By the request of our President, I arise this afternoon for the
purpose of addressing you upon those subjects that may be presented to
my mind, feeling joyful in my heart that I have the opportunity.
I do not say, as many others may have said, that it is a disagreeable
task, or a very great cross, for me to address the Saints; this is not
the case; it is a pleasure and a joy; and I feel to esteem it as a
blessing from the hand of God, that I have the privilege from time to
time of meeting with His people, and speaking about the great things
that God has revealed, which belong to our peace, happiness, and
welfare, both here and hereafter.
There is no other subject that I care much about. As it regards
earthly things, temporal things, the riches of this world, or the
honors of this world, I will not say they are of secondary nature to
me, but they are far beneath this; though they may be good in their
place, yet my whole object and design, delight and joy, is to
do the will of God, to benefit the children of men, and to seek after
the welfare, happiness, and peace, not only of myself and family, but
also of the whole human race, as far as it is within my power.
It does me good to return, after an absence of two years, and again
look upon the faces of the brethren and sisters; there is something so
different in the expression of your countenances from what we see
abroad in the world; the principles of goodness, of righteousness, of
virtue, and of holiness seem to be enstamped upon the countenances of
the Saints of the living God; the spirit of meekness, of sobriety, of
solemnity—a Godlike spirit is reflected in every feature of those who
are truly good, which seems to carry peace, happiness, and joy to the
hearts of those who gaze upon them with the same spirit. But after
all, brethren, we are not near as good as we might be, in many
respects. Though we are far in advance of the nations of the earth,
though we have become far exalted above them in the principles of
virtue, truth, righteousness, and a oneness of feeling, yet there is
still room for improvement, and, while we remain here in the flesh,
there will be room for improvement, upon all these principles, upon
all the attributes of divinity, and upon everything that is good and
Godlike.
There is one subject that presents itself to my mind, and upon which I
have meditated in years past and gone, and which gave me great joy
when I learned that it was being established in our midst. What is it?
It is the consecration of the properties of the whole Church,
according to the written revelations, commandments, and laws of the
Most High God. I heard of this about the time I was starting upon the
plains for this place, and it gave me great joy to learn that there
was a prominent step taken at your last Conference to bring about and
accomplish this object. I consider it is one of the most important
objects to be accomplished among the Saints of latter days.
You may ask why? You may think that this contradicts my first
statement—that the temporal things of this life are not even of a
secondary consideration with me. They are not in one respect, but, in
another, I consider them a part and portion of the religion that we as
a people have embraced, and a very essential and necessary part too.
We read in the revelations that God has given, that the earth is the
Lord's, and the fulness thereof; well, if it is the Lord's and the
fulness of it, then it does not belong to you nor me as individuals,
exclusive of others. If the Lord had set apart, and consecrated, and
given a certain portion of the earth to any individual with a deed and
covenant, he might with some propriety call it his own; but all other
deeds that are according to Gentile laws, and the institutions of the
nations of the earth, do not, according to the laws and revelations of
heaven, give to men the exclusive right to the things of this world,
as their own; they are good enough in their place, for the Lord deals
with the nations according to their light; and suffers laws to be
enacted that are good in their place, and calculated to govern
imperfect beings; laws to govern and control property; and in many
respects, they are just adapted to the circumstances and conditions of
the nations where they are enacted; and they are the means of doing
much good in preserving what are termed the rights of individuals, and
of the citizens generally; and they should not be done away, until
circumstances will permit of their being superseded by a more perfect
law. That more perfect order is what we wish to speak a few words upon
at this present time.
The Lord told us something about it in the revelations He gave a long
time ago, in the year 1831, when ancient "Mormonism," as it has often
been termed, was first introduced; we call it ancient, because it
seems quite long to us narrow-minded creatures.
