My brethren, sisters, and friends, I have rejoiced in the return of
this anniversary of the rise of the Church, and to see so many of
those that we have reason to believe love the truth, assembled in
general conference; in beholding and seeing the faces of so many as
were assembled on yesterday, and as are here today; to feel the
spirit, behold the unanimity, and the good feeling that appear to
exist, and the dispatch with which we are enabled to transact
business; and in reviewing the past, looking at the present, and
contemplating the future, my heart has been cheered.
I have been highly edified and interested, and have had reason to
rejoice in looking at the Saints gathered in from the north and from
the south, from the east and from the west, who have met to rejoice
and reflect upon the things of God. I have rejoiced while listening to
the edifying discourses which have been delivered. I have not heard
anything more useful and more to the point for a long time than the
discourse on yesterday in the forenoon; it was practical and
instructive in all its points, just the advice and counsel that are
needed at the present time; nor have I been less edified and
instructed in the remarks made, as I conceive in the spirit of
prophecy, in a great measure, that flowed from my brother yesterday in
the afternoon, a parting discourse as we may call it, as he expects
soon to depart to a foreign land on the other side of the ocean.
I have also been led to reflect much in contemplating that this is the
twenty-sixth year since the restoration of the Church of God, visibly as
an organization upon the earth. Twenty-six years have rolled away in
the experience of this Church, and it naturally leads the mind to
contemplate upon the past, and past events will rise in review, the
memory will fall back upon them and whether we look at the past, the
present, or the future, the mind cannot but view it, if it is
constituted like mine, or influenced by the same spirit that mine is
influenced by, with pleasure and delight.
Twenty-six years ago, the coming summer, mine eyes glanced over the
Book of Mormon, and I afterward heard the voice of the servant of the
Lord and enjoyed the smiles and the blessings of the Prophet Joseph
and his brother Hyrum, and received under their hands and those of
Oliver Cowdery the Priesthood, or a portion of it, and the keys and
power of the same, they having received it by the ministering
of angels, to be carried through to all the people of the earth; and
at that time all the people of this Church upon the face of the earth,
could have been assembled in the vestry of this Tabernacle without
being much crowded.
The joy which filled my bosom in reading that sacred record, waking up
our minds and giving us the knowledge of the past dealings of God with
the inhabitants of this vast western hemisphere, and of a nation of
people as ancient as that of Abraham or of the Jaredites, and giving
us a knowledge also of a branch of scattered Israel led away from the
land of their fathers 600 years before Christ, and the glorious fact,
the most important of all others in the book, that the risen Jesus in
his glorified immortal flesh and bones set his feet upon this western
hemisphere and ministered publicly to thousands and thousands of the
Nephites, blessed them, revealed to them his Gospel in its fulness,
and was glorified in their presence, and thousands of them had the
privilege of bowing at his feet, of bathing his feet with their tears
and of kissing them, and of handling him and seeing and beholding the
wounds that were pierced in his side and his hands and feet, and of
hearing the words of salvation and the commandments of God from his
own mouth, and then from day to day they had the privilege of
assembling in general conference and hearing his prophesyings, and his
remarks on the prophecies of the Prophets referring to himself and to
others, prophecies also concerning this our day, and the coming forth
of this work to us, and the visions that should appear and be given at
the opening up of this dispensation; all these things received in
faith in my heart, and by the spirit of knowledge and of light and of
understanding, and of hope and joy, and charity filled my heart in a
way that I never can express to any being; to have the same joy
understood, it must be experienced.
Nor have I been disappointed in my hopes since I embraced this Gospel.
After twenty-six years of progress—progressive fulfillment of the
things spoken by that Redeemer to the Nephites, and the things written
by his commandment and brought forth unto us, I not only believe but I
realize and know by the Spirit of the Lord as well as a man knows
anything that he sees and hears, and better too, for a man might be
deceived in seeing or in hearing, but I know these things by that
light that reflects on the understanding, and in which there is no
mistake, nor deception; by that I knew that the work was true and that
Joseph Smith, the finder, translator, and the restorer of the
Priesthood upon the earth, was a Prophet and an Apostle of Jesus
Christ—a restorer, raised up according to that which is written, to
bring back and commit unto the person appointed, those covenants,
those keys, those ordinances, that Gospel and plan of salvation which
were had in old times, but which had been suspended and lost from the
enjoyment of the people; I say, that he was such, I had a knowledge
and an understanding.
