power of God would increase in the midst of the
Saints. This is our experience: I, knowing for myself, what the Spirit
of the Lord brings to the understanding, testify what it reveals to
others. The same spirit that is given to me, to enlighten my mind, is
given to others; the same that is given to you I have received,
consequently I speak from personal knowledge, from that which I have
experienced and understand, and that I live in; and they who live in
and enjoy the spirit of our holy religion can testify to this.
There is a portion of this congregation who are young, and know but
little about the United States, or about the people there; and there
is a large percentage of our community who know nothing by experience
of the outside world. Ask them if they know anything of California?
No. Anything about the States? No. Did you not come from England? No,
but my parents did; consequently they have not experience. They have
lived here, they have grown up with us. We have brought them up
cheerfully and kindly, and instructed and taught them, and they have
enjoyed the spirit of life and of wisdom and knowledge. These children
who have been born here in the New and Everlasting Covenant, do not
seem to realize this. This is for the want of experience, which they
will obtain in future life. But those of experience, those who have
left their homes and their all for the sake of the Gospel, are capable
of judging better about these matters.
Now we, as Latter-day Saints, hope for salvation; we are living in
anticipation of eternal salvation. We have left our homes and
everything for the sake of our religion. Many women in our community
have left their husbands; many men have left their wives and children;
young boys have left their parents and brothers and sisters, and young
girls have come away, and left all. They had friends, homes, plenty,
parents, brothers and sisters; yet when the spirit of the Gospel came
upon them they were so enamored with it, and it gave such light,
knowledge and intelligence, that they were willing to forsake all, and
follow with the Latter-day Saints for life eternal. This is the case
with quite a portion of our community. We all, then, started for life
and salvation, and we still have no other object.
Now, my brethren and sisters, I wish to ask—Do we not anticipate
further knowledge, wisdom and blessings, and further communications by
the spirit of the Lord, further de monstrations and further
witnesses, revelations, knowledge, etc., in this kingdom? We do, every
one of us. We ask the question again, Do we expect that we have
already become perfect, and that we are prepared to be numbered with
the sanctified, and that we are now prepared to be gathered with God's
elect, and that, if we were to hear the voice tonight—"Behold the
bridegroom cometh" —we should be numbered with the wise? Do we
anticipate this? If we do we are wrong, for we are not prepared. We
have passed through a great many scenes, we may say, of tribulation,
though I would have all my brethren understand that I do not take this
to myself, for all that I have passed through has been joy and joyful
to me; but we have seemingly sacrificed a great deal, and passed
through many scenes of trial and temptations, no doubt of this. We
have had to suffer temptation more or less, and we have taken the
spoiling of our goods joyfully. I have, myself, five times before I
came to this valley, left everything that the Lord had blessed me with
pertaining to this world's goods, which, for the country where I
lived, was not a very little.
Well, we have passed these ordeals, and we are still going along. Now
have we profited by all that we have, passed through and experienced,
so that we really do consider that we are sanctified and prepared for
the celestial kingdom of God, or do we believe that there is something
more yet to be done? Why, all hearts reply—There is still
understanding in this kingdom; every heart echoes—We expect to learn
more, we expect to receive more, we are not yet perfect, we are not
complete in our stature as men and women in Christ Jesus. Now I will
just ask, right here—Shall we ever be learning and never able to come
to a knowledge of the truth? No, I say we shall not, but we shall come
to the knowledge of the truth. This is my hope and anticipation, and
this is my joy. The Latter-day Saints, as a people, in many respects
are shortsighted, we are but babes or suckling infants in the Church
and kingdom of God, comparatively, and especially since we have been
in these valleys. We have enjoyed peace and plenty here; we have been
blessed in our families, and in our flocks and herds, and in our
fields and crops, and we have gathered around us the comforts, and
even the luxuries of life, and some, to a small extent, wealth. Now,
in the enjoyment of all this is the kingdom of God first and foremost
with us? I can say, taking as a people, that our hearts are too much
on the things of this life. We are, perhaps, too skeptical in our
feelings, with regard to the things of the kingdom. We gather, as we
anticipate, mental strength, and we think we are capable of judging
where we are not capable of judging, and the riches, or the good
things of this life, I cannot in reality say the riches, but a little
of this world's goods, sometimes blind the mind and becloud the spirit
of a person. I can appeal to the experience of my brethren and
sisters, aged and middle-aged and youth, and even to the children. Go
to the child, and what does its joy consist in? Toys, we may call
them, something that produces, as they think, pleasure; and so it is
with our youth, our young boys and girls; they are thinking too much
of this world; and the middle-aged are striving and struggling to
obtain the good things of this life, and their hearts are too much
upon them. So it is with the aged. Is not this the condition of the
Latter-day Saints? It is. Well, now, take us as a people, we
anticipate life eternal; we think we are the best people on the earth,
and we think we have sacrificed more for our religion than anybody
else, though in my belief, and in this respect I probably differ with
