I have been very much interested while listening to the remarks made
by the brethren who have addressed us, and certain thoughts have
passed through my mind associated therewith, which it may not
be amiss, in part at least, to make known.
There are certain circumstances which take place in our associations
with the things of God that tend to lead our minds to reflection and
thought. We have been building a temple here. We have exerted
ourselves for a number of years for the accomplishment of that object.
We have completed it, it has been accepted by the Lord, and we are now
administering therein. In these administrations there are many things
that tend to lead men to thought and reflection. We meet in our
congregations as we are doing here today, and in thus meeting we pass
along through the common routine of religious duties which devolve
upon us; but when we go into those sacred places there are certain
requirements made of us, that, whether we may have thought about these
things before or not, are then brought to our remembrance. In the
first place people desirous to go and attend to ordinances in these
houses, must have a recommendation from their Bishop. That is one of
those—I was going to say—ugly facts. That is, ugly to those who are
not prepared to pass through that ordeal, whose lives have been
careless, whose actions have been improper, and whose standing perhaps
is precarious—that is one of those facts that must be faced. Then when
they have obtained this recommendation from the Bishop, it must be
endorsed by the President of the Stake, and after that have the
sanction of the President of the Church. This is quite an ordeal for
many men to go through. For men and women who are upright, virtuous
and honorable, it is a very simple matter; there is no difficulty in
their way at any time; but to those who have been careless of their
duties, who have departed from the laws of God, and who have tampered
with, or violated the ordinances of the Gospel—to such people it is a
critical time. However, there is something far more difficult than
that yet to come. That is only a starting point in these matters. The
things that are ahead are a great deal more difficult to accomplish.
What are they? The time will come when we shall not only have to pass
by those officers whom I have referred to—say, to have the sanction
and approval of our Bishop, of the President of the Stake and of the
President of the Church—but we are told in this book [the Book of
Doctrine and Covenants] that we shall have to pass by the angels and
the Gods. We may have squeezed through the other; we may have got
along tolerably well, and been passed and acted upon, and sometimes a
"tight squeak" at that; but how will it be when we get on the other
side, and we have the angels and the Gods to pass by before we can
enter into our exaltation? If we cannot pass, what then? Well, we
cannot, that is all. And if we cannot, shall we be able to enter into
our exaltation? I think not. What do you think about it?
A great many things of this kind are continually presenting
themselves before me. All kinds of cases are brought to my attention,
and some of them are of a very serious nature. I had a case only this
morning. I am not going to mention names, nor to expose persons; but
it was a case of a sister who had been married to a man, actually
sealed to him, in the Endowment House. The man, from what I was given
to understand—of course I do not know all the details of the case, it
will have to be inquired into by myself and others in
authority—the man had frequently one leg in the Church, and the other
out; sometimes doing well, and sometimes not doing well; sometimes in
good fellowship, making acknowledgements, etc., and sometimes not in
good fellowship. The woman had quite a large family by this man, and
finally, a little before his death, the man became very careless; very
indifferent, and very negligent pertaining to his duties, and he died
in that condition. Now this woman comes along and says, "What am I to
do? I have borne quite a large family to this man. He was a tolerable
good man in some things, but he did not magnify his calling nor honor
his God. Now, what shall I do?" Here are some very singular questions,
and they will come to all of us in some shape or another, and we might
as well begin to look at them now as at any other time, for it is
written: "Some men's sins are open beforehand, going before to
judgment; and some men they follow after;" hence the reason I mention
this matter. It is a sample of a great many others, sometimes with the
man and sometimes with the woman, and the question is: How far are we
prepared to say to such a woman, "You are not safe for eternity with
the husband that you have been associated with in time." These are
serious questions. That man was dreaming, perhaps, for a long while
that he was on his way to heaven and that all was right; that he had
been baptized and been received into the Church, and attended to some
of the ordinances thereof, but he was negligent, careless and
indifferent about the fulfillment of his duties, neglected his
children, did not act right towards his wife, and did many things that
were wrong and improper. Now, what shall be done? The woman felt
unsafe with such a man. But is it not said, says one that all manner
of sins and blasphemy shall be forgiven (except the sin against the
Holy Ghost, which is the shedding of innocent blood), and that they
shall come forth, if they have had certain blessings sealed upon them
"in the first resurrection; and if it be after the first resurrection
in the next resurrection." But the question is: If a woman is
expecting a man to exalt her, and to lead her forth to thrones and
principalities, powers and dominions, is she safe in that expectation?
