I discover it is here, as it is in other places through the Territory
which we have visited, that there is an increase, a strengthening of
the Stakes of Zion. The prophecy which refers to the strengthening of
the stakes and the lengthening of the cords of Zion is continually
being fulfilled in the efforts made in this direction by the
Latter-day Saints. In the world's history some of the greatest events
that have taken place, in their inception attracted but little of the
notice or attention of the children of men. The coming of our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ was known to but few people who then dwelt upon
the face of the earth; and yet it was the greatest event in the
history of the world. The coming forth of Joseph Smith and the Book of
Mormon, and the organization of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, attracted but little of the attention of the
masses. Of course it was considered of the greatest importance by the
few, but in the course of time we shall see in this land of Zion the
assembling of millions. Methinks I sometimes hear the sound of their
footsteps approaching; and when they come they will be for Zion, for
God and His kingdom, and they will sustain and uphold the holy and
righteous principles of eternal truth which have been revealed, and
the institutions of Heaven which our Father has established in this
day and age of the world. And God's purposes will be accomplished with
triumph, for victory will crown the efforts of the Lord and his
people.
In our day we are permitted to witness the occurring of some of the
greatest events that have ever transpired since the days of Adam upon
the earth. The ushering in of this great and glorious work of the last
days, the coming forth of the Gospel to the nations of the earth, and
the assembling of the people, the gathering together to sustain these
principles, and carry out the work of the Lord, to bring to pass His
great and glorious purposes and establish His kingdom in the earth, as
he shall lead forth, guide, and direct from time to time. It is the
great and glorious kingdom of our God that shall stand forever. In
these things we are co-workers with the Lord our Father in Heaven, so
far as we will let Him work with us, for He stands at the helm,
He guides the ship, directing the affairs of the whole earth, as well
as those of His covenant people. It has come forth in the age of the
world in which He designed it; He has made no mistake in regard to
this matter. I suppose the Lord knew and understood the time of
bringing to pass, and commencing to bring to pass His purposes in the
earth in regard to His kingdom, as well as, and no doubt a little
better than, anybody else, and He also knew there were those living
upon the earth who would receive it when He should reveal it unto
them. All these events have their times and seasons. I expect He knew
also that in the days of Jesus the word would be accepted by but
few—yea, that it would be trampled out by the wicked who would gain
the ascendancy; and that the Priesthood and authority thereof would be
received back again to the heavens, there to remain until the times of
restitution should set in, which times it is our happy privilege to
live in. This is the commencement of the restitution; the Gospel has
come again, but never more to be taken from the earth. It is now to be
sustained and upheld, to grow, to increase and multiply and become
mighty and powerful, and the way prepared for the coming of the Lord
Jesus Christ, who will rule from the rivers to the ends of the earth.
We do not fully realize, my brethren and sisters, that this work in
which we are engaged is the kingdom, the government of God if you
please, handed down to the children of men, with all its officers. A
people, a kingdom surrounded with all the elements necessary for the
advancement and prosperity of the people of the kingdom; the
government being established here in the earth, men, women, and
children under the gov ernment of Heaven are sustaining and upholding
and carrying it forward, with the power and might with which the God
of Heaven endows them; seeking to establish the principles of truth
and virtue upon His earth, here in the period of time in which it was
to come forth—the set time to favor Israel. A stripling came forth
with the message from Heaven, leading out, guiding, and directing the
affairs of the kingdom as they were made manifest to him by the Lord
from time to time, until it has grown to become a great people. It has
gone forth and continued to grow until we find it as it is this day
here in these valleys of the mountains—with a people dwelling in a
hundred towns, cities, and settlements. Poor people? Yes, in the
majority of cases; I might say in all cases. Poor people, laboring
people, who have come here, a good many of them, without anything
excepting their hands to obtain a subsistence; all poor alike, very
little difference, to find an inheritance. I do not suppose that a
parallel can be found since the God of Heaven gave Israel their
inheritance in the land of Palestine. We see many people who have
received inheritances; poor people that had nothing of this world's
goods have received inheritances and been blessed in a temporal point
of view. I presume and believe that President Brigham Young has done
more to obtain inheritances for the people, the poor among men, in the
last thirty years than all the emigrating and philanthropic societies
in the world, putting them all together, existing at the present time.
