We have just heard brother Morley's testimony concerning the religion
that we have embraced. The extent of knowledge, incorporated within
the salvation extended to the children of men, will vastly exceed the
researches of the human family, and when they have passed the veil,
they will then understand that they have but just commenced to learn.
Brother Morley says he never expects to be too old to learn; I believe
that doctrine. That which is to be learned in the eternities of the
Gods pertains to life, and that life is exhibited to the human family
in the degree which they are capacitated to receive it, that they may
be taught as we teach our children, that they may learn the first
rudiments of eternal lives.
Could we live to the age of Methuselah, and eat the fruits which the
earth would produce in her strength, as did Adam and Eve before the
transgression, and spend our lives in searching after the principles
of eternal life, we would find, when one eternity had passed to us,
that we had been but children thus far, babies just commencing to
learn the things which pertain to the eternities of the
Gods.
We might ask, when shall we cease to learn? I will give you my opinion
about it; never, never. If we continue to learn all that we can,
pertaining to the salvation which is purchased and presented to us
through the Son of God, is there a time when a person will cease to
learn? Yes, when he has sinned against God the Father, Jesus Christ
the Son, and the Holy Ghost—God's minister; when he has denied the
Lord, defied Him and committed the sin that in the Bible is termed the
unpardonable sin—the sin against the Holy Ghost. That is the time when
a person will cease to learn, and from that time forth, will descend
in ignorance, forgetting that which they formerly knew, and decreasing
until they return to the native element, whether it be one thousand or
in one million years, or during as many eternities as you can count.
They will cease to increase, but must decrease, until they return to
the native element. These are the only characters who will ever cease
to learn, both in time and eternity.
A number of items occupy my mind pertaining to the Saints, I may say,
a great many more than I could tell in one day, in one month, or in
one year. Those who are well acquainted with me, know something of the
action of my mind. To explain it, let me say to you, if you wish to
tell me a long story, one that will take you two hours to get through
with, a key word will at once give me an understanding of all you
could say, in that long time. All who are acquainted with me know
this. Bring any business matter before me, and the brethren with whom
I am associated in business transactions, know that I need but a word
to know the nature of it. So it is with regard to my preaching to the
people. If I could put into them the same spirit and understanding
which I have, they could see and understand things without a long
detail of explanation. But this is not the case with all the people,
therefore I am, in a manner, compelled to use the time I do in
speaking to them upon the various subjects, at least so far as I can
possibly spare it. If I were disposed to, I could train myself to get
up here and take a text and explain it, and dwell upon one little
item, just as long as any other man, but what is the use of it? Upon
this principle it would take us more eternities than we shall ever
see, to learn what we have to learn, consequently, when I speak to you
I speak the few words I have to say, as I already have upon the
subject of intelligence and learning.
We shall never cease to learn, unless we apostatize from the religion
of Jesus Christ. Then we shall cease to increase, and will continue to
decrease and decompose, until we return to our native element. Can you
understand that? It is a subject worthy the attention of the eminent
divines of Christendom, and they may search into it until they are
tired, and still know comparatively little about it, while I preach it
to you in a few words.
I will here introduce a subject that we all should be acquainted with,
I allude to morality. Have you been taught morality? Yes, every one of
you have been taught not to use profane language, to be honest in all
your dealings, to be courteous to all at home and abroad, and to be
strictly upright on all occasions. All this you have been taught from
your youth.
Many think that all which was taught them by their fathers and
mothers, schoolteachers and priests, ought to be removed, laid aside,
dispensed with, and that they should begin anew to learn every
principle of civilization. This is a great mistake. I make these
remarks because I have heard Elders preach that there was not
a sectarian priest—not a man living upon the earth, or that had lived
upon it, neither a reformer nor a professed Christian, from the time
the Priesthood was taken from the earth until Joseph Smith came, but
what went straight to hell fire when he died. Yes, I have heard them
preach just as absurdly as that. I have heard many say, I will
dispense with this, and I will dispense with that; and many of our
Elders actually dispense with praying, and say it is nothing but a
sectarian notion. Were you taught by your fathers to pray? "Yes, but
that is a sectarian notion." Were you taught not to lie? "Yes, but
that was a sectarian notion." Were you taught not to pilfer? "Yes,
but we think, we won't say it aloud, it is nothing but a sectarian
notion, and we have to learn everything over again." This is a
mistaken idea. There is only one thing which the people lack on this
point, in order that their traditions and former education may do them
good, and that is to know how to sever the good from the bad, how to
assimilate to themselves every good trait of character they have seen
in their fathers and mothers, teachers and neighbors, and every good
thing that has been taught them from their youth, and how to gather to
themselves every good principle they have been traditionated in, and
store that up as their individual property, and then dispense with
every erroneous idea and every inconsistency. Many things which have
been taught us in our childhood, or in our early lives, are truly
inconsistent; lay them aside and cleave to the traditions which
actually tend to virtue, holiness, chastity, loveliness, kindness,
honesty, and truthfulness in every respect, and gather all the good
into our own storehouse, and let each one say, that belongs to me.
