We have had the privilege of hearing the testimony of brother Whiting,
who has just returned from his mission, upon which he started two
years ago from San Pete.
Brothers Merrill and Clinton, and several others, have lately arrived
from their missions, and I will here give an invitation to those
brethren to come to the stand, Sabbath after Sabbath, and bear their
testimony and speak to the people. I wish to say to the Elders who
arrive, come, we would be happy to see you with us; come, we will find
seats for you; and if you are not all eloquent preachers, come and
bear your testimony. Brother Whiting says that he is a man of but few
words. I am satisfied that there is greater wisdom with many who say
but little, than there is with those who talk so much; as for the
multitude of words, they are but of little consequence, the ideas are
of far the greatest importance.
The kingdom of our God, that is set up on the earth, does not require
men of many words and flaming oratorical talents, to establish truth
and righteousness. It is not the many words that accomplish the
designs of our Father in heaven, with Him it is the acts of the people
more than their words; this I was convinced of, before I embraced the
Gospel. Had it not been that I clearly saw and understood that the
Lord Almighty would take the weak things of this world to confound
the mighty, the wise, and the talented, there was nothing that
could have induced me, or persuaded me to have ever become a public
speaker. I did think, and I now think, that I am personally as well
acquainted with my own weaknesses as any other mortal is with them,
for this is my fortune, my good fortune and blessing, and I am ready
to acknowledge that it is more than many have got. I am of the opinion
that I know and understand myself, about as well as any person can
know and understand me; yet I may think that I know my weaknesses and
incapabilities to the fullest, while others may see weaknesses that I
do not. Still I am so constituted that when I discover my weaknesses I
bear them off as well as I can; and I say to all people, if you
discover that I falter, when I do the best I can, what are you going
to do about it?
When I first commenced preaching, I made up my mind to declare the
things that I understood, fearless of friends and threats, and
regardless of caresses. They were nothing to me, for if it was my duty
to rise before a congregation of strangers and say that the Lord
lives, that He has revealed Himself in this our day, that He has given
to us a Prophet, and brought forth the new and everlasting covenant
for the restoration of Israel, and if that was all I could say, I must
be just as satisfied as though I could get up and talk for hours. If I
could only say that I was a monument of the Lord's work upon the
earth, that was sufficient; and had it not been for this feeling,
nothing could have induced me to have become a public speaker.
With regard to preaching, let a man present himself before the Saints,
or go into the world before the nobles and great men of the earth, and
let him stand up full of the Holy Ghost, full of the power of God, and
though he may use words and sentences in an awkward style, he will
convince and convert more, of the truth, than can the most polished
orator destitute of the Holy Ghost; for that Spirit will prepare the
minds of the people to receive the truth, and the spirit of the
speaker will influence the hearers so that they will feel it.
These reflections are my true sentiments, and it is knowledge with me
with regard to speakers and people who have honest hearts, who desire
the knowledge of the Lord, who are seeking to know the will of God,
and willing to become subject to it. The Spirit of truth will do more
to bring persons to light and knowledge, than flowery words. This is
my experience, and I presume it is the experience of many of you, and
that you can call that to mind when you first received the Spirit of
this Gospel.
When you see a person at a distance, you can, at times, see the spirit
of that person before you have the opportunity of speaking to him; you
can discern his spirit by the appearance of his countenance. This has
been my experience from my younger days, and more especially since I
have become acquainted with sacred things. My later experience has
been very vivid with regard to the spirits of people, and it matters
not to me whether they say much or little, so they but let me hear
their voices and see them, let me hear and see the manifestation of
their spirit, that I may know whether they are constantly with us in
their feelings. I wish to know the spirits of those that are around
and with us.
Brethren, you who have returned and are this season returning from
missions, we shall be happy to have you take your seats with us on
this stand, and when opportunity offers we shall be glad to hear your
voices and testimonies.
When I rise before you, brethren and sisters, I often speak of the
faults of the people and try to correct them; I strive to put
the Saints in a right course and plead with them to live their
religion, to become better and to purify themselves before the Lord;
to sanctify themselves, to be prepared for the days that are fast
approaching. I do this oftener than I speak of the good qualities of
this people, and I have reasons for this which, perhaps you would like
to hear.
