In some respects I would prefer to sit and listen to my brethren
speak, and to partake in quietude of the spirit of this Conference,
than I would to speak myself. But there is a duty devolving upon me I
presume, the same as upon my brethren and I desire to the best of my
ability to discharge that duty. The sight of so many people, the
singing, the speaking of our brethren this morning and the spirit that
I felt when I entered this building today almost overpowered me.
There is an influence, there is a power, there is a spirit connected
with the assembling together of a large body of people, such as we
witness today, that must affect those who are sensitive to
impressions, and especially when one has been absent among strangers,
to feel that he is home among his friends, among a people who are his
brethren and sisters, whose faith is his faith, and who are laboring
and struggling to accomplish the same objects that he himself has in
his heart. I rejoice exceedingly, my brethren and sisters, this day in
your midst, and I am thankful for the delightful circumstances
by which you are surrounded. I am thankful that the prospects before
you are so promising, so full of hope and so delightful to
contemplate. It is true we have had sickness, we have had many deaths,
this has been a cause of regret. But death is unavoidable, and with it
all we are in much better circumstances and more favorably situated
than the generality of the children of men. The Latter-day Saints are
rapidly becoming a great and important people. The influence that
attends us is being more widely felt; our power for good is
increasing, our strength, our union and the other qualities that we
possess, and which we have manifested through our career, are being
more recognized every day. It has always been a favorite idea of mine,
that no single human being who chooses to exert an influence for good
among his fellow men, ever spoke or ever acted in vain—without making
his influence, his example, his words, have an effect upon those with
whom he has been brought in contact. If this be true concerning an
individual, how much more truth is there in it when applied to an
assemblage of individuals, and to a community, to hundreds of
communities, to a great people stretching through these mountains and
filling these valleys? We have not lived in vain. We have not sought
to exhibit lives of temperance, of industry, of frugality, of
self-denial, lives of righteousness with the fear of God before our
eyes, nor have we lived these lives during the last 49 years, without
the effect being felt, not only upon those by whom we are surrounded,
but by the world at large. There is something connected with the
example of such a people that elevates men and women from the slime,
from the mire, and from the abject ruin into which, in too many
instances, they are plunged, to contemplate humanity in its better
aspects, humanity in its noble appearances, with its Godlike
attributes, with its powers for good, its capability of accomplishing
great results. There is something in the very fact of a people
believing in God in these days of atheism and utter infidelity that
brings men to serious contemplation. They say very frequently that it
is fanaticism, but there is something about fanaticism that is
healthy, refreshing, invigorating in its example, for no man ever
accomplished anything on this earth, without exposing himself by his
actions, his earnestness and enthusiasm and zeal, to the charge of
fanaticism. I am willing we should be called fanatics. I have a right
to be a fanatic if I wish to be, as long as my fanaticism does not
interfere with the rights of my fellow man. That is a barrier beyond
which my fanaticism should not be allowed to go.
It is refreshing to see a people who not only believe in God, but who
are willing to show their belief by suffering for his cause—to leave
their friends, to leave their homes, to suffer exile, persecution,
privations, hardships, and even death for the sake of God, for the
sake of religion, for the sake of principle. What would life be if it
were not for such people and for such characters? Why, their peculiar
lives illume the somber darkness of ages; they are bright spots in
history. When we look back and recall the men who have suffered and
died for principle, even if they died wrongfully, we find something
about their heroic lives that is glorious to contemplate. And when a
whole people can be found, such as are in these mountains,
who are capable of making the sacrifices which they have made, there
is something, as I have said, in their example and in their lives that
influences men, that impresses them, and that causes them, whatever
their feelings may be respecting the belief of these people, to feel a
profound and heartfelt respect for them; for no man or woman properly
constituted ever failed to respect devotion to principle, moral
courage and the qualities that are exhibited in the lives of the
Saints; I therefore say, we have not lived in vain; we have not
preached in vain; we have not suffered in vain; we have not protested
in vain. The fruits of these labors of ours which apparently have been
so long in coming, will be reaped in the great harvest yet to be
reaped upon the earth.
I feel to speak these words of encouragement to my brethren and
sisters, many of whom feel probably that their obscure lives and
struggles, their contest with poverty, their humble and eventful
histories are sometimes of so little value that they are comparatively
worthless in the earth. I say to the humble struggler, to the man or
woman who may be content with poverty, whose life may be uneventful in
his own estimation, who may be hidden from the popular sight and may
not figure on the world's stage, I say to every such person, as a
Latter-day Saint, You have a great and important mission to perform,
and if you perform the duties devolving upon you properly, your
influence will be felt; and in the days to come, in that great day of
God Almighty, your worth will be fully recognized, and you will shine
as a jewel in the kingdom of our Redeemer.