Some imagine that they must begin and unlearn the whole of their
former education, but I say, cling to all the good that you have
learned, and discard the bad. This leads me into a field, the gate to
which I wish to have closed up, locked up, and passed by; I do not
wish to say anything about it. I will say this much, however, if there
are not all kinds of fish in this Gospel net, I should like to see the
kind that is not in it, and I think that would be something new under
the sun.
Treasure up in your hearts that which tends to virtue. You say, "I
want an explanation upon virtue." I wish I could so give it to you,
that you could understand it when I am done talking; I will do my best
to do so. Learn the will of God, keep His commandments and do His
will, and you will be a virtuous person. Can you understand that? If
you can know the will of God and do it, you will be a virtuous person.
You say, "Perhaps I should be led to do that which is contrary to my
former traditions, and to do that which is really wrong." No matter
anything about that; if you can know the will of God and do it, you
will be a virtuous person, and will receive knowledge upon knowledge,
and wisdom upon wisdom, and you will increase in understanding, in
faith, and in the light of eternity, and know how to discriminate
between the right and the wrong. I know the people say that they
do not understand, that they do not know what the Lord requires of
them. I say keep the commandments of the Lord. We were taught that the
commandments of the Lord were this, that, and the other, in our former
lives, but when we can know and understand, by the revelations of
Jesus Christ, the will of our Father in heaven and do His will, He
will make us pure and holy, and fit for the society of angels and
Himself. Will we not be virtuous then? Yes, in the highest
sense. Many say, "I don't know the will of the Lord, I wish I did. I
do really wish I knew what the Lord requires of me, but I do not know,
and do not know how to find out."
I will now refer you to the scripture where it reads that we shall be
judged according to the deeds done in the body. If I do not know the
will of my Father, and what He requires of me in a certain
transaction, if I ask Him to give me wisdom concerning any requirement
in life, or in regard to my own course, or that of my friends, my
family, my children, or those that I preside over, and get no answer
from Him, and then do the very best that my judgment will teach me,
He is bound to own and honor that transaction, and He will do so to
all intents and purposes. I have often reflected with regard to
people knowing the mind and will of the Lord by revelation. My
thoughts turn within me in a moment, in my reflections upon what has
hitherto been, and that which actually now comes before me, concerning
the Saints in the last days and in the former days. For instance,
Jesus, when upon the earth, called twelve men to be witnesses that he
was the Christ. Then, there were a great many others who believed that
fact, but he showed to those twelve men things that he showed to none
else; he convinced them in a degree that he convinced no other person,
that is, in some instances.
My mind then reflects, in a moment, did Jesus have the power to make
his disciples believe that he was the Son of God by raising the dead,
by laying hands on the sick, by walking on water, by multiplying the
particles of bread and fish set before the multitude, or by any other
miracle? Did he convince, and prove to twelve men that he was the
Christ, by the miracles he performed? He did not. He did not convince
them by one or all of the acts, which were called miracles, that he
performed upon the earth. I know that many think that they are a great
proof, that it is astonishing that people will not believe, when they
read over the history and miracles performed in the days of Jesus and
his Apostles. Let me tell you that if his Apostles were here in this
our day, traveling through the country, raising the dead, laying
hands on the sick, casting out devils, walking upon the water, or
doing whatever they might be able to perform, it would all be no proof
to the people that they were sent of God. I know that some of you
think this is strange, and if so, I have strange views upon these
subjects. It is no proof to me, it is no proof to any person else, and
often serves to throw persons, relying upon it, into temptation, and
to cast them still further into darkness. "Have you any proof of
this?" Yes, right here in our midst. Men who have professedly seen the
most, known and understood the most, in this Church, and who have
testified in the presence of large congregations, in the name of
Israel's God, that they have seen Jesus, &c., have been the very men
who have left this kingdom, before others who had to live by faith. I
have a witness right before me, and I am fearful every time that a man
or woman comes to me and relates great visions, saying, "I have had a
vision, an angel came and told me thus and so; the visions of eternity
were opened, and I saw thus and so; I saw my destiny; I saw what the
brethren would do with me; I foresaw this and that." Look out for that
man or woman going to the devil.
