Nearly all the brethren who have spoken at this Conference have
referred to the circumstances in which we, as a people, are now
placed; and it would seem unnecessary for me to make any further
reference to this all-prevailing subject with which the people
generally are more or less familiar, and in which we necessarily are
considerably interested. But while the brethren who have spoken have
merely referred to some of the sayings of the Prophet Joseph, and to
items in the revelations through him, to the Church, I feel impressed
to read in the hearing of the congregation one or two passages from
the revelations previously referred to. I will, therefore, call the
attention of the congregation to a verse or two in the revelation
given in 1831, which will be found on page 219 of the Doctrine and
Covenants:
"Let no man break the laws of the land, for he that keepeth the laws
of God hath no need to break the laws of the land.
"Wherefore, be subject to the powers that be, until he reigns whose
right it is to reign, and subdues all enemies under his feet.
"Behold, the laws which ye have received from my hand are the laws of
the church, and in this light ye shall hold them forth. Behold, here is
wisdom."
The following I quote from a revelation given December, 1833, page
357:
"According to the laws and the constitution of the people, which I have
suffered to be established, and should be maintained for the rights and
protection of all flesh, according to just and holy principles;
"That every man may act in doctrine and principle pertaining to
futurity, according to the moral agency which I have given unto him,
that every man may be accountable for his own sins in the day of
judgment.
"Therefore, it is not right that any man should be in bondage one to
another.
"And for this purpose have I established the Constitution of this land,
by the hands of wise men whom I raised up unto this very purpose, and
redeemed the land by the shedding of blood."
Again, in a revelation on page 342:
"And now, verily I say unto you concerning the laws of the land, it is
my will that my people shall observe to do all things whatsoever I
command them.
And that law of the land which is constitutional, supporting that
principle of freedom in maintaining rights and privileges, belongs to
all mankind, and is justifiable before me.
Therefore, I, the Lord, justify you, and your brethren of my church, in
befriending that law which is the constitutional law of the land;
And as pertaining to law of man, whatsoever is more or less than this,
cometh of evil.
I, the Lord God, make you free, therefore ye are free indeed; and the
law also maketh you free.
Nevertheless, when the wicked rule the people mourn.
Wherefore, honest men and wise men should be sought for diligently,
and good men and wise men ye should observe to uphold; otherwise
whatsoever is less than these cometh of evil.
And I give unto you a commandment, that ye shall forsake all evil and
cleave unto all good, that ye shall live by every word which
proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
For he will give unto the faithful line upon line, precept upon
precept; and I will try you and prove you herewith.
And whoso layeth down his life in my cause, for my name's sake, shall
find it again, even life eternal.
Therefore, be not afraid of your enemies, for I have decreed in my
heart, saith the Lord, that I will prove you in all things, whether
you will abide in my covenant, even unto death, that you may be found
worthy.
For if ye will not abide in my covenant ye are not worthy of me."
This, as I understand it, is the law of God to the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints in all the world. And the requirements
here made of us must be obeyed, and practically carried out in our
lives, in order that we may secure the fulfillment of the promises
which God has made to the people of Zion. And it is further written,
that inasmuch as ye will do the things which I command you, thus saith
the Lord then am I bound; otherwise there is no promise. We can
therefore only expect that the promises are made and will apply to us
when we do the things which we are commanded.
We are told here that no man need break the laws of the land who will
keep the laws of God. But this is further defined by the passage which
I read afterwards—the law of the land, which all have no need to
break, is that law which is the Constitutional law of the land, and
that is as God himself has defined it. And whatsoever is more or less
than this cometh of evil. Now it seems to me that this makes this
matter so clear that it is not possible for any man who professes to
be a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to make
any mistake, or to be in doubt as to the course he should pursue under
the command of God in relation to the observance of the laws of the
land. I maintain that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
has ever been faithful to the constitutional laws of our country. I
maintain also, that I have a right to this opinion, as an American
citizen, as one who was not only born on American soil, but who
descended from parents who for generations were born in America. I
have a right to interpret the law in this manner, and to form
my own conclusions and express my opinions thereon, regardless of the
opinions of other men.