There is one thing that every parent can do. He can endeavor to make
his sons and daughters better qualified, better equipped for the great
struggle of life and better able to perform their part in this
glorious work that God has established than himself; that is one
thing the parents of the rising generation of these mountains can do.
I have never felt as I do today, and as I have recently, of the great
importance of our training and educating our children to the greatest
and best advantage, that nothing shall be left undone on our part to
prepare them for the great work which they have to perform. This is a
labor that we can accomplish. It does not depend so much upon the
knowledge of books; a great many people imagine that only books are
necessary for education; but the man is best educated, in my opinion,
who has thought the most, and that correctly. So far as theology is
concerned, we have been able, by the blessing of God, the light of the
Holy Ghost, and the power of truth, to go forth unlearned, illiterate,
and unprepared, so far as worldly education is concerned, and by
virtue of the knowledge that comes down from above, the elders of this
Church have gone forth and met the world of Christendom. I do not
speak in vanity, nor in the spirit of boasting when I say they have
never been vanquished. The learned, the educated, the professed
theologians when they have met the elders of this Church with the
Bible in their hands, have been compelled to retreat before the power
of truth proclaimed by uneducated but inspired men. Is our mission
accomplished by having done this? I feel that we as a people are only
on the threshold of the great work that lies before us. We have an
immense field of labor stretched out before us. When you look ahead
and try to see its limits, the field of usefulness, which
stretches out before this people called Latter-day Saints, is beyond
the reach of human vision; it is illimitable, stretching out in the
far distant future. Is there a wrong upon the earth to be righted? If
so, it is our bounden duty to attempt its correction. Is there a false
principle extant? It is our bounden duty to seek its eradication. Is
there tyranny in the world, tyranny of the body, tyranny of the mind,
physical or mental tyranny? It devolves upon us as Latter-day Saints
to overthrow it. Are there social problems to be solved? Who shall
solve them? Who can do so? Remove the Latter-day Saints from the
field, and who can solve these problems which are pressing themselves
upon the attention of all thinking people? The whole earth is full of
violence, wrong, oppression, misgovernment, and a thousand other evils
which I cannot now enumerate. It devolves upon us, as fast as we can
reach these things, to correct them, to remove them. In the first
place we have got to correct and remove them from our own midst. It is
a slow labor to train a people, brought as we are from every nation,
educated in every creed, speaking almost every language and heirs of
every tradition. There is, false or true, wedded to us old customs and
the evils of ages, which have been transmitted from generation to
generation until they have formed a strong part of our very being. It
is a slow work, I say, educating a people such as we are. We have been
at it now 49 years, and we can scarcely perceive, that is, in
comparison with that which lies before us, the growth and the
development which have been made. But we have grown, our minds have
been enlarged, we have become emancipated from many old follies, and
freedom of thought has taken place in our midst; but the great labor
that devolves upon us is to educate ourselves, and then we can soon
educate the rest of mankind, for as I have said, our example is felt;
the influence of it goes forth and bears its fruit among other people.
But it is a most difficult thing to get these Latter-day Saints to
understand the principles that are as plain as the noonday sun—that
they should receive readily, and why? Because, as I have said, they
are heirs of the traditions of centuries that have come down through
the dark ages. It is a wonderful thing to do what we have done
respecting woman. Look at what monogamy has done. Look at its effects;
trace its influence from the death of the Apostles, or soon
afterwards, down to this the nineteenth century, and what do we
behold? Why, in every generation a large percentage of our sisters has
been consigned either to that nameless condition of which it is a
shame to speak, or have died without ever knowing the joys of
maternity. When I think of it, when I read the history of the boasted
civilization of the Greeks and the Romans, and think of the boasted
civilization of our day, inherited from these nations, and witness its
effects, I wonder how man, standing up in the face of heaven, dare
look at woman and talk about being her protector. Read the history of
the sex and of the frightful evils which have been brought upon our
sisters through man's accursed traditions and evils. If it were to be
told to another people differently situated to us, with different
traditions to us, they could not believe that intelligent man would
entertain for one moment, or that women themselves, in view of what
their sex has suffered, would cherish and cling to the
wretched traditions that have prevailed in Christendom and to a
certain extent yet prevail in our midst.