There were certain laws and revelations then given, in the Book of
Doctrine and Covenants, pertaining to the Lord's earth, and the
righteous that He has upon it. I will repeat a small clause which was
given before the Church was one year old, in March 1831. It reads
thus—wherefore "it is not given that one man should possess that which
is above another, wherefore the world lieth in sin." This was revealed
above twenty-three years ago; we will again repeat it, "It is not
given that one man should possess that which is above another,
wherefore the world lieth in sin." Here was a hint of the more perfect
law and order of things that God intended eventually to introduce
among this people; and which I am happy to say, there has been a great
step already taken at the last Conference to bring about; and I hope
that I may be permitted to live to see this law carried out to the
fullest extent among the Saints of the living God.
Remember, that as long as there is inequality in the things that
belong to the Lord, the world lieth in sin. It is not given to them
that they should possess one above another. I intend to explain how
this is to be brought about, and also show how one man can possess
hundreds and thousands of dollars, in a certain sense of the word, and
another man only one dollar, and yet both be equal; but they possess
the same, not as their own, but as stewards of the Lord; it being the
Lord's property.
We read, in another revelation that God gave in the early rise of this
Church, that unless we are equal in earthly things, we cannot be made
equal in heavenly things. Here is an equality preached. There must be
an equality in earthly things, in order that we may be equal in
heavenly things. Now supposing the people were all to be made equal
today, tomorrow they would, through circumstances, become unequal:
but I will show you how this equality can be established upon an order
that never can be shaken—that inequality, in regard to property, never
more can be introduced among the Saints, that no circumstance which
can transpire can make them unequal. If a fire should burn up a man's
barn, and his stacks of grain, and everything he has accumulated, I
will prove to you that it does not render him unequal with his
brethren on the principle the Lord has established and ordained; so
that when this order is once established among this people, they will
become equal in earthly things, which will prepare them to be made
equal in heavenly things.
In the first place how shall we get at this order? In what manner and
by what means shall we begin to lay the foundation of this equality?
The Lord has told us, that it is required of every man in this Church
to lay all things, not one tenth alone, but to lay all things before
the Bishop of His Church; consecrate the whole of it—everything he
has—his flocks and herds—his cattle, horses, and mules—his gold and
silver—his wearing apparel, watches, jewelry, and everything he
possesses; consecrate it; not keep back a portion like Ananias and
his wife, but give everything—make a full consecration to begin with.
[Voice in the stand, "Wives and children." ] Yes, give wives and
children of course: the wives have given themselves to their husband,
and he has to consecrate them; they are the Lord's, He has only lent
them to us.
Supposing that the people had complied with this law when it was first given, in every respect, instead of seeing inequality that has
reigned for these many years in this Church, we should now have seen a
different order of things. But we lacked experience, and there was too
much covetousness in our hearts, for a full consecration of property,
then. In consecrating property, we must, in the first place, remember
that it is not ours. Why? Because the earth is the Lord's and the
fulness thereof. We have no cattle, no gold or silver, no watches or
jewelry, no property of any description, no houses, lands, or
anything else which is our own, if the fulness of the earth is the
Lord's. Then in consecrating that which we have been in the habit of
calling our own, we are only returning to the Lord His own
property—that which we became legally possessed of according to the
laws of man, but not according to the laws of God, He never having
directly given us the things which we claim as ours; we have not got
them according to the celestial law—according to the great principle
and order God has established; but we came by them through
speculation, trading, labor, etc., and after we thus got them they are
the Lord's still. We consecrate this property—it all goes into the
hands of the Bishop of the Church. If the whole Church were to
consecrate in this way they would have nothing left of their own.
Then, it would all be the Lord's, and it has to be consecrated too,
says the revelation, with a covenant and a deed that cannot be broken;
that is, according to the law of God and man, and if it is made
according to the law of God in all respects, and also according to the
law of the land in which we live, it will be in the situation the Lord
wants it in, even the whole property of the Church.