She may have been sealed to him, and he have had these things
pronounced upon him, but he may have been destroyed in the flesh,
because of his iniquities, which very many have been, although we
could not always tell the reason why. There are certain things that
men may commit according to the Scriptures, and to that which has been
revealed in our day, which render them subject to be turned over to
the buffetings of Satan, "for the destruction of the flesh, that the
spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus." (See 1st,
Corinthians, verse 5; also Doctrine and Covenants, Section cxxxii,
26.) There are other sins that they may commit, whereof it says they
shall be destroyed, whether men or women, that do these things. Now,
it may be well enough to fix up our own affairs as we think they ought
to be fixed, to make our own calculations, and to settle our own
accounts; but these accounts have yet to be supervised and settled
before those that have the right to do it before we get through, and
we must not only pass by, as I have said, our Bishops, and our
Presidents of Stakes, and the President of the Church, but we must
pass by the angels and the Gods also.
Some of the brethren mentioned that we are now on a more
elevated plane than we were a while ago. We ought to be. We do not
expect to remain in the position that we were. We ought to be
increasing in intelligence and in knowledge, and be preparing
ourselves for those things that are to come. Yet we find men that are
careless, such as the person I have referred to. By and by death comes
along, they pass out of existence; and while it is the feeling and
desire to do the dead man justice, and all men justice, and to act
upon correct principles in regard to all, it would scarcely seem just
under some of those circumstances to carry our charity so far that we
would unite a woman with a man, who, when he came forward and wanted
to pass by the angels and the Gods, they said to him, "Stop! and take
another course. You have not yet paid the penalty of your wickedness,
and the contempt of God's laws and His kindness. You cannot come forth
in this first thousand years; you must wait for the second." Then what
of the children, and what of the wife who perhaps has been faithful,
and might have been in very different circumstances, if she had not
attached herself to a man of that description?
These are things for us to reflect upon. We shall not have everything
our own way about these matters. When we pass out of this world we are
left at the mercy of somebody else. If we are resurrected it will be
because Jesus is the resurrection, and there are eternal laws and
principles that will have to be met by us all, and that cannot be
avoided. Jesus says: "I am the resurrection and the life: he that
believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: And whosoever
liveth and believeth in me shall never die." Certain ones will come
forth in the first resurrection, and others will not come forth until
the second. For the path of the just is upward and onward all the
time, while the path of the unjust is downward.
These are questions, I say, for us to reflect upon. If we are the
Saints of God, it is necessary we should begin to learn to do the will
of God on the earth as it is done in the heavens: for it is not every
one that saith, Lord, Lord, that shall enter into Christ's kingdom,
but he that doeth the will of the Father who is in heaven. We think
sometimes we can do as we please. We may do as we please, and then God
will do as He pleases; and for every word and for every secret thought
we shall be brought to judgment, we are told.
Some of these things when we reflect upon them are matters of very
great importance. We are not here to do our own will, but the will of
our heavenly Father. Some men who think they are doing pretty well,
and doing, according to their own expression, "as they darned please,"
will wake up to find they have not been doing the will of God. They
may have thought that they had wives and children, but they will wake
up to find that they have not got them, and that they are deprived of
many of those great blessings they anticipated enjoying. With all of
our mercy, kindness and tender feeling towards our brethren and
sisters, and towards all people, we cannot violate the law of God, nor
transgress those principles which He has laid down with impunity. He
expects us to do those things that are acceptable before Him, and if
we don't we must pay the penalty of our departure from correct
principle.
These are things that are of very great moment, and this
building on the hill [the Temple] is one of those things which brings
us face to face with many very important facts associated with the
present, with the past and with the future. Whatever we may think
about it, all things are open and naked before Him with whom we have
to do. As it is written: "Hell is naked before Him, and destruction
hath no covering," and how much more the hearts of the children of men?
We are here to accomplish the purposes of God, to build up His Zion,
and to establish His Kingdom upon the earth, and He expects us to do
it. He expects that we will begin to do His will upon the earth as it
is done in the heavens—here in this land of Zion among the Latter-day
Saints. If we do not do it we shall, as has been remarked by Brother
Cannon, dishonor ourselves. It is proper, therefore, for us to
consider well and ponder the path of our feet. It is well for us to
find out the standing we occupy in the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints. It is well for us to realize how we stand, first,
with our God, secondly with the Holy Priesthood, thirdly, with our
families, with our wives and children, or with our husbands and
children, as the case may be, and furthermore that we deal justly and
righteously with all men. We cannot run our own way and have the
blessing of God. Everyone who attempts it, will find he is mistaken.
God will withdraw His Spirit from such, and they will be left to
themselves to wander in the dark, and go down to perdition. It is
expected of us that we shall move on a higher plane, that we shall
feel that we are the children of God, that God is our Father, and that
He will not be dishonored by disobedient children, or by those who
fight against His laws and His Priesthood. He expects us to live our
religion, to obey His laws and keep His commandments.
