There is a passage in the Book of Mormon which has suggested itself to
my mind, which I will read. It contains the words of Alma unto his son
Helaman, and were among the last words which he spoke unto him. They
will be found recorded on page 368 of the new edition, namely:
"And now it came to pass that after Alma had said these things to Helaman,
he blessed him, and also his other sons; and he also blessed the earth
for the righteous' sake;
And he said: Thus saith the Lord God—Cursed shall be the land, yea,
this land, unto every nation, kindred, tongue, and people, unto
destruction, which do wickedly, when they are fully ripe; and as I
have said so shall it be; for this is the cursing and the blessing of
God upon the land, for the Lord cannot look upon sin with the least
degree of allowance.
And now, when Alma had said those words he blessed the church, yea, all
those who should stand fast in the faith from that time henceforth."
President Cannon then continued: In rising to speak unto you this
afternoon, my brethren and sisters, I do so with a desire in my heart
that that which I may say may be prompted by the Spirit of God, and
may be for your edification and comfort as well as my own. I am glad
to have this opportunity of meeting with you—not so much for the
privilege of speaking as of being here.
Some of us, as you know, have been traveling considerably of late,
visiting the various settlements, and I believe President Taylor and
party, when they return to this city, will have completed the entire
round of the Territory and of all the Stakes outside of Arizona—that
is so far as Utah and Idaho are concerned. We have found the people in
a very prosperous condition and feeling exceedingly well. In almost
every settlement the crops have been larger than they have been known
to be before. And the people are prospering in their temporal
circumstances and of course are feeling well, and I believe I do not overstate the matter when I say that they are as attentive to
their duties generally as I have ever seen them. Good health has
generally prevailed. I think probably we have had more sickness in
this city and neighborhood than in any other part of the Territory.
The people are increasing and spreading abroad, taking root in the
land. In the southern part of the Territory they are not prospering to
so great an extent as they are in the middle and northern part, owing
to various causes. Still there is an excellent feeling throughout all
these settlements, and they are looking hopefully to the future.
I have often thought in looking at the calmness and serenity of the
people, and the peace which prevails in their hearts, and in their
habitations and settlements, that it is not among the least wonderful
features of this organization that a people, who are so much maligned,
attacked and threatened as are the Latter-day Saints, should be found
living so undisturbed by these things and apparently enjoying
themselves as they do. There is scarcely a week passes, or has passed
for years in which there have not been some threats uttered and
circulated against us. "Terrible things going to be done with the
Mormons; we are going to have them all disposed of now; we shall have
this Mormon question all settled, and the problem so thoroughly solved
that it will never require to be meddled with again."
Threats of this character have been in circulation now for years, and
every time they have been alluded to it seemed to those who made them
as though their plans would be likely to be successful. In the case of
any other people it would repress all energy and devel opment, it would
frighten everybody, and, in fact, no one would want to live in a
community that was in such constant jeopardy. But so far as my
observation has extended the people, as I have remarked, are full of
peace and quiet, undisturbed by the prospects for the future. In fact
they feel quite happy and rejoice that they are counted worthy to have
their names cast out as evil. It is one of the most remarkable
features connected with this work that a people so few in number,
naturally so quiet and inoffensive, molesting no one, interfering with
no one's peace or enjoyment, threatening no one, minding their own
business, peacefully pursuing their varied pursuits, should create
such a stir in the world as we are doing. It might be thought that the
150,000 people who live in the Territory of Utah, would be such an
insignificant people and so utterly beneath the notice—so far as
numerical strength is concerned—of the world at large, that they might
be permitted to pursue the course which is marked out for them without
interference and without so much agitation respecting them. But I was
told yesterday by a federal official who had just returned from the
east—and I suppose it is true—that there was no subject today that
seemed to have the importance in men's minds that Utah had, and that
wherever he went, when it was known that he was from Utah, everybody
wanted to talk with him about its affairs and its people. Newspaper
reporters were after him to find out what he could tell them about us,
and I am informed that members of Congress and other leading men are
making the "Mormon question" a special study. I hope they will
thoroughly investigate it while they are at it; I think the
investigation will prove profitable to them, if it is only done in the
right spirit; but the object, I suppose, in making it a special study
is to do something, to deal with its imaginary evils, to devise some
plan that will reach this system that appears to be so hateful. Well,
now, I call this a remarkable feature of this work. I think it is
exceedingly wonderful that so small a people—a people whom every one
must admit who visits this country, are peaceful—should create such a
disturbance in the earth and be the cause of so much thought, so much
writing and speech making. And it has not been the case in Utah alone,
that is, since the Latter-day Saints came to Utah, but it has been a
peculiarity of this work—the work of God—from the day of its inception
in these last days until the present. And what is still more
remarkable, it was predicted that this would be the case about it when
it first started and before it, in fact, had an organization.