The froward and disobedient need chastisement, the humble and faithful
are sealed by the Spirit of the Gospel that we have received. I have
not time nor opportunity to caress the people, nor flatter them to do
right; nor often to speak well of them, portraying their good
qualities.
The consolations of the Holy Spirit of our Gospel comfort the hearts
of men and women, old and young, in every condition of this mortal
life. The humble, the meek, and faithful are all the time consoled and
comforted by the Spirit of the Gospel that we preach; consequently,
their comfort, happiness, joy, and peace must be received from the
fountainhead. As Jesus says, "In the world ye shall have tribulation,
but in me ye have peace," so we say to ourselves, so we say to the
Saints; in the Lord ye have joy and comfort, and the light of truth
which shines upon your path.
The Holy Ghost reveals unto you things past, present, and to come; it
makes your minds quick and vivid to understand the handiwork of the
Lord. Your joy is made full in beholding the footsteps of our Father
going forth among the inhabitants of the earth; this is invisible to
the world, but it is made visible to the Saints, and they behold the
Lord in His providences, bringing forth the work of the last days.
The hearts of the meek and humble are full of joy and comfort
continually; do such need comfort from me? Yes, if any mourn, perhaps
a few encouraging words from me would give them consolation and do
them good. I am always ready to impart what I have to this people,
that which will cheer and comfort their hearts, and if the Lord will
lead me by His Spirit into that train of reflections and teaching, I
am more willing and ready to speak comforting words to this people,
than I am to chastise them.
But I hope and trust in the Lord my God that I shall never be left to
praise this people, to speak well of them, for the purpose of cheering
and comforting them by the art of flattery; to lead them on by smooth
speeches day after day, week after week, month after month, and year
after year, and let them roll sin as a sweet morsel under their
tongues, and be guilty of transgressing the law of God. I hope I shall
never be left to flatter this people, or any people on the earth, in
their iniquity, but far rather chasten them for their wickedness and
praise them for their goodness.
The Lord praises you and comforts you, if you live as you are
directed; if you live with your life hid with Christ in God, you do
receive, from the fountainhead, life, joy, peace, truth, and every
good and wholesome principle that the Lord bestows upon this people,
and your hearts exult in it, and your joy is made full.
This people are the best people upon the face of the earth, that we
have any knowledge of. Take the congregation now before me, and what
portion of them has been in the Church twenty-six years? What portion
has been in the Church fifteen years? But a small part.
How many of those before me were personally acquainted with Joseph,
our Prophet? I can see now and then one; you can pick up one here and
another there; but the most of the people now inhabiting this Ter ritory never behold the face of our Prophet; even quite a portion
of this congregation never beheld his face. All this I consider.
But few of this congregation have been assembled together more than a
very few years, to receive and be benefited with the teachings from
the fountainhead, directly from the living oracles.
How long have they been gathered? Some one year, some two years, and
some five or six years; and I can only pick out a few in this
congregation, who were acquainted with the Prophet.
I could pick out a few of this assembly who have been here seven and
eight years.
You who understand the process of preparing mortar, know that it ought
to lay a certain time before it is in the best condition for use. Now,
suppose that our workmen should work over a portion and prepare it for
use, and when it is rightly tempered, suppose someone should throw
into the mixture a large quantity of unslacked lime, this would at
once destroy its cementing quality, and you would have to work it all
over and over again.
This is precisely like what we have to do with this people; when a new
batch is mixed with the lime and sand which were prepared ten days
ago, before it is fit for use it has to be worked all over with the
ingredients and proportions that were used to make the first.
Some think this rather hard, but they have to be worked over, because
they are in the batch. Again, they are in the mill, and like the
potter's clay which brother Kimball uses for a figure, they have got to
be ground over and worked on the table, until they are made perfectly
pliable and in readiness to be put on the wheel, to be turned into
vessels of honor.
Now, suppose, when it is in this good state, that somebody should
throw in a batch of unworked clay, it would spoil the lot, and the
potter would have to work it all over; the clay that was prepared has
to be worked over with the unprepared.
This principle makes many feet sore, and some are starting for the
States, and some for California, because they will not be worked over
so much, and we cannot set a guard over the mill to keep the new clay
from being thrown in.
