I feel as though I would like to express a few of the sentiments and
feelings that are passing in my mind. We have had much preaching,
exhortation, correction, and reproof, and some might say a great deal
of chastisement; though I call chastisement neither more nor less than
reproof or correction. When we are corrected by our leaders, it is to
set us right, to show us the wrong course, and induce us to pursue the
right one. If I do wrong, if I get astray, it is perfectly right that
someone should correct me; and when I am corrected, it is not right
for me to justify myself; for, if I do, I sustain the course of an
incorrect purpose. When I am corrected, it is my duty to listen, to
reform, and walk in the straight and narrow way. If we will not learn
by precept nor by example, we have to learn by the things we suffer.
Is it not better for people to learn by correction than by bitter
experience? The old saying is, that "Experience is a hard master."
There are some who are not so much benefited by preaching as they
might be, because they do not remember and apply what they hear. It
has a pleasing effect upon the ear, like a tune well played upon a
musical instrument, but makes so little of an impression, that it
cannot be repeated by the hearer. The word does not enter the ear and
proceed to the heart, which is the place of deposit. There the word of
God should be deposited, which would be at the seat of government in
the human form. We each have a seat of government within us, because
we are incorporated bodies. Every man that comes into this world is an
independent being, upon the same principle that our Father and our God
is independent, only He is independent to a greater degree, being
further advanced in perfection. He came here, and helped to organize
this earth; and having had an experience in organizing earths before
He came here, He was capable, and had every principle necessary to
create this earth and fill it with inhabitants. If there had not been a
seat of government in Him, and all those powers and faculties
necessary to propagate the human species, He never could have done
that work. We are His sons and daughters.
Now, what course is it for us to take as a people? It is for us to
unitedly go to work and live our religion, practice it in our lives;
and the more you live it and practice it the better you will be, and
it will beget a love of truth and righteousness in you that you never
can get rid of in time nor in eternity. Then our posterity will also
partake of that holy principle which is in us, wherefore they will
naturally love the truth from their infancy. A great many people do
not think that our characters and course of life are going to affect
our posterity, but they will. The seed from a good ripe
cucumber will produce good fruit, like that which produced the seed.
Has the woman an interest in this, as well as the man? She has. The
tree that bears the fruit affects that fruit for better or worse. The
Savior says that a good tree will produce good fruit, and a corrupt
tree cannot produce good fruit, but it will produce corrupt fruit.
Upon the same principle, how can a woman produce a good posterity when
she is corrupt? She cannot.
If we will do right, will do just as we have been told in all things,
we will dwell in peace and quietness from this time henceforth and
forever, and I know it.
For sometime past, the weather has been warm, and the ground parched
by heat, and now the Lord has again given us rain. What a beautiful
shower we had last night! Do I not feel thankful? Yes, as much so as
for anything of this nature I ever received. Did it bless me? Yes. It
also blessed everyone of you, whether you have any grain, fruit, and
vegetables growing, or not. Why? Because if you have not, you have to
live upon the products of the fields and gardens of some of your
neighbors. It affects everyone of you as much as it does me; you are
blessed as much as I am; I can only eat what one man can eat. I cannot
partake of these benefits to any greater amount than you can, and all
that I expect while I dwell in the flesh is what I want to eat,
clothes that are comfortable to wear, houses to live in, and what I
want to drink; I cannot drink all City Creek myself; I can only just
partake of enough of those blessings to sustain myself.
My feelings are that we are blessed above all the people that ever did
live, that we read of. We are blessed above the people of Enoch; and
far beyond the people in the days of Jesus, for they were driven,
scattered, and peeled throughout the world, and they have never yet
been able to gather again. But we are gathered, and we never will be
scattered again—no never, while the earth stands, if you will do as
you are told. Will we go to Jackson County? Yes, we will go there,
just as we will to the city of Fillmore, independently. We will go and
come at our pleasure, and no one to molest us; and we will build up
that city, and that, too, upon natural principles, just as we go and
build up Farmington, in Davis County, or this city, or any place we
occupy.
