I rise to explain one principle to Elders who are in the habit of
preaching the Gospel to the world. Not but what their views coincide
with mine, not but what they fully comprehend the matter, but all have
not the power and faculty to develop what is in them; some are at a
loss to explain that which they understand.
I wish to refer more particularly to a remark made by brother Benjamin
L. Clapp, who has just been speaking to us concerning men coming to
him in Texas, and saying that things were thus and so in Utah.
What can they tell about Utah? To begin with, they do not know any
evil of this people; the sins of this people are with themselves and
their God. I defy all hell and all the devils in and about the
inhabitants of the earth to substantiate permanent acts of wickedness
against the Elders of this people.
Suppose that men came to brother Benjamin in Texas, and told him that
I was the biggest scoundrel in the world, do not this people know
better about that than they? And even Benjamin himself knows it to be
a falsehood. We know that is falsehood, and I should have taken the
liberty of telling them so.
I never preached in Texas, but I have preached in places as wicked;
and when a man told me that which was not true about this people or
about the leaders of this people, I would take the liberty of telling
him that he was not telling the truth. I preached during twenty-four
or twenty-five years among the wicked, and I never yet saw a man that
I was afraid to tell that he was saying that which was not so, when I
knew better; frequently they would turn and say to me, "You had better
tell me that I lie," and my prompt reply would be, you do, sir, and
that before God.
What fault could the world justly find with this people? Some have
passed through here to California to dig gold, but they have received
nothing at the hands of this people but kindness. What do they know
about us? They cannot charge us with one evil. Suppose there are
wicked men here, I say the kingdom of heaven is like unto a net that
gathers fish both good and bad, and I say this because it is true.
We have in our community the worst creatures that the world can
produce; the Gospel net must gather them of necessity, or the saying of
Jesus, and what he knew of the kingdom in the last day would not come
to pass. There are as bad men and women within the pales of this
Church as there are upon this earth, and the Gospel being preached to
them prepares them to become devils. As you have frequently been told,
that is the only way men can become devils; they must have the
knowledge to sin against the Holy Ghost, or yet the day of redemption
awaits them, one or the other.
Suppose I was preaching in the world, and they should allege that
some of the people in Utah swore, stole, and were wicked in many ways,
I would acknowledge it to be the case. They might then inquire, "Why
do you say that you have got the Gospel of salvation? And why do you
come to us to preach, seeing that your own people do wickedly?" I
would reply that the kingdom of heaven is like unto a net that gathers
fish of all kinds, therefore we must have the good and the bad in
Utah, or else it cannot be the kingdom of heaven.
We have some of the bad, and those who pass through our settlements,
or sojourn in our midst for a brief period, become familiar with those
who are wicked, but do not become acquainted with the righteous. The
great majority of this people are righteous, but the worldlings seek
out and mingle with the few wicked here, because both those classes
love the spirit of the world.
As to the great argument against the kingdom of God, because there are
some evildoers in the Church, I will take the principles and
doctrines taught by Jesus and his Apostles, and show that these go to
prove and substantiate the fact that this is the kingdom of God. Why?
Because we can produce the meanest curses there are on the earth,
those who take all the revelations given by the Almighty, and every
influence and revelation they can get from the devil, and make
use of them to add sin to sin. This fact is also another proof that
all hell is against this people, for there is not a person in the
world, that gives way to wickedness, but what has antipathy against
this people.
Now hearken, O ye Texans; do you say there are people here who
are wicked? So we say. Could I wish things to be otherwise? No, I
would not have them different if I could. We can produce the best men
and the worst, the best women and the worst, and thus prove, according
to the sayings of Jesus Christ and his Apostles, that this is the
kingdom of God, or at least answers to the Savior's description of
that kingdom.
Were I in Texas I would say, let me tell you that I have not embraced
any man on this earth, in my faith, but I have embraced the doctrine
of salvation, and it is no matter what the people do in Utah. Here is
the doctrine of salvation, talk against that, prove that to be false,
or find a flaw in it, if you can. As for the people, they cannot save
you. Never embrace a man in your faith, for that is sectarianism.