Doubtless the most of you remember that when Joseph Smith was visited
by an angel of God when he was quite a youth, it was said to him by
the angel that his name should be known for good and evil throughout
the earth, and most wonderfully has that statement been fulfilled in
his case and in the case of all those who have embraced the
everlasting Gospel. This was said before the Church was organized; it
was published directly after the organization.
Doubtless you are all familiar—or most of you are—with the letters of
Oliver Cowdery to W. W. Phelps, in which this was published among the
earliest writings that were sent forth by this Church, and when to all
human appearances there was not the least probability of it being
fulfilled, except a man should have the spirit of revelation to
discern the future. But when the Church was organized it created a
sensation in the neighborhood—it attracted attention—men's minds were
drawn towards it. As it increased the excitement spread, and among the
earliest predictions that I remember hearing, connected with this
work, was, that it had called forth the attention of townships and of
counties and of States, and it was said of it, that it should spread
until it would attract the attention of the United States and of the
world. This was one of the earliest predictions that was uttered
connected with the work, and it was also predicted concerning it, that
its missionaries should go to every land and to every people, and
carry the glad tidings of salvation, and should be the means of
gathering out of every nation, kindred, tongue and people, the honest
in heart, who should gather together in one place, and should be known
by the name of Zion. I often think of this. The wonderful manner in
which this people called Latter-day Saints dwelling in Utah have been
gathered together is a subject of never-ceasing interest to me.
Before the organization of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, Joseph Smith received revelations which he said were
revelations from God. They are now embodied in this book, which we
call the Book of Doctrine and Covenants and among the earliest of
these revelations is found a statement given by the Lord Jesus Christ,
through Joseph Smith, to the effect that he intended to bring forth
and establish Zion, and that He would gather together the people who
would obey His Gospel. This prediction is particularly note worthy, because at the time when the first of these revelations
was given, there was no such organization as the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints upon the earth; it did not have an
existence; and in the September following its organization—that is
five months afterwards—another revelation was given, in which it was
stated still more plainly who were to be gathered, and the purposes
for which they were to be gathered, and this, too, before there was a
place designated as a place of gathering. I have often said that if
the Prophet Joseph Smith had no other evidence to show to the world of
the divinity of his mission, and of his prophetic office, than that
revelation alone, it was sufficient in and of itself to establish it;
for this reason; that at the time it was uttered, as I have said there
was no organization of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints; there was no gathering place; no person had ever witnessed
such a proceeding as a people belonging to one church gathering
together and dwelling together in one organization. There was nothing
of the kind known; there was no organization among the children of men
that could have given a hint of the possibility or probability of such
a great event taking place. If other churches had done the same, then
it might have been thought that the Prophet Joseph Smith could easily
have predicted that the people that he would be the means of gathering
together, might do so also. But there was no accessible record extant
of the gathering together of any people in this manner at the time
that Joseph proclaimed this principle. Yet he, inspired of God, dared
to make this statement to the world, and to publish it, and today, we
who are here are living witnesses of its fulfillment —not of its
complete fulfillment, but sufficiently to make it one of the strangest
events that has ever been witnessed among men. There have been many
circumstances surrounding the people which have been of such a
character as to operate against their gathering. It is not long since
a Secretary of State issued a circular to the nations of Europe to
check this very business of gathering. I do not suppose that he knew
that Joseph Smith had made such a prediction, or that God had inspired
him to give such a revelation, or that he ever imagined for a moment
that the word of God was recorded upon this subject; but he thought it
would be a good thing to stop the immigration of "Mormons." Mobs have
also done their part to accomplish the same end, by endeavoring to
break up the community and scatter its members and frighten those who
had not gathered, so that they might be deterred from coming. But
notwithstanding all these influences which have been operating from
the beginning—commencing as I said in a township, then spreading to a
county, afterwards to a State, and to States, and then the Secretary
of State of our nation taking the matter in hand—notwithstanding all
these influences which have been operating to check the gathering of
the people together, they have gathered as we see them today, and are
still gathering, because God has said they should, and there is no
earthly power that can prevent their gathering together, though it
need not surprise you if more thorough measures than ever have been
should be taken to prevent the Saints from obeying this command.