I know I am touching now upon what many people consider a tender spot.
Say they, "The decision of the Supreme Court has arranged all this."
Yes, but it will not stay arranged. Let me tell you, that wrong may
prevail and right may apparently be crushed; but right must at last
prevail and claim its own in spite of laws, of decisions, of mandates,
and everything that man can utter. I am talking now not respecting
law; I am not talking respecting tradition; I am not talking about
"Mormon" plural marriage or patriarchal marriage; I am talking about
men and women, brethren and sisters as such. Come let us reason
together; let us talk together, not as religionists, not as "Mormons,"
not as monogamists, not as polygamists, not as citizens of
Christendom, but as men and women, the children of God, as brethren
and sisters of the one family. Let us talk together face to face, in
plainness, in simplicity, without allowing tradition to have weight
with us, to blind our understandings. It is in this spirit that I wish
to talk upon this subject.
Here is a family, a family composed of men and women, and we will say
this tabernacle contains this entire family of God upon the earth, for
the sake of illustrating the point. Here are men and women in equal
numbers and equal proportions, one sex not outnumbering the other—a
man for a woman and a woman for a man, no surplus of women, no surplus
of men. If they were to marry, each would have a partner, each man
would have a wife and each woman would have a husband; each would be
perfect, for the man is not perfect without the woman, nor the woman
without the man. We turn in and make a law, such as prevailed at one
time in Rome that every man shall marry a wife. Such a law was made at
Rome at one time; it was aimed at celibacy. It was aimed at a certain
class as the law of 1862 was aimed at us. One was enacted to prevent
marriage, the other to compel marriage, that no class of men should
grow up in the community without wives, and that no woman should be
allowed to forsake man and become a nun. We have such a law, say in
this tabernacle. That answers very well. Every woman is provided with
a husband, and every man with a wife. But after a while somebody comes
along and says, "I do not like this law, it is oppressive; I know, for
instance, where it works very badly; I know men who do not want to
have wives." They prefer a single life, and they succeed after a while
in repealing the law, as they did in Rome. The law is repealed and
men are at liberty to marry or not as they please. On the top of this
another law is enacted, in effect that every man shall have but one
wife, and shall not be permitted to take two or more wives. The women,
of course, have to do just as the men say, they cannot compel the men
to marry them, but must wait until they are invited to marry. This law
suits a great many individuals. Many men say, "I prefer not to have a
wife and especially if you will only make a law confining the men to
marry but one wife each. I like that very well, because I will not
then be under the necessity of keeping a wife. If I want a partner, an
associate, I can have one without being at the trouble or expense of
keeping her as such. Because if you confine marriage to one
man and one woman there will necessarily be a share of the women who
cannot be married; that is, if the sexes are equal in numbers. Then I
can do as I please. I know the confiding nature of woman; I know how
she loves, how she clings to the object of her love. This will be my
opportunity." But what shall be said respecting the women. The men so
far as they are concerned, have the right to marry or not as they
please. But here is a large percentage of the women who by this law
are to a certain extent deprived from marrying, even supposing the
sexes to be equal. A civil commotion arises. Men go to war, they go to
sea, they engage in commercial pursuits, they leave their homes, they
engage in hazardous occupations. The result is that though in the
beginning the men and women were equal in numbers, by the effects of
war, and of engaging in hazardous pursuits which women do not follow,
the men die and are killed, and the women survive and outnumber the
males. The operation of a law then, such as I have described,
increases the hardship, increases the percentage of those who are not
married and who have no opportunity of marrying. Here comes along a
man after witnessing the evils that have grown up among his brothers
and sisters, and says, "I have a plan to suggest which I believe will
cure the evils that exist among us. I see that a dreadful vice called
prostitution has crept into our midst, and arising from it are
dreadful diseases, diseases that I cannot describe, so appalling are
they that the very thought of them makes the heart recoil with horror;
they have appeared in our family circle and they are destroying our
young men and women. And now then, the plan that I have to propose to
our family is this, that every man shall marry until all the women are
married, until every woman that wants a husband shall have one, so
that the men who will not marry shall not have a class of unmarried
women, to prey upon, to commit violence with, or to prostitute. "Now,"
says he, "if you let all these men and women marry, there will be some
women who will not want to marry, but that proportion will be very
small; and by this means you will arrest this dreadful evil that is
growing in our midst."