You may say that that is my business; no, it is my business to throw
in the new clay, and work it over and over, and to use the wire to
draw from the lump any material that would obstruct the potter from
preparing a vessel unto honor.
I do not wish you to think that I chastise good men and good women;
chastisements do not belong to them, but we have some unruly people
here, those who know the law of God, but will not abide it. They have
to be talked to; and we have to keep talking to them, and talking to
them, until by and by they will forsake their evils, and turn round
and become good people, or take up their line of march and leave us.
I have reflected much upon the true character of mankind, pertaining
to the Gospel of salvation, and more particularly in reference to the
character of that portion of mankind that is here in the capacity in
which we now are. How hard it is for people to see and understand
things as they are. I allude, in my remarks, to this people who do
reflect, and who profess to believe in a Supreme Being, the Creator of
the heavens and the earth, who have professed, by their acts, that God
has spoken in the last days, that unto us He has revealed His will;
that He has given unto us the oracles of divine truth, the Gospel of
life and salvation, with the privilege of making sure unto ourselves
eternal life; this is the people I am now preaching to, and
unto whom I wish to address my few remarks.
How slow many of us are to believe the things of God, O how slow. How
many men and women can I find here who place implicit confidence in
their God? Perhaps you might wish an explanation with regard to the
term I here make use of. I will acknowledge my inability to explain to
the fullest extent, what I regard as implicit confidence in our God;
the reason of this is the ten thousand opinions that people have.
If I were to urge that we ought to have implicit confidence in the
power and willingness of our God to sustain us by doing everything for
us, that would cut the thread of my own faith, it would run counter to
many of my ideas in regard to the dealings of the Almighty with the
human family. On the other hand, how much confidence shall I have in
God? One says, "I have no confidence in Him, any further than what I
can see, hear, and understand. I have no confidence that wheat will
grow here, unless I put it into the ground; or that I will have food
to eat, unless I take the proper steps for raising it, or purchase it
from those that have it." Both of these points are true in part, but
the minds of the people are more or less beclouded.
To explain how much confidence we should have in God, were I using a
term to suit myself, I should say implicit confidence. I have faith in
my God, and that faith corresponds with the works I produce. I have no
confidence in faith without works. Shall I explain this? I do not
think I can fully present the idea to your understanding, but I will a
portion of it; and to do so, I will refer to a circumstance that
transpired in Nauvoo. A President of the Elders' Quorum, old father
Baker, was called upon to visit a very sick woman, a sister in the
Church; they sent for him to lay hands upon her. It was a very sickly
time, and there was scarcely a person to attend upon the sick, for
nearly all were afflicted. Father Baker was one of those tenacious,
ignorant, self-willed, overrighteous Elders, and when he went into
the house he enquired what the woman wanted. She told him that she
wished him to lay hands upon her. Father Baker saw a teapot on the
coals, and supposed that there was tea in it, and immediately turned
upon his heels, saying, "God don't want me to lay hands on those who
do not keep the Word of Wisdom," and he went out. He did not know
whether the pot contained catnip, pennyroyal, or some other mild herb,
and he did not wait for anyone to tell him. That class of people are
ignorant and overrighteous, and they are not in the true line by any
means.
You may go to some people here, and ask what ails them, and they
answer, "I don't know, but we feel a dreadful distress in the stomach
and in the back; we feel all out of order, and we wish you to lay
hands upon us." "Have you used any remedies?" "No. We wish
the Elders
to lay hands upon us, and we have faith that we shall be healed." That
is very inconsistent according to my faith. If we are sick, and ask
the Lord to heal us, and to do all for us that is necessary to be
done, according to my understanding of the Gospel of salvation, I
might as well ask the Lord to cause my wheat and corn to grow, without
my plowing the ground and casting in the seed. It appears consistent
to me to apply every remedy that comes within the range of my
knowledge, and to ask my Father in heaven, in the name of Jesus
Christ, to sanctify that application to the healing of my body; to
another this may appear inconsistent.