When the Elders of this Church first went out, they went out without the ordinary advantages that men who call themselves ministers
possess. They were men selected from the various avocations of life.
Joseph Smith himself was a farmer. He was not a man that was schooled
for the ministry. He had had no education to fit and qualify him as
men are ordinarily supposed to be qualified in these days who teach
their fellow men what is called the Gospel of Jesus Christ. He did not
go to a theological seminary. But inspired of God, having been
ordained of God to the everlasting Priesthood (that authority that had
been withdrawn from the earth in consequence of the wickedness of men;
and been restored to the earth and bestowed upon him by angelic
agency) he stood up in the midst of his fellow men and proclaimed the
truth, and by the power of God he was the means of bringing many to
its knowledge; and, as I have said, inspired of God, he selected
others and laid his hands upon them, that being the ordination
necessary to qualify them to preach the word of God. They were taken
from the plow, they were taken from the blacksmith's shop, from the
mechanic's bench, from the counting room, and from all the vocations
of life in which they were found; they were taken and were thus
ordained and sent out to preach the Gospel, without purse and scrip,
without salary, without that which the world had considered
necessary—an education, an education suited to the calling. In this
way they went forth and preached the Gospel—not in men's wisdom, not
in their own strength, but calling upon God in the name of Jesus to
bestow His Holy Spirit upon the people and to carry their words by
that spirit to their hearts, and to help them find the honest, the
meek, and the humble. This is the way in which they went. They could
not glory in man. They could not take glory to themselves, for there
was nothing about them in which they could glory. And the result was
that wherever they went they met honest-hearted people—people who were
waiting to receive their message; and these people as soon as they
were baptized were seized with a desire to gather together with the
people of God, without knowing what God had said upon the subject.
Now, when God does a work he does it in his own way, and he is
determined—he always was apparently from all we read—to have the glory
of that work. If a man were to go forth qualified by education and
preached by the power of education and of learning, who is it that
gets the glory? Why, you will find it everywhere that man is
glorified. If there is a fluent preacher, if there is a successful
orator in what is called the Christian Church, he gets the glory of
it, and he gets a salary in proportion to it. Commencing, as some of
them have done, to preach in humble places, the fame of their oratory
has spread, and they have had calls to the ministry from other places,
such calls being accompanied by an increase of salary, and a man goes
from one place to another according to the addition he receives in his
salary until he becomes noted as many are today. The fame of their
oratory goes throughout the United States. Who is it that gets the
glory for this? Why, it is the men themselves, and they get the
salary, too. They not only get the glory of men, but they get their
pay. Man's education is praised, the college where he received it
receives credit for it according to the ability that he may display,
and God is very little thought about in the matter, and
certainly the Holy Ghost gets no credit, for it is supposed that the
Holy Ghost has nothing to do with it. Well, now, God has taken a
different method in our day, and he is showing forth his power. He is
taking the meek and the lowly and the humble men who are desirous to
keep his commandments, and he is making them mighty through his power.
But they cannot give any glory to anyone but the Almighty for this.