I do not think it has been equaled since the days of Israel, when
Palestine was divided out and given to the sons of Jacob. If it has I
have no knowledge of it, and I read a good deal.
It is said "in that day" —looking forward to the day in which we
live—that the "poor among men should rejoice in the Holy One of
Israel." Is this being literally fulfilled? Yes, it is. We have
demonstrated this fact, we have fulfilled it and are fulfilling it all
the time. It is one of the signs of the latter times, when the Gospel
is preached to the poor. What is the Gospel to the poor? It is the
power of God unto salvation. Cannot we see the power of God
demonstrated to the salvation of the poor among men, that lifts them
out of the poverty in which they have been brought up, and places them
in a land where they can get inheritances both for themselves and
their posterity? Then most assuredly this Gospel is the power of God
to the salvation of all such at least. It has proven itself the power
of God to this whole community, not even President Young himself
excepted. We came here stripped of everything, as the poor among men;
we can now lift up our hearts and rejoice in God who has wrought out
His salvation, temporal as well as spiritual. We were brought here to
these valleys of the mountains, a land held in reserve by Him, where
He can plant the feet of His Saints and strengthen Israel. Has he done
it? Witness ye this day! Here in this little nook and corner, a place
passed by, by the traveler who journeys over the great highway,
almost unnoticed. Yet in this little place the children were strung
along the sidewalk greeting our coming, from the railroad depot to the
bridge, a distance of half a mile. One would not suppose there were so
many in the whole country round. Here we behold the results of the
emigration from the heavens, as well as that from the various nations
of the earth, a grand assembling of the Saints of the Most High. What
for? Without a purpose or design? No, not by any means. The God of
Heaven, our Father, never planted a single individual upon the earth
without a purpose and design. Well would it be for us to find out that
purpose and design concerning us, and then truly live to it and fulfil
it, that our existence upon this earth might be accomplished, that our
existence here might not be a failure, that we might return to our
Father and receive that welcome plaudit, "Well done, good and faithful
servants."
He has given us the opportunity of filling the full measure of our
creation with credit to ourselves and honor to His name. And this can
be done simply by living our religion, the religion of Heaven. He is
inviting everybody who will to come and partake of the waters of life
freely, without money and without price. And yet it will cost you all
you have; but then there is one thing also to be thought of: you did
not have much when you commenced. Those who have riches are the last
to receive the Gospel. They do not see anything to rejoice over in the
revealed will of God to man upon the earth. If they do, they are so
full of the cares and love of the world that the good seed is choked
by the weeds that grow up around them, so that they cannot attend to
it, and place for the word is not found in their hearts.
It is the poor who receive the words of truth, who are the most ready
to do the will of God. When John sent one of his disciples to the
Savior to ask Him if He was the Son of God, etc., He said tell
John—"The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are
cleansed and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up and the poor have
the Gospel preached to them." That is the sign he gave to John. It
seems that even he was in some little doubt concerning the
divinity of Jesus' mission. The Gospel is preached to the poor; it is
also preached to the rich so far as they will receive it, but they
will not hear it. "O, (say they) go your way, we do not want anything
to do with it or with you." This is what they say to the Elder who
bears the message of life and salvation to the children of men. It is
among the poor they find the readiest access. And such are the ones
that the Lord can use to bring to pass his purposes; they are the ones
who need redemption, and who feel that they need it, and who obtain
it. Feeling their dependence upon Him, they appreciate the great good,
the blessing that God is pouring out upon them from time to time; they
realize that it is he who is doing this work for them. But they could
not arrogate to themselves this honor, inasmuch as they know that they
are merely instruments in our Father's hands of establishing his
kingdom. The rich if they attempted to perform this work would go
forth in their own power; they would say, "I have done it; it is I who
have accomplished this great work." They would not acknowledge God in
all things, nor give the honor to whom it really belongs, for who does
not know that they themselves only exist by God's power and
beneficence? But how is it that while the great majority feel and
realize these things, there are many who very soon arrogate to
themselves greatness and power, and think that they have accomplished
great things, and that the Lord can scarcely get along without them; I
wonder sometimes how he did happen to get along before they were born.
I have seen a great many of this character. You know those who get fat
quickly are very apt to kick.
