As I arise I am cautioned by President Kimball to be careful that my
hair does not blow off; I shall exercise as much care and caution as
possible on the subject; but if it should actually come off, I have
very few friends here today in this numerous audience but what know
very well how my head looks perfectly bare, and consequently I should
not feel as though I was subject to any particular disgrace, while I
can enjoy the comfort of sitting in the congregation without having my
head tied up in a handkerchief, or suffering with a cold.
I feel a little sorry this morning that our meetinghouse is so small;
really it seems too bad that we have not a little more room, but it
fulfills very clearly the early predictions of the first President of
the Church (Joseph Smith), that we may build as many houses as we
would, and we should never get one big enough to hold the Saints; and
I presume, before this immense Bowery is absolutely enclosed, and
comfortably seated, that we shall find it too small to accommodate
those who wish to attend here on the Sabbath day, or on any important
occasion.
In rising to speak to so vast an assembly, I am reminded of the old
rupture of my lungs, which was made while preaching in the streets of
London to scattered assemblies, to persons in the courts, in the
squares, in the windows of buildings four and five stories high, and
on different sides of the streets, in the midst of a foggy, smoky,
damp atmosphere. It is a rupture which caused my lungs to bleed, and
which has been a constant caution and effectual check to my course in
life, requiring me to keep within a certain limit, with, however, this
condition, that, live or die, or whatsoever might be in the road, the
Gospel of Jesus Christ I would preach, and the testimony of the
fulness of the Gospel of the Lord to the Saints in the last days I
would bear, wherever and whenever I had the opportunity, backed with
a faith in me that I would have power and health to do this; at the
same time any kind of exercise, that would heat my blood for one half
hour, would produce considerable bleeding from the lungs, and yet by
the aid of your faith I undertake to address this immense audience,
with full confidence that I shall succeed so that a great portion will
hear me, and by the stillness of the balance I may be enabled to make
them all hear me, though it requires a great effort for even a man
with sound lungs to make ten thousand persons hear him speak
distinctly.
I have been a member of this Church from my childhood: I commenced to
advocate the Book of Mormon when only thirteen years of age. The
second day after I got hold of it I read it nearly through. News flew
round the neighborhood that the "golden bible" had come, and a large
company of neighbors came in to see the book; they commenced to
examine and find fault with it, and I to ans wer their
objections, as I thought they looked so unreasonable; although I had
not made my mind up on the subject, yet I tried to remove their
objections; the result was, the whole company went away confounded,
leaving me surprised that they could not raise any stronger objections
against it; and from that day to this I have not let any proper
occasion slip that presented to me an opportunity of defending the
mission of Joseph Smith, and the Book of Mormon, to the very best of
my ability. It may be said of me that I never knew anything else but
"Mormonism," yet I have found that some of the traditions of my early
education (as I was piously educated at the Sunday school in the
doctrine and principles of Presbyterianism)—some of these principles
which I received in my youth have clung to me so closely that I have
had to stop at times and reflect whether I had learned that from the
proper source, or whether it was part of my old catechism, which I
must confess I have forgotten.
I introduce these remarks as a preface to my discourse, because I have
been pleased by the remarks of the First Presidency, especially by
those of President Brigham Young, on the subject of the appointment of
Bishops; he wishes to appoint those who have grown up in the Church,
who have not lived a great portion of their days under the influence
of sectarian traditions of their fathers, and been subject to the
slavish notions of cast-iron creeds, that when they entered into this
Church, they were so bound in them, they never could be unbound, and
that even now in performing the duties of their callings they do not
learn enough of the things of God to in every instance discriminate
between the two. I had discovered in a number of instances that
appointments of this kind to different offices did not work well; and
that when men who are not very old when they come into the Church, all
they have learned is the truth, and are not under the necessity of
unlearning what they might have learned in twenty, forty, or fifty
years, of old tenets, creeds, doctrines, and nonsense, but have taken
a start from the right foundation, and what they did learn have
learned it right.
I thought I would take the liberty of addressing the younger brethren,
as a great portion of this congregation are what might be termed in
the States, Young America, if you please, or among us, "Young
Mormons," those who have been raised in the midst of persecutions, and
the instructions the Saints have enjoyed. President Young, in the
course of his remarks, introduces the subject of the divisions that
exist in New York politics; for instance, it is customary in the
political circles of New York, and has extended from that capital
throughout the Union, to denominate men that have become somewhat
superannuated in their veins, or have got the old-fashioned slow
motion about them, "old fogies." For instance, there are but few of us
but what can remember when railroads were first introduced into the
United States. It is not difficult for old men to remember when the
first steamboat was built, or when the first telegraph wire was put
in operation; and it is properly denominated the "fast age." Men who
have got the old principles of locomotion—that cannot accommodate
their feelings to the great improvements of the fast age—that have got
their education on the slow track, and are determined to follow it, it
would be better for them to stand aside, and clear the track for the
telegraph speed of the present generation just rising up on their
heels.
