It used to be, in the days of the Prophet Joseph, a kind of common
adage that "Mormonism" flourished best out of doors, and although we
struggled hard at the time that the brethren undertook in Missouri to
build a hewed log house that would cost about $1,200, yet that tried
the faith of many, and was more than we accomplished before the Saints
were driven from Jackson County, and we failed to erect a building big
enough to hold the Saints previous to the death of the Prophet. At the
time of his death we were still trying to build a Temple, but all our
exertions only resulted in our having to go out of doors for room
enough.
We on the present occasion have the pleasure of sitting out of doors,
and of listening to the counsel and instruction of the servants of God
without being crowded, from the fact that we have Father's big kitchen
to meet in, and in this capacious Bowery we can enjoy a great deal of
comfort, instead of being jammed into our large Tabernacle, those of
us who could get in, and the balance being obliged to go home.
It is by the request of my brethren that I arise on the present
occasion to offer a few reflections for your consideration. When I was
first called upon by the Prophet to go and preach the Gospel, I
received a little good advice, which I have endeavored to profit by
ever since, and that too, to the best of my ability.
In the morning, as I was about to start on my first mission to preach
the Gospel, I waited upon brother Joseph, and asked if he had any
advice to give me. "Yes," said he, "George A., preach short sermons,
make short prayers, deliver your sermons with a prayerful heart, and
you will be blessed, and the truth will prosper in your hands." I was
a boy of seventeen at the time, and I called this my college
education; I however took a second degree, calling upon father Joseph
Smith, who was the Patriarch of the Church, and as I was about
starting, he said, "One word of advice George A., whatever you do, be
careful to go in at the little end of the horn, then, if you increase,
though it be but a very little, you are sure to come out at the big
end; but if you go in at the big end, you are certain to come out at
the small end."
Ever since that time I have applied it, and thought often of the old
gentleman's counsel, and I have found it to be very correct.
At that time Elder Sidney Rigdon, our great preacher (the perfect
comber of all the sects), a man that could bring to bear all the big,
jaw-cracking words of the English language, and who could fill up the
interstices with quotations from other languages, and bring all
to illustrate the Gospel of Christ, and to contrast it with the errors
of the different sects to which he had formerly belonged, I remember
seeing him get up to preach when there were present Professor Seixas
and several other learned gentlemen who were on a visit to Kirtland,
and President Rigdon wanted to show himself to the best possible
advantage. I discovered his error when he first began speaking; I saw
that he was in his high heeled boots, and at the commencement he
soared so far above his subject that he could not get down to it; his
whole discourse was a constant series of efforts to descend to a style
requisite to illustrate the simplicity of the Gospel, the natural
result of his commencing on too high a key—the difficulty and trouble
was that he commenced on too grand a scale to carry it through
successfully.
Now if he had commenced to preach to those learned men the first
simple principles of the Gospel, and then, as the Spirit had opened up
things to his mind, have gone into the more advanced principles, he
might have succeeded as he desired, but he got up with the intention
of showing his great big self, and began at the big end of the horn.
There are several young Elders present, who are going on missions, and
the advice that I received may not be uninteresting to them. I have
known many young Elders go out preaching, and the first thing they
would do when they began to preach would be to tell what a tremendous
smart sermon they were going to preach, and what wonderful results
would follow; and I have seen these dashing kind of fellows carry on
until they withered, and became depreciated, and went out at the
little end of the horn.
Now when we present ourselves to a congregation of people, the first
thing should be plainly and simply to communicate to them the first
principles that we receive, in the best possible manner. But what is
the best way to communicate them to the inhabitants of the earth?
Shall we select the greatest jaw-cracking words in the English
language, and from other languages, or shall we use reasoning the most
abstruse and mysterious? The best method is to select the best and
simplest way in our possession, and you will find that to be the most
successful method of proclaiming the Gospel. You may note it when you
will, in men that go forth to proclaim the truth, and you discover
that the man who has the fewest words communicates his ideas to the
people, as a general thing, in the plainest manner.
When a man uses ten or fifteen superfluous words to convey one simple
idea, his real meaning is lost, he reaches beyond all the rules of
grammar and rhetoric, and his idea, which, had it been clothed with
simple and appropriate language, might have been good, is lost for
want of more suitable words. It is like Massa Gratian's wit—"two
grains of wheat hid in three barrels of chaff." It is my advice that
our Elders should study brevity in all their discourses and
communications to the people, and that they should speak in the
plainest and simplest manner; for if they were to do this—speak so
that the unlearned can comprehend, then the learned will be sure to
understand, unless they have got their ears so twisted that it is
vulgar for them to listen to common conversation; they are like the
young gentleman who had just come from college and was desirous of
making a considerable show, so when he stopped at a country hotel, he
gave the following orders to the ostler—"You will extricate the
quadruped from the vehicle, stabulate him, donate him an adequate
supply of nutritious aliment, and when the Aurora of man shall
illumine the celestial horizon I will award thee a pecuniary
compensation."