What is there to hinder the bles sings of heaven flowing to this people
to the full extent of their hearts desire? I do not know of any
reason, unless we are not prepared and worthy to receive it, and make
a wise and proper use of it when it does come. How many do you believe
there are in Israel today who, if the wealth of the world were turned
towards them, would not consign it to the hands of the devil about as
fast as the Lord handed it to them? Do you know that I believe there
are a good many; our experience teaches us there are a good many,
because they part with it just as fast as it comes to them. I will say
that no Latter-day Saint has any right to dispose of the blessings
that God bestows upon him; he has no right to bestow his patronage
upon the outside world, and especially upon those who are in the midst
of Israel, whose interests are separate and apart from ours. It only
fosters an agency in our midst calculated to undermine the faith of
the Latter-day Saints; it nourishes a viper in our midst; a power that
is calculated to lead astray the young and unthinking. I said a
Latter-day Saint had no right to dispose of the blessings that God
bestows upon him; they are not given to us for any such purpose. What
are they given us for? To strengthen the Zion of God upon the earth,
not to destroy it; to send forth the Gospel to all nations, to build
Temples to God's holy name, wherein those who are faithful may receive
the blessings of time and eternity for themselves and their dead; they
are given to us to sustain and uphold righteous principles, and the
institutions of heaven; to gather the poor from afar, who are seeking
to be delivered from a state of bondage, to come up and participate in
the blessings you and I enjoy in these mountains. And so when
the Lord finds out that he has a people who will be thus zealous of
good works, who will make a good use of the wealth of the world, so
fast and so soon will the kingdom be delivered to the Saints in
greatness and power.
It cannot be given any sooner, and should not be if it could. Then if
we want to see advancement and progress, let us be diligent and
faithful over the few things committed to our trust, using them for
God and for his kingdom, and not distribute them to the wicked, nor
sift our ways to strangers, nor to those who know not God, and who
give no heed to the principles of truth he has established in the
earth. It is suicidal in the highest degree for the Latter-day Saints
to take such a course, and it is treasonable against the Government to
which we have sworn allegiance. There is a warfare, but who institutes
it? The Devil; he is against the authority of the holy Priesthood,
seeking to trample it from off the face of the earth. What do the
Latter-day Saints do? Nothing, only stand in their own defense,
contending inch by inch for the right. The Adversary is found all the
day long seeking to overthrow us, his agents are continually making
their insidious approaches to undermine the faith of the Saints, and
destroy the authority of the holy Priesthood, their aim and object
being to drive it from the earth as they did anciently. Then for the
Saints to give aid to those who would destroy them, by giving them our
patronage, even the means that God has placed in our possession! Yes,
we do it all the day long, we are doing it continually. The people
here in Brigham City not so much perhaps as in other places. You have
a better order of things I presume; yet it is done more or less
everywhere. Supposing for instance, nations at war with each other
should find any of their citizens giving comfort and aid to the enemy,
giving munitions for war, rendering service or information, or
betraying any trust whatever, such person would be strung up for
treason. This is the law among the nations; and why should it be
counted anything less than treason for those who have sworn allegiance
to the government of Heaven to be found giving their patronage to the
enemy. I tell you in the name of the Lord, you cannot do it with
impunity; such acts will be counted against you, no matter who you
are, and you will have to meet it! It behooves the Latter-day Saints,
above all people upon the face of the earth, to stand shoulder to
shoulder, presenting an unbroken phalanx for the enemy to meet, a
phalanx that they cannot penetrate or destroy. It is our duty to God
and to one another to fortify our walls of defense. How? By living our
religion, by sustaining through our faith, integrity, and good works
the government which the God of heaven has so kindly bestowed upon us.
There is necessity enough for this government to be established in the
earth. There was no rallying point in all the earth for the Saints,
until the Lord revealed the truth. But now there is a rallying point,
and the people are gathering to it. What for? To pull it down? No! but
to uphold it, to keep it and to hold it, unfurling its banner to the
mountain breezes, and in the strength of Israel's God to stand by and
defend it! To stand by and sustain each other in all good works, not
to seek to pull each other down; but to put down sin and iniquity, and
trample it out of our midst, sustaining purity and upholding and main taining righteousness, and God and his kingdom forever. Let
the wicked howl; heed them not! What matters though we are unpopular;
Jesus and his disciples were unpopular in their day; but our Savior
passed the ordeals. Have we any ordeals to pass? Not many. We have
more or less difficulties to encounter it is true, which is all right,
in fact it is the only way we can be tested. If we "fly the track" the
moment a difficulty presents itself, what good are we? Where is our
integrity? It is given unto us to overcome every difficulty and
continue on our way rejoicing, having our hearts fixed like a flint on
the prize before us; yes, no matter what devil stands in our way to
prevent our onward march, or to beckon us this way or that way, let us
not be moved either by fear or temptation, but exclaim like one of
old, "As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord!" Let us all,
young and old, make our resolves, and then live to our resolutions,
notwithstanding the inducements and allurements the evil one may bring
to bear to prevent us walking in the strait and narrow way.