I was pleased with the resolution, as far as it was necessary to apply
it; but there are a great many men of the most mature age, who were at a mature age when they received this Gospel, that never had
imbibed scarcely any sectarian prejudices; and those that they had
got, when they discovered they were of little use, they have cast them
behind the lighthouse, and let them go with the waves. There are
others who have stood in the stream of light until every single
particle of the old imperfections and old prejudices that could
possibly have adhered to them, have been carried away; the light of
the Spirit has showered upon them so brilliantly that all of us who
were younger when we entered the work, were instructed, taught, and
made acquainted with the things of God, through the wisdom and light
which God has given them.
Mankind is capable of a great many extravagances; we very well
remember the time when a very zealous man named Hawley, arraigned
Joseph Smith before Bishop's counsel in Kirtland, and charged him with
having forfeited his office as a Prophet of God, because he had not
prohibited the aged sisters from wearing caps. I attended the Council,
which was held very late, and the man there advocated that he was cut
off from the Church, for God had cut him off from the Church, as well
as from his Apostleship, because he had suffered the men to wear
little cushions on the shoulders of their coat sleeves. It being then
fashionable to wear a little cotton on the shoulders, and in
consequence of some of the brethren wearing such coats, the Prophet of
God was cut off from the Church by this man, and persecuted as an
impostor, and another was placed in his stead.
That man was possessed of such wisdom as man could reasonably
manifest, yet he was so perfectly full of folly and of his own
traditions and notions he had fancied over in his own head, that
seemingly it was im possible for him to understand anything better; he
was blinded, and lifted his hand against the Prophet of God. Instances
of this kind have been continually accumulating, and it is one of the
most perfect illustrations of the sayings of the Prophet, that He
would sift His people as with a sieve. It has been a constant sifting
from the time we entered the Church up to the present; some would
compel it, while in others none of the old prejudices have
predominated; and so it has continued until twenty-five years have
passed away, and until a great number of persons have risen up who
have not the prejudices of their fathers to contend with, and if they
will humble themselves with all their might, knowledge, and
intelligence, power will grow in them, and they will approximate
nearer to the things of God, to get more light, more knowledge, more
intelligence, more faith, and more power to spread forth the work of
God, and to roll forth the kingdom their fathers have been able to
obtain.
It is an old proverb, that as the old birds crow the young ones learn.
There are a great many habits, a great many customs which our fathers
have imbibed, and which their children have been induced more or less
to practice, which are decidedly in opposition to the true principles
of life and prosperity; now for us who are young, we are full of life
and vigor, to think, because our fathers or mothers indulged in a good
cup of tea, or cup of coffee, and a hundred other different luxuries
which are at variance with the Word of Wisdom, that we must follow the
same track, pursue the same course, and not only ourselves become
slaves to the same habits, but transmit them to our posterity, and
continue them, that we may preserve the old Gentile customs which have
been established under a system of tactics that have been introduced by medical men, to injure the health of the community and to
make for themselves a growing business! I do not believe in the
constant use of tobacco and hot drinks, although they have been for a
long time steadily recommended by men in the medical profession as
beneficial to health; I believe that learned doctors do know, when
they are doing so, they are introducing a system of things to make men
sick throughout their lives, weaken the human race, and make business
for medical practitioners. If men wish to grow up in these mountains,
free from disease, and from the power of the destroyer, and become
strong and powerful like tigers—like giants in Israel, let them
observe the principles laid down in the words of wisdom, let them
observe them when they are children, let them grow up breathing a pure
atmosphere, drinking pure water, and partaking of the wholesome
vegetation, observing the words of wisdom, and they will grow up
mighty men; one of them will be worth five dozen of those who are
steeped and boiled by hot drinks, and tanned in tobacco juice.