I ask, is there a reason for men and women being exposed more
constantly and more powerfully, to the power of the enemy, by having
visions than by not having them? There is and it is simply this—God
never bestows upon His people, or upon an individual, superior
blessings without a severe trial to prove them, to prove that
individual, or that people, to see whether they will keep their
covenants with Him, and keep in remembrance what He has shown them.
Then the greater the vision, the greater the display of the power of
the enemy. And when such individuals are off their guard they are left
to themselves, as Jesus was. For this express purpose the Father
withdrew His spirit from His Son, at the time he was to be crucified.
Jesus had been with his Father, talked with Him, dwelt in His bosom,
and knew all about heaven, about making the earth, about the
transgression of man, and what would redeem the people, and that he
was the character who was to redeem the sons of earth, and the earth
itself from all sin that had come upon it. The light, knowledge,
power, and glory with which he was clothed were far above, or exceeded
that of all others who had been upon the earth after the fall,
consequently at the very moment, at the hour when the crisis came for
him to offer up his life, the Father withdrew Himself, withdrew His
Spirit, and cast a veil over him. That is what made him sweat blood.
If he had had the power of God upon him, he would not have sweat
blood; but all was withdrawn from him, and a veil was cast over him,
and he then plead with the Father not to forsake him. "No," says the
Father, "you must have your trials, as well as others."
So when individuals are blessed with visions, revelations, and great
manifestations, look out, then the devil is nigh you, and you will be
tempted in proportion to the vision, revelation, or manifestation you
have received. Hence thousands, when they are off their guard, give
way to the severe temptations which come upon them, and behold they
are gone.
You will recollect that I have often told you that miracles would not
save a person, and I say that they never should. If I were to see a
man come in here this day, and say, "I am the great one whom the Lord
has sent," and cause fire to come down in our sight, through the
ceiling that is over our heads, I would not believe any more for that.
It is no matter what he does, I cannot believe any more on that
account. What will make me believe? What made the Twelve Apostles of
Jesus Christ witnesses? What constituted them Apostles—special
witnesses to the world? Was it seeing miracles? No. What was it? The
visions of their minds were opened, and it was necessary that a few
should receive light, knowledge, and intelligence, that all the powers
of earth and hell could not gainsay or compete with. That witness was
within them, and yet, after all that was done for them, after all that
Jesus showed them, and after all the power of the spirit of revelation
which they possessed, you find that one of them apostatized, turned
away and sold his Lord and master for thirty pieces of silver, in
consequence of his not being firm to his covenant in the hour of
darkness and temptation. Another of them was ready to say, "I do not
know anything about the Lord Jesus Christ," and denied him with
cursing and swearing.
Some are apt now to say, "I don't know anything about this Mormonism,
I don't know about the Priesthood." Did you not once know? "I thought
I did." Did you not once know that Joseph Smith was a Prophet? "I
thought I did." Did you not once know that this was the kingdom of God
set up on the earth? "I thought I did, but now I find myself
deceived." What is the reason? Because they give way to temptation;
they may have had great light, knowledge, and understanding, the
vision of their minds may have been opened and eternity exhibited to
their view, but when this is closed up, in proportion to the
light given to them, so is the darkness that comes upon them to try
them.
Are you going to apostatize when you are in darkness? That is the time
to stand firm. I know there are some people right in our midst, only
about on a par with good Quakers; say they, "I pray when I feel like
it." Have you prayers in your families? "Yes, sometimes, but I do not
always feel like praying, and then I feel as though it would be a
sin."
Let me tell you how you should do. If you feel that you are tempted
not to open your mouth to the Lord, and as though the heavens are
brass over your heads and the earth iron beneath your feet, and that
everything is closed up, and you feel that it would be a sin for you
to pray, then walk up to the devil and say, Mr. Devil, get out of my
way; and if you feel that you cannot get down upon your knees for fear
you will swear, say, get down knees; and if they don't feel right when
they are down, put something under them, some sharp sticks, for
instance, and say, knees come to it. "But I dare not open my mouth,"
says one, "for fear that I shall swear." Then say, open, mouth, and
now tongue, begin. Cannot I say Father? Yes, I can: I learned that in
the days of my youth. Suppose you say, "Father, look in mercy upon
me," do you think the devil is going to snap you up then? If he is
still by, and you dare not open your eyes for fear you will see him,
tell him to stand there until you have done praying, and bring the
body to a state of submission.