most of the Latter-day Saints, for the simple reason that God, our
Heavenly Father, in his religion, does not require men and women to
suffer as false religions do. Take the religions of the heathen, and
false systems of religion generally, and they require sacrifices that
the Lord does not require. The Lord has offered his sacrifice in the
character of his Son; but he does not require us to sacrifice our
children or ourselves as the heathens sacrifice to their gods;
consequently our sacrifices and our sufferings are not to be compared
with those of the heathens. There are professing Christians in our
midst, who are so strict in their religious notions that they would
rise in the morning at five o'clock, and walk miles, if necessary,
rather than miss their religious services; and they are those who are
so zealous that they would measure the soil from here into old
Jerusalem with their bodies if they could, to pay penance, as they
call it. God does not require any such sacrifice as this; neither does
he require any of these sacrifices which involve the shedding of blood
or the loss of life. Such things do not belong to God's religion, they
come through sin and transgression. Perhaps they who show such
manifestations of their faith strengthen it and do themselves some
good. All that is required of us is to sacrifice our feelings and to
overcome the adversary by subduing the lust within us for anything but
the kingdom of God on the earth, the glory of God, and the salvation
of our friends and families and of the human family from first to
last; that our whole souls may be devoted to the building up of the
kingdom of God on the earth, and for the salvation of those who sleep,
who died without the Gospel. We want to sacrifice enough to do the
will of God in preparing to bring up those who have not had the
privilege of hearing the Gospel while in the flesh, for the simple
reason that, in the spirit world, they cannot officiate in the
ordinances of the House of God. They have passed the ordeals, and are
beyond the possibility of personally officiating for the remission of
their sins and for their exaltation, consequently they are under the
necessity of trusting in their friends, their children and their
children's children to officiate for them, that they may be brought up
into the celestial kingdom of God. All that the Lord requires of us is
a perfect submission in our hearts to his will. The Latter-day Saints
say at once—"This is correct, certainly it is right that we should
have no other object and aim in our feelings and affections but to do
good and to promote the kingdom of God on the earth." But the weakness
of man is such, the humanity with which our spirits is clothed is so
frail that we are liable to be overcome. These tabernacles are dull,
subject to sin and temptation, and to stray from the kingdom of God
and the ordinances of his house, to lust after riches, the pride of
life and the vanities of the world, and these things are prone to be
uppermost in the minds of all; old and young, even Latter-day Saints.
The infant wants his toys, the children want nice dresses, and this is
correct; and when we understand how to rightly use the things of the
world, there will be the most beautiful children in Zion that ever
lived on the earth. But we wish the wealth or things of the world; we
think about them morning, noon and night; they are first in
our minds when we awake in the morning, and the last thing before we
go to sleep at night; and we dream about how we shall do this, and
how we shall obtain that, and our minds are continually lusting after
the things of the world. Is not this too much the case with the
Latter-day Saints?
I will ask this question of the few who are here—What think ye, my
brethren and sisters of experience, you that have enjoyed the light of
the spirit, you that can see the travail of the Saints, do you think
that this people called Latter-day Saints are traveling in the path
that they should go in? Do you think that they offer their oblations
and sacrifices to the Lord as they should? What do you think about it?
What is the general expression through our community? It is that the
Latter-day Saints are drifting as fast as they can into idolatry,
drifting into the spirit of the world and into pride and vanity.
You read in the revelations given to John on the Isle of Patmos,
concerning the latter days, that a voice was heard crying to the
Saints in Babylon—"Come out of her, O my people, be not partakers of
her sins, lest ye receive of her plagues, for her sins have reached
unto heaven," etc. Has this voice been heard? Yes, the Latter-day
Saints have heard it. Has the angel flown through the midst of heaven
and delivered the Gospel to the children of men? Yes, we believe all
this. Do we believe that the Lord sent his messengers to Joseph Smith,
and commanded him to refrain from joining any Christian church, and to
refrain from the wickedness he saw in the churches, and finally
delivered to him a message informing him that the Lord was about to
establish his kingdom on the earth, and led him on step by step until
he gave him the revelation concerning the plates? Yes, this is all
correct. Did Joseph receive these revelations? He did. Did the
heavenly messengers come to Joseph, and commit to him the keys of the
Aaronic Priesthood? Yes, we believe all this. Did they commit to him
the keys of the Melchizedek Priesthood? Yes. This is all correct, we
believe all this. Did the Lord speak from the heavens through Joseph,
commanding his people to gather out from the wicked before the
scourges—sickness, pestilence, wars, bloodshed, and the various
calamities spoken of by the Prophets and Apostles, should pass over
the nations? Yes, we believe the Lord has called upon the people who
received the Gospel to come out of Babylon, to separate themselves
from the wicked and to stand in holy places preparatory to the coming
of the Son of Man. All Latter-day Saints believe all this; then I say,
if we do believe it, let us act up to and be true to our faith and to
the knowledge that we have of God and his kingdom. This is what is
required of us.