While I address you, brethren, upon this subject, I speak more from
observation of the conduct of others than from my own experience; I
have observed considerable upon this matter; I know that indulging in
habits of this kind, however simple they may seem, they lead in the
end to great evil, and I know from experience that our tastes are in a
great measure artificial. Now when a "Mormon" Elder comes up to me,
and wants to get a little counsel, and his breath smells as though he
had swallowed a stillhouse, it is all I can possibly do to remain
near enough to him to hear his story; he necessarily wishes to come up
close to me, as such men are sure to have a secret they wish to
whisper, and their breath is so offensive, I am forced to retire. When
I am called upon to give counsel to a man who is indulging in these
intemperate practices, I feel at a loss to know whether my counsel is
going to do him good or harm, or whether he will pay any attention to
it after he gets it.
I know that many men have persisted in the use of these stimulating
articles until they cannot do without them, or they think they cannot.
Perhaps sometimes when they have been reduced by sickness or fatigue,
they have then been under the necessity of taking some of these things
as a medicine to revive sinking nature, and this was probably when
they first began to practice the use of them, and laid the foundation
for a short life. They now wish me to prolong their days, like the old
toper who had undermined his constitution, and who was about to die in
consequence of drinking a quart of brandy a day; he sent for the
doctor; he, being anxious to preserve the life of his patient, dared
not stop the use of brandy entirely, nor yet suffer the inebriate to
persist in his usual course, ordered his patient three glasses of
French brandy with loaf sugar per day, upon which the old toper
shrugged his shoulders and said, "Doctor, aint it bad to
take?" In
introducing the use of things injurious to our health, when we
commence it, it is not so pleasant; perhaps in a fit of sickness,
prostrated by the ague, cut down by disease, we will indulge in these
kinds of habits, until by and by a taste is formed for them, and we
feel that we really must have our tea or our coffee; a glass of liquor
does us good occasionally. How often does "occasionally" come? "O,
once in a while." How often is that? "Why, every now and then." And
it
gets so, by and by, if a man has addicted himself to it and don't
have it, he feels quite lonely, he feels lost, as though there was
something wrong about him, and he be comes such a perfect slave
to it, he cannot exercise his talents or his ingenuity. I have seen
distinguished members of the bar with whom it was absolutely necessary
they should take a drink of spirits in the middle of a plea, to
brighten their ideas; the result is, it will bring a man to a
premature grave.
I say to Young America, brethren and sisters, if we have imbibed such
habits, let us lay them off; let us suffer our fathers and mothers to
drink the tea and the coffee, and chew all the tobacco they want, and
as long as we can get it for them, because they have imbibed this
practice years ago, and now to deprive them of these things altogether
might endanger their lives; but when it comes to us, who have not been
believers in the doctrine, let us take these things as we would
calomel, opium, arsenic, lobelia, corrosive sublimate, or any other
drugs which are so much valued among physicians. Now if a man really
felt as if he were dying, and was anxious to hurry himself away, a
dose of strychnine might assist him. Now anything that a man takes
that stimulates his nerves above their proper mode of action when he
is in health, his system will fall in the same proportion below a
healthy action, and it will require a little more the next time to
stimulate it to the same height, and so on, until the system refuses
to be stimulated, and the person will suddenly fall into the grave. So
much, then, will answer for my remarks upon this subject.
I believe, brethren, many of us have accustomed ourselves to using
articles prohibited in the Word of Wisdom, which prohibition is
desired for the benefit of the Saints in Zion, and in all the world;
we frequently use them merely out of compliment. For instance, I call
in a brother's house, the lady of the house knows I am an Apostle, and
she wishes to treat me with marked respect, and she supposes I am
entirely unmindful of the precepts contained in the Word of Wisdom,
makes me a cup of tea or coffee; well, I think it is a pity to throw
it away, after it has spoiled half a gallon of the best American creek
water, and I drink it to save it. This is not only the case with me,
but with other young men also (for I can call myself a young man with
a perfect grace now, for I have as fine a head of hair as any of you);
a great many of us take these stimulating drinks for the sake of
fashion. If I should happen to come across those who know how to use
"the good crater," they will invite me to partake with them; if I
refuse, they will then begin to urge; but the best policy to be
observed in cases of this kind is to do as we have a mind to; if we do
not want "the intoxicating drink," let them take it all; and if we do,
we will take it without urging, and bear the responsibility ourselves.
This is the best policy I would wish to be governed by, though I have
had to say, once or twice in my life, "Gentlemen, I do not wish to be
urged." If a man refuses to drink with those who indulge in the use of
strong drinks, it is customary to consider it a want of friendship.
Let us be our own masters, and not believe we must be chained down to
these foolish and hurtful traditions.