If a person afflicted with a cancer should come to me and ask me to
heal him, I would rather go the graveyard and try to raise a
dead person, comparatively speaking. But supposing we were traveling
in the mountains and all we had or could get, in the shape of
nourishment, was a little venison, and one or two were taken sick,
without anything in the world in the shape of healing medicine within
our reach, what should we do? According to my faith, ask the Lord
Almighty to send an angel to heal the sick. This is our privilege,
when so situated that we cannot get anything to help ourselves. Then
the Lord and his servants can do all. But it is my duty to do, when I
have it in my power. Many people are unwilling to do one thing for
themselves, in case of sickness, but ask God to do it all.
A portion of our community have so much confidence in God, even men
and women in this city, that if you put in their possession five
bushels of wheat, they will dispose of it and trust in God for their
food for a year to come. To me this is inconsistent; I know nothing
about the consistency of such a confidence in God. But to me it is
consistent for the poor man, or woman, that has been gleaning wheat,
and has saved five or ten bushels, to lay it up for a time of need;
though I understand that some of them are trying to sell it. Poor men
and women who have had to beg for the last six months, and who have
had nothing but what they obtained through charity, but who have now
obtained a few bushels of wheat, are ready to sell it for something of
no intrinsic worth, trusting in God to provide for them. This is
inconsistent to me.
How shall I present consistent faith and religion, so that you may
comprehend the subject? I will do my best, and leave the event with
God. I believe, according to my understanding of the principles of
eternal truth, that I should have implicit faith in our God; and when
we are where we have no help for ourselves in the case of diseases,
that we have the right to ask the Father, in the name of Jesus, to
administer by His power and heal the sick, and I am sure it will be
done to those who have implicit confidence in Him.
Again, in regard to food, implicit faith and confidence in God is for
you and I to do everything we can to sustain and preserve ourselves;
and the community that works together, heart and hand, to accomplish
this, their efforts will be like the efforts of one man. The past year
was a hard one for us with regard to provisions, but I never had one
faltering feeling in reference to this community's suffering, provided
all had understood their religion and lived it. Some few understand
their religion and live it; others make a profession, without
understanding their religion, and do not live it; consequently there
has been a lack of union of effort to sustain ourselves, which has
made it very hard for the few.
Suppose that we had done our best and had not raised one bushel of
grain this year, I have confidence enough in my God to believe that we
could stay here, and not starve to death. If all our cattle had died
through the severity of the past winter, if the insects had cut off
all our crops, if we still proved faithful to our God and to our
religion, I have confidence to believe that the Lord would send manna
and flocks of quails to us. But He will not do this, if we murmur and
are neglectful and disunited.
Not having breadstuff nor manna, if we are cut off from those
resources, from our provisions, the Lord can fill these mountains and
valleys with antelope, mountain sheep, elk, deer, and other animals;
He can cause the buffalo to take a stampede on the east side of the
Rocky mountains, and fill these mountains and valleys with beef;
I have just that confidence in my God. I have confidence enough to
believe that if we had not raised our own provisions this year, and
had proved true and faithful to our God and to our religion, that the
Lord would have given us a little bread, even though he should have to
put it in the minds of the people in the States to go to California
and Oregon, and to load their wagons with sugar, flour, and everything
needed, more than they could consume, and cause them to leave their
superabundance here, as some did a great quantity of clothing, dried
fruit, tools, and various other useful articles, in 1849, the first
season that large emigrating companies passed through this valley to
California. I could then buy a vest for twenty-five cents, that would
now sell here for two or three dollars; and coats could be bought for
a dollar each, such as are now selling for fifteen dollars.
This is my confidence in my God. I am no more concerned about this
people's suffering unto death, than I am concerned about the sun's
falling out of its orbit and ceasing to shine on this earth again. I
know that we should have that confidence in God; this has been my
experience, I have been led into this confidence by the miraculous
providences of God. My implicit confidence in God causes me to husband
every iota of property He gives me; I will take the best care of my
farm, I will prepare my ground as well as I can, and put in the best
seed I have got, and trust in God for the result, for it is the Lord
that gives the increase.
I will illustrate by relating a circumstance which occurred this
summer. A certain brother sowed a field with wheat, and he has been
afraid, and afraid, all the summer, about the water, saying, "When
shall we get the water? We shall quit farming, for I am tired of it."
