It is with much pleasure and satisfaction I again stand before the
Saints of God in this Tabernacle. A year nearly has passed since I
enjoyed this privilege, my labors having been directed elsewhere.
Whatever I may say to you depends entirely upon the dictation of the
Holy Spirit. And I may say that we all need the inspiration of the
Almighty to dictate us, whether we preach or listen, and not only in
our public gatherings but in all of our labors connected with the
building up of the kingdom of God, yes, just as much as the Saints of
God did in every past age and dispensation.
I can truly say as the Apostle Paul said, "For I am not ashamed of the
Gospel of Christ; for it is the power of God unto salvation to every
one that believeth." I am not ashamed of what the world is pleased to
call "Mormonism;" I am not ashamed of any revelation that God has
given unto the Latter-day Saints, through the mouth of modern
Prophets; I am not ashamed to acknowledge myself a firm believer in
the literal fulfillment of the Bible, as well as every communication of
God to man, although I am well aware that the Scriptures have been
more or less spiritualized by the whole Christian world, especially
during the last hundred years. I believe that holy men of old wrote
and spoke as they were moved upon by the Holy Ghost, and that they
meant what they said and said what they meant, and that the Apostle
Paul spoke truly when he said, "that no prophecy of the Scripture is
of any private interpretation." The Lord has taught us in a modern
revelation contained in this book, the "Doctrine and Covenants," that
it matters not whether he speaks from heaven by his own voice, or by
the ministration of angels, or by the mouth of his servants when they
are moved upon by the Holy Ghost, it is all the same, the mind and will
of God; and although the heavens and the earth pass away, my words
would not fall unfulfilled.
I desire more particularly to address myself, this afternoon, to the
Latter-day Saints; and at the same time if any of the strangers
present can receive any benefit from my re marks, I shall be glad of it.
Our position, today, before the heavens and the earth and before each
other, reminds me of days that are past and gone. On the 20th of July,
1847, I brought our late President Young in my carriage through
Emigration Canyon into this valley, which was the first time he set
foot upon this land. The question has been often asked by strangers
who visit our city, why did Brigham Young pick upon this spot to build
a city? Because it was shown him before he came here. But when we came
to this country, what did we find here? A barren desert as barren as
the Desert of Sahara; and the only signs of life were a few black
crickets, some coyote wolves, and a few poor wandering Indians. Today
we may travel from Paris in the north of our Territory to St. George
in the south, a distance of some 500 miles, and see on every hand
towns and villages, gardens, and orchards, fields and crops; we behold
a people industrious and happy, building their own dwelling houses,
meetinghouses, schoolhouses, tabernacles and Temples, and
improvements and enterprises are constantly going on. And all this
within so short a time. What does this mean? What does it bespeak to
the strangers who visit our Territory, and in fact to the whole world,
and to heavenly as well as mortal beings? It is evidence that God has
set his hand to fulfil the prediction contained in the Bible, that he
has commenced the work of uniting the record or stick of Joseph with
that of Judah; that the set time has come for him to favor Zion. And
how have these things come to pass and what was the origin of this
peculiar system that presents itself now to the inhabitants of the
earth, which found a resting place in the wilds of this desolate,
uninhabited land, and which has already produced such marvelous
results? It was performed in a very singular manner, to begin with. As
the Lord ever has done in attempting to establish his rule and
government on the earth, he chose the weak things of the earth, and
them he will use to confound the wisdom of the wise. He manifested
himself to a boy in his teens, and also sent an angel to him on
several occasions, in fulfillment of the revelation to John the
Revelator, and of the inspired words of many other Prophets and
Apostles who have spoken concerning the marvelous work and wonder of
the latter days. But says the world, "We do not believe that." We
understand that perfectly well; we do not expect you to receive the
Gospel of the Son of God with the same readiness that you believe the
falsehoods and misrepresentations that are constantly made about it.
The world ever has opposed it, and we expect to meet all manner of
opposition until the final triumph of right over wrong, of truth over
error. We might commence with father Adam and trace it down to the
present time, and we would find that the same spirit of opposition and
of persecution followed the people of God in every age, as exists
today against us, as a people. And so natural is it for the devil to
oppose every move that the Lord makes towards reclaiming and redeeming
the earth, that men are often found to denounce the "Mormons" and
their religion when they know nothing either of us or our tenets. The
Savior of the world himself was denounced as a deceiver, as an
impostor; why? Because those who raised this cry against him knew him
not, and those who reechoed it took not the trouble to ascertain
whether it was true or false. And it has been precisely in the
same way that the names of Joseph Smith and Brigham Young have been
had for evil by the masses of this enlightened age. The Savior said of
those that rejected him, that he was hated by them because he
testified of their works which were evil. And so verily it might be
said of those who decry against the men who, in this respect, have not
been more favored than their Master. Through them light has dawned
upon the world, and because men choose darkness rather than light,
their deeds being evil, they find their opposite in "Mormonism," and
in all those who faithfully adhere to it and advocate it.
