I always regret that circumstances should occur to call from our
President remarks like some of those he was moved upon to make this
forenoon; but such circumstances do occur, hence similar remarks must
be made.
As an individual I have been and am very anxious in relation to the
immigration now upon the Plains. Their situation is very distressing,
and several have died in brother Willie's company. Some had died
before the brethren could reach them, and a few more died during the
first five days after they met them. The company had encountered cold
and storms, and one very stormy day which caused nearly one-third of
the deaths that had happened.
They had no serious or contagious diseases, but the storms came and
the air was very cold, as a matter of course some who were fatigued
with the toil and anxiety of the journey sank under the inclemency of
the weather; they were furnished by those that returned to them, with
shoes, clothing, and food. They were not entirely destitute of
provisions when the return teams met them; their rations at the
outfitting were more than those of the companies in advance of them.
When met they had nearly four hundred pounds of sea bread, but their
last rations of flour had been dealt out on the evening previous.
Brother Willie's company was met with on the upper crossing of Sweet
Water, but the whereabouts of the ox-trains and the handcart company
in rear of brother Willie are yet unknown to us.
We have now some two hundred teams out to meet them, and some were
only prepared with seven days forage for animals. It will be necessary
for more teams to go to their relief, with grain and hay to sustain
the animals already sent out, or they will die.
The weather had been cold enough to freeze over the Sweet Water; I
mention this that you may know how the thermometer stood in that
region; and some animals had been frozen to death. It is winter where
they are, and they are actually in the cold and snow which was near
one foot deep, and as they went east it appeared to grow deeper.
The observations made this morn ing, as a matter of course,
would only be treasured up by those who had in them the spirit of
life. We have persons that have so much death in them that they do not
know the counsels that are given to the immigrating Saints, that do
not know the tenor of advice contained in the general epistles of the
Presidency of the Church. But I do not suppose that the thinking part
of the community anticipated any censures being placed upon the First
Presidency of this Church, in consequence of the sufferings of the
people now upon the Plains. Still there is a certain class of people
whose brains never reach above the calves of their legs, and they
never will know anything about the general policy of the Church, about
what is written, what is desired, counseled, or asked for.
In relation to handcart companies, I have said, and I say it again,
that they should start by the first of May, and then they can travel
leisurely according to their strength and feelings; they can then have
May, June, July, and August for the accomplishment of their journey.
They could not travel so leisurely this year, from the fact that there
were no grain depots on the route, consequently they had to hurry
through, lest their rations should fail. Were grain deposited at
convenient points on the route, the trip is, in every sense of the
word, a feasible one for handcarts, for without that advantage, the
present year has proved the feasibility of the undertaking.
The grand difficulty with a portion of our immigration this year has
been in starting in the forepart of September instead of the first of
May, but even then it is worse with ox teams than with handcarts, for
if the cattle fail the people have no facilities for transporting
their tents, bedding, clothing, and provisions. Unless I have
different feelings to what I now have, I should never wish to see a
train leave the Missouri River after the middle of June, or after the
first day of July at the latest, until we can establish grain depots
on the route, for I do not consider any train safe in starting late.
Brother Brigham has invariably advised early starts, and he gave his
reasons for so doing this morning, and I do not wish to reiterate
them.
I wish to see those who are directly engaged in carrying out the
operations of gathering the Saints, to correctly understand the advice
given and the system adopted for the gathering, and when they
understand that and carry it out, as planned and given by brother
Brigham, our immigration will be free from the sad results of
mismanagement. But for persons, who are ignorant of the special causes
and agents in any unpleasant transaction, to at once blame the head is
the height of nonsense, though people in all ages have been prone to
censure their leader, in times of special distress. When crickets and
grasshoppers devour, when famine wastes, and when snows, storms, and
accidents occur, it is natural, in that portion of the community that
lack the gift of the Holy Ghost, to murmur against the leader of the
people.
With Saints, what is the practical result of that murmuring? It shuts
down the gate between you and heaven, between you and the Almighty,
and you cannot get the Spirit of God. The murmurings and rebellions of
ancient Israel prevented Moses from leading them to the land of
Canaan. So soon as they had to endure hardship they began to murmur
against Moses, and the result was the Lord would not give them His
Spirit; the same has been the result in this dispensation.
In the days of Joseph, if a woman happened to put on her stocking
wrong side out she would blame the Prophet; and if a man
happened to tie his shoestring in a hard instead of a bow knot, he was
angry with the Prophet for not having inspiration enough to have
prevented so dire an event. The brains of that class of people never
reach above the calves of their legs. I like to see the people have a
little hard sense, like the mule; I like to see them understand the
principles of the Son of God.
With regard to this people, I know that they are the best people on
the earth, but there is more or less alloy among them which we hate.