I ask myself, What law have you broken? What constitutional law have
you not observed? I am bound not only by allegiance to the government
of the United States, but by the actual command of God Almighty, to
observe and obey every constitutional law of the land, and without
hesitancy I declare to this congregation that I have never violated,
nor transgressed any law, I am not amenable to any penalties of the
law, because I have endeavored from my youth up to be a law-abiding
citizen, and not only so, but to be a peacemaker, a preacher of
righteousness, and not only to preach righteousness by word, but by
example. What therefore have I to fear? The Lord Almighty requires
this people to observe the laws of the land, to be subject to "the
powers that be," so far as they abide by the fundamental principles of
good government, but He will hold them responsible if they will pass
unconstitutional measures and frame unjust and proscriptive laws, as
did Nebuchadnezzar and Darius, in relation to the three Hebrew
children and Daniel. If lawmakers have a mind to violate their oath,
break their covenants and their faith with the people, and depart from
the provisions of the Constitution where is the law human or divine,
which binds me, as an individual, to outwardly and openly proclaim my
acceptance of their acts?
I firmly believe that the only way in which we can be sustained in
regard to this matter by God our Heavenly Father is by following the
illustrious examples we find in holy writ. And while we regret, and
look with sorrow upon the acts of men who seek to bring us into
bondage and to oppress us, we must obey God, for He has commanded us
to do so; and at the same time He has declared that in obeying the
laws which He has given us we will not necessarily break the
constitutional laws of the land.
I wish to enter here my avowal that the people called Latter-day
Saints, as has been often repeated from this stand, are the most
law-abiding, the most peaceable, long-suffering and patient people
that can today be found within the confines of this republic, and
perhaps anywhere else upon the face of the earth; and we intend to
continue to be law-abiding so far as the constitutional law of the
land is concerned; and we expect to meet the consequences of our
obedience to the laws and commandments of Godlike men. These are my
sentiments briefly expressed, upon this subject.
Now I desire to read another passage in a revelation given in 1834,
which will be found on page 364 of the Doctrine and Covenants,
commencing at the first verse:
"Verily I say unto you, my friends, behold, I will give unto you a
revelation and commandment, that you may know how to act in the
discharge of your duties concerning the salvation and redemption of
your brethren, who have been scattered on the land of Zion;
Being driven and smitten by the hands of mine enemies, on whom I will
pour out my wrath without measure in mine own time.
For I have suffered them thus far, that they might fill up the measure
of their iniquities, that their cup might be full;
And that those who call themselves after my name might be chastened
for a little season with a sore and grievous chastisement, be cause they did not hearken altogether unto the precepts and
commandments which I gave unto them.
But verily I say unto you, that I have decreed a decree which my
people shall realize, inasmuch as they hearken from this very hour
unto the counsel which I, the Lord their God, shall give unto them.
Behold they shall, for I have decreed it, begin to prevail against
mine enemies from this very hour.
And by hearkening to observe all the words which I, the Lord their
God, shall speak unto them, they shall never cease to prevail until
the kingdoms of the world are subdued under my feet, and the earth is
given unto the saints, to possess it forever and ever.
But inasmuch
as they keep not my commandments, and hearken not to observe all my
words, the kingdoms of the world shall prevail against them.
For they were set to be a light unto the world, and to be the saviors
of men.;
And inasmuch as they are not the saviors of men, they are as salt that
has lost its savor, and is thenceforth good for nothing but to be cast
out and trodden under foot of men.
But verily I say unto you, I have decreed that your brethren which
have been scattered shall return to the land of their inheritances,
and build up the waste places of Zion."
It is somewhere written as the word of God, that the enemies of the
people of Zion can do nothing against but for Zion. Now let us review
for a few moments the history of the Church, and see how far the acts
of the enemies of this people have gone towards nullifying those
words.
When Joseph first looked upon the face of the Father and the Son in
1820, until the Book of Mormon was translated and published to the
world in 1829, his enemies did not cease their efforts to destroy him;
they sought his life continually; they blackened his character; they
maligned and proscribed him, and his name was cast out as evil among
all men. But mark you, at the beginning of this period Joseph was a
lad of a little over fourteen years of age; and during the nine years
of persecution he was but a boy; he had no vast congregation as we see
before us this morning to sustain, encourage, or cheer him in his
ministry and labors. He stood alone in the world, friendless and
despised, cast out, maligned and persecuted on every hand. But did the
work cease? Did his enemies prevent him from performing the mission
which he had been sent to accomplish? They tried and they did their
utmost. They not only made frequent attempts to imprison him under the
law, but they made several attempts to take his life, and thus stop
the progress of the work in which he was engaged. They spared neither
pains nor means, nor did they shrink from hypocrisy, falsehood and
misrepresentation to accomplish their purposes; but they signally
failed, and he continued to steadily pursue his course, and performed
his work, translated the plates, published the Book of Mormon, and in
1830 organized the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,
according to the law of the land.