I said to him, it is God that gives the increase, and it is for us to
do the best we can; and if there is no water for the grain, He is
close by, and is careful to give the increase, when it is necessary.
This brother had sowed five or six acres; and the straw was so short,
that a portion of the crop had to be pulled, and when thrashed, he had
over one hundred and seventy bushels of wheat.
The Lord wishes to show this people that He is close by, that He walks
in our midst daily and we know but little about him; yet He intends
to train us until we find out. This year, I think, gives us a positive
manifestation of the hand of our God in giving the increase. I do not
know that any person can cavil upon that question any more, and say
that it is all in accordance with natural philosophy, as the world
term it.
Natural philosophy, as you and I understand it, would not have
produced one bushel of grain, where we now have ten. I would like the
philosopher to make it appear how the trees have grown so luxuriantly
this year, with so little water. Have you ever before seen the weeds
flourish so finely on these dry hills? Look at your grain; though much
of it is so low that you have to pull it, can you tell what it is that
has caused the kernels to be so numerous and plump? Let the natural
philosopher tell the reason, if he can; he cannot do it.
After all that has been said and done, after He has led this people so
long, do you not perceive that there is a lack of confidence in our
God? Can you perceive it in yourselves? You may ask, "Brother Brigham,
do you perceive it in yourself?" I do, I can see that I yet lack
confidence, to some extent, in Him whom I trust. Why? Because I have
not the power, in consequence of that which the fall has brought upon
me. I have just told you that I have no lack of confidence in
the Lord's sustaining this people; I never had one shadow of doubt on
that point.
But through the power of fallen nature, something rises up within me,
at times, that measurably draws a dividing line between my interest
and the interest of my Father in heaven—something that makes my
interest and the interest of my Father in heaven not precisely one.
I know that we should feel and understand, as far as possible, as far
as fallen nature will let us, as far as we can get faith and knowledge
to understand ourselves, that the interest of that God whom we serve
is our interest, and that we have no other, neither in time nor in
eternity.
If I have an interest in any object, but should not live to enjoy that
object, you can perceive that it is cut off from me, and that my
interest and my hopes are gone, so far as worldly things are
concerned. If anyone has an interest in an object that is changeable,
in anything of an earthly nature, and is separated from it, it can be
of but little use to him, and should cease to be an object of great
care or desire. Any object or interest that we have, aside from our
Father in heaven, will be taken from us, and though we may seem to
enjoy it here, in eternity we shall be deprived of it.
Consequently, I say that we have no true interest, only conjointly
with our Father in heaven. We are His children, His sons and
daughters, and this should not be a mystery to this people, even
though there are many who have been gathered with us but a short time.
He is the God and Father of our spirits; He devised the plan that
produced our tabernacles, the houses for our spirits to dwell in.
My interests are with His, yours are there, and if you, seemingly,
have any interest anywhere else, it will be severed from you, and you
will never enjoy it. Still there is a feeling which has come by the
fall, by transgression, in the heart of every person, that his
interest is individually to himself; and that if he serves God, or
does anything for Him, it is for some being for whom he has no
particular concern. This is a mistaken idea; for everything you do,
every act you perform, every duty incumbent upon you, is solely for
your interest in God, and nowhere else, neither can it be.
When you promote His interest, you promote your own; and when you
promote your own interest, you promote His. When you gain a title of
glory, or any good thing, you gain this to your Father in heaven as
well as to yourself. And every object you are in pursuit of, should be
that which will pertain to eternity, and let time take care of itself,
only be sure to do the duties pertaining to it.
If we can see and realize that our interests are hid in God, and that
we can have no interest anywhere else, perhaps we can learn obedience
faster than we now do. Many think, "Well, I am an independent
character; I do not like to be counseled, governed, or controlled; I
wish to do as I please." That feeling, in a degree, is in every
person.
There is an impulse in man that separates his interest from the
interest of his God, and the interest of our Father in heaven from
ours.
This must be learned so that you can discern it in yourselves, so that
you can apply all your efforts, every act of your lives, to the
interest that pertains to your eternal exaltation.