We have passed from one thing to another, and I may say from one
degree of knowledge to another. When Joseph first received the
knowledge of the plates that were in the hill Cumorah, he did not then
receive the keys of the Aaronic Priesthood, he merely received the
knowledge that the plates were there, and that the Lord would bring
them forth, and that they contained the history of the aborigines of
this country. He received the knowledge that they were once in
possession of the Gospel, and from that time he went on, step by step,
until he obtained the plates, and the Urim and Thummim, and had power
to translate them. This did not make him an Apostle, it did not
give to him the keys of the kingdom, nor make him an Elder in Israel.
He was a Prophet, and had the spirit of prophecy, and had received all
this before the Lord ordained him. And when the Lord, by revelation,
told him to go to Pennsylvania, he did so, and finished the
translation of the Book of Mormon; and when the Lord, in another
revelation, told him to come back, into New York State, and to go to
old Father Whitmer's, who lived in a place opposite Waterloo, and
there stop, he did so, and had meetings, and gathered up the few who
believed in his testimony. He received the Aaronic Priesthood, and
then he received the keys of the Melchizedek Priesthood, and organized
the Church. He first received the power to baptize, and still did not
know that he was to receive any more until the Lord told him there was
more for him. Then he received the keys of the Melchizedek Priesthood,
and had power to confirm after he had baptized, which he had not
before. He would have stood precisely as John the Baptist stood, had
not the Lord sent his other messengers, Peter, James and John, to
ordain Joseph to the Melchizedek Priesthood. Then, after some of the
brethren had been out preaching, he had a revelation that they should
go up to the Ohio. I knew of them, though I was not acquainted with
them before they went up there. They were seen by some of my family,
my father saw and conversed with them. Then the way opened for a large
gathering in the State of Ohio. Parley P. Pratt, Oliver Cowdery,
Samuel Peterson, David Whitmer, John Whitmer, and a few others, went
up there and preached the Gospel, and they came among the members of
the society called Campbellites, formerly mem bers of the Close
Communion Baptists, their leader's name being Alexander Campbell. This
man preached the doctrine that baptism was for the remission of sins,
and that split the Church; but when the brethren came to these
societies and taught them, not only baptism for the remission of sins,
but the laying on of hands for the reception of the Holy Ghost, they
believed it, and were baptized for the remission of their sins, and
received the laying on of hands for the Holy Ghost, and then received
other ordinances.
Then the Lord revealed to Joseph to go out to the Ohio, and he went
up; and after he went up he then understood and was taught of the Lord
to send men to the west to hunt out a place for the Center Stake of
Zion. They went according to the revelations that Joseph received, and
finally Joseph went up to meet them, in Independence, Jackson County,
Mo., on the borders of the Lamanites. You can read all this in the
Book of Doctrine and Covenants. Then he had not received all at this
time, and at the time that Zion's Camp, as it is called, went up to
Missouri, in 1834, so far as I am aware, Joseph had never received any
intimation as to there being a Patriarch in the Church. On our return
home from Missouri, my brother Joseph Young, while conversing with me,
asked if it would be right for our father to give us a blessing. Said
he—"I feel just as though I want my father to give me a patriarchal
blessing." When we reached Kirtland we talked with Joseph on the
subject, and he said, "Certainly," and finally we appointed a day, and
brother Joseph, the Prophet, came to where we met and ordained my
father a Patriarch, and he was the first man ordained to the office of
Patriarch in the Church, and he blessed his children; and soon after this Joseph ordained his father a patriarch and his father
called his children together and blessed them. Then Joseph had another
revelation, that a record should be kept, and when this was revealed
to him, he then had his father call his house together again, and
blessed them over and a record was kept of it. This is to show you,
and especially those who have no experience in the Church, how the
Lord has led this people along, led them along, led them along.
We were driven from Missouri after Joseph went up there, and we came
to Nauvoo, and the Twelve went to England. While we were in England, I
think, the Lord manifested to me by visions and his Spirit, things
that I did not then understand. I never opened my mouth to any person
concerning them, until I returned to Nauvoo. Joseph had never
mentioned this, there had never been a thought of it in the Church
that I knew anything about at that time. But I had this for myself,
and I kept it to myself, and when I returned home and Joseph revealed
these things to me, I then understood the reflections that were upon
my mind while in England. But this was not until after I had told him
what I understood. I saw that he was after something by his
conversation, leading my mind along, and others, to see how we could
bear this. This was in 1841; the revelation was given in 1843, but the
doctrine was revealed before this; and when I told Joseph what I
understood, which was right in front of my house in the street, as he
was shaking hands and leaving me, he turned round and looked me in the
eyes, and says he—"Brother Brigham, are you speaking what you
understand—are you in earnest?" Says I—"I speak just as the Spirit
manifests to me." Says he—"God bless you, the Lord has opened your
mind," and he turned and went off.