When the Book of Mormon was published and the Church organized, did
they cease their endeavors? Did the hatred of the world diminish? Did
the wicked stop their persecutions? Did they refrain from slandering,
misrepresenting, and otherwise attempting to obstruct the progress of
this work? No, they did not, but on the contrary, as the work
developed, as the Church increased in numbers and began to spread on
the right and on the left, the feeling of hatred, animosity,
bitterness and persecution increased proportionately, and as the
Church became stronger, her enemies become more numerous and gained
strength. But notwithstanding, we moved on; built a Temple in
Kirtland, Ohio, from whence we colonized Jackson County, Missouri. We
were afterwards driven into Clay, Caldwell and Davies's Counties,
Missouri, where we founded new colonies. Like the snowball starting
from the summit of the mountain which gathers not only in bulk but in
velocity, so did the work of God increase in the midst of the
opposition, persecution and hatred of the world. In the midst of all
the powers that were exerted to stop it, it moved right on. But did
they succeed in expelling our people from Jackson County, and finally
from the State of Missouri? Yes, they drove the Saints from their
homes, deprived them of their rights as citizens and freemen, murdered
many of them in cold blood, while others they confined in dungeons
feeding them on the flesh, (as those heartless wretches themselves
boasted) of their own brethren; and they dispersed the people, as they
supposed, to the four winds of heaven, rejoicing in the belief that
they had finally consummated the destruction of the "Mormons." But
like the phoenix rising from the ashes of its supposed destruction,
they gathered like swarms of bees in Illinois, founded a city, and
built another Temple, which cost a million dollars—the most beautiful
structure in the Western States at that time; and they continued to
thrive. Here they gained something which they never possessed before,
a city charter granted to them by the State government of Illinois.
They soon became notable for their union and their tenacity to the
principles which they had espoused, for their faith in God and in His
servant the Prophet, for their unconquerable, irrevocable will to
prosecute what they knew to be the work of God, and to accomplish, so
far as in their power lay, His purposes and designs, concerning this
great latter-day work.
In all these vicissitudes and during all the persecutions of fourteen
years which were as ceaseless against the Prophet Joseph as the forces
of nature are endless, did they diminish the numbers of Saints? Did
they break the Saints to pieces? Did they destroy them? No; you know
they did not and it seems that our enemies themselves are fully aware
of this fact. But when they thought they had torn up "Mormonism" by
the roots and cast it out to dry up and wither under the parching,
blighting influence of hostile public sentiment, behold, they had only
transplanted the tree into new and better watered soil. Instead of
destroying our confidence in the promises of God to us, it had the
tendency to strengthen our faith, to increase our knowledge and
experience, thus fitting and preparing us for the future that lay
before us.
Finally they succeeded in taking the life of the Prophet and that of
his brother; and they shed the blood of our honored President who sits
here today upon this stand. They thought then they had accomplished
their hellish work, they thought then the head and front, or root and
branch of "Mormonism" was destroyed. But was it? No; it only made us
stronger in faith and more united in purpose. "The blood of the
martyrs became the seed of the Church."
They next drove us from our homes in Nauvoo. I remember the
circumstances, although at the time I was but a lad. I also remember
my thoughts on the day the mob besieged the City of Nauvoo. My widowed
mother had been compelled a day or two previously to take her children
and ferry them, in an open flat boat across the Mississippi River into
Iowa, where we camped under the trees and listened to the bombardment
of the city. We had left our comfortable home with all the furniture
remaining in the house, together with all our earthly possessions,
with no hope or thought of ever seeing them again; and I well remember
the feelings I had when we made our camp on the Iowa side of the
river. They were not feelings of regret, sorrow or disappointment, but
of gratitude to God, that we had the shelter of even the trees and the
broad bosom of the "father of waters" to protect us from those who
sought our lives; I felt to thank God that we still possessed our
lives and freedom, and that there was at least some prospect of the
homeless widow and her family of little ones, helpless as they were,
to hide themselves somewhere in the wilderness from those who sought
their destruction, even though it should be among the wild, so-called
savage, native tribes of the desert, but who have proved themselves
more humane and Christlike than the so-called Christian and more
civilized persecutors of the Saints.