If in this world we had every object that we could desire, of an
earthly nature, do you not understand that death would separate us
from it? You can understand that naturally. A man possessing thrones,
kingdoms, and power, leaves them when he is laid in the grave. Now suppose that you let the common mode of reflection and
practice reach into eternal things, upon the same principle you would
have a selfish interest in eternity; you would there be to yourself,
by yourself, and for yourself, regardless of every other creature. But
the truth is, you are not going to have a separate kingdom; I am not
going to have a separate kingdom; it is not our prerogative to have it
on this earth.
If you have a kingdom and a dominion here, it must be concentrated in
the head; if we are ever prepared for an eternal exaltation, we must
be concentrated in the head of the eternal Godhead. Why? Because
everything else is opposed to that kingdom, and the heir of that
kingdom will keep up the warfare with that opposing power until death
is destroyed, and him that hath the power of it; not annihilated, but
sent back to native element. He will never cease to contend with the
opposite power, with that power that contends against the heir of this
earth; consequently, if we fancy that we have an independent interest
here and in the world to come, we shall fail in getting any of it.
Your interest must be concentrated in the head on the earth, and all
of our interest must center in the Godhead in eternity, and there is
no durable interest in any other channel.
I desire the people to consider whether they have any faltering in
their feelings, any misgivings, or lack of confidence in their God. If
they have, they should seek, with all the spirit and power they are in
possession of, until they can understand the principle of eternity and
eternal exaltation, and then apply the actions of their lives to these
principles, that they may be prepared to enjoy that which their hearts
now anticipate and desire. If we will learn these things correctly and
advance, and advance, and conti nue to advance, though the new clay may
be continually thrown into the mill, we will bring it to the same
pliability as the old, much sooner than if it was ground alone; for
the old clay soon mixes with the new and makes the whole lump passive.
If we apply our hearts to these things, we shall soon learn to have
our interests one here on the earth.
The principles of eternity and eternal exaltation are of no use to us,
unless they are brought down to our capacities so that we practice
them in our lives. We must learn the principles of government, must
learn ourselves, the eternal government of our God, the interest that
the Father has here on the earth and the interest that we have; then
we will place our interest with the interest of our Father and God,
and will have no self-interest, no interest only in His kingdom that
is set up on the earth; then we will begin and apply these principles
in our lives.
How shall we apply them? We must learn that we have not one farthing's
worth of anything in heaven, earth, or hell, not even our own being.
We have been brought forth on this earth, organized for the purpose of
giving us an opportunity of proving ourselves worthy to possess
something by and by.
We make farms, build fine houses, get possessions around us, and these
we call ours, when not a dime's worth of them is either yours or mine.
This is what we must learn.
I have much property in my possession, and we use the terms, "my farm,
my house, my cattle, my horses, my carriage," &c., but the fact is we
do not truly own anything; we never did and never will, until many
long ages after this. We seemingly have property; we have gold and
silver in our possession, and houses and lands, and goods, &c. These
things we are accustomed to call ours, but that is for the want
of understanding.
Every man and woman has got to feel that not one farthing of anything
in their possession is rightfully theirs, in the strict sense of
ownership. When we learn this lesson, where will be my interest and my
effort? I do not own anything—it is my Father's. How came I by my
possessions? His providence has thrown them into my care; He has
appointed me a steward over them, and I am His servant, His steward,
His hired man, one with whom He has placed certain property in charge
for the time being, that is, pertaining to the things of this world.
Says one, "It was preached thirty years ago, that nothing belongs to
us, and, if I have a thousand dollars, to at once give it all to the
poor." That is your enthusiasm and ignorance. Were you to make an
equal distribution of property today, one year would not pass before
there would be as great an inequality as now.
How could you ever get a people equal with regard to their
possessions? They never can be, no more than they can be in the
appearance of their faces.
Are we equal? Yes. Wherein? We are equal in the interest of eternal
things, in our God, not aside from Him.
We behold Church property, and not one farthing of it is yours or
mine. Of the possessions that are called mine, my individual property,
not a dollar's worth is mine; and of all that you seem to possess, not
a dollar's worth is yours.
Did you ever organize a tree, gold, silver, or any other kind of
metal, or any other natural production? No, you have not yet attained
to that power, and it will be ages before you do. Who owns all the
elements with which we are commanded and permitted to operate? The
Lord, and we are stewards over them. It is not for me to take the
Lord's property placed under my charge and wantonly distribute it; I
must do with it as He tells me. In my stewardship I am not to be
guided by the mere whims of human folly, by those who are more
ignorant than I am, not by the lesser power, but by the superior and
wiser.