We ask, are they not all equal now? Yes. If the whole Church have
consecrated everything in their possession to the Bishop, is there
not a perfect equality among them before they get their stewardship?
Yes: this makes them perfectly so, as far as property is concerned;
they are all in a state of equality, owning nothing. What is the next
step to be taken in order to bring about equality of property? The
Lord says, "Let the Bishop appoint every man his stewardship," for,
says the Lord, "It is required of every man to render an account of
his stewardship, both in time and in eternity." Now the Bishop begins
and parcels out to this man his stewardship, and to that one his
stewardship, according to the counsels of the First Presidency of the
Church—the authority that has the management and control of the Lord's
property. Each one gets his stewardship.
Now supposing one man obtained double the quantity of another; it is
not his, but the stewardship is the Lord's; consequently the man is on
a perfect equality with his brother still. But there is another sense
in which this equality may be made, so far as the consecrating of
property to the Church is concerned, which includes the whole of it. I
say, who does it belong to in another sense of the word? I have shown
you that it belongs to the Lord, and if we are His, we shall inherit
it with Him; consequently in another sense of the word it is all ours.
If each one in the Church, then, possesses the whole of it, as joint
heirs with the Lord, is there not an equality? You may diminish the
common property or joint fund just as much as you please. Suppose it
were diminished to one half by mobs, &c., it does not make the Church
unequal, not in the least; for each one may be considered as the
possessor of the whole; he inherits all things; he is a joint heir
with Jesus Christ in the inheritance of the earth, and all the fulness
thereof. Can you make any inequality here? If each man in the Church is a joint inheritor of all the property, and a part of it,
it makes each one perfectly equal with the rest.
Now I defy you to bring about an equality upon any other principle.
You may divide the properties of the Church today, yes, if it be
possible, make a perfectly equal division of it, so that every man in
the whole Church should have his share, and let him call it his own;
it would not be one day before there would be an inequality again
introduced; and one man would possess that which is above another; it
could not be otherwise; the changes, difficulties, want of judgment in
the management and control of property, and all these things combined
together, would serve to render these divided shares unequal; one man
losing a large portion of his property through mismanagement; another
by fire, by mobocracy, or in some other way, so that neither would
have one half, one quarter, or perhaps one hundredth part as much as
some of his brethren with whom he was only a short time before
perfectly equal.
No equality can be brought about by dividing property; the Lord never
intended such an order of things. It is not a division of property
that is going to bring about a oneness among the Latter-day Saints in
temporal things, but it is a union of property, that all the property
may be united, and considered belonging to the Lord, and to every
individual in the whole Church, as joint heirs with Him, or as His
stewards. You may imagine, then, how my heart rejoiced, when I
received a letter from our beloved President, informing me that steps
had been taken for a full consecration of the property of the Church,
to introduce the order of stewardships among the Saints of God.
But in regard to these stewardships, it is not needful or necessary,
or the Lord never intended, that every man should possess an equal
amount of stewardship with his brother. Why? Because God has given to
some men greater ability to manage and control property than others.
He may give to one, one talent; to another, two; to another, three; to
another, five; and to another, ten; and then command them to make use
of these talents according to the instructions and revelations given,
and be accountable to Him who gave them. "It is required of every
man," says the Lord, "to be accountable to me in their stewardships,
both in time and in eternity;" consequently these stewards have to
render all their accounts to some one in time, but to whom? To the
Lord's Bishop—to those whom the Lord has appointed to receive the
accounts. And if a man undertakes to squander the stewardship which
the Lord has entrusted to him, He takes it away, and gives it to
another who is a more wise steward; one who will manage His property
in such a way as to benefit the whole; each one seeking the interest
of the whole as well as of himself.