How will it be with our enemies? The Lord deals with them and leads
them, just as much as He does you and me. Can He hold them as with a
bit, the same as you can a horse? Yes, and He can put it into the
hearts of that people to send up a petition here for the Mormons to
buy that whole land, and we will be under no necessity of shedding
blood. God does not want to shed blood without it is necessary, any
more than He wants us to go and slaughter a beast when we have no need
of it. But when we have need of meat, and are driven to it by
necessity, then it is all right. If it is necessary that we should
shed blood, then it is right. All things are right that are done
according to the will and pleasure of God.
My feelings are to exhort you, to pray you, be ye reconciled to God
and to His servants; and if you will be reconciled to His servants you
will be to God, and you cannot without. How can you be reconciled to a
Being you never saw, and not to a being you do see? If you cannot love
those you see and associate with everyday, how can you love a Being
you never did see? It is impossible. And one of the greatest sins you
commit is to sin against those you do know—those whom God has sent and
authorized—for it is His authority which you rebel against;
and, in sinning against it, you sin against God the Father who sent
them. Upon the same principle, when we send brother Bernhisel to
Washington, should they take him and misuse him, they show despite to
the authority that sent him. You send a minister to Europe, and should
they cast him out and whip him they show despite to the authority that
sent him—to the whole United States, in case they had sent him.
Our Father and our God has sent Brigham and his brethren. If you rebel
against them, you rebel against the authority that sent them. You sin
not only against the authority or servants he has sent, but you sin
against God who authorized them. If brother Brigham sends brother
Wells to me as a delegate, to authorize me to do a thing, and I
refuse, I sin against brother Brigham and against the one that sent
him. Now, brethren, what are we told to do? Read a revelation that
Joseph received of the Lord to Thomas B. Marsh concerning the Twelve;
He told them to go forth and preach the Gospel to every nation,
kindred, tongue, and people, or cause it to be done; and after your
testimony cometh the testimony of earthquakes, of famine, of fire, and
of desolation; it shall come upon the world, and it shall begin at my
house, saith the Lord, that is, with that portion who rebel against
Him in the midst of His house.
You can also read other revelations wherein the Lord says that, after
you have done so and so, He will send famine, and earthquakes, and
desolating sickness, &c., &c.; and that he who rejecteth you rejecteth
me, and he that rejecteth me rejecteth my Father and my God. When you
do this, you do it at your own risk, and to your own sorrow and
distress, and the Spirit of God will so teach you all the time.
These calamities are coming; go and read for yourselves. If you do not
believe me, and brother Brigham, and the Twelve, believe the
revelation that God gave to Joseph. And then, if you do not believe
Joseph, believe Isaiah, Jeremiah, and the Prophets; and if you cannot
believe them, believe Jesus Christ; and if you cannot believe him,
believe the Father. [Voice: "And if they believe the Father, they will
believe all the rest." ] Yes; brother Brigham says that if you believe
the Father, you will believe all the rest. You can believe Jesus; and
if you can believe Jesus, you can believe his Apostles, and then you
can believe Joseph and his Apostles, and brother Brigham and his
Apostles. Has brother Brigham got Apostles? Yes, he has ordained
Twelve. Brother Joseph ordained Twelve, and so did Peter.
Brother Brigham is an apostle of Jesus, and I know it, just as much as
ever Joseph was. I do not ask you to believe that for me; I know it is
true. Brother Brigham, myself, and some others walked with brother
Joseph in his regeneration, but we do not know whether we shall sit at
his right hand or his left, or not; that is for the Father or others
to dictate. It mattereth not, however; for if we keep the commandments
of God we shall triumph over the world, the flesh, and the devil, and
over every person living upon God's footstool that does not surrender
themselves and all they have to him.