He was only about twenty-four or twenty-five years old when I first
met him, and I became intimately acquainted with him and his brothers,
and with his father's house, and I remained so, as far as I was not
separated by foreign missions, until his death; and did I not know,
and do I not know and bear testimony that he lived and that he died an
Apostle and Prophet of Jesus Christ? And from the day of his death, or
long before that until the present, I have been intimately acquainted
and associated with the Apostles of this Church and kingdom under all
circumstances, whether in sickness or in health, whether in
the midst of life or in death, whether in prosperity or adversity;
whether abounding or suffering want; whether by sea or land; whether
in the midst of peace or of mobs and oppression. And do I not know
that President Young and his counselors and the other Apostles
associated with him in this Church, hold the keys of salvation? That
they hold that authority which administers life and salvation to the
obedient and the humble, and which to reject is condemnation, wherever
it exists, to every soul of man upon the earth? Yes, I do know it, and
I do this day bear testimony of it, and of that glorious Gospel in its
fulness which was restored to the earth twenty-six years ago, that
filled my heart with joy and charity and love for my fellow men, and
with a desire to do good, and to impart the truth as it is revealed.
Has it become dim and waxed cold in my heart, or departed from it? I
say unto you no! But if it be possible for a man to rejoice more than
I rejoiced twenty-six years ago, I say if it be possible, then I
rejoice more today than I did on yesterday and more than I did
twenty-six years ago—and why? Because my heart is larger; it was full
then, it is full now, and although outwardly and according to the
flesh, and in the world I may be in tribulation and sorrow, and care,
and labor, and anxiety, yet in Jesus Christ there is peace, in the
fulness of the Gospel there is joy, in the Spirit of God there is
gladness; and whether we look to the past we rejoice with
thanksgiving, and whether we look to the present our hearts seem to
grow larger, and whether we look to the future there is hope and a
fulness of joy, and we increase in understanding—and why? Because the
Spirit that is in us sheds forth in abundance in our souls joy and
satisfaction, and the Gospel inspires us with a degree of knowledge
and light, and certainty in regard to what we are about, in regard to
the work we are engaged in and the prospects that lie before us.
We know for what we labor, although in the flesh, subject to
mortality and its weaknesses, we may be partially asleep, or in other
words we may know in part, comprehend in part, prophesy in part, and
hope in part, not seeing and realizing the fulness, nor the thousandth
part of the fulness that will be consummated in the progress of this
work. But after we see enough of it to serve us for the time being,
and we enter into it with sufficient comprehension to rejoice with a
heart full of joy and of satisfaction, it inspires us to act with all
our heart, might, mind and strength.
I have often been reminded by the faithful laborers in this Church,
the Presidency and others, of the parable in the Book of Mormon that
these latter-day laborers should be called to prune the vineyard of
the Lord. It says that "Their numbers were few, but they did go to
labor with their might," and it says, "The Lord labored with them."
Well, do they not do so? Do not the old Prophets and Apostles help us?
Have we not their aid and their influence in our favor? Zenos and many
other Prophets are helping us. Lehi and all the Prophets understood
the principle of union and concentration that would be necessary in
the last days. And Nephi in bringing up this prophesy which was
uttered by the Prophet Zenos and putting it in his book, shows that he
considered it of importance to the people of God, and it is written
there that we might see and understand how it was that the great work
of the last days was to be fulfilled.
Is it not being fulfilled every whit? Have not the eleventh hour
laborers been called? Are not their numbers few? And have they not
labored with all their might, many of them? We won't say all,
because there are many called but few chosen, but those chosen men
that have been faithful, have not denied the faith, nor departed from
the labors assigned them, nor forsaken the cause, but have held on and
held out all the day long; and many more laborers of more recent date,
have they not labored with all their might, temporally, and
spiritually? Verily I say unto you, yea, and the Lord has labored with
them; and if you want the proof look around here! What else but the
power of these laborers and the powers of the Almighty God with them
could have led these thousands and tens of thousands of Latter-day
Saints over seas, deserts, through the mountains, overcoming every
obstacle and then have sustained them in these Valleys? Did not the
Almighty labor with them when He clothed them and fed them? Was not
His eye over them in providing circumstances through which they might
be fed and clothed, and have the necessary comforts of life? When He
caused them to flourish in the midst of a desert country? When He
inspired the Gentiles to pass through here with all kinds of tools,
clothing, shoes, seeds, with cattle and horses, flour, bacon, powder
and lead, from the frontiers of the United States, and throw them down
at the feet of this people cheaper than they could buy them where the
articles were produced?