Each one is to be considered as possessor of all things in the Church:
but if it be all common property, how is it that the Saints can get
along and give an account of their stewardship of property? Will not
one brother go and pick up his brother's plow, and take it off,
without asking him for it, imagining that he is the possessor of all
things? Yes, if that brother had no understanding he would do it, but
when he comes to understand the law of the Lord, he will find that all
these stewardships are controlled by the wisest kind of laws; hence
the Lord says, "Thou shall not take thy brother's garment; thou shalt
pay for that which thou dost receive from thy brother."
Notwithstanding the whole property belongs to the Lord, and to each
one as joint heirs, yet the Lord has given strict laws with regard to
the stewardships, so that one has no business to go and pick
up his neighbor's ax, or take any of his stewardship from him, without
leave; but he is to pay for that which he receives from his brother
steward, unless he borrow it by fairly asking for it.
On this principle it would be an easy matter for each steward to
render an account of his time; and if necessary he could account for
every item of his stewardship. But if it were permitted to run at
random, according to the vague ideas of common stock in some societies
in the world, away would go a man's hat, or his coat, and he could
render no account of it at all. But according to the strict principle
which the Lord has ordained, he could show to his Bishop a full
account of everything in his stewardship—that he has gained so much
here, and made so much there, upon the Lord's property. What says the
Bishop? "Well done, good and faithful steward, thou hast been faithful
over a few things, I will enlarge that stewardship," providing he had
anything to enlarge it with. "You have gained other talents; you have
increased upon that entrusted to your charge; you have not squandered
it away foolishly for that which would not profit you."
There would be no desire on the part of stewards to steal, "For, says
one, If I go and steal from another steward, it is all the Lord's, and
it would do just as much good in the hands of that steward to whom it
was entrusted, as if I were to possess it by stealing it from him."
How much every Saint ought to be interested for this order of things
to be brought about, realizing that all the property of the Church is
for his own good as well as for the good of the whole body.
But in regard to these inequalities in stewardship: I will show you
another principle where men may have equal judgment, and yet there may
be an inequality of stewardships; it is in consequence of the various
branches of business in which they may be engaged. It is well known
that for farming purposes, it does not require the same skill as for
manufacturing many articles, nor the same capital. And the ingenious
mechanic, who understands the nature or construction of machinery,
might have to be entrusted with a stewardship of one hundred thousand
dollars worth of property to establish his manufactory, and work it so
as to have it prove a benefit to the whole Church; and without this
amount being put into his hands, as a steward, he might not be able to
accomplish anything needed in the particular branch of manufacturing
with which he was familiar. The stewardships, in such cases, would be
different, not only in kind, but in the amount or value of the
stewardship.
Let me illustrate this in another way; not but what I suppose all the
Saints understand it, but you only want to be put in mind of that you
have understood for years, but have not perhaps practiced upon it; and
unless a people practice upon that they do understand, it does not
benefit them much. Suppose a man have twelve sons, and he had
according to the laws of the land 78 acres of ground; he gives to his
oldest son twelve acres as a steward; he gives to his next son eleven
acres, and to the next ten, and so on down to the youngest, which he
gives one acre; and he says unto them, "Manage these different
inheritances that I have set off to you, and gain all you can;" would
those sons have any right or title to call that property their own?
No: they would say, "It is father's property, and he has told us to go
and occupy it, and he has given us rules by which we are to be
governed; that the youngest may not encroach upon the oldest, nor any
one encroach upon another, but that each stewardship may be managed and controlled according to the regulations he has given, and
at the end of the year each of us must render a strict account to our
father of every iota of our business transactions, of our losses and
gains in trading, etc." Now all this property, we see, belongs to the
father, but it is all for the benefit of the twelve sons; they are all
to be made joint heirs with the father in the possession of it. In due
time, when they have learned the law the father has ordained, they
will be prepared to enter as joint owners upon the grand inheritances,
not only of 78 acres, but to possess all things that the father has.