About this time came a revelation concerning baptism for the dead. I
know that in my traveling and preaching, many a time, I have stopped
by beautiful streams of clear, pure water, and have said to myself,
"How delightful it would be to me to go into this, to be baptized for
the remission of my sins." When I got home Joseph told me it was my
privilege. At this time came a revelation, that the Saints could be
baptized and rebaptized when they chose, and then that we could be
baptized for our dear friends, but at first it was not revealed that a
record should be kept of those who were baptized; but when he received
an additional revelation to that effect, then a record was kept.
Hundreds and thousands, I suppose, were baptized before any record was
kept at all, and they were baptized over, and a record kept of the
baptisms and the names of the administrator, those who acted for the
dead, and of the dead, and of the witnesses. You can read in the Book
of Doctrine and Covenants, the letter that Joseph wrote when he was
away from home in regard to having witnesses at these baptisms. I
relate this to show you that the Lord did not reveal everything at
once; but I need not dwell on this any longer.
I will now say to my brethren and sisters, the Lord, in the first
place, commenced to bring the people together upon the ground of union
and oneness; but they could not bear this. You can read, on page 161,
of the Book of Doctrine and Covenants, a revelation given to the
Colesville Branch. Leman Copley had a tract of land that was
to be given to the Saints, and they were to build up a stake of Zion
until there was another place prepared for the Center Stake; but he
apostatized and the people went away. Before this the Lord revealed to
Joseph, that the people would gather out from Babylon, and establish
the kingdom of God upon the principles of heaven. They went up to
Jackson County, Mo., with this in their faith, and with the express
understanding that when they got there, everything was to be laid at
the feet of the Bishop, not at the feet of the Apostles, as they did
anciently. Then, you know, they sold all they had, and brought their
substance and laid it at the feet of the Apostles. The revelation
given through Joseph was to lay all at the feet of the Bishop, who was
to distribute it among the people, according to the revelation given
for that purpose, for their benefit. But they could not bear this,
consequently they were driven from Jackson County, and assembled
again, some in Caldwell, and some in Davies County, and finally they
were driven from the State. This was in the fall of 1838. I recollect,
in Far West, Joseph, talking upon these matters, said—"The people
cannot bear the revelations that the Lord has for them. There were a
great many revelations if the people could bear them." I think it was
the eighth day of July, 1831, Joseph had a revelation that the people
should consecrate their surplus property for the building of the
Temple there in Far West, for the support of the Priesthood, for the
paying of the debts of the Presidency, etc., which I could give an
account of, for I was present when it came. Joseph was doing business
in Kirtland, and it seemed as though all creation was upon him, to
hamper him in every way, and they drove him from his business, and it
left him so that some of his debts had to be settled afterwards; and I
am thankful to say that they were settled up; still further, we have
sent East to New York, to Ohio, and to every place where I had any
idea that Joseph had ever done business, and inquired if there was a
man left to whom Joseph Smith, Jun., the Prophet, owed a dollar, or a
sixpence. If there was we would pay it. But I have not been able to
find one. I have advertised this through every neighborhood and place
where he formerly lived, consequently I have a right to conclude that
all his debts were settled.
We will now pass on. You know the history with regard to our leaving
Nauvoo. Now I have it in my mind to ask the question of the Latter-day
Saints—Are they in earnest? Do they mean what they say, when they say
they believe that brother Brigham Young is the legal successor of
Joseph Smith, the Prophet? We believe in Joseph the Prophet; he sealed
his testimony with his blood, consequently we can, with impunity,
believe on him a little better than if he were living. When he was
living, his testimony was not in force upon the people as it is now.
But is brother Brigham the legal successor of brother Joseph? This
people, called Latter-day Saints, by their acts, by their voting, say
they believe he is. Well, we will admit the fact. I have a little to
say, then, and shall come back to former days with regard to the
duties of the individual who leads the kingdom of God on the earth.
In all ages of the world that we have any knowledge of, when there was
a people on the earth whom God acknowledged as his people, he
has invariably dictated them in spiritual and in temporal things. This
question was agitated year after year in the days of Joseph. The first
two Bishops in the Church—Edward Partridge was the first—I was well
acquainted with him, and Newel K. Whitney was the second—questioned
the propriety of Joseph having anything to do with temporal things.