The lad went into the house to the old man, crying—"Landlord, there is
a Dutchman out here; I can't understand a word he says, do come and
talk to him yourself." (Laughter). Now if he had said—"Unharness the
horse, water and feed him, and I will pay you for it in the morning,"
he would have been understood by the ostler. But the fact is, the
world through their wisdom know not God, and have lost sight of and
forgotten the simplicity of our fathers, and the plainness of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ, and the reason is, that from the beginning the
plan of salvation was too plain and simple to be interesting to the
learned, and it has ever since been the design of men of learning, to
couch the wisdom and knowledge of the world in such high flown
language that the poorer classes of mankind could not get anywhere
near them, and thereby hide it in the superabundance of nonsense they
made use of; they made use of thousands of words to blind the ignorant
and illiterate, that they might be kept in the dark, and remain in
ignorance all through the learning and cunning of men.
These are my sentiments upon that subject in brief, and however much I
may break or violate the instructions I received from President Joseph
Smith to preach short sermons, and make short prayers, I have always
endeavored to observe those instructions, though I may have failed on
some occasions. Sometimes perhaps overanxiety has led me beyond the
mark, but as a general thing I have endeavored to observe them
strictly, and have found it to be good to do so, and I have often and
do yet frequently think of my first degree.
But I ought to make some acknowledgment and confessions probably. I
well remember the first time I ever broke those instructions; I was
preaching in Virginia, in the County of Tyler. There was a Methodist
preacher by the name of West, that would follow me wherever I went,
and when I got through preaching he would get up to burlesque me, and
he would talk for an hour or two, and then he would get his
congregation to sing, but with all he could do he could not get more
than thirty or forty to come and hear him preach, whereas I had from
three to four hundred attentive hearers. So on one certain occasion he
came with his Methodist friends to the meeting, and I invited him to
preach first, but no—he said he was "going to preach just as soon as I
got through;" so I said to myself, "You will have to wait a pretty
considerable spell, old gentleman;" and I then selected and read one
of the longest chapters I could find in the Bible, and read it slowly;
then read a long hymn and lined it off, and got the preacher to sing
it for me, after which I preached about two hours and a half. I saw
the preacher was in a terrible great hurry to get a chance to speak;
the reason was, there were many at the meeting who had come from 20 to
30 miles on purpose to hear me, the country being very thinly settled,
and some of them would have turned their pigs out of the pen if they
had known West was going to preach in it, and the very moment I had
done speaking, he jumped up and said he wanted to preach before I
dismissed the congregation. When he commenced, about 300 of the
congregation left.
He had made a practice of following every "Mormon" Elder that came
into the country, and keeping up his harangue against the truth, then
his Methodist brethren would join him and sing at the top of their
voices until the congregation dispersed, and it was his intention to
serve me the same, but he did not succeed quite so well as he
anticipated.
That was the first time that I recollect violating the instructions I
had received, and I must say that I did not repent of it for a good
many years, and I have not fully done so yet, for I thought that a man
must be pardoned for straining his instructions on an occasion like
that; and the fact is we do not often find such men. This man followed
and harassed our Elders every time they went into the country, and
kept on their track until he had run them clear out of the country.
When he perceived I would preach about there, he gave public notice
that if I came into the neighborhood where he lived I should get a
coat of tar and feathers; so on hearing this, I resolved to go and try
it.
There was a man by the name of Mr. Willey, a near neighbor of the Rev.
Mr. West. He was a small man of about 130 lbs. weight, with a red head,
and he had 13 boys with red heads, each of them weighing from 180 to
250 lbs. He had his boys perfectly drilled, and when he could not beat
the opposite party at the ballot box by voting, he could always beat
them by fighting; for he and his redheaded boys (for they had hair
as red as my wig that I wear sometimes), were more than a match for
any party they come in contact with in the County of Tyler; when he
could not beat them in the election, he always could the other way.
When he heard that West, the Methodist preacher, was going to have me
tarred and feathered, he sent his best looking daughter on horseback
over the mountains, dressed in the finest silk, and invited me to go
over and preach, and assured me that I need not fear the least danger
from the Methodists threatening to tar and feather me. I sent an
appointment that I would preach at his house in two weeks. Accordingly
I proceeded on my way to visit the old man, filling some appointments
previously given on Buffalo Creek, Monongahela County, and about 15
miles from Mr. Willey's, I met three young men, all with red heads,
well mounted, and standing about 6 feet 2 inches, dressed in Kentucky
jeans, but very neat and clean. They looked big enough to have been
employed in Erebus, as strikers for Vulcan, forging thunderbolts for
Jupiter. They informed me that they were the sons of Mr. Willey, and
that he had sent them to show me the way through the mountains. They
remarked that it was rather a wild country to travel in alone, and
they likewise informed me that the rumor was that West, the Methodist
priest, was intending to meet me with a party of his pious brethren,
and give me a coat of tar and feathers, but assured me, in the name of
their father, that I need not apprehend the least possible danger.