It has happened to be my lot to visit a good many of the Branches; a
great portion of the time that I have been in this Church, I have
spent in traveling. Last year, in performing the duties of historian,
when I found that constant application to these duties became severe
on my health, I would go out in the neighboring settlements and preach
to the people, and stir them up to diligence and obedience; in this
way I have had a good opportunity to observe the feelings and
sentiments of the people, which operate upon the hearts of the Saints in the different settlements of these valleys.
The view that I wish to take on this subject is, that there is in many
of the settlements a want of union. For instance, they will get
together in a meeting, and conclude that they will have a certain man
for a President, or for a Bishop, they will all agree to it, then some
few individuals will go back into a corner and say, "Well, brother,
don't you think that such a man would have made a great deal the best
President?" And whenever the President steps forward to introduce a
measure, the next thing he would come across would be, two or three of
the brethren will kindly say to one another, "I, for one, don't like
that measure." You understand the simple lever power, the most simple
of all mechanical principles; you know that I can take a lever, and by
getting a first-rate good purchase, I can hold as much as twenty men
can roll; the result is, if I cannot have it my way, I might by that
means prevent the President from having it his way. I am more intimate
with the City of Provo; its population I do not now exactly recollect,
but it is probably about three thousand five hundred; its locality is
one of the best in the mountains, from the fact that the position is
in the midst of a heavy amount of water power, which can be easily
applied to machinery to the best possible advantage; it is also
surrounded with the best farming land, with an abundant means of
irrigation by the application of a very little labor, and the
facilities for timber are a great deal more convenient than in other
places, referring especially to this Territory. Provo is also the
County Seat of Utah County, gathering to its center a great amount of
county business, at any rate such a portion of it as pertains to
keeping of records, which makes it a kind of general place of resort
for men from every part of the county, who wish to do business of this
kind.
I give you this description to show you that they have every facility
to make it one of the handsomest and most wealthy cities, according to
the number of its inhabitants; they have a rich soil as well as an
abundance of water and mill privileges; and yet, for want of union in
the feelings of that community, the place has been a great portion of
the time at a kind of drag, the progress of the place has been slow;
for when any measure would be presented, a few individuals would use
their influence to check the wheel. The fact is, if they were not
disposed to roll the load over, they could clog the wheels and hinder
in a great measure its progress.
That has been the difficulty which has existed in that place, and in
other places, and it has had the effect of retarding the progress of
the place in wealth, in prosperity, in public buildings, schools,
roads, bridges, and other improvements, in private interests, and in
farming facilities. To any man who has an idea of what men can
accomplish, this arrangement is positively obnoxious; it seems as a
clear illustration of the necessity of Saints being united. There is a
city in Utah County, by the name of Springville; in consequence of a
little division which has arisen there occasionally, they have been
prevented, for several years, from building anything like a reasonable
amount of schoolhouses, compared with the number of its inhabitants;
there are individuals there who have been all the time blocking the
wheels, and by that means they hinder the onward progress of the whole
community in their labor of public improvements.
Now, brethren, almost all the difficulties that have been brought on
the Saints from the beginning, were in the first place in consequence
of this kind of division. There is nothing we ought to guard
against so much, on the face of the earth, as against division of this
kind, or any other kind. It is an old adage that "union is strength,"
and a very true one. An old Scythian king, who had many sons, on his
death bed called them around him, and some of them suggested to him
the propriety of his dividing his dominions among all his sons. He
took a bundle of arrows, and gave them to his sons, saying, "Break
that bundle of arrows." They passed the arrows round and all tried to
break them, as the old man lay upon his death bed, and they could not.
He then said, "Now untie them, and then break them;" which was easily
done. He then said to his sons, "If you are all united as one man, you
can never be overpowered or destroyed, but if you divide you will be
easily conquered." We can now behold the result in the Russian Empire.
This principle applies to the Saints, and to every principle of
division that sticks out in any Branch of the Church; hang together,
and love, and faithfully carry out the measures of those who preside,
for they know the best what measures to adopt.
The principle of division aims directly at the foundation of the
Church. "But," say some, "I am nobody, and if I stick out I cannot do
much hurt anyhow." You can do a little, you can do all the hurt you
are able to do; and the little influence you have, if it counts in any
way, it should count in favor of the common cause, and not against it;
if it counts in its favor, it counts twice. My exertions would count
for what they are worth; not only this, but if I was operating against
the cause, it would take one of equal capacity of myself to balance
against me.
The time is coming when one shall chase a thousand, and two shall put
ten thousand to flight. When will that be? When Israel is united. If
all this people were absolutely united with all their hearts to pull
upon one grand thread, upon one grand cord, they would have power and
dominion over the whole earth; all the men and devils in hell, on the
earth, or anywhere else could not make a successful opposition against
us. The chief point we have got to maintain is the point of union;
that is all that is necessary to be done to secure all we anticipate.
