I take the liberty of saying a few words on this occasion to both
Saints and sinners. That expression brings to my mind at once—Where
are the Saints? And who are they? And who are the sinners? We are all
sinners; but there is quite a portion of the congregation who are
trying to be Saints. For those who profess to be Saints I have a few
texts of Scripture. With regard to those who believe the truth and
desire to do it; to all who wish to live and preserve yourselves in
the truth, in the love of God, I wish to say, they whom God loves he
chastens. This is so, whether we believe it or not. If we have not
received chastisement, we receive not that witness, that assurance, to
testify to us that we love him. Another text of Scripture: The wicked
are a rod in the hand of God to chasten his people. If the Lord loves
us and we love him, we may expect to be chastened; and it is not
joyous at the time of receiving the chastisement; it is grievous; but
if we are exercised by grace and the spirit of truth, it will yield
the peaceable fruits of righteousness.
I wish to whisper in the ears of the Latter-day Saints, I mean those
who profess to be Saints, Know ye that the Lord reigns, and that the
hearts of all living are in his hands. He turns the hearts of the
children of men as the rivers of waters are turned. He rules in the
armies of heaven, and does his pleasure upon the earth. When he wills,
no man can hinder it; when he is disposed to open the door, it is not
in the power of man to shut it; and when he closes the door it is not
in the power of man to open it. Remember this, Latter-day Saints, and
all the Christian world, the Pagan, Infidel and Jewish world, and
everybody in the world; and hearken, O ye nations of the earth, and
know ye that God lives, that he has spoken from the heavens, and has
sent forth his everlasting Gospel to the children of men, that through
obedience to the same they may be saved; and if they reject this
message they will be damned. We cannot help it, it is not our
business, it is not our doctrine, it is the doctrine of him whom we
serve, of him whom we obey, of him who holds us in existence, who
gives us breath and being, and we have a right to believe in Him, to
love and serve him and to build up and establish his kingdom; and we
are doing it.
If I were to tell you one half of the things that I know in many
particulars it would astonish the halfhearted who have but little or
no faith, and who do not understand the workings of the providences of
God among the children of men. But as to the persecution, it is
nothing at all, neither one way nor another, only to purify the Saints
and prepare the nations for the good or evil, for the Lord Almighty to
send forth his judgments to cleanse the earth, to sanctify it, and to
justify the righteous and condemn the guilty, and to prepare the way
for the coming of the Son of Man. I wish to say to you, to those who
are in the truth, as well as to those who are out of the truth, if we
did not have to bear the iron hand of persecution, the principles we
believe in, which attract the attention of the good and the evil upon
the earth and which occupy so many tongues and circumscribe their
philosophy, would be embraced by thousands who are now indifferent to
them. The evildoer would crowd upon our borders; and we have plenty of
them now without receiving any more. They would crowd into this
Church. And this is the reason why brother George Q. Cannon says, he
is pleased and rejoiced because of this persecution. We should be
satisfied with it, we should acknowledge the hand of God in it, and
say: The will of the Lord be done and not ours. By closely watching
the Latter-day Saints, and seeing that they are kept in the line of
their duty by using this kind of a rod, it prevents others from coming
that would affect us more than they can who are outside of this
Church. There is not one man in this city nor in the Territory who
hates the truth and the Latter-day Saints, whose influence I dread,
no, not even the hundredth part, as I do a smooth, slick hypocrite who
professes to be a Latter-day Saint. The former cannot sow the seeds of
infidelity and unbelief in the hearts of the people; but the latter
can.
I wish to say to all the people, The principles of the Gospel that God
has revealed from the heavens to the children of men upon the earth
are worthy the acceptation of the wise, the pure and the just. There
is no true philosophy in existence which is not embraced in the
Gospel, it belongs to the Gospel, it is a part of the Gospel. The
philosophy of the heavens and the earth, of the worlds that are, that
were, and that are yet to come into existence, is all in the Gospel
that we have embraced. Every true philosopher, so far as he
understands the principles of truth, has so much of the Gospel, and so
far he is a Latter-day Saint, whether he knows it or not. Our Father,
the great God, is the author of the sciences, he is the great
mechanic, he is the systematizer of all things, he plans and devises
all things, and every particle of knowledge which man has in his
possession is the gift of God, whether they consider it divine, or
whether it is the wisdom of man; it belongs to God, and he has
bestowed it upon us, his children dwelling here upon the earth.
We take up the principles or ordinances of the house of God, and when
we set them before the people, who would like to believe them? Ask the world of mankind, the heathen world, if there is one doctrine
or principle in all these which is not good for man to receive. If we
could find such a place as an angelic world, we might ask its
inhabitants if we had embraced in our faith a single principle not
good for them. Even they would not find an idea, a doctrine or a
principle but what every person would say, respecting it: "It is just
as good as we could ask for." For the principles of the Gospel are
calculated to purify the heart, the hands, the mouth, the brain, and
every act of the children of men, and to prepare them to live with
perfect and holy beings. These are principles worth seeking for, they
are worth living for, they are worth dying for. As to the struggle
that is going on between the Latter-day Saints and the world, have we
any struggle with them? No. Have we any contention? No, not in the
least. Have we any battle to fight? No, none at all. Are we to marshal
our armies to contend against them? No. Here are the words of truth;
we go forth and declare them to the ends of the earth; it is our
mission and all we have to do. They may war against us, they may
marshal their forces and their armies. God rules, I fear them not. If
I preserve myself in the truth, I am all right. With the principles
that these Latter-day Saints believe in, if we had our own way, and
were not followed up by these blessed scoundrels, would we have any
grog shops? No! Would we permit men to take the name of the Lord in
vain? No. If we could use that moral influence we would stop all
drinking, swearing, stealing, and Sabbath breaking, and speaking evil
one of another; and we would have no dishonest men; we would have all
men do that which is right before the Lord. But no, we must be
followed up. That is all right, perfectly right. Every step we take
and every move we make must be scanned by the devil to see if it is
right. You will excuse the expression. He is watching closely to see
if we live our religion. And he says: "Now, Latter-day Saints, are you
not ashamed whenever you do anything that is naughty?" and tries to
discourage them, that they may turn away from the truth. What should
this do for us? Should it not cause us to refrain from all wrong, and
teach us to do better, even this the chastisement of the devil?