Let a man attempt to travel without purse and scrip, as the Elders of
this Church have done, and as the ancient Apostles did, and if he is
successful he is successful through faith, through his reliance upon
God through keeping his commandments, through being humble, meek and
lowly of heart, and if he reaches the hearts of the honest, the only
way he can hope to do it is by having the Spirit of God, and having
that power accompanying his words. He cannot do it in any other way.
And who is there in this Church that gives Joseph Smith the glory of
this work? Yet it is the most wonderful organization ever beheld among
men. There is nothing like it. There is no limit to the power
connected with it; there is no limit to the union connected with it;
there is no limit to the capacity for expansion connected with it. You
may expand it and make it as wide and broad as you please, and the
organization is equal to it. If it only consisted of six members it
answered the purpose; if it consisted of six thousand it answered the
purpose. If it were to consist of six millions it would answer the
purpose; if it should embrace the whole world it would be found equal
to the necessity. No man can look upon the organization of this Church
and ex amine it in its details without being wonderfully impressed—if
he be a man who does not give glory to God—with the ability of the man
who framed it; but if he be disposed to give glory to God, he cannot
examine it without praising God in his heart for giving so wonderful
and so simple an organization on the earth for a church. But though
this is the case, who is there that gives any glory to Joseph Smith?
Who is there that gives any glory to Brigham Young? I have been told
repeatedly that we do not honor our men enough, we do not give them
praise enough; but it is a fact, the people look behind the
instrument. Joseph Smith was a man; yet we have been falsely accused
of worshiping Joseph Smith in the place of the Savior, and the same
has also been said of Brigham Young. But the true feeling is to look
behind Joseph Smith and Brigham Young to the power who raised them up,
to that Being who gave them all their gifts and endowments, who
inspired them and who made them perform the work that they did. And
when Elders in this Church are successful there is very little
disposition to give them the glory or the praise therefore. The praise
is given to God, who is the author of these blessings and of the
gathering of this people together. The world say it was the shrewdness
of Joseph Smith that first suggested this, and that it was the
executive ability that Brigham Young had that carried it out. They do
not recognize God in it; it was Brigham Young. But, my brethren and
sisters, you know who it was. You know that it was no power of man
that could have touched your hearts and made you desire to leave your
homes and come to Zion. This makes every man and woman in
In this way God has built up this Church. It did not, as we have often
heard, depend upon one man. Men thought if they killed Joseph Smith
they would destroy the keystone; that his existence was the means of
upholding the work and giving it solidity. But he was killed, and
still the work prospered, and it will prosper if every man that is now
in position in the Church should be killed or should die. The
testimony of Jesus is in the hearts of the people. You travel
throughout the Territory, and call the people together and ask them:
"What influence brought you here?" Every one who is an adult, and has
retained the faith, will tell you that it was the Spirit and power of
God. No other influence nor power could have done this but that. Well,
now, men will fight it, men are fighting it. It is strange today to
see people who call themselves religious, advocating all manner of
means to be brought against this people to destroy them. To shed their
blood is thought to be justifiable; the killing of people in order to
destroy an organization that they think is so full of menace; and yet
we are told in the Bible—and we have been taught it from childhood,
that the righteous never persecute the wicked, but it has always been
the case that the wicked persecute the righteous; and we are told by
the Savior himself that his followers should be hated of all men, and
that men in seeking to kill them would think they were doing God's
service. It was not the Apostles of Jesus who persecuted the wicked,
it was not the righteous who hated them and who sought their
destruction. There were no petitions went out from the humble
followers of Christ against the Pharisees and against the religious
sects of that day to have them destroyed, to have governmental aid to
assist them in extirpating their heresies; nothing of this kind has
ever been witnessed, but here we find today the professedly
righteous, the ministers, advocating the most dreadful measures. Why I
heard here a few days ago from one of our returned missionaries that
the sermon of a notorious preacher in the East, delivered some time
since, in which he advocated the wiping out of the Latter-day Saints
by the use of arms and cannon and weapons of war—I was told that the
sermon when it reached England was re-printed and distributed
gratuitously at the doors of the churches. People rejoiced over it,
thought it an excellent scheme, and yet you tell those people they are
not Christians and they would be shocked, feel insulted and think
themselves terribly abused by such a statement, and at the
same time were rejoicing over the prospect of the Latter-day Saints
being killed and the system being broken up by violence.