Joseph would argue the case with them a little, and tell them how
things were, and bring up Scripture to show them that it could not be
otherwise—that it was impossible for the Lord to dictate people unless
he dictated them in temporal affairs. The very first act after
believing is a temporal act. After I hear the Gospel preached and
believe it, I go down into the waters of baptism, which is a temporal
act: it is an act that pertains to my will and my body, I will that my
body shall go down into the water and be immersed for the remission of
my sins, consequently I have to go to the Elder who taught me the
Gospel, the spiritual portion of the kingdom, and apply to him to
administer this temporal ordinance, and he has to do it; having taught
the doctrine he officiates in the act, and you will find it through
life, every circumstance, in every case the man that dictates the
spiritual kingdom of God, must dictate the temporal affairs, it
cannot be otherwise. I say this to you, because the idea in the minds of
a few of the people is—"Brigham ought not to meddle with temporal
affairs." They said so to Joseph, and they said so much about it, that
I went into the Temple at Kirtland, and challenged the men who were
querying on this, to prove or bring up one instance where God did not
manifest his will concerning temporal things whenever he made known
his will to the children of men for establishing his kingdom on the
earth. They always came to the floor; they had to do it, there was
nothing else for them; it prostrated every person. There were William
E. McLellin, John F. Boynton, and Lyman Johnson, who belonged to the
Twelve, Frederick G. Williams, second counselor to Joseph, and
two-thirds of the High Council all talking about this, and I went into
the Temple and just challenged them to show wherein the Lord ever
conferred upon any man in the world the power to dictate in spiritual
affairs, that he did not in temporal affairs? They could not do it. I
told them they could not draw the line between the spiritual and the
temporal. All things were created first spiritual, and then temporal.
Everything in the spirit world was presented as we see it now, and
this temporal earth was presented there. We were in the spirit world,
and we came here into this time, which is in eternity, nothing in the
world only a change of time and seasons allotted to a change of being
that makes it time to us. It is in eternity, and we are just as much
in eternity now, as we shall be millions of years hence. But it is
time measured to finite beings, and it is changeable, and we call it
temporal, while the fact is it is all spiritual in the first place,
then temporal, then spiritual, and made immortal, consequently you
cannot divide them. I say this for those to reflect upon who think that
there is a difference between temporal and spiritual things. I do not
say, for I do not know, that there any such here.
Now we come to our present condition. You know the past. These
children who were born in this city or Territory, know what they can
remember, and many of them are old enough to have many reflections and can see and understand a great many things; but the older
ones know that this people have drifted just as far as they can
without a reformation. Every spiritual mind knows this. I will now say
to my brethren and sisters, that while we were in Winter Quarters, the
Lord gave to me a revelation just as much as he ever gave one to
anybody. He opened my mind, and showed me the organization of the
kingdom of God in a family capacity. I talked it to my brethren; I
would throw out a few words here, and a few words there, to my first
counselor, to my second counselor and the Twelve Apostles, but with
the exception of one or two of the Twelve, it would not touch a man.
They believed it would come, O yes, but it would be by and by. Says I,
"Why not now?" If I had been worth millions when we came into this
valley and built what we now call the "Old Fort," I would have given
it if the people had been prepared to then receive the kingdom of God
according to the pattern given to Enoch. But I could not touch them.
One would say, "I am for California," another one, "I am for
gold,"
and I am for this and I am for that; and some used their influence in
trying to persuade others to go to California. They said—"You can't
stay here, you can't raise anything here, it is too cold, too frosty,
these mountains are not fit to live in, this is not the place for
white people, let us go to California and get some gold," etc.
Now I am going to tell a dream that I had, which I think is as
applicable, to the people today—the 21st day of June, 1874, as when I
had it. There were so many going to California, and going this way and
that way, and they did not know what they wanted, and said I—"stay
here, we can raise our food here, I know it is a good stock country, a
good sheep country, and as good a country for raising silk as there is
in the world, and we shall raise some of the best of wheat. There
stands a man—Burr Frost, and there is Truman O. Angell, who were
present at the time. Said I, "We can raise all we want here, do not go
away, do not be discouraged." That was when the pioneers came; the
next year, it was California, California, California, California.
"No," said I, "stay here." After much thought and reflection, and
a
good deal of praying and anxiety as to whether the people would be
saved after all our trouble in being driven into the wilderness, I had
a dream one night, the second year after we came in here. Captain
Brown had gone up to the Weber, and bought a little place belonging to
Miles Goodyear. Miles Goodyear had a few goats, and I had a few sheep
that I had driven into the Valley, and I wanted to get a few goats to
put along with the sheep. I had seen Captain Brown and spoken to him
about the goats, and he said I could have them. Just at that time I
had this dream, which I will now relate. I thought I had started and
gone past the Hot Springs, which is about four miles north of this
city. I was going after my goats. When I had gone round the point of
the mountain by the Hot Springs, and had got about half a mile on the
rise of ground beyond the Spring, whom should I meet but brother
Joseph Smith. He had a wagon with no bed on, with bottom boards, and
tents and camp equipage piled on. Somebody sat on the wagon driving
the team. Behind the team I saw a great flock of sheep. I heard their
bleating, and saw some goats among them. I looked at them and thought —"This is curious, brother Joseph has been up to Captain
Brown's and got my goats." There were men driving the sheep, and some
of the sheep I should think were three and a half feet high, with
large, fine, beautiful white fleeces, and they looked so lovely and
pure; others were of moderate size, and pure and white; and in fact
there were sheep of all sizes, with fleeces clean, pure and white.