We need not worry about this, that or the other, not in the least; it
is for us to serve the Lord, and see that we do his will. And so far
as persecution and the killing of the Prophets are concerned, whether
of ancient or of modern times, even Joseph and Hyrum Smith, and others
of the Saints, men, women and children, as they have done, we do not
expect that the perpetrators of these deeds will be brought to
justice; not in the least, until the Lord sits upon the case and deals
out justice to them. The cry has been against the Prophets of every
age, against the Apostles and against Jesus himself, and against all
those who have ever preached the truth, and why? Because the systems
of the world are errors; while the Gospel is true, it stands alone, it
is as firm as the everlasting mountains; the storms may beat upon it,
and it is there. But how is it with those who are jealous of us and
who oppose us? We hear some of them who profess Christianity crying,
"Come to Jesus," "Come to Jesus," etc. What is there of it? It
is so
much nonsense. If Jesus were in their midst today, they would kick
him out; for they did so to his servants. Suppose the Apostle
Paul, or Peter, in fact any of the Apostles were to get into their
chapels, and were to preach from their pulpits their doctrine which
they preached when upon the earth, what do you think they would do to
them? They would take them and lead them out of doors, saying, "We
will not have any such hypocrites and false Prophets as you are in our
midst."
There is once in a while a good honest man who professes to preach the
truth, and when he does preach, it amounts to this: "My brethren, we
think we are Christians, we are believers in the word of God; but I
tell you if the Apostles were here today we would not receive them."
That is what these good, honest preachers would say, and a few do say
it to their congregations.
A false principle, a false theory, whether in mechanism or philosophy,
requires much argument and superior talent to sustain it, but when the
truth is presented it commends itself to the understanding of the
people so readily that it requires no great amount of learning to
substantiate it, nor much skill to declare it to the honest who want
truth, and it remains firm and sound.
Forty-five years ago they were determined to kill the Prophet Joseph.
I have lain upon the floor scores and scores of nights ready to
receive the mob who sought his life. This persecution commenced with a
little neighborhood, then a town, then a county, then a State, and
then the people of the United States; and by and by other nations will
be just as bitter towards us, and the doctrines we preach as many of
the people of our own nation now are. They will struggle and strive,
and plan and devise, saying, Let us take this course, and that course;
and they will struggle until they will come to a stop as though they
were against a mountain of solid rock. They will do all they can to
break us up, and even destroy us; this has been the case now for the
last forty-five years. Joseph Smith had forty-seven law suits, and I
was with him through the most of them, and never was the first thing
proved against him; he was never guilty of the first violation of the
law or of good order. And when Governor Ford asked him to go to
prison, as the mob were so enraged that he could not insure his life,
that he might be safe until he returned from Nauvoo, he said: "I will
pledge you the faith of the State of Illinois for your safety." But as
soon as he was gone, the mob murdered both Joseph and his brother
Hyrum, in the jail. That was to be so. I heard Joseph say many a time,
"I should not live until I am forty years of age." The spring before
he was killed—his death occurred the 27th of June, 1844—he hurried off
the first Elders of the Church. All right, I thought then, and I think
so now. It is all in the hands of God. They killed Joseph, and what
for? For the Gospel's sake. It was for no evil, for I was well
acquainted with him. He testified to the truth, he sealed his
testimony with his blood. Whether we believe in blood atonement or
not, the Lord so ordered it, that Joseph, as well as others of the
Prophets, sealed their testimony with their blood.
I said here last Sabbath, that, if the people of this government are
not satisfied with what they have already passed through this side of
twenty years past, "Wait a little longer, and they will be perfectly
satisfied with blood." They shed the blood of the innocent; if they
are not satisfied with the blood they have shed of each other, wait a
little while and they will shed each other's blood to their
full satisfaction. The Lord has spoken it, and we have nothing to do
with it. If we could, we would hide ourselves away from the scenes
that will take place; but this we cannot do. But wait a little longer,
and the people of this nation, as well as others, will have blood till
they are satisfied with shedding the blood of each other. This is the
prediction of the ancient Prophets, and has been confirmed unto us
through his servant Joseph. The people are in the hands of God, he
will rule all things and deal justly with all mankind; but he will not
suffer this wickedness to dwell on the earth; it must be cleansed. All
that we need to concern ourselves about is to serve the Lord, to trust
in him, so that we may be ready to receive his dealings upon the just
and the unjust, in all his chastisements. Let us live up to the
principles of the just, and God will continue to bless us and deliver
us with the just.
If I had power, I certainly would bless the people with everything
their hearts could wish if they would not sin. I would do, as I heard
the mothers of some of my children say, that went with me to St.
George this winter, that I indulged them in everything they wanted.
Why? Because they never manifested a desire for anything wrong. And if
it were in my power I would bless all the inhabitants of the earth,
with everything in which they could glorify God, and purify their own
hearts.
May God bless you. Amen.