Through this boy, inexperienced and unlearned as he was, the Lord
organized this Church on the 6th day of April, 1830, with only six
members; and it can be said of him as of no other man in Christendom,
that he was the instrument in the hands of God of presenting to the
world a system of religion, a Church organization complete with all
the keys and powers of the Holy Priesthood, and that through him has
been imparted to the religious world more light and knowledge than all
the professors of religion combined, with all their boasted
intelligence and learning. And when he published to the world this new
yet old doctrine, even the everlasting Gospel, it was found to agree
precisely with that taught by the Savior, and the Church organization
was after the same pattern as the one instituted by Him, although the
Gospel had not been preached since it was driven away from the earth
by the iron hand of persecution. One of the peculiar features in the
faith of the Latter-day Saints is that we believe there is but one
Gospel, that there never has been nor never will be any other, and
that that Gospel never changes from one generation to another, and
that it consists of the simple principles taught by the Savior and
contained in the New Testament, which principles never deviate one
from another. The first was faith in the Lord Jesus Christ; the second
was baptism in water by immersion for the remission of sins, and then
the laying on of hands for the reception of the Holy Ghost; and this
was the kind of doctrine taught by Christ and his Apostles, and this
was the doctrine that Joseph Smith preached. In doing so he stood
alone in the world, and he had to meet the traditions of eighteen
hundred years, traditions which had been handed down from generation
to generation, which were entirely opposed to the doctrine which the
Lord had revealed to him, and which he was commanded to preach. You
and I were taught from our youth that there was no such thing as new
revelation, it was all done away; and this same tradition is being
imbibed by the youth of Christendom to the present time. Ask the
ministers, the men to whom people look as their spiritual guides, why
they do not enjoy the gifts and graces and the light of revelation
from heaven, and what is the universal reply? It is in substance, "Oh,
these things are all done away, they are no longer needed; it was
necessary that they should exist in the dark ages of the world but not
in these days of the blaze of Gospel light." Whenever God had a Church
upon the earth these gifts were enjoyed by the people. The sick were
healed of their sickness, the lame were made to walk, the blind to
see, the dumb to speak, etc., through the administrations of those
among them who held the Priesthood, which authorizes men to act in the name of the Lord; and without it no man ever did or ever
can officiate in the ordinances of the House of God. And I cannot
believe that there is an honest-hearted man anywhere who possesses any
portion of the spirit of the Lord, and who has any faith in the
revelations of God, who can believe that men, whether of high or
humble birth, learned or unlearned, would be divinely called to
minister in the things of God, unless they were endowed from on high
with the same power that the ancient Apostles possessed.
Well, the Prophet Joseph Smith lived fourteen years after he had
organized the Church; and during that time the work spread over the
United States, and to some of the foreign nations and islands of the
sea. And when he had done this, he had a mission the other side of the
veil, as well as this. Here again we widely differ from other
religious denominations. As I before intimated, the world of mankind
do not comprehend "Mormonism;" the people are as ignorant of the
Gospel today as Nicodemus was when he inquired of the Savior what he
should do to be saved. And I will here say that the answer which Jesus
made him in that early day is strictly applicable to all who are now
seeking the same information. "Verily, verily, I say unto thee, except
a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." And no man
from Father Adam to the present time ever understood the principles of
the Gospel, unless he received the testimony of Jesus through
obedience thereto.
We are living in the dispensation which Daniel saw in prophetic
vision, when the kingdom of God was to be established upon the earth,
whose dominion is to have no end, and when the greatness of the
kingdom is to be given to the Saints of the Most High, to possess it
forever and ever. Who are the Saints of God, I may ask? Every honest
soul who on hearing the Gospel preached, receives it and obeys it, and
uses his energies to consummate its establishment upon the earth.