Then I saw some that were dark and spotted, of all colors and sizes
and kinds, and their fleeces were dirty, and they looked inferior;
some of these were a pretty good size, but not as large as some of the
large fine clean sheep, and altogether there was a multitude of them
of all sizes and kinds, and goats of all colors, sizes and kinds mixed
among them. Joseph stopped the wagon, and the sheep kept rushing up
until there was an immense herd. I looked in Joseph's eye, and
laughed, just as I had many a time when he was alive, about some
trifling thing or other, and said I—"Joseph, you have got the darndest
flock of sheep I ever saw in my life; what are you going to do with
them, what on earth are they for?" Joseph looked cunningly out of his
eyes, just as he used to at times, and said he—"They are all good in
their places." When I awoke in the morning I did not find any fault
with those who wanted to go to California; I said, "If they want to go
let them go, and we will do all we can to save them; I have no more
fault to find, the sheep and the goats will run together, but Joseph
says, "they are all good in their places."
This will apply precisely to what we are doing at the present time. We
are trying to unite the people together in the order that the Lord
revealed to Enoch, which will be observed and sustained in the latter
days in redeeming and building up Zion; this is the very order that
will do it, and nothing short of it. We are trying to organize the
Latter-day Saints into this order; but I want to tell you, my brethren
and sisters, that I have not come here to say that you have got to
join this order or we will cut you off the Church, or you must join
this order or we will consider you apostates; no such thing, oh no,
the Saints are not prepared to see everything at once. They have got
to learn little by little, and to receive a little here and a little
there. Since we commenced to organize at St. George, I have not had a
feeling in my heart but to say to those who cannot see this order—Try
and live your religion; get the Spirit of the Lord and keep it; humble
yourselves before the Lord and get his Spirit; ask the Father in the
name of Jesus to open your minds and let you see things as they are,
and you will delight in it. And I say to all those who wish to receive
the Order, come along and we will organize you, and we will do the
very best we can for you. It is true that some who are in the Order
talk very foolishly to those who do not feel to come into it; they
throw out some very unbecoming expressions. This is entirely wrong. It
is not called for, it is not needed, and it will not do the least good
in the world. We must manifest and show to our brethren a purer life
than we have heretofore. I will say to you, who want to be organized
in this Order, we will not take one red cent from you, but the Lord
will add to you riches and honor, if you will take counsel. As we have
said from the beginning, we do not want a man's farm, we do not want
his gold and his silver, and nothing in the world but just his time.
We want to dictate the time of the Latter-day Saints, to show
them that we can come into the Order of God, and that we will be that
people that the Lord has said with regard to temporal things.
Speaking of the Latter-day Saints, the Lord has said—"I will make you
the richest people on the earth," and he can do it just as well as
not, if we have a mind to let him. It is the time of the people we
want to dictate.
I will branch off to another thread of the subject. Here is a brother
who says, "Why, yes, you may have some of my property, or even take it
all; but I want to be a man for myself; I do not want to be dictated;
I want to preserve my own freedom; I do not want to be a slave." What
an idea! It is from the enemy, and because a person has not the Spirit
of the Lord to see how things are. There is not a man of us but what
is willing to acknowledge at once that God demands strict obedience to
his requirements. But in rendering that strict obedience, are we made
slaves? No, it is the only way on the face of the earth for you and me
to become free, and we shall become the slaves of our own passions,
and of the wicked one, and servants to the devil, if we take any other
course, and we shall be eventually cast into hell with the devils. Now
to say that I do not enjoy the volition of my own will just as much
when I pray as I would to swear, is a false principle, it is false
ground to take. You take the man who swears, and he has no more
freedom, and acts no more on his own will than the man who prays; and
the man who yields strict obedience to the requirements of Heaven,
acts upon the volition of his own will and exercises his freedom just
as much as when he was a slave to passion; and I think it is much
better and more honorable for us, whether children or adults,
youthful, middle-aged or old, it is better to live by and better to
die by, to have our hearts pure, and to yield strict obedience to the
principles of life which the Lord has revealed, than be a slave to sin
and wickedness. All that the Lord requires of us is strict obedience
to the laws of life. All the sacrifice that the Lord asks of his
people is strict obedience to our own covenants that we have made with
our God, and that is to serve him with an undivided heart.