Now let me put this to you; let us reason upon this, face to face, as
I have said. Which will be the better plan? According to my judgment,
speaking as one of this family, not as a member of Congress, not as a
"Mormon" but as one of the family I have described. The latter law is
far superior to the other. I would say, as a father, if I had a family
of that kind, by all means let my daughters marry, let every woman
have a husband that wants one. Then if every man marries a wife, they
will only have a wife apiece; but if there should be any of the boys
that do not want wives, the girls would not necessarily go without
husbands.
I consider our false tradition upon this subject one of the greatest
evils at the present time that exists upon the earth. It has come down
to us from the Greeks and Romans, than whom a more abominable lot of
people never lived upon the earth. To read their books is enough to
make a man with the least feeling of modesty blush and be ashamed of
his race. Yet they are introduced into our literature. Whoever reads
Horace, Sallust, and numbers of those authors, well knows how full of
corruption they are. Not only crimes, but crimes against
nature were justified by some of the best and most noted of Greek
philosophers, and were practiced by Sophocles, Socrates, and others;
and yet this is the philosophy that has come down to us. They had a
class of women in their midst who were regularly compensated and
sustained as courtesans; they were maintained in order that the purity
of the domestic circle might be unpolluted. And this has come down to
us in Christendom, in Europe and America to the present time. The
fairest of Earth's daughters fall yearly sacrifices to the abominable
lusts of men. How is the domestic circle preserved in monogamous
countries today? It is only preserved at the expense of this class to
which I have referred, by these priestesses of humanity, blasted for
the sins of the people, living short lives and carrying with them the
effects of man's abominable lust.
Now I do not want to talk today about law; I do not want to talk
today about its effects in relation to this subject—the subject of
"Mormon" patriarchal marriage; I do not want to talk about the law of
1862, nor the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States
affecting it; but I want to deal with the facts that stare us in the
face. Shall we correct these evils? "O," says one, "they always
existed." Out upon such doctrine; we do not believe it. I cannot
believe that the Great Creator, he who formed the universe, who placed
the sun in the center of our solar system and caused those planets to
revolve around it; that that being who created these things, and
produced order out of chaos who said, "Let there be light and there
was light;" who called forth out of chaos the elements from which our
earth is formed and created it as a glorious habitation for man; that
He possessing, as we know he does, infinite wisdom, has placed men and
women, his sons and daughters, upon the earth in the midst of evils
such as I have briefly alluded to, and provided no remedy therefore. I
could no more believe it than I could believe this light to be
darkness. But I do believe that in the bosom of the Father there is
wisdom to create all, to carry out all, and to make this earth a
heaven, where peace, love, joy and happiness shall prevail, and where
there shall be no sin, no sorrow, no heartrending or pain, where man
and woman will dwell together in perfect peace, love and harmony, and
children grow up in purity with every heavenly surrounding.
I have said, probably, enough on this subject. I merely wish to point
out and to show that certain evils exist and that they need
correction. How shall they be corrected? Who shall point out the
remedy? I believe God has done it, and he will continue to do it; he
will bring to pass in his own way and in his own due time all the
corrections necessary to change all this. This subject of itself,
affecting as it does the happiness, welfare and prosperity of the human
family, is one of almost overshadowing importance. But there are other
evils under which mankind groan. There are evils in regard to wealth
and the management of property, the organization of capital and the
organization of labor, the relations, that labor shall bear to
capital, and capital to labor. There are questions of this kind that
press themselves upon the attention of statesmen, and upon the
attention of every man of thought and reflection, and he sees there is
room for the exercise of the most profound wisdom, and the
greatest talent in order that these things may be corrected. It
devolves upon us, Latter-day Saints, to help to accomplish this work.
It devolves upon us, and will devolve upon us more particularly in the
near future, to maintain upon this continent and through this broad
land pure republican institutions, constitutional liberty in its
broadest sense. For the day is not far distant when the power such as
is growing up in the mountains will be needed. Conflict of parties, an
increase of party feeling, an increased disposition to take possession
of power by any means, no matter what it might be, are becoming
general in the United States. This is so self-evident that no man,
unless completely wedded to the idea that this nation will exist in
perpetuity, can fail to see for himself that there is a crisis
approaching in the affairs of our nation. Already the feeling prevails
that in order to accomplish certain things fraud is justifiable. Money
is used to an extent in the accomplishing of certain results in
government affairs, and in politics that you, as a people who live in
these mountains, have scarcely any conception of. And this is
increasing. What the end will be is not difficult to foretell.