I have taught you that the spirit is pure, when it comes into the
tabernacle. The tabernacle is subject to sin, but the spirit is not. A
great many think that the spirits of the children of men, when they
enter the tabernacles, are totally depraved; this is a mistake. They
are as holy as the angels; the devil has no power to contaminate them,
he only contaminated the bodies. When your spirit wishes to worship
the Father, and your body is so full of weakness or wickedness, that
you feel as though you could not do it, go to and bring your body into
subjection; bow the knee and confess that Jesus is the Christ, if it
is darker than 10,000 midnights in your minds; say, "I am for the Lord
anyhow."
That makes me think of a great many Christians in the world; when they
are sick and in trouble they will pray; if they are in fear of
starving to death for want of food, of freezing through lack of
raiment or fuel, then they will call upon the Lord. I know the old
Prophet said, "In the day of trouble they draw nigh unto me." Get out,
say I, in my feelings, in regard to such a religion. When I am
starving to death it is time for me to be diligent in getting
something to eat; when the ship is in a storm, it is then time to look
out for the rigging. One may say, "Are you not going down below to
pray, in this dreadful storm?" "No, I have no time to pray now, I must
take care of the ship." So it should be with every Latter-day Saint.
By and by the storm is over, then let us go down into the cabin and
do up our praying in fair weather. That is what "Mormonism" teaches
me; and when it is dark as midnight darkness, when there is not one
particle of feeling in my heart to pray, shall I then say, I will not
pray? No, but get down knees, bend yourselves upon the floor, and
mouth, open; tongue, speak; and we will see what will come forth, and
you shall worship the Lord God of Israel, even when you feel as though
you could not say a word in His favor. That is the victory we have to
gain; that is the warfare we have to wage. It is between the spirit
and the body; they are inseparably connected. The spirit was
not made here, it was organized in eternity, before the worlds were,
with the Father and with angels before they came here.
When the devil got possession of the earth, his power extended to that
which pertains to the earth. He obtained influence over the children
of men in their present organization, because the spirits of men
yielded to the temptations of the evil principle that the flesh or
body is subjected to. This causes the warfare spoken of by Paul, when
he says, "The spirit warreth against the flesh, and the flesh against
the spirit." Paul explained it as well as he could, and I am trying to
explain it as well as I can. Often when the spirit would do good the
body overcomes, then one does the evil that brings into subjection the
spirit. When the spirits of men are subject to the body, and continue
to be, and commit the amount of evil necessary to fill up their cup,
they are cast out and their names will be blotted out from the Lamb's
Book of Life.
You know that it used to be a great saying, and I might say worthy of
all acceptation, among the Methodists, "I know that my Redeemer lives,
and my name is written in the Lamb's Book of Life." Their names were
always there, and never will be blotted out, though they may be up and
down, warm, hot, and cool, and though they may sin today, and
tomorrow repent of it, but their names will remain in the Lamb's Book
of Life until they sin the sin unto death. And when their names are
once blotted out they will never be written there again; they will
then be numbered with those who will cease to increase, cease to
learn, to multiply, and spread abroad.
But again to the witness, that is on my mind. It was necessary for
Jesus Christ to open the heavens to certain individuals that they
might be witnesses of his personage, death, sufferings, and
resurrection; those men were witnesses. But as Jesus appeared to the
two brethren going out of Jerusalem, he was made known to them in the
breaking of bread. Now suppose he had eaten that bread, and gone out
without opening their eyes, how could they have known that he was the
Savior who had been crucified on Mount Calvary? They could not; but in
the breaking of bread the vision of their minds was opened. This was
necessary in order to constitute safe witnesses, and they returned to
Jerusalem and told the brethren what they had seen.