Temporal things are a type of heavenly things, as the Lord says, in
one of the revelations, "All things have their likeness, both things
which are temporal, and things which are spiritual." Does this order
of things—the equality of property—have its likeness? Yes, in the
heavens, and it is typical of that celestial order that we are all
praying for, that we all desire the Lord to bestow upon us. We all
feel very anxious to enter into the fulness of celestial glory, and
inherit thrones and dominions, principalities and powers, and to have
kingdoms appointed to us, and to receive crowns and to sway a scepter
over kingdoms, as wise rulers. If we want to get there, we must begin
here, and learn the order that is to be there. If we should have a
division of property here, as we have had heretofore, and continue
this order of things, as has been for many years back, and never
should begin to practice upon this equality of things which God has
ordained in His law, when we come to enter the courts above, we should
be ignoramuses; we could say, "We read in your law something about it,
but the people did not practice it, they were careless, and did not
keep the law." And now we do not know how to manage this celestial
glory, and these kingdoms, and these worlds placed under our charge;
for we are to give an account, not only in time, but in eternity, of
our stewardship; consequently we must improve upon the true order of
things here, which is typical of that which is hereafter; and if we
learn the lessons here, everything there will be plain before us, and
we will be able to enter into the very things we have been practicing
years before. There will be an inequality, no doubt, in some respects
in the eternal worlds, in proportion to the eternal things that will
be entrusted to the servants, as in temporal things; but there will be
a perfect equality in another respect; the revelation says, "He maketh
them equal in might, and in power, and in dominion."
Did you ever think of that? It is only in one respect. Each one will
be made joint heir of all things in heaven, and upon earth. What more
can a person want, if he is made a joint heir of all things; and one
revelation says, he that is a faithful and wise steward in time shall
inherit all things; consequently they are equal in dominion, and in
power, and in might, as the Vision states. This don't say that each
one shall actually control, and govern, and manage all things; that is
a very different thing; just as it is here in temporal things, though
each person may be considered as the inheritor of all the properties
of the Church; yet when he comes to the management of property, he has
only a share; so in heavenly things, a person may have the management
of only one world, or of two, or of three, or of as many as there are
particles of dust that compose our globe, yet, after all, each can
proclaim himself as the inheritor of all things, being a joint heir of
the grand universal inheritance.
There is no division of celestial glory, imparting to each one an
equa lity of dominion, and might, and power; it is not to be
divided, but there is an equality in the union of all these things.
That is what we want to get at here; we want to learn the alphabet of
it here, and advance to the a, be, abbs, and get over into two
syllables, and keep on until we understand all about the celestial
order by practice in this world, and then we will learn the laws that
are to govern the different individuals that control and manage
certain portions of the great joint stock inheritance; we will learn
the laws that are to rule and govern between man and man; and we will
not be ignorant of it when we go into the next world, we will find
there that one kingdom will not have the right to encroach upon the
royalty of another and take away its right, but each one will be
governed by true and holy laws. Upon this principle, and this only,
can we understand those revelations which so often speak of the
principles of equality in the eternal worlds. Equality of dominion we
cannot understand, by supposing each person that comes into the
celestial glory is going to have the same number of worlds, and of
kingdoms, and thrones set off to him that those have who have been in
the celestial glory millions of ages—that he is going to have the same
number of principalities and powers, and servants or angels to wait
upon him to carry out his commands. An equality of dominion is that
that I have already explained, each one inheriting all things,
according to the laws God has ordained for celestial beings, but not
directly or personally controlling only that which is placed under his
management.
Much might be said upon this subject; it is glorious, and it is a
principle I wish the Saints in Utah may all be enlisted in, that it
may be sought by the nations afar off, when they come to learn that
this people are the people of God, and they are governed by God's
laws; that they may see the order carried out before them in practice,
that we may be looked to as a great light set upon the mountains, that
will reflect upon all the face of the earth, and show the people the
true order by practice, and then they will see the difference between
God's order of the possession of property, and the little, narrow,
contracted orders established by man; for each one is grasping for all
he can get, oppressing the widow and the fatherless, bearing down his
neighbor, and grinding him down in distress, tyrannizing over mankind,
because he has riches at his command. The Lord has seen this order
long enough, and it is a stink in His nostrils, and He wishes it
driven away from the earth, and He has given us instructions to do it
away, and if we want to do it away, let us begin among ourselves
first. I rejoice in this principle, because it takes away the idea of
having so many poor in our midst. You know in the days of Enoch the
Lord placed the people upon the high places and mountains, and they
flourished, and He blessed them, and called them Zion because there
was no poor among them, and the Lord was in their midst.