Republicanism ceases to be republicanism whenever fraud enters into
the decision of questions and the will of the people cannot be
properly ascertained.
So far as religious liberty is concerned we have fought that battle
thus far with tolerable success; but we have yet to contend still more
for greater liberty, not for ourselves alone, but for every human
being that dwells upon this land, from the east to the west and from
the north to the south. The principle must be maintained, the
principle, that actuated the founders of our government, when they
laid the foundation stone thereof, that in matters of religious
concernment no man has a right to step between his fellow man and his
God. I may worship idols; I may burn incense to idols; I may worship
the sun and pay adoration to him, the great luminary of day; I may do
other things which may seem equally improper, but have I not the right
to do these things under our constitution? Was it not the intention of
the framers of our form of government that every man should have this
right? Certainly it was; and it can be clearly proved that this was
their intention, that this was the spirit that actuated and prompted
them.
In Salt Lake City, if the "Mormons" had supreme control—I say
"Mormons," I ought to say Latter-day Saints—if they had Supreme
control from our northern boundary in Idaho, to the southern boundary,
Arizona, and from our eastern boundary, Colorado, to our western
boundary, Nevada; if we had supreme control and undisputed possession
of this land, without the right of dominion over us being questioned,
we would have no authority under the constitution under which we live
to say to any human being within these confines how he should worship,
what he should or should not do in order to please the Creator. If the
Chinaman should come here and build a Joss house and burn incense to
Joss, if he prostrate himself in adoration before the images that he
thinks represents his deity, we have no right in the world to
interfere with him. If an Ingersoll should come here and say that he
did not believe in any God at all, and he could carry his feelings
into practice, we would have no right to interfere with him.
Under the circumstances I have described, he would have a perfect
right to believe in God or not. We would have no right to interfere
with a man who, believing his priest has power to remit his sins,
would enter the confessional chamber for the purpose of having them
forgiven; or with the Episcopalian who may choose to sprinkle his
infant, or the Jew because he believed in circumcising his infant
child, or with the Baptist because he believed in baptism by
immersion. But supposing that a man should come along that believes it
his right and in accordance with his religious convictions to marry
more than one wife, and he takes care of his wives and provides for
them properly according to his religion, believing that in the
eternity to come he will dwell with them. Some of us may think that
his ideas of heaven are very materialistic; we may think him a very
foolish man for having such a belief, and especially for going to the
expense of keeping three or four wives; these may be the popular ideas
about him, but if he carries out his belief from a religious
standpoint, he has a perfect right to do it in the face of God and
even under the constitution of our land. The Parsee and
fire-worshipper and men of kindred belief may yet come to this land of
liberty; and I tell you if the spirit of the Constitution be
maintained, as the Latter-day Saints will yet maintain it, they will
have a perfect right to worship their God according to the dictates of
their own consciences without any to molest or make afraid. The only
time that these men can be interfered with will be when their
religious acts interfere with the rights and liberties of their
fellow men. Hear it, ye Latter-day Saints! When John Chinaman comes in
your midst, teach your children to respect him. When any other man of
any other creed, race or color takes his abode among you, teach your
children to respect his form of worship. And if they go to the church
of the Catholics or that of the Presbyterians or of any other sect,
teach them to behave themselves and treat everybody with civility and
kindness, and that it is none of their business how these sects
worship, teach that they violate good order and good law when they in
any way make light of religious exercises. I would whip a boy for it
quicker than for anything else. That is the freedom I believe in; that
is the freedom I mean to teach to my children and to all men so far as
my voice and influence extend; that is the freedom I mean to contend
for and, as I have said hundreds of times to leading men of this
nation, I will, if necessary, take my sons and make them swear that
they will stand by and maintain this liberty as long as they live and
contend for it and teach their children after them to contend for it
also. I believe in the fullest liberty upon these points. We have been
accused of exclusiveness. Our hearts have many times warmed towards
"Gentiles," as they are called. We have extended the arms of kindness
thousands and thousands of times to them, as our history has proved. We
have been full of that disposition. But how have our advances been
met? Let those in this tabernacle and those who are familiar with such
matters read the newspapers. I have had people visit me at my house
where every attention and courtesy would be shown them, and they would
leave and perhaps through reading newspaper articles consisting of
abominable lies, would go away and betray those who had
received and treated them kindly and hospitably and so often has this
been the case that I have almost sworn I will never do it again. It is
not because we have unkind feelings. The time will come when we will
have power; at present we are in the minority, and it pays for
scribblers to write about us and hold us up to ridicule. But suppose
the Latter-day Saints had control; suppose their ideas were fulfilled,
that is, that we, as it is destined we shall be, were the people who
uphold Constitutional government upon this continent, who restored the
government to its primitive condition when all the political parties
shall have fallen into chaos; would we feel at liberty to say that
none but the Latter-day Saints should be elected to offices of trust
and responsibility? No. Joseph Smith set the pattern; he taught the
brethren who were with him better ideas; you well-informed Latter-day
Saints know that there are two powers which God has restored in these
the last days. One is the Church of God, the other the Kingdom of God.