Before I got into the neighborhood I was met by two or three other
redheaded gentlemen, and we shortly after arrived at the old man's
residence, where I was treated with every kindness, and the first
salutation was an assurance that I need not be the least afraid, or
anticipate that any harm would come to me from my Methodist friends:
and the beauty of it was, as I learned afterward, he had long desired
an opportunity to whip the whole Methodist church; and if they had
turned out to mob me, he would then have had a good chance to pounce
upon them. This is an illustration of what men will do to accomplish
their ends, or the objects they have in view.
And as long as I remained in that part of the county of Tyler, the old
man would have two or three of these boys go along with me to show me
the way through the country wherever I wished to go, and two or three
more looking out. I suppose he really wanted to have the
Methodists execute their threat, and attempt to mob me; but West
knowing the feelings of the redheaded troop, he concluded it was best
not to do so.
Notwithstanding all the opposition, we did succeed in gathering a few
"Mormons" in that county. I am aware that things were different then
to what they are now, for then when an Elder presented "Mormonism" in
a town or city, everyone that is acquainted with our history knows
that it was looked upon by all as a mere matter of humbug. "Why," they
would say, "it will be all down in two or three weeks; these are some
idle fellows going about for the sake of getting a living." But now it
is altogether different; when a "Mormon" goes forth to preach, however
much they may oppose him and abuse him, they know that he represents
an almighty people, and that he stands in connection with and is
backed up by the greatest men of the age. They know that the "Mormons"
cannot be successfully contended with by argument and moral suasion,
but only on the old Missourian system of mobocracy; they know that the
priests have given it up years ago. "O," say they, "if you talk with a
Mormon Elder, you are sure to get worsted; tar and feather them, mob
them, and stone them out of the country, for if you listen to them,
you will be deceived."
I remember when Joseph first got the Abrahamic records (and let me
here say that I hope those brethren and sisters who are not already
subscribers to the Deseret News, will go to the office and commence to
take it while that important record is being published, for it will be
of great service in years to come), there was in the State of New York
a very pious Presbyterian deacon, who was very intimate with my father
and mother, when they were members of the same church; and, as he was
passing through Kirtland, called to see them. It was almost a
violation of the pious old man's faith to shake hands with my father
when he met him, but he ventured, and finally got courage enough to
call, and not only shake hands, but have a little conversation.
My father told him that Joseph had got this Book of Abraham, and that
he could translate it, and that it revealed some very important
principles. "It is curious," replied the old man, "I really would like
to see the record."
"Well, deacon," said my father, "come, I will go over with you to the
Prophet's, and show you the papyrus."
"Well, Mr. Smith, but I don't know about going over now."
"O come along," said my father, "there is plenty of time before
dinner, it is but a few steps—let us walk over while dinner is being
prepared."
"Mr. Smith, Mr. Smith, there is great danger of being de—cei—ved! Mr.
Smith—I'd rather not go!"
This is the way men feel; they are all the time afraid of being
deceived; when the truth comes, they dare not trust their eyes, their
ears, or their understanding; they are all the day long fearing and
trembling lest they should be deceived. And at the same time,
Infidelity, Mesmerism, Electrobiology, spiritual communications of
various kinds and grades are taking hold of the minds of the human
race, from those in the highest ranks of society to the lowest.
And here in the newspapers we will find half their columns taken up
with accounts of murder, suicide, plunder, bloodshed, and every other
species of crime. "And what of it," says one. Why, crime seems to be
the principal feature of the day. And what is the cause of all this?
The reason is because the people have rejected the truth, and
therefore the light of truth has ceased to shine in their
hearts.
They thirst for one another's blood, and they thirst after and desire
each other's destruction, and they have no feeling for anything but
blood and slaughter: and the great question the world over, but
especially in the East, is whether the Emperor of Russia shall have
the privilege of building as many ships as he may think proper, and
putting them in the Black Sea. He says that a part of the Black Sea
and the Sea of Azoff are in his dominions, and that he will do as he
pleases; but the allied powers swear that he shall not, and they stake
the lives of millions, and declare that he shall not build any more
ships than some half dozen other nations see proper to keep in that
sea. This seems to be the whole question which causes the lives of
millions to be in jeopardy continually.
I say, read the Deseret News; read the accounts of the missions of the
Elders; read the great things that are being revealed week after
week—the History of the Prophet, the revelations which came through
him, and see how rapidly they are fulfilling, and observe how partyism
and constant wrangling are seizing the human mind, and how tremendously
they will contend with each other, and sustain one another in lies,
and speak evil of those who are good.
With these remarks I shall give way, praying that the Lord may bless
you forever. Amen.
- George A. Smith