There are many of the men and women now before me who have looked for
a pure people, and have supposed that that was a proof of the truth of
our doctrines, but they will never find such a people until Satan is
bound, and Jesus comes to reign with his Saints. The doctrine we
preach is the doctrine of salvation, and it is that which the Elders
of this Church take to the world, and not the people of Utah.
Some of the Elders seem to be tripped up in a moment, if the wicked
can find any fault with the members of this Church; but bless your
souls, I would not yet have this people faultless, for the day of
separation has not yet arrived. I have many a time, in this stand,
dared the world to produce as mean devils as we can; we can beat them
at anything. We have the greatest and smoothest liars in the world,
the cunningest and most adroit thieves, and any other shade of
character that you can mention.
We can pick out Elders in Israel right here who can beat the world at
gambling, who can handle the cards, cut and shuffle them with the
smartest rogue on the face of God's footstool. I can produce Elders
here who can shave their smartest shavers, and take their money from
them. We can beat the world at any game.
We can beat them, because we have men here that live in the light of
the Lord, that have the Holy Priesthood, and hold the keys of the
kingdom of God. But you may go through all the sectarian world, and
you cannot find a man capable of opening the door of the kingdom of
God to admit others in. We can do that. We can pray the best, preach
the best, and sing the best. We are the best looking and finest set of
people on the face of the earth, and they may begin any game they
please, and we are on hand, and can beat them at anything they have a
mind to begin. They may make sharp their two-edged swords, and I will
turn out the Elders of Israel with greased feathers, and whip them to
death. We are not to be beat. We expect to be a stumbling block to the
whole world, and a rock of offense to them.
I never preached to the world but what the cry was, "That damned old
Joe Smith has done thus and so." I would tell the people that they did
not know him, and I did, and that I knew him to be a good man; and
that when they spoke against him, they spoke against as good a man as
ever lived.
I recollect a conversation I had with a priest who was an old
friend of ours, before I was personally acquainted with the Prophet
Joseph. I clipped every argument he advanced, until at last he came
out and began to rail against "Joe Smith," saying, "that he was a mean
man, a liar, money digger, gambler, and a whoremaster;" and he
charged him with everything bad, that he could find language to utter.
I said, hold on, brother Gillmore, here is the doctrine, here is the
Bible, the Book of Mormon, and the revelations that have come through
Joseph Smith the Prophet. I have never seen him, and do not know his
private character. The doctrine he teaches is all I know about the
matter, bring anything against that if you can. As to anything else I
do not care. If he acts like a devil, he has brought forth a doctrine
that will save us, if we will abide it. He may get drunk every day of
his life, sleep with his neighbor's wife every night, run horses and
gamble, I do not care anything about that, for I never embrace any man
in my faith. But the doctrine he has produced will save you and me,
and the whole world; and if you can find fault with that, find it. He
said, "I have done."
It is the fashion in the world to embrace men in their faith, or a
fine meetinghouse, or a genteel congregation, thinking, "O, what
perfect order, and how pretty they look; how straight they walk to
meeting, and how long their faces are during the services; how pretty
that deacon looks under the pulpit; the people are so pretty, the
meetinghouse is so nice, that we want to join such pretty people."
Such feelings will take a people to hell. Embrace a doctrine that will
purge sin and iniquity from your hearts, and sanctify you before God,
and you are right, no matter how others act.
I wish you all to understand that no Elders go to any place among the
world, but what the wicked find fault with the people of God. They
found fault with Joseph Smith, and at length killed him, as they bare
a great many others of the Latter-day Saints. What for? Because of his
wickedness? No. But the cry was, "Away with him, we cannot do with
this man nor with his people." Did they hate him for his evil works?
No. If he had been a liar, a swearer, a gambler, or in any way an
evildoer, and of the world, it would have loved its own, and they would
have embraced him, and nourished and kept him. If he had been a false
prophet they never would have lifted a hand against him, because he
could have spread still more delusion through the world around him.