A man may belong to the Kingdom of God and yet not be a member of the
Church of God. In the Kingdom of God, using it in a political sense,
there may be heathens and Pagans and Mahommedans and Latter-day Saints
and Presbyterians and Episcopalians and Catholics and men of every
creed. Will they legislate for the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints alone? Will the laws that they enact protect us
alone and not protect others? No. Why? Because God is the Father of
the Latter-day Saints as well as of every human being; God is the
father of all, is the father of the Chinaman, the Hindoo, the African,
the European, the American; is the Father of all the races of men and
of every creed and nationality. When he establishes his kingdom it
will protect all in their equal rights; I as a Latter-day Saint, will
not have power to trample on my fellow man who may not be orthodox in
my opinion, because I am a Latter-day Saint; nor will my fellow man to
whom I am heterodox, have the power to trample upon me. Does not that
look right? That is the kind of kingdom we have to contend for; that
is the kind of kingdom we have to establish, and it is already
provided for in the Constitution given unto us by God, and through the
glorious labors of the fathers who laid the foundation of this
government, who were inspired and raised by our Almighty Father for
this express purpose. There is no liberty that a human being can
desire, neither is there a right that can be exercised properly, that
we do not have under the Constitution of our land. It needs no
amendment about it; it is broad enough, if interpreted in its true
spirit, to cover the individual, the continent, and the entire globe
and furnish freedom for all.
Now, Latter-day Saints, if you have had narrow views I will tell you
to put them aside. I do not mean by this you must take everybody into
your houses. There is the difference. I have seen President Young
scores of times acting upon the spirit to which I have alluded. He has
invited strangers to our social parties and houses and extended
courtesies to them because it was wisdom to do so. But a great many of
the Latter-day Saints are so ignorant upon these points that they do
not know when to stop. There are some so ignorant that they would in
the spirit of kindness let a man come into their homes and become so familiar that he would try to lead astray some member of
their family. Can you not see that these are acts of folly, that we
are not required, because of the liberality we should cherish and
cultivate, to throw down every barrier and allow vice to stalk through
our cities and enter into our family circles to pollute the purity
that should prevail there. Can you not see, Latter-day Saints, however
young, however uninformed you may be, can you not see that to allow
this liberty would be wrong? Therefore we ought to discriminate.
Nowhere in good society has a man the entree without proper
introduction. If a stranger were to come to me bearing lines of
introduction from a friend of mine, I would, if necessary, go with him
to the bank and endorse a note for him, because I would be perfectly
secure in doing so. But supposing a stranger were to come to me for
the same favor, without an introduction, I would not be under the
slightest obligation to do as he wished, though I might do so as an
act of charity, but of course under such circumstances I should not be
expected to do more than this. And if I were to go among strangers I
would not think of attempting to push myself among the people without
proper introduction. I have gone in their midst many times, but have
never been a sharer of their kindness and confidence only as such
confidence was established by acquaintance. So in our midst; a man can
come properly recommended, he is at home. He can have time enough to
establish his name and to show to the people what kind of man he is.
Then he will be received as he should be, having that respect shown to
him that is due.
I have talked a great deal more than I intended. I hope what I have
said may be blessed to your profit. If I have said any unwise thing,
forget it. If I have said any improper thing, I hope it will pass from
your minds, and that which is good, cling to you. Cleave to virtue, to
purity, to everything that is good, that will elevate you and make you
a better people. Above all let me say to you, let us get rid of old
traditions as fast as we can, and learn from the Lord, and be taught
by his holy spirit. That God may grant this is my prayer, in the name
of Jesus. Amen.
- George Q. Cannon