That is what we have been schooled for in the schoolhouse of trouble
and affliction.
It is hard to make the Saints united, and we have to be sifted and
sifted until we are perfectly united, that every man in the kingdom
will be united as one man, and then no power can break our ranks. Talk
about the power of men, only let the Saints be united, and their power
vanishes away; it becomes weakness. But how is it? How is it in
families? How many men are there that can take their families, and
gather round the family altar, and all of them bow before the Lord
without a jar of feeling, with one perfect unity, every one willing to
submit with the most perfect submission to the will of the Lord, as
clay in the hands of the potter? How many families, I say, are there
in Israel where this union exists in this style, in all its purity and
power? How many men would be permitted to rear a family altar of this
kind even in his own house? How many wards can we find in all Israel
that could unite so that they would not find a single word of fault
with each other, or grumble at the Bishop? The only way we can ever
obtain this point is to look at our own faults and not at our
neighbors', and listen to the counsel of those men whom God sets to
counsel us; correct the errors in ourselves, and dwell on our own
faults.
I recollect once in Iron County one of the brethren got irritated at
me, and threatened to report my conduct to the First President; I
wanted to know what I had done, and he went on and gave a
whole list of my sins for six months past, he seemed to be as well
acquainted with them as though he had counted them over every day
after his prayers, as the Catholic counts his beads. One sin was, I
had threatened to beat a teamster if he did not stop abusing his oxen,
and a great many more such like. After he had read all my sins over at
once, the list rather shocked me, but I suspected, instead of counting
his own faults, and keeping a record of them, he had been at work to
keep a record of mine; instead of living to correct his own faults, he
was trying to correct my errors.
When he got through, I said if he reported me to the Presidency, they
would correct my faults, and that would do me good. I was ready to
make all due acknowledgment, and was prepared to receive reproof with
a thankful heart, whenever it was necessary, for all my faults; at the
same time I really did feel as though he had dwelt more upon my faults
than his own; he subsequently acknowledged that was the fact, and I
consequently escaped being brought before the Presidency. I always did
feel, when I saw a man abusing his oxen, who could not defend
themselves, to lay the whip about his back, and I have once or twice
come very near trying the operation. I believe every man in Israel is
responsible as to how he uses his cattle; I can speak with perfect
safety on this subject, for I am not possessed of cattle so as to have
any person criticize me; a great proportion of animals that are used
among men on the California and Oregon roads are abused in a shameful
manner, and thousands have been killed with the Missouri whip; I never
believed it was right, and when I had the control of moving a camp, I
used a little extra exertion to prevent it.
Now, brethren, I want every one of you to let these principles sink
deep in your hearts, that we may cultivate a principle of union, and
look first at ourselves, reckon first with ourselves, and dwell upon
our own faults, instead of dwelling upon the faults of others. We have
to know for ourselves, and every wrong another person may do, it is no
excuse for me: and I tell you that every man who raises his hand in
the Branches, among the wards, or wherever he may be, to injure and
destroy the counsel and instructions given to them, and operate in
opposition to those instructions, will fall into a snare; and I do
absolutely know, that if the Saints in the settlements, especially in
the South, had listened to the counsel of the Presidency in the
foundation of those settlements, instead of the Church property
ranging at a value of seven or eight hundred thousand dollars, it
might have increased to as many millions just as well, if the brethren
had listened with one spirit to the counsels and instructions given
them from the head which God has appointed to lead and direct us.
But no, some of us thought they had a better plan, and there were as
many plans as men, and never found out their mistake till the Indian
war set in. We have got along, by the mercy of God, and by His
blessings, as well as we have, learning by the things which we suffer,
and we all ought to continually thank Him for it, and not our own
wisdom. With these remarks I will close by bearing my testimony that
this is the work of God, and these men are His servants, and God has
placed in His Church a Prophet, Priest, and President, who is just as
good and as wise a man as we are capable of keeping in our society; if
he was any better than he is, God would have to take him, or we would
have to improve with the rapidity of lightning to keep up with him.
Joseph Smith was a true Prophet, and that which he has conferred upon
this peo ple is a true Priesthood, and if you listen to the
instructions and be led by the keys of this kingdom, you are in the
path to an eternal exaltation, and we shall overcome every power that
would seek to prevail against us. Let us be as one, and we can never
be broken. May God preserve us in the light and law of Christ, that we
may be redeemed. Amen.
- George A. Smith