How shall we feel respecting these matters? I have said that the
people, so far as my observation has extended throughout this
Territory, were rejoicing and feeling contented. How shall we feel?
Shall we be disturbed? The man or woman who entered into this Church
who was old enough to understand these matters, and expected anything
different to this, was not properly informed. When I became old enough
to understand the character of this work I made up my mind that it
might cost me everything before I got through. I did not know what
might be involved in it, what consequences; but I knew that others who
had started out for salvation had been slain, and that Saints of God
in every age have had to lay down their lives for the truth and that
my Lord and Master Jesus Christ, had been crucified, and if I expected
to live and reign with Him, that I must also be prepared to endure all
things. The salvation that God has promised unto us is worthy of all
this, or it is worth nothing. If we cannot sacrifice everything there
is upon the face of the earth, that men hold dear to them, then we are
unworthy of that great salvation that God has promised unto the
faithful. The man that cannot bring every appetite into subjection to
the mind and will of God, that cannot forego everything of this kind,
and that is not willing to sacrifice houses and lands, and father and
mother, wives and children and everything that men hold dear to them,
is unworthy that great salvation that God has in store for His
faithful children. When I hear people say that they are Latter-day
Saints, and will drink with the drunken; when I hear men talk about
being Latter-day Saints who will not conquer their appetites, and will
not bring them in subjection to the mind and will of God, I think very
little of their professions. If we value this salvation as we should,
there is nothing that will stand between us and it. We may love our
wives as we love our own lives; we may love our children as we do
ourselves; we may be willing to step between death and our wives and
children and say, "If any be killed, let us be killed; if there is to
be any hardship, let us endure it;" we may have this feeling, but at
the same time we must love the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, and
the cause that He established, better than we do our wives and our
children, better than we do our own lives. There is nothing upon the
face of the earth that we should love as we do the Gospel. God
requires this of us. Therefore, if we are Latter-day Saints, what
difference does it make what is brought against us? Suppose armies
should be launched against us; suppose the measures urged by some
so-called divines, should be carried out; will it make any difference in
regard to us and our future? Shall we be disturbed because of these
threats being fulminated against us? Not in the least; for the reason
that God is our Father—He stands at the head, and not one hair of our
heads shall fall to the ground without His notice. Nothing can occur
that He does not take cognizance of. He watches over us as well as the
rest of the human family, and He will overrule everything for our
good. We should, therefore, be the happiest people—as I fully believe
we are—on the face of the earth. We may be persecuted,
maligned and threatened, it ought not to make the least difference to
us in regard to our enjoyment. Our trust should be in something higher
than man. There is one Being whom we call our Father, and that is God,
whom we should fear; we should hold Him in reverence and be so afraid
that we would never do anything to offend Him or to grieve His Holy
Spirit. But as for man! What is man? What is there about man that we
should fear him? We have seen men in the plenitude of their power
array themselves against the work of God, and they have passed away
one after another; but the work of God lives and will live. Opposers
may fight it, rave against it; organizations may be formed for the
purpose of crushing it, but they will pass away just as sure as God
has spoken and as we live. This work that God has established will
roll forth. The power connected with it cannot be crushed. Men may
apostatize, as many have done, but it will not affect the work. The
three witnesses of this Book of Mormon, from which I have read—Oliver
Cowdery, David Whitmer and Martin Harris—two of them are now dead
—testified all their days that an holy angel came and showed them the
plates from which this book was translated—even they fell away. They
disagreed with the Prophet Joseph, and fell away from the Church, one
of them at least, because of unchastity, the cause most fruitful above
all others of apostasy. When a man indulges in unchaste desires or
practices he cannot stand in this Church, he will apostatize sooner or
later unless he repents. One of the witnesses—Oliver Cowdery—upon
whose head, with that of Joseph Smith, the hands of John the Baptist
were laid, upon whose head, in company with Joseph Smith, the hands of
Peter, James and John were laid, even he fell away from this Church,
and yet he never denied his testimony of the truth of this work, nor
did Martin Harris. David Whitmer, the only surviving witness, is in
the same condition. He, too, fell away from the Church during Joseph's
lifetime, and became Joseph's enemy; but he never denied the truth of
his testimony connected with the Book of Mormon, and still bears
testimony to it today. These men, it might have been supposed, would
have shaken the Church. Oliver Cowdery had the idea, notwithstanding
the revelations he had received, that when he fell away the Church
would receive a great shock. There were twelve men chosen as Apostles
from the midst of the people, and of these twelve six fell away from
the Church and ranged themselves against the Prophet of God. They were
determined to destroy the work if they could. This reminds one of the
parable of the ten virgins. There were five wise and five foolish;
one-half of them were unprepared to go out and meet the bridegroom. So
with the Apostles, half of them fell away. But did the Church stop?