When Jesus came and ate fish broiled upon the coals, and told his
disciples to cast the net on the other side of the ship, which they
did and got it so full that they could hardly draw it to shore, would
they have known that he was the Savior by the catching and hauling in
a wonderful quantity of fish, or by anything else that they could have
seen with their natural eyes? No, but when he came and ate the broiled
fish and honeycomb, he opened their eyes and they saw that he was
present with them. He had been back to his Father, had ascended to
heaven and again descended, and opened their minds that they might be
special witnesses. This is necessary. Did all the disciples, in the
days of the Apostles, see the risen Jesus? No. Did all the disciples
have visions? No, they did not. Do they now? No. I know the inquiry
may arise, can a person be a real disciple without having visions?
Yes, but that person cannot be a special witness to the doctrine he
believes in.
What makes true disciples to a doctrine, to a religion, to a creed, or
to a faith, no matter what it is which is subscribed to? To be
faithful adherents to those articles of faith or doctrine taught,
makes them true disciples to that religion or doctrine. Then if we
have the religion of the Savior we are entitled to the blessings precisely as they were anciently. Not that all had visions,
not that all had dreams, not that all had the gift of tongues or the
interpretation of tongues, but every man received according to his
capacity and the blessing of the Giver. "Well, brother Brigham, have
you had visions?" Yes, I have. "Have you had revelations?" Yes, I have
them all the time, I live constantly by the principle of revelation. I
never received one iota of intelligence, from the letter A to what I
now know, I mean that, from the very start of my life to this time, I
have never received one particle of intelligence only by revelation,
no matter whether father or mother revealed it, or my sister, or
neighbor.
No person receives knowledge only upon the principle of revelation,
that is, by having something revealed to them. "Do you have the
revelations of the Lord Jesus Christ?" I will leave that for others to
judge. If the Lord requires anything of this people, and speaks
through me, I will tell them of it; but if He does not, still we all
live by the principle of revelation. Who reveals? Everybody around
us; we learn of each other. I have something which you have not, and
you have something which I have not; I reveal what I have to you, and
you reveal what you have to me. I believe that we are revelators to
each other. Are the heavens opened? Yes, to some at times, yet upon
natural principles, upon the principle of natural philosophy. "Do you
know the will and mind of the Lord?" Yes, concerning this people, and
concerning myself. Do every one of my brethren and sisters know the
will of the Lord? Let me say to the Latter-day Saints, if they will
take up their cross and follow the Lord Jesus Christ in the
regeneration, many of them will receive more, know more, and have more
of the spirit of revelation than they are aware of; but the
revelations which I receive are all upon natural principles. I will
give you one revelation which I had in Far West, and it was upon the
same principle that it would be for me to have a revelation now, while
I am talking to you. It was in the spring of 1838, before there was
any disturbance in Far West, or in Davis County.
This people, thought I, are obnoxious to these Missourians, our
religion they hate, our Prophet they despise and would like to kill
him; they are ignorant of the things of God; they have received the
precepts of men and drank deep into them, and are so interwoven with
their feelings that the true religion of heaven cannot abide in their
minds. Therefore I saw, upon natural principles, that we would be
driven from there, but when, I did not know; but still it was plain to
me that we would have to leave the State, and that when we did leave
it we would not go south, north or west, but east, back to the other
States. That I saw upon natural principles, and I knew what those
people were afraid of. I then saw that we would go north, as a Church
and people, and then to the west, and that when they went to Jackson
County, they would go from the west to the east. Mark my words, write
them down, this people, as a Church and kingdom, will go from the west
to the east. I can tell you more concerning what I saw upon natural
principles; I saw that this people would have to gain a foothold, a
strength, power, influence, and ability to walk by themselves and to
take care of themselves, and power to contend with their enemies and
overcome them, upon the same principle that the whites did when they
first came to America and overcame the Indians. Many here do not know
anything about the history of the early settling of America.
New Orleans was one of the first places settled by the
Europeans, after North America was discovered. St. Louis was settled
long before New York, and in that region you can find apple trees two
feet through, standing among the oaks which are several feet in
diameter. Did the first settlers stay there? No, they were either
killed or had to leave lest they should be killed, with the exception
of a few of the Spaniards who intermarried and lived with the Indians.
The whites had to leave and go down the Mississippi River, and went
round into Maine and Massachusetts, and when they reached there the
Indians said, "You are welcome to this land;" a region where they have
thirteen months of winter during each year. I use that extravagant
expression in order to convey an idea of the rigor of the climate; but
you talk about hard winters and snows here; in comparison many of you
know but little about them.