Those who are in favor of an equality in property say that that is the
doctrine taught in the New Testament. True, the Savior said to the
young man, "Go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou
shalt have treasure in heaven: and come and follow me," in order to
try him and prove whether he had faith or not.
In the days of the Apostles, the brethren sold their possessions and
laid them at the Apostles' feet. And where did many of those brethren
go to? To naught, to confusion and destruction. Could those Apostles
keep the Church together, on those principles? No. Could they build up
the kingdom on those principles? No, they never could. Many of those
persons were good men, but they were filled with enthusiasm, insomuch
that if they owned a little possession they would place it at the feet
of the Apostles.
Will such a course sustain the kingdom? No. Did it, in the days of the
Apostles? No. Such a policy would be the ruin of this people, and
scatter them to the four winds. We are to be guided by superior
knowledge, by a higher influence and power.
The superior is not to be directed by the inferior, consequently you
need not ask me to throw that which the Lord has put into my hands to
the four winds. If, by industrious habits and honorable dealings, you
obtain thousands or millions, little or much, it is your duty to use
all that is put in your possession, as judiciously as you have
knowledge, to build up the kingdom of God on the earth. Let this
people equalize their means, and it would be one of the greatest
injuries that could be done to them. During the past season, those who
lived their religion acted upon the principles thereof by extending
the hand of charity and benevolence to the poor, freely distributing
their flour and other provisions, yet I am fearful that that mode was
an injury instead of a real good, although it was designed for good.
Many poor people who receive flour of the brethren, if they have a
bushel of wheat will sell it in the stores for that which will do them
no good. My object is to accomplish the greatest good to this people.
If I can by my wisdom and the wisdom of my brethren, by the wisdom
that the Lord gives unto us, get this people into a situation in which
they can actually sustain themselves and help their neighbors, it will
be one of the greatest temporal blessings that can be conferred upon
them. If you wish to place persons in a backsliding condition, make
them idle and dilatory in temporal things, even though they may be
good Saints in other respects. If the whole of this people can be put
in a situation to take care of themselves, individually, and
collectively, it will save a great many from apostatizing, and be
productive of much good. I have got to wait for the Lord to dictate
from day to day, and from time to time, as to what particular course
to pursue for the accomplishment of so desirable a result.
Suppose that we should say that we intend to sell flour at ten dollars
per hundred, would that make the people take care of themselves and
their grain? It is not so very material what flour costs, nor whether
the brethren sell it for three or ten cents a pound, as it is whether
each will strive to secure and economise his own provisions. If you
establish the selling price of flour at one dollar a hundred, or even
at thirty cents, here are some who will sell all they have before
night, and then beg their living of their neighbors. What course shall
we pursue to produce the greatest good? We have the Gospel and the
ordinances of salvation, and if we can get the people to do that which
will produce the greatest good, then we shall further promote the
interests of the kingdom of God on the earth.
I do not like to have the Saints, those who profess to be Saints, get
such extravagant confidence in our God that they will not do one thing
to provide for the body, but omit securing provision enough to sustain
themselves, and say, "O, I shall have as long as there is any means,
or wheat, or flour; I know that brother Brigham will not see me
suffer. Mr. Storekeeper, take the little I have and give me some
ribbons for it, or a nice dress, for I want the best I can get, and I
know that brother Brigham will not let me suffer." Will this course
produce good to the people, or are they ignorant that they do not know
what course to pursue?
The grand difficulty with this community is simply this, their
interest is not one. When you will have your interests concentrated
in one, then you will work jointly, and we shall not have to scold and
find fault, as much as we are now required to. Somebody ought to be
reproved here today, for some of our farmers are bringing in wheat
and selling it to the stores for a dollar and a half a bushel. Would
they sell it that low to the poor? No, they would not, if the poor had
money to pay for it. If this is the best way, the most conducive of
the greatest good to this community, all right, but I cannot
see any good resulting from it.