We are hated, because we are righteous. If we have sinned, the people
in Texas know nothing about it; they cannot in truth find a word of
fault with the character of this people, except with the few we have
on hand ready to beat them at their meanness. The Lord wants those few
here to fulfil His words and purposes, and they are fit for no other
place. The sheep and the goats, the calves and the pigs, are all good
in their places. The Lord will make use of us to His glory; and though
a good many of those who now profess to be good Latter-day Saints may
meet condemnation, even their course will finally result to the glory
of God. Are these ideas correct? Judge ye.
Now, brethren, let me say a few words to you. Let us repent of our
backslidings and tell the people of Texas that we ask no odds of them,
nor of anyone else but our Father and our God, and those we are
associated with in His kingdom. As brother Benjamin has exhorted you,
confess your faults to the individuals that you ought to confess them
to, and proclaim them not on the housetops. Be careful that you wrong
not yourselves. Do you not know that if a good person is guilty
of committing a crime he thinks that everybody knows it, and is ready
to confess here, and there, and everywhere he has an opportunity?
I do not want to know anything about the sins of this people, at least
no more than I am obliged to. If persons lose confidence in
themselves, it takes away the strength, faith and confidence that
others have in them; it leaves a space that we call weakness. If you
have committed a sin that no other person on the earth knows of, and
which harms no other one, you have done a wrong and sinned against
your God, but keep that within your own bosom, and seek to God and
confess there, and get pardon for your sin.
If children have sinned against their parents, or husbands against
their wives, or wives against their husbands, let them confess their
faults one to another and forgive each other, and there let the
confession stop; and then let them ask pardon from their God. Confess
your sins to whoever you have sinned against, and let it stop there.
If you have committed a sin against the community, confess to them. If
you have sinned in your family, confess there. Confess your sins,
iniquities, and follies, where that confession belongs, and learn to
classify your actions.
Suppose that the people were to get up here and confess their sins, it
would destroy many innocent persons. Does Texas know about it? No, nor
you about one another, if you will be wise and confess your wrongs
where they ought to be confessed, and keep the knowledge of them from
every person it ought to be kept from. In this way you will have
strength against the enemy, who would otherwise buffet you and say,
"Here is your wickedness made manifest," and would overcome you and
destroy all the confidence you have in yourselves and in your God.
If the Lord has confidence in you, preserve it, and take a course to
produce more. If the Lord had a people on the earth that He had
perfect confidence in, there is not a blessing in the eternities of
our God, that they could bear in the flesh, that He would not pour out
upon them. Tongue cannot tell the blessings the Lord has for a people
who have proved themselves before Him.
That we may have confidence in Him, and He in us, let us take a
course to create it, that He may open the heavens and pour upon us the
blessings and power of the Holy Ghost.
Fathers, reflect for yourselves. Suppose that a father had thirty
thousand dollars to distribute among three of his boys, and that one
of them was a spendthrift who would prodigally sow his share to the
four winds, and cause his wife and children to come on his father for
support. Would that father have confidence to bestow ten thousand
dollars on his spendthrift son? No, but he would deal it out to that
son's wife and children as they might need, and the rest he would
preserve for him to another time. Our Father has to deal in that
manner with us, for He has not confidence to know that we will do the
things we ought and economize His blessings, if He should bestow them
upon us.
We are like children who want the looking-glass to play with, and who
cry for the sharp razor and for the moon they see reflected in the
water, desiring them for playthings. Let us take such a course that
God will have confidence in us, and then we shall receive all we need,
all we desire and ask for.
Take a wise course; do not be foolish. I want you to reform, for there
is need of it; though the world knows nothing about it. They
hate us for the truth's sake, and seek to destroy us; and I say to
them, go it ye cripples, while you are young; for the day is coming in
which you will find yourselves as badly crippled as ever the "Mormons"
were.
May the Lord bless you. Amen.