Did not the Lord labor with His servants and with this people? Yes, He
did. And when they had made the track where neither wagon nor horse
tracks had been seen for hundreds of years and for hundreds of miles
of the journey, and made the bridges and crossed the streams, they had
not more than made a commencement on their journey when five hundred
men were called for by the United States to go to the seat of the
Mexican war; and these men took California and made it secure to the
government of the United States.
When these men were discharged from government service, two thousand
miles from their friends and without means to return, did not He guide
them to bring forth the treasures of the earth, to bring forth the
shining dust, and turn the world upside down? And did He not cause
persons from all parts of the earth to follow in their wake, with
their implements, their provisions, and their various kinds of tools,
from the United States to this country, and when they came here they
found themselves too heavily laden, their animals worn out; but they
were bound to press onward, and hence they stripped for the race and
harnessed for the battle, to see who would reach the gold mines first.
Well, suppose a man had stood up and prophesied before the Battalion
went to California, or when we were first driven out from Illinois,
that we should ever be prospered, clothed and fed until we could come
here into these mountains and raise food for our own sustenance, who
would have believed it?
And suppose a man had prophesied thus—"The Gentiles will follow you
like a flowing stream by scores, and hundreds, and thousands, and they
will bring their flour and bacon, their sugar and dry goods, their
tools and implements of husbandry, their iron, and everything that is
of use and pour them out at your feet, so that your every want will be
supplied, and the treasures of the earth will open under your feet,
and the treasures of the ancient mountains shall be opened unto you,
and the clouds shall drop down their rains. "Suppose that all this had
been prophesied; also that Great Salt Lake City would become the
great central seat of government for this country, and that the
Gentiles would come like a mighty flowing stream, and that we
should after all our difficulties be sustained, who would have
believed it? Why someone would have said, this is wild enthusiasm; it
is too good to be true.
Well, this people came, sustained themselves on the journey, and
arrived in this desert country, plowed up the parched earth and put in
their seeds, after bringing them more than a thousand miles, besides
what they had to bring to sustain themselves on their journey, and
they have lived until now on what they could raise in these deserts.
Who ever heard such things? And yet the very moment that we are tried,
some of us are complaining, and you will find that our stores are not
overflowing with plenty, and the insects eat our grain, nearly
everything is destroyed by the grasshoppers and drought, and we are
then brought to ourselves.
For these trying times some will begin to say in their hearts that the
Lord has forsaken us, and the Lord has forgotten us, but He will show
that He hath not. Can a mother forget her suckling child? Say,
mothers, can you forget your infant children? Peradventure you may,
but it is not likely; yet though a mother may forget her child when it
cries with hunger, yet the Lord says He will not forget Zion. He may
show that He is displeased with the acts of some, He may hide His face
from them in His justice, yet in His loving kindness He will chastise
them, but He will make a way for their escape. Brethren, will His
friends ever forsake Him? Or will He ever forsake them? No, never.
To sinners He has never made any promise, but that they shall be
rewarded according to their works; but to the Saints that keep the
commandments and abide in the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and to them that
do believe and know His will, He has made these; but those who have
known Him and in the day of tribulation forsaken His laws will be
beaten with many stripes. To all those who stand firm and steadfast
when the love of many shall wax cold because of the famine and
pestilence, and great trials with which the Saints of God are to be
tried before the judgments pass from the house of God to the wicked,
to all such He has made precious promises, and they will be fulfilled;
and the promises concerning things to the house of Israel as well as
to the Saints of the Most High will surely be fulfilled, for those
promises hold good to the other side of the veil; for although the
remnants of Israel are not yet in the Church, although not in the
covenant, yet they are beloved for their father's sake, and the
promises have claim on them because of the promises made to their
fathers; and though these their children do not understand it, and
though they are in a state of ignorance, not knowing the Lord,
ignorant in relation to the promises obtained by the obedience of
their fathers, yet the promises extend to them as well as to us
Latter-day Saints.
Do you suppose these promises will be fulfilled? I know they will. I
knew they would twenty-six years ago this summer; I knew it then, I
have testified to it ever since; I know it now, and though heaven and
earth should pass away, yet not one jot nor one tittle of the
promises of God concerning the Latter-day Saints, concerning Zion,
concerning Jerusalem, concerning the Jews, concerning the Lamanites,
concerning the remnants of Joseph, concerning the seed of Lehi, or
concerning the ten tribes of Israel, or any of the branches
thereof—not one will fail, but they all will be fulfilled in their
time and in their season.