The Prophet Joseph was moved upon by divine inspiration in the
establishment of this Church. And before his death he called the
Twelve Apostles together, whom he had called to the ministry by
revelation, intimating that he was going to leave them, that he would
shortly be called home to rest. And he talked with them and instructed
them for weeks and months in the ordinances and laws of the Gospel;
and he sealed upon their heads all the Priesthood, keys and powers
that had been conferred upon him by the angels of God. And then, in
addressing them he said, "Brethren, no matter what becomes of me, or
what my fate may be, you have got to round up your shoulders and bear
off this kingdom; the God of heaven requires it at your hands. I have
desired," said he, "to see the Temple completed, but I shall not be
spared to see it, but you will." Although he spoke so plainly to us,
intimating that his end drew near, we could no more get it into our
hearts that he was going to be martyred, any more than the Apostles
could comprehend the meaning of the Savior when he told them he was
going away, and that if he did not leave them, the Comforter could not
come. When the Messiah was crucified his followers felt sorrowful and
disappointed, because they expected him to release them and their
nation from the Romish yoke. And so helpless did they feel themselves
when denied his society, that even Peter, the first among the
Apostles, proposed that they return to their nets, that
instead of pursuing the high calling of "fishers of men," that they
again become common fishermen. They comprehended not the words of the
Savior to them. But after his death, he appeared to them, and they
began to understand then what he had previously told them. We did not
understand either what Joseph meant when he told us he was going to be
taken away. But so it was, and when it came, we knew too well his
meaning, for sorrow and gloom rested upon all Israel. The question may
be asked, Why was this necessary? There may be more than one reason;
one, however, is, the dispensation already ushered in is the
dispensation of the fullness of times; and like preceding ones, the
men who have been called upon to open them up, had to seal their
testimony with their blood, Joseph had to do the same. But those who
took his life, and those who assented to it, will have to pay the
bill. He held the keys of the Priesthood, and had a work to perform in
the spirit world, as Jesus had. When he was put to death, and while
his body lay in the tomb, he went to the spirit world to introduce the
Gospel to the spirits there, that they might have the opportunity of
either receiving or rejecting it, and be judged according to men in
the flesh. And it will be the privilege of every son and daughter of
Adam, sometime of their life, either in the body or in the spirit, to
hear the glad tidings of great joy proclaimed to them, for God is just
and is no respecter of persons. Joseph, then, standing at the head of
this dispensation holds the keys of the Priesthood pertaining to this
time, and it was a duty that the God of heaven required of him to open
up the Gospel to those in the spirit world who had not received it.
And there is no greater duty resting upon the Latter-day Saints today
than that of building Temples, and officiating therein for the dead as
well as the living. Said Paul, in support of this doctrine, "Else what
shall they do which are baptized for the dead, if the dead rise not at
all? Why are they then baptized for the dead?" There is no doubt or
obscurity in the minds of the Latter-day Saints respecting this
principle, it has been made plain unto our understanding by the light
of revelation. The Adversary, well knowing the nature and importance
of the mission of this Prophet of God, put it into the hearts of
wicked men to kill him, and in taking his life they thought they were
putting an end to "Mormonism." They reasoned from their human
standpoint, for such might have been the case if this work were the
creation of man. But the hand of God was over him and the work that he
established, and it is his work and he directs it, and those who want
to find fault with it, or any part of it, should enter complaint
against God, for he is its Author; we are merely the instruments in
his hands in carrying it on.
After the martyrdom of our beloved Prophet, the Twelve Apostles
stepped forward, in the magnitude of their calling, and assumed the
Presidency of the Church, and, as a Quorum, they led it, with
President Young as President of that Quorum, for several years before
there was an organization of the First Presidency; and when this
organization was effected, with Brigham Young as President of the
Church, he continued to preside for the space of thirty-three years,
until the time of his death, notwithstanding the combined efforts of the Adversary and wicked men to destroy him from off the
earth. His works are before you; they are before the heavens and the
earth, and all men. The entire Territory bears marks of his genius and
enterprise; and the Lord certainly crowned his labors with success, as
he has blessed the labors of his brethren who have not spared their
hands or their hearts in assisting him. And instead of the work of the
latter day stopping, or its progress being retarded in consequence of
the death of our beloved President, it will move forward with
accelerated speed, until Zion arises in beauty, and power, and
dominion, in fulfillment of the inspired words of Prophets and Seers
who have spoken, and who, while wrapt in heavenly vision, saw our day.
It cannot be a very great while before many of us will follow him. I
have traveled with him for some forty-four years of my life, and
during those years I have never known him to waver or flinch in the
performance of his duties. He has performed an honorable mission to
earth, and while his body sleeps his spirit lives, and he continues
his labors, strengthening the hands of Joseph, and Hyrum, and
Jedediah, and Heber, and George A., and all those who have been true
and faithful to God and to man while upon the earth, who are now
engaged in the same great cause of redemption and salvation. Although
President Young has finished his earthly career and mission to this
earth, the work has only commenced. The Gospel must be thoroughly and
faithfully preached to every nation under heaven, and the Lord holds
us responsible, for verily the trust has been imposed upon us, and it
behooves us to see to it. I have traveled more or less for the last
forty years, without purse or scrip, and I have been sustained by the
hand of the Lord, and so have my brethren. Our Elders who are called
constantly from the plow and the workshops to go forth into the world
and preach the Gospel, traveling from place to place on foot, without
purse or scrip, and although they are not trained in colleges or
seminaries of learning, yet they are sustained and enabled to cope
with the learned and wise, and the honest in heart receive their
testimony, which is accompanied by the Spirit of God, and the Holy
Ghost.