The Savior said that the Kingdom of Heaven is like unto a net that
gathereth all kinds of fish; and I believe that parable holds good in
our day, with regard to the gathering of the people that are caught by
the Gospel of the Son of God, through the practical preaching of the
Elders. I believe this, from observing the unwise sayings and doings
of some who profess to be Saints.
I am aware that the world, because we are not all strictly living our
religion, will imagine, as a matter of course, that we are bursting to
pieces up here, and will say, "That is what we like; we told you that
if you would let the 'Mormons' alone they would all burst to pieces."
We can, by taking an unrighteous course, burst ourselves to pieces,
but they cannot burst us to pieces, if we do right, that is certain,
for they tried it when there were but eight or ten in the Church, and
when there were a few hundred, and when there were a few thousand, and
they were unable to burst the Church. Now they flatter themselves that
we shall burst under the weight of our own conduct, but I will tell
you that we are after the evildoers.
If the Bishops and Teachers will go to work, together with every
officer in the Church, we can soon find out those who are not disposed
to do right; and let their names be written down, and let the offense
and place of residence be written against the name, that we may know
who are living in sin, where they live and what their offenses are.
I know that a great many people are full of sympathy, and yet they
talk of the celestial law that they are going to keep and abide; but
let me tell you that if you violate that law, you must meet the
penalty. How many have we got here that would sympathize with those
who are guilty of breaking their covenants, and thereby virtually
partake of their crimes? I believe it to be a correct doctrine that
the sympathizer is more or less implicated. The President enjoined it
on the High Priests to expose those they knew to have committed or to
be committing evil, and if they did not, hereafter the sin would be
upon their heads.
Let the whole people take warning; and let every man and woman in
Israel understand that the indignation of the Almighty rests upon that
person who fails to expose iniquity. And let the wrath of God be upon
any officer of the Church that knows of abomination, unless he comes
out and makes known that abomination. I believe this ought to be, for
we want the evil deeds of every person exposed.
We want to feel after the people and hunt them up; and we want the
wrath of Brigham, and the wrath of Heber, and the wrath of all the men
and woman on earth that are right, and the wrath of Joseph, and the
wrath of Michael, and the wrath of Raphael, and the wrath of the Lord
Jesus Christ, and the wrath of Almighty God and of all the Gods in
eternity to burn against those that will sin. And we want the
indignation and fire of the Almighty to sweep through the land like
the locusts of Egypt, until every nauseous weed that grows
among the Saints of God is destroyed.
Words are said to be light and windy, but I tell you that talking
these things foreshadows what will be literally and really. I would be
glad, when I speak to the people, that the Lord would let His Holy
Spirit accompany my words, for I do not want my words to go alone. We
have to speak to this people often, and when we talk to them like a
man reading off a sermon that is written, it takes but little effect.
When words go to the people alone, they are not profited by them.
Instead of all the people being desirous and anxious, as they should,
to serve their God and practice what they know to be right, many are
all the time longing for some fantastical doctrine, for something to
gratify their vain imaginations. If you wish to feast on the word of
God and feel its realities, you must practice the revelations of Jesus
Christ. You must advance and do the will of God, and then you will be
blest.
I am aware, as the President said this morning, that it is of no use
talking about the Holy Ghost, the power of God, the gift of God, or
the light of the Almighty resting on this people, until they become
morally reformed. Some people laugh at and deride sectarian religion.
I never was a sectarian; I have been in this Church from my boyhood;
but in the region where I was raised, sectarian morality exceeds, in
some respects, the morality of many who call themselves Latter-day
Saints.
Some here keep their children too dirty for admission into a district
school where I was raised; and in some houses the towels look as
though they had passed Noah's ark, or had been used by some of the
inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah, and the knives and forks have the
appearance of having been rusting ever since Adam was driven from the
garden of Eden.
I want to see the people wake up and reform, forsake all their evil
habits and everything that is dark, loathsome and impure. I want to
see them eschew all dirt, and filth, and degradation, and cease
profaning the Sabbath, and the name of the Lord God of Israel; I want
to see them become at least as moral and temperate as any people in
the Gentile world, as we call it. I tell you that the Gentiles would
be shocked at the filth and dirt of some of the sons and daughters of
Israel, and feel offended to associate with them; I mean that portion
of the Gentiles that are pure in their moral habits.
I want to see the people repent, as the President said this morning,
and make a reformation in their lives, in their doings, and in keeping
their houses, farms, and everything they have, clean and tidy.
We talk about our boys being smarter than their fathers. How many of
our boys are learning trades, are learning to be farmers, or to
understand any useful occupation? How many boys have we that are
trustworthy; and as good as their fathers were at the same age? I know
that our boys are bright and active, full of energy, life, and power,
but many of the parents do not teach their children as they ought.
They expect the schoolmaster to teach them, but what can the
schoolmaster teach them, when the parents teach them nothing at home,
and take no interest in what they are learning at school?
We talk about daughters rivaling their mothers. How many daughters
have we that know how to spin, make butter, keep hairs and flies'
wings and legs on one plate, and the butter on the other, make good
cheese, knit their own stockings, and make good hasty pudding or mush?