No; and if all the Apostles had apostatized it would not have arrested
the onward progress of this work, for God has spoken concerning it,
and His word will be fulfilled. And shall we fear man? Shall we fear
earthly organizations? Shall we fear threats? Shall our knees tremble
and our hands and our hearts falter because men array themselves
against the work of God? If we do, then we mistake entirely its
character. No such feeling enters into the heart of any faithful man
or woman connected with this Church.
Now, my brethren and sisters, the Lord has made great promises unto
us. I have read you one from this Book of Mormon. This land is a
blessed land unto all the inhabitants of the earth who will act
righteously, but is and will be cursed to those who will not. There is
a curse and a blessing upon the land. No nation can prosper in this
land that works unrighteousness, and it is a painful thing to say that
our own nation, unless it repents, will meet with disasters sooner or
later. It pains us to say this, but it is true. God has said it. It
will be true about us. This land can only be blessed to us if we work
righteously. Let us turn round and oppress the weak and do wrong, and
God will curse the land to us. There will be trouble in the land among
the inhabitants of the earth as long as they work wickedness, just as
sure as God has spoken. There has been no nation prospered as our
nation has. No government was ever framed by man that is so strong and
so good and well adapted to the happiness of human beings as our
government is. There never was a better instrument framed for the
happiness of man than the Constitution of the United States. The men
who framed it were inspired of God. The men who fought the battles of
the Revolution were the same. Washington was inspired of God; he was
sustained by the almighty arm of God; and the defeats that the mother
country received were in accordance with the plan of God. This land
was kept for this purpose. For centuries it was hidden from all the
nations of the earth. It was not until the 15th century that God
inspired Columbus to go forth and seek a passage across the Atlantic,
and land upon some of the islands adjacent to this continent. His
track was followed by others. All this was in the mind of God. We have
it all plainly stated to us in this book (the Book of Mormon), and the
reasons for it, the best possible reasons that could be given. It is
said that the Norwegians had visited this country and that the stone
tower at Newport is evidence of it. The Scandinavian antiquarians
claim that it was thus discovered; but if so, it was not peopled. It
remained hidden until the 15th century, and there was good reason for
it. This land would have been overrun by other nations had it been
discovered earlier, and there would have been no place for that which
we now behold. But God preserved it; and He has said in the Book of
Mormon, that so long as the inhabitants of this land serve the God of
the land, who is Jesus Christ—they shall prosper and no nation shall
have power over them. The Lord has also said that there shall be no
kings upon this land. The attempt of Maximillian is an evidence of the
truth of it. Backed as he was by the power of France and Austria,
particularly by France, he was killed for his attempt; for the Lord
has said there shall be no kings upon this land, and that it shall be
a land of liberty unto the inhabitants thereof as long as they serve
the Lord. And the prosperity that has attended the land thus far is
due to this blessing. Those who contended for liberty in early days
were men who desired to serve the Lord. They may have been mistaken in
many things, but they were zealous in this and devoted to it, and many
of them were willing that every human being should have the rights
that they contended for themselves. But this is all changed today.