I say this because I want you to understand our position. I am the
director and counselor to this people for building up the kingdom of
God on the earth. I am the one who will tell what shall be done, and
how it shall be done, and any man who deviates or says that there is
any design in connection with the United Order other than to put the
people in a condition and situation to be better and freer, and in
which they will enjoy more of the blessings of heaven and earth than
they can out of it, does not tell the truth. You all know that it
takes intelligence to enjoy. Persons in good-health enjoy their food.
Why? Because they have sensibility and nervous feeling. Take that away
and they would be like that stovepipe. Cut a hole in that, and put
therein a nice beef steak, plum pudding, or a sweet cake, and would
the stovepipe enjoy it? No. Why? Because it, has no sensibility. We
enjoy because we have sensibility. Promote this sensibility, seek to
get more and more knowledge, more wisdom, and more understanding, and
to know the things of God. He is the author of life and of all joy and
comfort; he is the author of all intelligence and of all good to us;
then become satisfied to obey him, and seek to get more and more of
his nature, and learn more and more of him. This will give us greater sensibility, and we shall know how to enjoy, and how to
endure. I say, if you want to enjoy exquisitely, become a Latter-day
Saint, and then live the doctrine of Jesus Christ. The man or woman who
will do this will enjoy and endure most; and if they will be humble
and faithful they will enjoy the glory and the excellency of the power
of God, and be prepared to live with Gods and with angels.
We want to build up the kingdom of God on the earth. I do not know but
I am spending more time than I should, but I must say some things
more. This Third Ward is not organized. I do not know when it will be.
We asked your Bishop, and he did not feel exactly prepared to enter
into the Order. We know the reason why. Will he be prepared? Yes. I
want to prophesy that he and his Ward will be prepared by and by, and
I hope my prophecy will be fulfilled. He does not see things as
quickly as I do. I will tell you what my position has always been.
Before I embraced the Gospel, I understood pretty well what the
different sects preached, but I was called an infidel because I could
not embrace their dogmas. I could not believe all of Methodism; I
could not believe all of the Baptists' doctrines; there were some
things they preached I could believe, and some I could not. I could
not fully agree with the Presbyterians in their doctrines, nor with
the Quakers, nor the Catholics, although they all have some truth. As
far as their teachings were in accordance with the Bible, I could
believe them, and no further. I was acquainted with the creeds of
nearly all the various sects of dissenters in America, for I had made
it my business to inquire into the principles in which they believed.
I was religiously inclined in my youth, but I could not believe in
their dogmas, for they did not commend themselves to my understanding,
though a child I had attended their camp meetings, and had seen what
they called the power of God. I had seen men and women fall, and be
as speechless and breathless as that stove before me. I had seen
scientists hold the lightest feather they could procure at the
nostrils and mouths of females to see if a particle of air passed to
or from the lungs, and not a particle was discernable. When a child I
saw all this, but I could not believe in their dogmas. I could not say
the people were not sincere in their faith and acts, but it was all a
mystery to me. I was not old enough, and did not understand enough to
decide. In the days of Joseph, when the revelation came to him and
Sidney Rigdon, while translating that portion of the New Testament
contained in the 29th verse of the third chapter of John, in reference
to the different degrees of glory, I was not prepared to say that I
believed it, and I had to wait. What did I do? I handed this over to
the Lord in my feelings, and said I, "I will wait until the Spirit of
God manifests to me, for or against." I did not judge the matter, I
did not argue against it, not in the least. I never argued the least
against anything Joseph proposed, but, if I could not see or
understand it, I handed it over to the Lord. This is my counsel to
you, my brethren and sisters, and if I were sure my prophecy would be
fulfilled, I certainly would prophesy that all here, who profess to be
Latter-day Saints, will come into the holy Order and rejoice in it.