Now the Latter-day Zion is to be built up according to the same
pattern, so far as circumstances will permit, for we expect that the
Zion which was built up by Enoch, that had no poor in it, will come
down again at the commencement of the Millennium to meet the Zion
here, according to the song in the Book of Covenants, "The Lord has
brought up Zion from beneath, the Lord has brought down Zion from
above," and they shall gaze upon each other's countenances, and see
eye to eye. When we get there how sadly we should be disappointed, if
we should look forward upon all the vast extent of the Zion of Enoch,
and all the Zions God has taken out of His creations to heaven, and
should see no poor among them; and then we should look upon
Zion brought up from beneath, containing poor and rich; should we not
be ashamed? Especially when we reflected that the law of God had been
among us; we should not have boldness to gaze upon their countenances,
unless we came into the same order of things that existed among them.
Let us prepare ourselves for the coming of Enoch's Zion, that we may
have the same order of things among us that they had in the beginning.
Then, again, it will be a glorious thing in many other respects. What
is it that creates this great inequality that we naturally see in the
world, in regard to the high and low? It is the difference of
parentage in many respects. One man is so situated he can train up his
children in all the learning of the day; he can take them into his
carriage, and they can ride at their ease, and in their grandeur,
while the poor and needy and destitute bow before them, or are
trampled under their feet. There is no such thing as union there,
because they were unequal to begin with. When the Saints have this
established in their midst, you will see them all alike, where none
can say that "such a person is richer than I am, and I have no right
to associate with him." Neither can the rich look upon those that are
poor, and say, "My children shall not marry with the poor, and unite
with them in their festivities, &c., because I have more property than
they." All these things will be done away, and the principle of
equality will be established, and all will be stewards of the Lord's
property. That is what I wish to see—that when one family of children
have the privilege of being educated, the rest should enjoy it; when
one family are in possession of the good things of the earth, the rest
should enjoy the same privileges also.
How do I feel, to take it home to myself? I long for the time to come
when I can consecrate everything I have got; all the cattle I have; I
have got some first-rate cattle, the Lord has prospered them. I want
the time to come when I can consecrate every hoof of them; also my
books, and the right and title I have to publish my works, also my
wearing apparel, and my houses; they are not mine, and not being mine,
I have no business with this property, only as the Lord sees fit to
let me have it. When I have done this, if the Lord in His mercy will
give me one team, five or ten teams, to make use of as His steward, I
will endeavor to keep a record of that stewardship, of the losses and
the gains of it, and will endeavor to render an account of it in time
as well as in eternity, and an account of all things pertaining to it,
and of my transactions in regard to it; for unless I am a wise and
faithful steward in time, I never expect to inherit all things in
eternity.
Having said this much, may the Lord bless you, and may His Holy Spirit
be poured out upon you, and may your hearts be united to bring about
this union; for if we unite ourselves together upon this principle,
with all our hearts, mights, minds, and strength, laying aside all
covetousness, there is not any power beneath the celestial kingdom
that is able to prevail against us; we will prosper in all things, and
the Lord will make us the richest of all people that have been upon
the face of the earth for many generations, and He will bless our
basket and our store, and increase and multiply the flocks and the
herds in the fields, and cause them to flourish exceedingly, and make
us mighty; and when we go forth He will make the nations to tremble
before us, because His power and glory will be with us when we are
doing His will and are united in one.