There is a great change. You and I cannot worship God as we desire, without being in danger. We are told that it is because we are
polygamists. Why, the earliest privations which we had to contend
with, the scenes which are seared in the memories of these aged
people, and these of middle age, were all passed through by us when
polygamy was not known. When we chose to worship God, and said He was
a God of revelation today, the same as He was 1,800 years ago. There
were men then, and there are men today, who would destroy us because
we exercise that belief. Hence, I say, prosperity cannot attend a
people who will trample upon liberty in that manner, and the party
that arrays itself against the work of God cannot prosper.
When men have power and do right they will be sustained; but when they
do wrong they go against the eternal principles of justice and against
God. There are many thousands of men who know that Utah has not been
fairly treated, but they have not the courage to say so, because with
many who hold office it might cost them position. Visitors come here
and are impressed with what they see, but many of them yield to the
force of public opinion and say what they do not believe in their
hearts. Thus it is that the tide of calumny has swelled and there is
no one to throw obstacles in its way; we have endured its full force
as it has rolled upon us, and must still stand up and endure it.
Although it is so painful, it is not without profit; it teaches us
many valuable lessons. I hope it will have a good effect upon us. I
suppose it is to chasten us and to keep us humble, and if it will
teach us to be liberal and not to oppress others, I shall be glad:
liberty for every man in the land and every woman—liberty to the
fullest possible extent for all, as long as they do not trespass upon
the rights of their fellows. If a man wishes to worship an idol or an
animal, a bull, a calf, a dog, or a serpent or anything else—liberty
to do so as long as his worship does not interfere with the rights of
his fellows. If he wishes to worship the God of Heaven, all right, he
should not be interfered with. God has blessed the land in the words
that I have read in your hearing, and if we were driven out of it, in
five years it would return to its original desolation. This land of
desolation God has changed into a fruitful field, because of the
blessing on the land, and as long as the Latter-day Saints live
righteously the land shall be blessed to them. The climate will be
ameliorated; the soil will be fertilized; fruits will grow as they
have done in this valley.
When we first came here I remember the thoughts of many. They did not
believe that we could raise any fruit here, and the man who first set
out peach stones was laughed at because of the idea he entertained
that they would grow. Very few believed they would grow. And today
where can you find a better land for fruit than this? I suppose when
we came many thought if we could raise bread enough, it would be as
much as we could do, there being frost every month of the year. But
now it is so charming a place that many covet it. When they got up
that raid against us a few years ago, I was credibly informed that
there were certain men here who actually went round and selected the
places they would occupy! They indicted Brigham Young, Daniel H.
Wells, and others for alleged crimes, and the hope was that we would
scare away from here and then places could be had for the
choosing.
But we came here to stay, here we expect to stay, and here we shall
stay as long as we do right. And we shall not only stay here, but we
shall spread abroad, and the day will come—and this is another
prediction of Joseph Smith's—I want to remind you of it, my brethren
and sisters, when good government, constitutional government—liberty—will
be found among the Latter-day Saints, and it will be sought for
in vain elsewhere; when the Constitution of this land and republican
government and institutions will be upheld by this people who are now
so oppressed and whose destruction is now sought so diligently. The
day will come when the Constitution, and free government under it,
will be sustained and preserved by this people. This is saying a great
deal, but it is not saying any more than is said concerning the growth
of this work, and that which is already accomplished. I have just
turned to the revelation upon this subject, which says:
"And it shall come to pass, among the wicked, that every man that will
not take his sword against his neighbor, must needs flee unto Zion for
safety. And there shall be gathered unto it out of every nation under
heaven; and it shall be the only people that shall not be at war one
with another."