Before I close, I want to say one thing to the Latter-day Saints,
which is resting upon my mind. President Young having now passed away,
his labors with us have ceased for the present. He, with his brethren,
built and completed one Temple, also laid the foundation for one at
Manti and one at Logan, and besides a great deal of work has been done
on the one in this city. He left this unfinished work for us to carry
on to completion; and it is our duty to rise up and build these
Temples. I look upon this portion of our ministry as a mission of as
much importance as preaching to the living; the dead will hear the
voice of the servants of God in the spirit world, and they cannot come
forth in the morning of the resurrection, unless certain ordinances
are performed, for and in their behalf, in Temples built to the name
of God. It takes just as much to save a dead man as a living man. For
the last eighteen hundred years, the people that have lived and passed
away never heard the voice of an inspired man, never heard a Gospel
sermon, until they entered the spirit world. Somebody has got to
redeem them, by performing such ordinances for them in the flesh as
they cannot attend to themselves in the spirit, and in order
that this work may be done, we must have Temples in which to do it;
and what I wish to say to you, my brethren and sisters, is that the
God of heaven requires us to rise up and build them, that the work of
redemption may be hastened. Our reward will meet us when we go behind
the veil.
"Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea,
saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and their
works do follow them."
We have labored in the St. George Temple since January, and we have
done all we could there; and the Lord has stirred up our minds, and
many things have been revealed to us concerning the dead. President
Young has said to us, and it is verily so, if the dead could they
would speak in language loud as ten thousand thunders, calling upon
the servants of God to rise up and build Temples, magnify their
calling and redeem their dead. This doubtless sounds strange to those
present who believe not the faith and doctrine of the Latter-day
Saints; but when we get to the spirit world we will find out that all
that God has revealed is true. We will find, too, that everything
there is reality, and that God has a body, parts and passions, and the
erroneous ideas that exist now with regard to him will have passed
away. I feel to say little else to the Latter-day Saints wherever and
whenever I have the opportunity of speaking to them, than to call upon
them to build these Temples now under way, to hurry them up to
completion. The dead will be after you, they will seek after you as
they have after us in St. George. They called upon us, knowing that we
held the keys and power to redeem them.
I will here say, before closing, that two weeks before I left St.
George, the spirits of the dead gathered around me, wanting to know
why we did not redeem them. Said they, "You have had the use of the
Endowment House for a number of years, and yet nothing has ever been
done for us. We laid the foundation of the government you now enjoy,
and we never apostatized from it, but we remained true to it and were
faithful to God." These were the signers of the Declaration of
Independence, and they waited on me for two days and two nights. I
thought it very singular, that notwithstanding so much work had been
done, and yet nothing had been done for them. The thought never
entered my heart, from the fact, I suppose, that heretofore our minds
were reaching after our more immediate friends and relatives. I
straightway went into the baptismal font and called upon brother
McCallister to baptize me for the signers of the Declaration of
Independence, and fifty other eminent men, making one hundred in all,
including John Wesley, Columbus, and others; I then baptized him for
every President of the United States, except three; and when their
cause is just, somebody will do the work for them.
I have felt to rejoice exceedingly in this work of redeeming the dead.
I do not wonder at President Young saying he felt moved upon to call
upon the Latter-day Saints to hurry up the building of these Temples.
He felt the importance of the work; but now he has gone, it rests with
us to continue it, and God will bless our labors and we will have joy
therein. This is a preparation necessary for the second advent of the
Savior; and when we shall have built the Temples now
contemplated, we will then begin to see the necessity of
building others, for in proportion to the diligence of our labors in
this direction, will we comprehend the extent of the work to be done,
and the present is only a beginning. When the Savior comes, a thousand
years will be devoted to this work of redemption; and Temples will
appear all over this land of Joseph—North and South America—and also
in Europe and elsewhere; and all the descendants of Shem, Ham, and
Japheth who received not the Gospel in the flesh, must be officiated
for in the Temples of God, before the Savior can present the kingdom
to the Father, saying, "It is finished."
May God continue to bless us, and guide and direct our labors, is my
prayer, in the name of Jesus. Amen.