The Gospel incorporates everything calculated to do any good whatever,
and it is the power of God unto salvation both here and hereafter; and
you will not find any real pleasure or salvation outside of it. Now
remember that! Both the old and the young can find suitable and
satisfactory enjoyments within the purview and elements of the Gospel.
Real enjoyment is such as can be participated in without offending the
Lord. There is no enjoyment in taking a course calculated to injure
and offend Deity. There is no real enjoyment in the intoxicating cup,
it brings misery instead of joy. And so are all these things that are
used to their abuse. The Gospel teaches us better things, a better
way; and still it furnishes us everything necessary for our pastime
and for our encouragement to go forward in the path that leads to
honor and renown in time and eternity.
There is a great work to be done! The Lord has designed to accomplish
a mighty work through the instrumentality of his children who do and
will exist upon the earth. It is through this means he does accomplish
his purposes; he always has and I expect he always will. The
redemption of our dead friends, of our progenitors who never knew the
Gospel; the resurrection of the dead to come forth clothed in
immortality and eternal lives, will all be brought about through the
Gospel. What, all the human family? Yes, pretty nearly all. It is a
great undertaking; the Lord is susceptible to great undertakings. He
undertook to people this earth with spirits that were begotten in
heaven and who dwelt in his presence. Consider that undertaking for a
moment, and perhaps it will be found to be as vast as our
comprehension is of the redemption of the dead and the accomplishment
of the resurrection of the dead. He is capable of great enterprises of
this kind. And just as sure as he brought forth man upon this earth,
organizing it for them to dwell upon, so sure will he bring them forth
again in the resurrection. I do not know that one is greater than the
other; however he is capable of accomplishing all. I have heard people
talk about the utter impossibility of bringing about the resurrection
of the dead. We read there is nothing impossible with God. I am quite
sure of it in this respect. We see how natural, how easy it is to
bring forth the great work of peopling the earth; and I see no reason
why the other should not be just as easy for him to do as this
seems to us. He has all time and eternity at his command; the heavens
are full of days, and the work will continue onward when you and I
rest and sleep in the dust. There is something to be done, we have the
opportunity and blessed privilege of laboring in the cause; and it is
well for us if we do it while the day lasts, for "behold the night
cometh wherein no man can work." Therefore we should be diligent in
the performance of our duties, divesting ourselves of the errors and
traditions we have imbibed, and which are in opposition to truth and
righteousness according to the revelations of Jesus made known to us
in this our day and generation. We should control ourselves; our
passions are given to us for a good and wise purpose, not to be our
masters, not to be given way to, allowing ourselves to quarrel, to
speak harsh and unkind words and to mistreat our wives and children as
some do. Our passions are implanted within us to give strength and
energy of character, to serve a good and wise purpose; and it is
expected that we hold them in proper subjection, instead of allowing
them to master us. No man is able to control or is fit to govern, even
a family, unless he can govern and control himself.
Let us give heed to the requirements of heaven, and perform them
regardless of the consequences, trusting in God who will sustain even
to the death. If we have to meet obstacles, what of it? "Though he
slay me, yet will I trust in him," let this be the word in the heart
and mind of every man and woman before the Lord. Because we know he is
the wise giver of all good things, the wise controller of all events
who does all things well. Let us put our trust in him, and go forward
in the righteousness of the God of our salvation, in the performance
of the work allotted to us his Saints upon the earth. If we do this
and endure faithful to the end, great will be our reward; and great is
our reward as we pass along. It brings peace of mind in the assurance
that we are doing the Lord's will, and taking that course which is
pleasing unto him.
That the Lord may add his blessing unto us while we sojourn in the
earth, and at last save us in his kingdom is my prayer, in the name of
Jesus. Amen.
- Daniel H. Wells