This revelation was given on the 7th of March 1831. We have already
beheld and are now beholding its fulfillment: the righteous are being
gathered and they are coming with songs of everlasting joy: and this
was given before there was a gathering place, and only eleven months
after the Church was organized. And it is a remarkable fact that
today—I do not say it out of any improper feeling—our hands as a
people, by a singular providence, are free from the blood of our
fellow men. We were driven out of this land. Our enemies were not
content to let us remain in the States, on the land that we had
purchased, they would not permit us to occupy the homes we had built,
but compelled us to leave, and we came to the Rocky Mountains. And
when the civil war broke out President Lincoln sent a communication to
Governor Young, asking him if he could send troops to guard the
continental highway and preserve it from the attacks of Indians. He
responded by sending out companies of cavalry. They spent the time in
guarding the mail route against the Indians, and thus, as I have said,
our hands today as a people, are free from the blood of our
fellow citizens by this singular providence, through the acts of our
enemies. Had we remained in the State of Illinois, or in Missouri, we
should have been compelled—unless we had chosen to occupy a very
anomalous position—to have taken sides in this fratricidal war, a war
which Joseph Smith in the year 1832, predicted would take place. The
revelation was printed in 1850—though known to the church long
before—stating that the war should commence between the north and
south, at South Carolina. I suppose there is not a boy who has been
brought up in this community who did not know of the revelation years
before it was published, and, still longer, before it was fulfilled. I
know I was taught concerning this revelation, when a boy, and I knew
the time would come when there would be a bloody war between the north
and south and that it would commence in South Carolina. Did it
commence there? Yes. Joseph Smith predicted it 28 years before
it occurred. And in the manner to which I have alluded, we were driven
out and occupied a position where, though we did not go to the war,
our loyalty to the Union could not be questioned, for we responded to
every call that was made upon us. Though we deplored the war, and did
all we could by our preaching, counsels and warnings to avert it, we
were true to our obligations; and yet at the same time—though we have
men among us who took part in the war—as a people our hands are clean
from the blood of our fellow men. Our Church has not been divided into
a church north and a church south. It is a church that belongs to the
whole people of the north and of the south, and there are no sectional
heartburnings in our midst. God in his providence had made this a
place of refuge from the north and from the south. They can come here
without heartburnings and without prejudice; no civil broils, no
disunion; they have nothing to remember or forget connected with us.
It is a church that is adapted to all. The black man is welcome, and
he is entitled to the rites of the Gospel, though the Lord has shown
that to his race the Priesthood is forbidden. The red man, and the
yellow man and every man of every race and of every kindred and of
every tongue, has a right in this Church and will be received into it
and have place in it, just as sure as God has spoken. And we shall be
preserved from future broils and disunion when they break out; we
shall stand in places where we can maintain our loyalty and our
truthfulness and our honor, and at the same time not interfere with
the rights of any human being.
I have talked longer than I intended to. It is probably the last
opportunity I will have of addressing you for some little time. I
expect to leave for Washington before another Sunday comes. I desire
earnestly in my heart that I may have your faith and prayers. I have
felt greatly strengthened by the knowledge that I have had your faith,
your confidence, and your prayers, and I go out now hoping I shall
still have these, for they are more valuable to me than anything else.
I should go weak indeed if I did not have the faith and prayers and
confidence of my brethren and sisters. I do not believe there is
another representative in the world, it may be said—and certainly not
in our nation—who has more cause for thanksgiving in this respect than
I have. I know I am backed and sustained by my entire constituency; I
know I have their love and affection; I know their hearts go with me,
and their feelings and affections are always towards me; I know in
almost every household prayers are offered in my behalf; it gives me
strength; and when I am assailed and when our people are assailed and
our Territory, it gives me strength to know we are united, and that
when I am in Washington, though I may be alone—which I am in one sense
of the word—I have an influence and a power attending me, in
consequence of this, that others do not have. God has preserved us,
and he will preserve us and overrule evil for good. I feel hopeful and
cheerful: this is a blessing God has given unto me. In the midst of
the darkest hours I have always felt exceedingly cheerful: fear has
been taken away from me.
I pray that you may be blessed exceedingly of the Lord; that His Holy
Spirit may be poured out upon you; that peace may be given unto you and union fill your hearts: I ask this in the name of Jesus
Christ. Amen.
- George Q. Cannon