The work has rolled on progressively up to the present time; not one
jot or tittle has rolled out of its place, but it has moved on
harmoniously, and it will continue to progress, and all the promises
will be fulfilled.
In order to aid in their fulfillment, the Latter-day Saints, the
faithful, those who hold the keys of this ministry, must fill their
storehouses with grain, their treasures with the comforts of life,
their cellars with vegetables and all kinds of food, which can be
preserved, and this will be done in the own due time of the Lord.
Whatever straits, whatever poverty, and however long they may last,
yet the Lord will smile upon us and we shall again have plentiful
harvests; and however much there may appear to be in the world at the
present, yet in the own due time of the Lord they will need bread and
provision, and the necessaries of life, and if faithful to the counsel
given, we shall be able to succor the poor, and have means to help the
laborers and the mechanics, and to supply the wants of the needy.
We shall be able to call into requisition the skill of the able
mechanics, to have the benefit of machinery, and we shall have all the
skill, and all the power, and all the wisdom, and all the treasures,
and all the means necessary to build up Zion, gather the people,
redeem Israel, fulfil the promises, and build the holy temples and
cities of our God; redeem and bring about the restoration of the
living, and administer for the dead, and do all things necessary to
accomplish the purposes of God whereunto we are called.
Who will live to see it? We will live to see a great deal of it before
we die, but in one sense of the word, we all will live to see it, for
we will never die, but we shall part with our bodies, and beyond the
veil, we shall then be no less interested in this great and glorious
work.
I know some people are apt to think, while the Latter-day Saints are a
small people, and considering what we sift out, and what go to
California and the States, and with one thing or another, that we do
not increase very fast, and that we cannot accomplish all these things
that were predicted.
Well, I do not expect that the Latter-day Saints will accomplish the
work; I never thought they would. I will tell you my opinion, no, my
knowledge, and my testimony; call it opinion if you please. The
Latter-day Saints never expect to do it all themselves, but they
expect reinforcements of the former-day Saints, and that the two will
carry it all out.
You know the prophecy of Daniel about the kingdom and the greatness of
the kingdom under the whole heavens being given to the Saints of the
Most High God to possess it forever and forever; you have read it and
no doubt understand it.
Well, a mock court under the administration of Austin A. King, since
governor of Missouri, while Joseph Smith and others were taken by a
mob and were made subject to this inquisition, and to a mock trial,
and while undergoing this mock trial the question was put to a
witness, "Do these people, these 'Mormons' believe in this verse in
the Prophet Daniel?" and at the same time quoting it. "Yes," said the
witness. "Put that down," said the judge, "it is a strong point for
treason." "But," says one of the lawyers in defense, "Judge, you
had
better put the Bible down for treason."
That was a very suitable reply; but mind you the text does not say
that the Latter-day Saints would possess the kingdom, but it says that
the Saints of the Most High, and of course that includes the
Latter-day as well as all the former-day Saints from Adam down to the
end of time.
Well, then, when the former-day Saints reinforce the
Latter-day Saints, and all the powers of heaven are in the midst of
Zion, and all the people from Adam and from Jesus Christ, and from the
least and last Latter-day Saint all combine their faith and their
works, and their powers, and their gifts, I would leave it to any
intelligent person in Christendom whether or not they will be able to
do this.
I say they will; I know it; but to say that the Latter-day Saints ever
undertook it is not correct, for they never undertook any such thing.
It is, as I told them in California, in public debates and everywhere
throughout the State where I had an opportunity of speaking to them,
and while they were threatening the sword because they could not get
the governor out of the chair. I told them to their faces that they
need not worry themselves about the Latter-day Saints undertaking that
job, for they never would, and they never would be strong enough; but
the Saints of the Most High had undertaken it, and I told them that
these would reinforce the Latter-day Saints, and then they will all
combine together, and they will do it, for it has to be done, and it
will be accomplished; and this is what we are here for today; it is
for what we are assembled at this conference, and we never had but
that one object in view, neither have we now, whether we come together
to sing, pray, prophesy or bless, to saw wood or to chop it in the
canyon; if we are Saints we never had but this one object in view.