I can pick up scores of Yankees here, who have lived in countries
where they could have fine orchards, and live like nabobs, and yet, in
the winter season often ride in their sleighs over fences five feet
high. I have rode over snow in the eastern states when it was fifteen
feet deep. To return to the subject; I said, upon natural principles,
that this people had to go to a country that the Gentiles do not
desire. I can tell you another thing, when you see any member of this
community wishing to withdraw and go to where there is a beautiful
country—where it is easy to live, let me tell you that that man will
apostatize, or be driven from his favorite locality: write that down
brother George as the word of the Almighty.
I have deed after deed of land for which I did not get a cent when I
was obliged to leave it. I also built many houses in the States, they
are there now, for ought I know; they will fall down some of these
days, and I care not how quickly. This people can only gain strength
upon the principle of fleeing to a country where the wicked will not
live, and where they can gain strength enough to walk by themselves,
and to go where they please. This is one of the truths of heaven.
Whenever you see persons from this place on their way to a milder
climate, seeking a better home, they will apostatize or be driven from
their loved asylum; you may set that down for a fact. I saw that this
people would have to flee into the mountains, and into a climate and
country that the Gentiles would not desire. If we are not in such a
place, I do not know where we will find one more undesirable than
this. Do the Saints delight in this locality? No, it is repugnant to
their feelings, if they could have their choice. Did I come here by
choice, or was it not because I had to come? I like this country, and
if it is not bare enough, cold and disagreeable enough, to those who
wish to live in ease, we will find another location a little farther
off. When we came here we were one thousand miles from everybody. Are
you afraid of the Gentiles coming here? Should we all move from this
city and give the Gentiles liberty to occupy our houses, our farms,
&c., in five years you would not find them here; they could not live
here, for this is not a place that would suit them. If this is not the
place for us to dwell, it is not to be found in Texas, in California,
nor in old or new Mexico. Where is it then? That is not for me nor you
to inquire about, but it will not be in any of those places. If we are
not now in the right place, the Lord will lead us to where we can
gather up our strength, and multiply and sanctify ourselves, so that
we can go forth and serve the Lord with clean hands and pure hearts.
I will now tell you a little more about the witnesses; I have strayed some from that point, but I never bind myself while I am with
the brethren. If I were preaching abroad in the world I should feel
myself somewhat obliged, through custom, to adhere to the wishes and
feelings of the people in regard to pursuing the thread of any given
subject, but here I feel as free as air. You have gathered the idea
from me that it is not the miracles that are performed before a
person's eyes that convince him that one is of God, or of the devil;
yet, if the Lord designs that a person should heal the sick, that
individual can do so; but is that to convince the wicked that the
operator is sent of God? No, it is a blessing on the Saints, and the
wicked have nothing to do with it, they have no business to hear of
it; that is for the Saints, it is especially for their benefit, and
theirs alone. What should the wicked hear? They should hear a man
testify that Joseph Smith was and is a Prophet of God, that he was a
good man, and that he did plant and establish the kingdom of God on
the earth, and we know it. "How shall I know?" says one. By obeying
the commandments given to you. The Lord has said, go into the waters
of baptism and be baptized for the remission of your sins, and you
shall receive a witness that I am telling you the truth. How? By
baptism and the laying on of hands alone? No. By seeing the sick
healed? No, but by the Spirit that shall come unto you through
obedience, which will make you feel like little children, and cause
you to delight in doing good, to love your father in heaven and the
society of the righteous. Have you malice and wrath then? No, it is
taken from you, and you feel like the child in its mother's lap. You
will feel kind to your children, to your brothers and sisters, to your
parents and neighbors, and to all around you; you will feel a glow, as
of fire, burning within you. And if you open your mouths to talk you
will declare ideas which you did not formerly think of; they will flow
into your mind, even such as you have not thought of for years. The
Scriptures will be opened to you, and you will see how clear and
reasonable everything is which this or that Elder teaches you. Your
hearts will be comforted, you can lie down and sleep in peace, and wake
up with feelings as pleasant as the breezes of summer. This is a
witness to you. You ask the Lord to heal you, or your sick child, and
if He is disposed to do it He will, and if not, it is all right. If He
is disposed to open the heavens and give us a visit from an angel, it
is all right. If He is disposed to reveal to us, by natural
philosophy, what is going to take place, that is right. If He is
disposed to show us by vision where this people are going, and when,
all right, and it is right if He withholds that information.
If, by the whispering of a small, still voice, He dictates you to do
this or that, showing you which is right and which is wrong, it is all
right, and it is right to acknowledge the hand of the Lord in His so
doing.