I can see no good accruing to this community in maintaining a divided
interest; our interest must be one throughout, in order to produce the
good we desire. Many are distrustful in the providences of God; they
profess faith enough to have the Lord extract a cancer from their
flesh, or drive a fever from them, though they would not do a single
thing for themselves; yet if they have a few bushels of grain, or five
dollars, and you touch that, you touch the apple of their eye. You
will run counter to the feelings of "here is my individual family, my
individual substance, my individual habitation, and my individual
property that I have gathered together; it is all my own, it is not
yours."
I know that there is great liberality among this people, and on the
other hand there is much liberality like this, though I do not know
that I can fully explain it to you, but I will try. A few years ago we
wished to drive all the cattle not needed here, so as to leave the
feed for our milk cows, and there was not a man who was not heart and
hand for the policy. When the time came to gather up the cattle, every
man said to his neighbor, "This is one of the best possible plans for
our stock, now you drive off your cattle," so each man said to his
neighbor, and thought to himself "mine will have a better chance." And
in the matter of fencing, each one says to his neighbor, "You put up a
good fence round your garden and herd your cattle," at the same time
intending to let his own run at large. These few instances explain the
feelings and conduct of some, and in what manner they are liberal.
I again say that I do not wish any to take chastisement but those who
need it, though most of the people are generally so righteous and
liberal that they give over every part of it to their neighbors; they
consider that none of it belongs to them. Some are so liberal that
they will pick up my cattle on the range and butcher them, saying,
"There is nothing here belonging to brother Brigham, nor to anybody
else, it is the Lord's, and I will have a little beef."
I wish the people to understand that they have no interest apart from
the Lord our God. The moment you have a divided interest, that moment
you sever yourselves from eternal principles.
It is reported that many are going away; I say, gentlemen and ladies,
you who wish to go to California, or to the States, go and welcome; I
had rather you would go than stay. I wish every one to go who prefers
doing so, and if they will go like gentlemen, they go with my best
feelings; but if they go like rascals and knaves, they cannot have
them. I have never requested but two things of those who leave,
namely, to pay their debts and not steal; that is all that I have
required of them. Go about your business, for I would rather you would
go than stay.
The moment a person decides to leave this people, he is cut off from
every object that is durable for time and eternity, and I have told
you the reason why. Everything that is opposed to God and His Son
Jesus Christ, to the celestial kingdom and to celestial laws, those
celestial laws and beings will hold warfare with, until every particle
of the opposite is turned back to its native element, though it should
take millions and millions of ages to accomplish it. Christ will never
cease the warfare, until he destroys death and him that hath the power
of it. Every possession and object of affection will be taken from
those who forsake the truth, and their identity and existence will eventually cease. "That is strange doctrine." No matter, they
have not an object which they can place their hands or affections
upon, but what will vanish and pass away. That is the course and will
be the tendency of every man and woman, when they decide to leave this
kingdom.
They are welcome to go, and to stay where they go; I heartily wish
that a great many would go, such as I can point out. Like old Lorenzo
Dow, when he was trying to detect the person who had stolen an axe; he
said that he could throw the stone which he had carried into the
pulpit and hit the man that stole the axe; he handled the stone as
though he would throw it, and the guilty person dodged, when he said,
that is the man. So I could throw and hit a great many that I wish to
go.
I say again, you that wish to go, go in peace, and we like to have you
go; and those that wish to come here we like to have them come and be
Saints, and if they would, they would stay; but if not, I like to have
them leave, no matter whether they belong to the Church or not.
My soul feels hallelujah, it exults in God, that He has planted this
people in a place that is not desired by the wicked; for if the wicked
come here they do not wish to stay, no matter how well they are
treated, and I thank the Lord for it; and I want hard times, so that
every person that does not wish to stay, for the sake of his religion,
will leave. This is a good place to make Saints, and it is a good
place for Saints to live; it is the place the Lord has appointed, and
we shall stay here until He tells us to go somewhere else.
All I ask of the Saints is to live their religion, serve their God,
and recollect that their interest should be in Him and nowhere else;
that the inferior must be controlled by the superior, and our efforts
and affections all be concentrated in one, namely, in building up the
kingdom of God to the destruction of wickedness; and may God help us
to do it, I ask in the name of Jesus Christ: Amen.