This Temple, as I have already said, is a place where among other things,
eternal covenants and obligations are entered into, and the
question is, How and in what manner shall they be performed, and who
are worthy and who are unworthy. There are some things that we find
it exceedingly difficult to decide upon. Why? Because the parties
that are dead are not here to speak for themselves, and we cannot have
them misrepresented or robbed of their rights in any shape. But if
they have violated the laws of God, what then? Now, here comes a
question to which I desire to draw the attention of the authorities of
this Stake. There are many of those men (if what we hear about them is
correct) who ought to have been cut off from the Church. But they have
not been; the Bishops have been negligent, the Teachers have been
negligent, and perhaps the President of the Stake has been negligent.
I am not speaking particularly of this Stake; I am speaking in general
terms. I speak of it to draw the attention of Presidents of Stakes,
Bishops, Elders, Priests, Teachers and Deacons, and those who
officiate in the Church of God, and all men who are set to watch over
the fold of Christ. If some of these men, that I have referred to, had
been brought up on certain occasions, they might have repented of
their sins and placed themselves right; but because these officers did
not do their duty themselves, and did not see that other men did
theirs, things have passed along out of order, and the parties in
question have gone behind the veil. What account can we give of
ourselves if we are found thus negligent? If people do wrong
let them be brought up, and let the Teachers, Priests, and Bishops
clear their garments of them, and feel that they have done their duty
and purified the Church so far as they could. The Presidents of Stakes
should see that these things are carried out according to the laws of
God. This is a standard we must attain to, so that when people say,
"Can we go into the Temple of the Lord?" we may know exactly their
status, what position they occupy, and what to do with them, without
having to take up the records of the dead. These are responsibilities
devolving upon us. Our Elders go abroad to preach the Gospel and to
gather in the people. When they are thus gathered the Presidents of
Stakes, the Bishops, Priests, Teachers and Deacons are expected to
watch over them, and see that they are fulfilling their obligations,
or that they are not fulfilling them. If they fail to do their duty,
let them be brought to account; let them be dealt with according to
the laws of God. If they repent, forgive them; but it is expected that
all who have taken upon them the name of Christ will obey the laws of
God, and walk in obedience to His commands. These are some things that
we all of us have to be responsible for, and therefore I, occupying
the position that I do, feel it my duty to lay these things before you
and to require them at your hands—that is at the hands of the
President of the Stake and his Counselors, at the hands of the Bishops
and their Counselors, at the hands of the High Council, and at the
hands of the Priests, Teachers, and Deacons; for I don't want to carry
myself the sins of the people. God expects us to purge ourselves from
iniquity, that we may become the chosen of the Lord, and our offspring
with us, not in name or in theory, but in deed and in truth, and
according to the laws of life, and the spirit that dwells in Jesus
Christ, our Savior, which every one of us ought to have dwelling in us
and dwelling and abiding in our habitations, that we may feel that we
are devoted to our God, blameless before the Lord, and keeping His
commandments.
These are things that it is proper for us to reflect upon. We enter
into obligations here as young men or young women, or as old men or
old women, as the case may be, no matter what or how we enter into
covenants before God, holy angels and witnesses, and pledge ourselves
in the most solemn manner to be true to these covenants, and if we
violate these covenants, and trample under foot the ordinances of God,
we ought to be dealt with by the Church, and either repent of our sins
or be cut off from the Church, so that by purging the Church from
iniquity, we may be acceptable before God. For the Gods spoken of, are
not going to associate with every scalawag in existence; scalawags
are not going where they are; and if men do not live according to the
laws of a Celestial kingdom, they are not going into a Celestial
glory; they cannot pass by the angels and the Gods, who are set to
guard the way of life. Straight is the gate and narrow is the way that
leads to life, and few there be that find it.
Is God merciful? Yes. Will He treat His children well? Yes. He will do
the very best He can for all. But there are certain eternal laws by
which the Gods in the eternal worlds are governed and which they
cannot violate, and do not want to violate. These eternal principles
must be kept, and one principle is, that no unclean thing can enter
into the Kingdom of God. What, then, will be the result? Why,
the people I have referred to—people who do not keep the Celestial
law—will have to go into a lesser kingdom, into a Terrestrial, or
perhaps a Telestial, as the case may be. Is that according to the law
of God? Yes. For if they are not prepared for the Celestial kingdom,
they must go to such a one as they are prepared to endure. Certain
principles have been developed, and a great many have not. But we are
here in a school to learn, and it is for the El ders of Israel who are
desirous to do the will of God, and keep His commandments, to put
themselves in the way of doing so, to seek to the Lord for His
guidance and direction, to repent of their follies, their nonsense and
wickedness of every kind, and to come out for God and His kingdom, and
to seek to build up the Zion of God and the kingdom of God upon the
earth, and if we do this, God will bless us and exalt us in time and
throughout the eternities that are to come. Amen.