But if you had faith to go out to the graveyard and raise up scores of
the dead, that alone would not make you Latter-day Saints, neither if
the visions of your minds were opened so as to see the finger of God.
What will? Keeping the commandments of the Lord, to walk humbly before
your God, and before one another, to cease to do evil and learn to do
well, and to live by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God;
then you are a Latter-day Saint, whether you have visions or not.
You may be tried and cast down, and be inclined to say that the Lord
has not revealed this or that to you, but that has nothing to do with
me or you. I do not desire to dictate the Lord in that matter;
all I have to do is to concern myself with the things He requires of
me, for it is His right to pursue His own way, and take His own time
and course in dealing with me. Can you gain a victory? You can.
As I have told you, your spirit is continually warring with the flesh;
your spirit dictates one way, your flesh suggests another, and this
brings on the combat. What are you to do? You must bring the hands,
the elbows, the feet, the tongue, and all the organs of speech, and
every power of the body into subjection.
You must say that you will not swear, nor say or do anything which is
wrong. An Elder was cut off from the Church here last Sunday for
swearing. What do I think of it? Time and time again have I requested
the High Priests and Seventies to cut off such members of their
several quorums as will break the Sabbath, and take the name of God in
vain. I say sever them from the tree, for these loose and wicked
characters hurt the tree. They are like dry limbs, and have become so
decayed, that the moisture leaks through them, and seeks its way into
the heart of the tree, and, by and by, if we do not cut away such
branches, the tree itself will die.
I often think that the High Priests and Seventies dare not walk up
strictly to this duty, and I am disposed, at times, to imagine that
some of the presidents of those quorums are guilty of such things
themselves.
Bring the names of such men to this stand and I will cut them off, if
no other person will, and ask no odds of the quorum, and you will go
in with me. Bring the names of men who take the name of God in vain
and do wrong in any way, and I will not ask for a High Council or
Bishop's Court to deliberate on their case; I will sever them from the
tree of life, and ask them what they are going to do about it. They
will wither and die.
You may try to make dead limbs grow on the tree, but such a practice
is a detriment to the bearing of good fruit.
I want to talk a little more about the witnesses. I am a witness—of
what? I have told it here and in Nauvoo. I know what I am a witness
of, and I know my Apostleship. I am a witness that Joseph Smith was a
Prophet of God. What an uproar it would make in the Christian world to
say, I am an Apostle of Joseph. Write it down, and write it back to
your friends in the east, that I am an Apostle of Joseph Smith. He was
a man of God and had the revelations of Jesus Christ, and the words of
Jesus Christ to the people. He did build and establish the kingdom of
God on earth, and through him the Lord Almighty again restored the
Priesthood to the children of men.
Brethren, I am a witness of that; not by my laying hands on the sick
and they being healed, nor by the revelations which are given of him
in the Bible, but by receiving the same Spirit and witness which the
ancients received; by the visions of the heavens being opened to my
mind; by my understanding that which is revealed in the Book of
Mormon, and that which Joseph revealed as comprised in the Book of
Doctrine and Covenants.
I am a witness that those are the revelations of the Lord through
Joseph Smith, in this the last dispensation for the gathering of the
people; and all who reject my testimony will go to hell, so sure as
there is one, no matter whether it be hot or cold; they will incur the
displeasure of the Father and of the Son.
I am a witness of this; and all who will hear the voice of the
servants of God, pay attention to what they say, and obey the
commandments given to the people, shall receive a testimony and know
that we tell them the truth, that Joseph is a Prophet of God,
and did actually finish the work which the Lord gave him to do, sealed
his testimony with his blood, and has gone to dwell in the world of
spirits, until he gets his body. All will have to acknowledge that
this is true.
There are many other things that might be noticed, and much more might
be said upon this subject. I have merely hinted at the witness, at the
privileges, blessings, and duties of the Saints, and at what makes a
Saint, but I feel as though I had talked long enough, or as much as I
should today. I have a bad cold, and could cough as well as the rest
of you, but I have been enabled to refrain from coughing since I have
been here, and during the brief time I have occupied while addressing
you this morning.
I hope and trust that we will order our lives so as to be worthy of
the blessings promised to us, and live to the glory of God, that we
may have a glorious resurrection, and enjoy each other's society in
the kingdom of our God. This is our constant prayer concerning you, in
the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.