And if you do not feel to come into the Order, assist those who do,
and do not say anything against them. You who come into the Order, do
not lisp anything against those who do not; if you feel right
you will not have the least feeling against them. Come along, for, as
I have said, if I do not find more than fifty men in the kingdom of
God who will go with me to organize the Church and kingdom of God more
perfectly, I shall go ahead. What for? More knowledge, wisdom, and
perfection in the management and control of our temporal affairs. This
is what I calculate to do, and I am going to do. Ask me if I am going
into the Order with all that I have? Yes, as I told them in a meeting
not long ago, I am going in with hat, coat, vest, pants, shirt, boots,
and all I have. And if the question is asked, If your family do not
go into the Order, what are you going to do with your property? I am
going to seal it up to the kingdom of God, for I do not mean that the
enemies of the kingdom shall have a penny if I can help it. I want it
to go to the kingdom of God, I want it appropriated for the salvation
of the human family, to build Temples, to sustain the families of the
Elders who go abroad to preach; I want it to be used for the good of
the poor and for the establishing of truth and righteousness on the
earth. That is all it is for; I have no pleasure in it, I have no
delight in it, it is nothing to me; I want everything that the Lord
places in my possession, my time, my talents, every ability I have,
every penny that he has committed to me to be used to his glory, and
for the building up of his kingdom on the earth. I have nothing but
what he has committed to me. What do you say to that, Jacob? Is that
right? It is exactly. There is not a man here who has got his sight,
hearing, taste and smell, but he is indebted to the Lord for them. The
Lord gave us everything we possess, whatever ability or talents we
have; our Tabernacles and all we enjoy, are the gifts of the Lord, and
all should be devoted to the promotion of his kingdom on the earth,
and I mean that mine shall be, the Lord being my helper.
I do not want to say to this Ward, you must come into the Order, or we
shall not fellowship you, for we shall fellowship you if you do not. A
short time ago, I said to those of this Ward who intended to be
organized, go to the Eighth Ward and organize with them, but it was a
misunderstanding, that I had dismissed Bro. Weiler from being Bishop
here; and if anybody else understood so, I think they are mistaken. He
is your Bishop still, and I charge him now in God's name, not to
trifle with the sacred things of the kingdom of God, or to throw cold
water on them; if he does he will be left dark, and finally
apostatize. I say to you Bishop and to the brethren and sisters, be
faithful, live so that the Spirit of the Lord will abide within you,
then you can judge for yourselves. I have often said to the Latter-day
Saints—"Live so that you will know whether I teach you truth or not."
Suppose you are careless and unconcerned, and give way to the spirit
of the world, and I am led, likewise, to preach the things of this
world and to accept things that are not of God, how easy it would be
for me to lead you astray! But I say to you, live so that you will
know for yourselves whether I tell the truth or not. That is the way
we want all Saints to live. Will you do it? Yes, I hope you will,
every one of you. I say to the Bishop, here, go along and do not
contend against the things of God. You and your counselors are
disposed to argue in regard to the United Order. There should he no
argument in this case; the Spirit of the Lord is the only thing that
can enlighten our minds, and give us a knowledge of the things
of God. No earthly argument, no earthly reasoning can open the minds
of intelligent beings and show them heavenly things; that can only be
done by the spirit of revelation. I testify this to the Latter-day
Saints, and I feel to say God bless you, peace be with you. I have not
come here to scold you, or anybody else. I am sometimes very rough in
my language to the people, and I give them a rough scolding, but I do
not wish any evil to the individual, it is to his wrong acts. If a
person does wrong I am for exposing that, and chastening the
perpetrator if he persists in it. I want wrongdoers to refrain. Now,
I say, brother Jacob, teach the things of God. Do not have a doubt
about this any more than about baptism, nor say a word against it. How
many are there in this Church who are now wavering and shaking because
they have spoken against the ordinances of heaven, and especially
against that ordinance which God has revealed for the exaltation of
the children of men in celestial marriage? Hold that as sacred as your
own soul: if you cannot see the beauty and glory of it, and feel it in
your own hearts, say nothing against it. This earth was placed in the
hands of Adam and his sons, and he is the Lord of the earth; the male
portion of the human family are the lords of the earth, and they are
full of wickedness, evil and destruction, and especially in their acts
towards the female sex. But God will hold them accountable. The fact
is, let the pure principles of the kingdom of God be taught to men and
women, and far more of the latter than of the former will receive and
obey them. What shall we do with them? They want exaltation, they want
to be in the great family of heaven, they do not want to be cast off,
then they must be taken into the families of those who prove
themselves worthy to be exalted with the Gods. Who is it that cannot
see the beauty and the excellency of celestial marriage, and having
our children sealed to us? What should we do without this? Were it not
for what is revealed concerning the sealing ordinances, children born
out of the covenant could not be sealed to their parents; children
born in the covenant are entitled to the Spirit of the Lord and all
the blessings of the kingdom. I know that our children, universally,
have the Spirit of the Lord, and when they get old enough to judge
right from wrong, if they turn from the good and promote evil in their
hearts, then will be the time they sin.
Now, I say to you, brother Jacob, teach the things of God, and do not
trifle with this; do not argue about this at all; if you do not see
and understand, stand still and see the salvation of God. Labor and
help those who wish to go forward, and the Lord will bless you in it.
He will open your minds and give you light and understanding, and you
will be far happier than the wicked. How blessed are you when you are
for God and none else! Then you are ready for whatever he reveals. How
sweet you can sleep! Your dreams are pleasant and delightful, and the
days, weeks, months and years pass away easily and joyfully, you are
so happy.
I pray God to bless you, Amen.