Just so with the former-day Saints, they never had anything in view,
in heaven or on earth, but this one object in relation to the earth
and the inhabitants thereof, and that was to rule and reign on the
earth and over it, and over the elements, and over the people, and
over all kings and all presidents, and all governors, and all rulers,
and all powers that exist upon this planet, and finally over death,
and hell, and the devil, and all his hosts, and the last enemy that
will be conquered on this earth is death; so it is written.
Well, that is the object, brethren, is it not, of our coming together
into these mountains? This is the object, and we have armed forces
enough to do it, and they will be brought to bear, and our part of the
business is to get ourselves ready. The powers of the heavens will not
cooperate with unholy powers directly, and fully, and immediately; of
course we as a people are not yet holy, we have not yet gained that
fulness of the Gospel and of righteousness, but hardness of heart and
blindness of mind do prevent us from rending the veil, and it doth
cause us still to measurably remain in that state of blindness spoken
of by the Prophet.
We have not yet learned all things as they are, and to entirely
overcome iniquity, and because of this the powers of heaven, although
ready, cannot fully commune with us, for we are not ready. For this
cause your President labors, and for this cause his counselors preach
here, and lift up their voices from day to day, and from time to time,
and for this cause the Apostles labor and toil amongst you; it is to
get a modern people, a latter-day people, a latter-day kingdom or
Church ready, united, sanctified, enlightened, made holy, and prepared
for the glorious union, and immediate presence and cooperation of
those who have gone before us; for the conquest of the earth, the
elements, and all the powers connected therewith, to put down
iniquity, to put down Satan, to put down sin, to put down corruption,
darkness, and error, and misrule, that the cause of light and truth,
and the principles of virtue and rectitude may prevail, and the reign
of peace and righteousness be ushered in.
This is the object, and now, is it not worthy of our attention and of
our suffering a little? Why, the Almighty God will chasten His
people from time to time, because He loves them, and He will purge out
the sinners from among them, and some will repent and become
righteous, and a great many who promise themselves that they are going
to repent and become first-rate Saints, but do not begin, need not
flatter themselves, for they never will do so in that manner.
When you see men that are not ready to repent, to bring forth fruits
meet for repentance, but say, I want to indulge in sin a little
longer, and then I am going to turn round and be a first-rate good
Saint, I will tell you they are deceiving themselves, for they will
not do it, for every time they think of doing it they will love sin as
much as they did before, and they will continue to love sin, and why?
Because, when He (the Lord) spoke they would not hear; when He sent
His servants they would not listen, and they would none of His
reproof, and because of this He will laugh at their calamities and
mock when their fear cometh, and when they call He will not hear, and
when they seek Him earnestly they will not find Him.
A man cannot be righteous of his own will and without the Spirit of
the Lord; there is no assurance for men, they cannot have the Spirit
unless they determine to walk in the light as fast as they see it.
Those who promise to repent, but want to indulge in sin a little
longer, do not repent, and their hearts are not fit for the kingdom of
God.
That man is on the right track who always loved the truth, and lived
up to it, as far as he could, with all his exertions, and walked in
the light thereof every day, and every time he saw a little more truth
obeyed it, and if he did anything at all it was his purpose
continually to avoid error and walk in the truth. If he failed at any
time it was his weakness, his error of judgment, his mistake, his
temptation; it was not because he did not want to do right, or to put
it off purposely and choose sin; but it was through his weakness and
temptation.
I tell you there is a poor prospect of a man that makes no progress;
there is a more promising prospect of a man that has no light, yet
lives in the practical duties of his religion, that man or that woman
must be happy. Why, bless your souls, there is hope with such a man,
and though he may err in judgment and make mistakes, and though he may
trespass, and though he may sin many sins that are not unto death,
make many mistakes through weakness, and have to be borne with a long
time, yet I tell you there is hope of such a man, because if he lives
he learns to see his duties, and if he stumbles and falls down, what
of all that?—he will get up again and start on his journey, and when
he starts the next time he will start well.
Brethren, don't seek to discourage or crush such a man; it will not do
to destroy a man because he makes one or two blunders; it will never
do to cry for spilt milk, but try again; and if you cannot overcome at
first, try again, and keep trying until you overcome.
But when a man is not trying, but loves to live in sin, but still says
every day, "I am going to be a good 'Mormon,'" I have but little
hope
of such a man, and I generally say to him, you will not do it, for the
Lord will not give you His Spirit when you please to get ready to
repent.