After the expulsion of the Saints from Nauvoo, and from the State of
Illinois, our enemies thought surely the "Mormons" are now broken up,
and that this would be the last of "Mormonism." But it is strange how
hard we are to kill; it would seem that we object to being killed:
there is something dreadful in the thought of being
destroyed—annihilated. We naturally recoil from such a doom and seek
to preserve and perpetuate our existence. The fact is, we think we
have a right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," so long
as we do not interfere with the rights of others; we therefore most
decidedly object to being demolished; we do not like nor do we intend
to be destroyed. Not that we presume to be able to defend ourselves
unaided by divine power, against our numerous and unrelenting foes;
but knowing in whom we trust, and the nature of the work in which we
are engaged, we are not slow to believe, neither are we afraid to
openly maintain that we were born to live and to uphold truth, to
defend virtue, to establish righteousness, and to stand by the right,
and by the help of God we intend to fill the measure of our creation.
Let us follow the wanderings of the Latter-day Saints across the
plains to these mountain valleys, and look at our condition today
compared with our condition in Illinois, Missouri, Ohio, or New York,
or compared with our condition at any period of our existence as a
church. What do we see today? We see the promises of God made on
certain conditions fulfilled; and that is an evidence to me that the
majority of the people have complied with the conditions, although
many may not have done as they should have done. We have prevailed
thus far, in accordance with the word of God. And what of the future?
So far as the ultimatum of this work is concerned, there is no man in
Israel who has a spark of the inspiration of the Almighty in his heart
who does not know just as well as he knows that God lives or that he himself lives, that it will be triumphant. But I do not suppose
it would be wisdom in God to show us all the vicissitudes and changes,
the trials and persecutions through which we may have to pass in order
to reach this consummation, because if He did we might get
fainthearted before we were prepared to enter into that trial. We may
have to be driven again. I do not say we shall be driven; I do not
believe we shall—but what has been done may be done again. And
supposing we were driven again, what would be the result? Is it not
fair to presume—have we not good grounds to believe from the
experience of the past, that if we should be again driven and
despoiled of our homes, we should rise up somewhere else, many fold
greater and more numerous than we are now? The enemies of God can do
nothing against, but much for, the work of God. Is it not written that
the God of heaven has set His hand for the last time to establish His
kingdom upon the earth, never more to be thrown down, and no more to
be left to another people? Are we not assured by the word of God,
ancient and modern, that its destiny is onward and upward, until the
purposes of God concerning this great latter-day work are consummated?
This seems to be a point difficult for many to comprehend; but when
comprehended it is a key to the whole matter. What God has decreed
cannot be annulled by the learning, wisdom, wealth, power, numbers or
cunning of man! There is no power beneath the celestial kingdom that
can stop or impede its progress one iota. Its destiny is onward and
upward—man may fail, but the purposes of God will not. All His
enemies, combined with the cunning and perfidy of the infernal spirits
by which they are moved to hate, hound, and pursue him unto death,
failed, signally failed, even in the crime of murdering him, to
prevent Joseph Smith from accomplishing his mission; he filled his
destiny and sealed his testimony with his blood. And his blood is upon
this nation and upon all the nations that have consented to that
terrible deed inasmuch as they do not repent of their sins and obey
the Gospel of salvation which is being preached unto them.
My childhood and youth were spent in wandering with the people of God,
in suffering with them and in rejoicing with them. My whole life has
been identified with this people, and in the name and by the help of
God it will be to the end. I have no other associations or place of
abode. I am in this respect like Peter when the Savior, on seeing the
people turn away from Him, asked him, Will ye go also? Said Peter,
Lord, if I leave Thee whither can I go, Thou hast the words of eternal
life. We have nothing else to do save to keep in the narrow path that
leads back to God our Father. That is the channel He has marked out
for us to pursue, and it is our duty to press on; we cannot turn
aside, we cannot switch off; there is no side track, it is a "through
train" and its destiny is already fixed and mapped out. We have got to
meet opposition as it presents itself, battling against it with the
weapons of truth which God has placed in our hands. And we must make
up our minds that this world with all its pleasures is as dross
compared with the excellency of the knowledge of God. He intends to
try us and prove us, and He has a right to do it, even to the death if
need be, and only those who endure to the end, who will not flinch, but will maintain their integrity at the risk and sacrifice of
their all, if need be, will gain eternal life, or be worthy of the
reward of the faithful.
I am thankful to God that circumstances are as well with us as they
are. He has delivered His people thus far and blessed them from the
beginning. His word has been fulfilled concerning them, and will be
fulfilled from this time henceforth until His purposes shall be
accomplished with regard to them, providing they keep his
commandments, which, that they may do, is my prayer, in the name of
Jesus. Amen.
- Joseph F. Smith