How many of them can make their own bonnets and dresses? How
many know how to use fine needles and coarse needles, and every kind
of needles?
Many parents need to reform. Let the fathers teach their sons how to
work, the art of chopping and hauling wood, of breaking up the ground,
and of raising grain, cattle, sheep, hogs, &c.; and let the mothers
set their daughters to work; and let every man, woman, and child, that
is old enough, learn the arts of industry.
We want every Bishop to teach these reforms in Israel, we want every
man in Israel to teach them; and when all reform in such matters, the
Lord our God, will shower His blessings upon the people of this city
and upon the people in the valleys of these mountains.
You may talk of reform, you may preach upon a virtuous life, upon
cleanliness, upon God and the Holy Ghost, but while there is filth
around the house, filth in the yard, and in every part of the city,
your preaching will not amount to much. Some people are never
contented unless the cow yard is under their noses, the hen coop in
the parlor, and the privy in the kitchen, that is if they have any
privy.
I want the people to wake up to a sense of their duty, and begin to
serve God and repent of their sins, repent of every improper habit.
I sometimes confess men's sins for them, and they will get up and
parry off. I confessed a man's sins here lately, and he supposed that
I did not know what I was talking about. If he had corrected me a
little further, I would have told all his sins; I would have told the
things that were in his very heart; and if he parries again, I will
come out more pointedly than I did then.
In some of the wards men will rise up and confess their sins, and
after a week's reflection, they will go to meeting and commence
parrying, and make themselves as good as an angel. Again, some people,
when they get the Spirit of God, when they actually pray fervently,
are deemed by their neighbors to have sectarian religion. If God
Almighty moves upon a man to pray with a loud voice and in earnest,
some are ready to exclaim that he is a sectarian, and are so anxious
to put away sectarianism, that they bundle the religion of Jesus
Christ out of doors. In their zeal against sectarianism and doctrines
they do not like, they leave God and the Lord Jesus Christ out of the
question, and prayer, and keeping the Sabbath, and moral honesty, and
virtue, and purity and everything that is good.
Every portion of sectarian religion that is good is my religion. If
they have a precious gem it belongs to my religion; if it is purity,
virtue, integrity, the gift of the Holy Ghost, fervency, and prayer,
it is my religion. Some people talk of wildfire; I would rather have
wildfire than no fire at all. I would like you to come up to the
light of the Almighty, and if you want to pray to God, if you want to
shout and make heaven and earth ring—drive the devil out of doors,
chase darkness from your houses, and from your families, and raise the
banner of the Lord Jesus Christ in your households, and the flag of
God in your city, and say, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, I
will do right, and root up everything that is wrong.
This makes me think of a circumstance that occurred when we went to
Kaysville to preach the reformation, under the direction of brother
Brigham. There was a dark and dull spirit there which was not very
congenial to our natures, and brother Joseph Young felt life in him,
he was full of the Spirit. After staying a couple of days, he said to
me, "Brother Grant, they feel cold, and I guess we had better go to
Farmington, preach there, and go home." After a while I said to
him, "Do you know how I feel about it? In the name of the Lord Jesus
Christ, I will never leave this land, until this people surrender. I
will hang the flag of the Lord Jesus Christ on their doors, and there
shall be a siege of forty days. Then let every man storm the castle,
and rule against the bulwarks of hell, and let every Elder throw the
arrows of God Almighty through the sinner, and pierce their loins, and
penetrate their vitals, until the banner of Christ shall wave
triumphantly over Israel. Shall we give up, and let the wicked and
ungodly overcome us? No, in the name and by the power of God we will
overcome them. We will cleanse the inside of the platter and have
Israel saved, through the name of Jesus Christ, and by the power of
his word."
Those who will not repent by the preaching of the Gospel, we will
bring to the standard of the Lord Jesus Christ in the right and proper
way, for we are determined to save you all, if possible. In former
days the Lord cut off rebellious Israel by thousands, to save them; He
had no other way for saving them. He had tried every other means; He
had opened the sea for them to pass over dryshod, and overthrew their
enemies, the horse and his rider, in the flood; He made the mountains
skip like rams, and the little hills like lambs; He spoke to the
angels, saying, throw down your food to them, and the bright clouds
shed down manna to sustain them; He spake to them in thunders, in
lightnings, in earthquakes, and tried every means to save them, that a
God could try in the plentitude of His mercy, and when He had
exhausted the arrows of His wrath in chastisement, and the wells of
His mercy in blessings and entreaty, He cut them off by thousands.
O Israel, hear, while the voice of entreaty is in the land, hear the
voice of brother Brigham, and awake from your slumbers; forsake your
sins and abominations and turn unto your God, that repentance may
reach you, and remission of sins, and the gifts and blessings of God
come upon you. May God bless you in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
- Jedediah M. Grant