But the honest man says, "I have been brought to see the truth, and I
will do the best I know, though I have a thousand traditions, and
though I make a thousand mistakes, and my brethren have to bear with
me, yet I will do the best I can, and will be willing to try again;
and if I find myself weak and unable to progress and overcome,
I will pray that the good Spirit and the strength of the Lord may help
me." When a man talks in this way, there is hope in his case; I don't
care how such traditions have been entwined around him, or how many
blunders he may make; I say there is hope in those who seek diligently
to learn their duties, and endeavor to live up to them; and this makes
me have hope for this people and for myself.
But when a man is careless and indifferent to the blessings of
providence, and keeps putting off his repentance, and is continually
looking after the things of this life, the Lord don't want such a man;
he has no use for him, and damnation awaits such a man, and he will
have to wait patiently for the return of the good Spirit to again lead
him to repentance. Such a man won't prosper, for a man that will fix
his own business first, and then serve God, he is not worthy of Him.
He has no business with his own business, his business is to serve
God, he has no other business; as I said, whether preaching or
whatever place he may be in, he should have but one object in view—the
kingdom of God. In whatever part of the earth he may be located,
whether among the Saints or in the very midst of wickedness, and where
the power of the devil holds sway, it is his duty to preach
righteousness faithfully before the people.
Well, brethren, I bear testimony that Joseph Smith and the witnesses
to the Book of Mormon were, and, so far as they held out faithful, are
men of God, holding the keys of the dispensation of the fulness of
times, which is calculated to lead the people out from the iniquity and
abominations of this lower world; and that their successors, the
Apostles, your President and his Counselors, received the keys under
the hands of the Pro phet Joseph. They are the Apostles of Joseph
Smith, and holding the keys of a dispensation which will never come to
an end, for although all other institutions on the earth come to an
end, this will stand forever.
They are faithful and they labor diligently, and I bear them record
that they labor with all diligence, and God is with them, and their
counsels will lead to exaltation, and to celestial glory and eternal
life, and those that are with them bear a portion of the same keys;
they are men that have been faithful and true, many of them have been
proved to be such through a long series of years, and they would lay
down their lives for the cause; and they, I say, hold a portion of the
keys of this kingdom, which they received under the hands of Joseph
the Prophet and others of the Apostles, and they will bear those keys
and this ministry triumphant to the nations, and while they live they
will live for this purpose; whether the flesh lives or not, they will
never cease in this world, nor in the spirit world, nor in the
resurrected world; whatever their circumstances may be, they never
will cease to labor until they accomplish that which they have
undertaken; they will labor for this worthy object.
I am not speaking of the eternities, but they will labor for this
earth and every creature therein until the conquest is achieved, and
death swallowed up in victory; for the powers and keys of endless
life, without beginning of days or end of years, have undertaken the
great work of the redemption of this earth; they have not and will not
pass to others until they have redeemed this little world. Christ
offered himself a sacrifice for this earth, for men, for the animals,
for fishes, and the creeping things. Christ died for the earth and for
the elements; Christ died for all mankind upon its face.
Christ died, his blood was spilt, the Priesthood was given, and the
labor will continue with the Priesthood from generation to generation,
until the kingdom will finally be given to the Saints to possess for
ever and ever. He died to accomplish the salvation of all except the
sons of perdition, and they have had all these blessings applied to
them, and have partaken of them, known them, and then turned enemies
to them, and there is not anything greater that you can do for them,
and they perish, for after the blood of Christ has been shed and they
despised it, nothing more can be done for them than already has been,
for they have rejected the means of salvation.
If salt won't save me, what else will? If salt loses its saltiness,
what will salt the earth? All this was undertaken, and it will be
carried through until every son and daughter of Adam have an
opportunity of participating in its benefits.
Then here is my heart, and here is my hand to every good Saint in this
world, in the world of spirits, in the resurrected world, and in all
the worlds connected with this warfare and this work—here is my heart
and hand! Depend upon it, if I am counted worthy, I will be somewhere
about, whether I stay here or go there, whether I stay in the flesh or
go into the spirit world, or whether in the resurrected world, depend
upon it, while my name is Parley P. Pratt, I will be somewhere about,
and while I am, I will have that one object in view, and if I go into
heaven, I shall think of nothing else until this is done, nor act with
any other view, and I want to be counted worthy, and I mean to try to
be, and trust in God for the rest. God bless you all. Amen.
- Parley P. Pratt