Brethren and sisters, this is the time in which to prepare. If you are
not saved temporally in these Valleys, I shall not be. If you will
take a course to bring distress on this people, we shall have to be
distressed. I have learned enough to know that, when we were in
Kirtland, and distress and desolation came upon this people, I had to
suffer with them. I fled for England; brother Joseph and brother
Brigham fled to Missouri; and every man that would honor
"Mormonism" and sustain it had to flee. Why? Because some would not
honor it. The righteous had to suffer with the wicked; and it is the
ungodly who bring trouble upon the righteous, and they have to pay
that debt. If it is not in ten thousand times ten thousand years, they
will have to pay the debt for unlawfully bringing distress upon the
righteous.
What shall we do? The Lord is blessing us; and such a time of blessing
I never saw. We never have been blessed so much as we are this year.
Go to the north, to the south, to the east, and to the west, and you
will see the earth matted over with vegetation to such an extent as I
have never before seen. Go into our gardens and orchards, and you will
find our trees even now actually breaking down with fruit. We shall
have to thin out the peaches on the boughs, or they will break before
they can ripen the load that is upon them. The limbs are breaking down
with apples, plums, currants, and every kind of fruit that we are
raising; and the strawberry vines would break down, if they were not
already on the ground. I never saw the like in the States, nor in
England, nor anywhere else.
The people are doing right; they are waking up; and the Lord looks
upon us as a good father looks upon his boys who are in the field at
work, digging and watering the ground, in the hot sun, up to the knees
in mud, with their wives and their children. Says he, "My boys, you
are good boys; I will give you some rain, I will wet your crops, and
rest you a little while; but I will not let you have but a little
water, for if I send the rains here the devil will come upon you with
his gang. I will not let you have much rain, only enough to ease your
labors a little while." That is the way my Father feels, and I feel
so, when I have His Spirit; and that is the reason I can comprehend
Him when I have His Spirit. You have heard me say that I felt joyful,
funny, and jocular, according to the portion of the Spirit of the Lord
I enjoyed. Do I feel like dancing and jumping? Yes, and like doing
everything else that is good and comfortable. When I have the Spirit
of the Lord, I feel so; and that makes me think that my Father in
heaven felt so before me.
Brethren, go and build your storehouses before your grain is
harvested, and lay it up, and let us never cease until we have got a
seven years' supply. You may think that we shall not see times in
which we shall need it. Do you not comprehend how comfortable it will
be for us to know that we have grain enough to last us seven years?
But it would make me feel bad for brother Brigham, myself, and a few
others, and the Tithing Office, to have our granaries full, and the
rest of the people have none. Why? Because we should have to hand out
of our granaries as long as there was a kernel left. [Voice: "We
should have to buy the whole of them." ] Yes, we should have to buy
your fine dresses, your jewelry, and everything you have got; which
we shall do, if you do not lay up in store.
I ask, would things have been with us as they are now, if we had not
repented and commenced anew? Now, 7 tons, or 14,000 lbs. of flour are
dealt out of the Tithing Office every week to the hands upon the
Public Works; and can they reduce the supplies that are in that
office? They have not been able to yet, for some of the cellars are
being dug out to put in grain. We have not storeroom enough to hold
it, and we are obliged to go to the flouring mills to get storage for
it. And the men who deal out the flour say that they have not reduced
the supplies on hand, that they continually keep about so, and a
little more so. If you can account for that, go at it.
Does the Lord cause our grain to increase? He does, and that, too,
upon natural principles. Sow one bushel of wheat, for instance; and
when you harvest the product of that, you get, say, from 25 to 50
bushels. Where do those 25 or 50 bushels come from? Say that I go and
put 100 pounds of flour into my bin, and that I afterwards take out
forty times more flour than I put in, how did it come there? Upon the
same principle that one bushel of wheat increased to forty. I will
take one peach stone and plant it, and in about four years that peach
stone will produce a tree that will bear from 500 to 1,000 peaches.
Where did they come from? There was only one planted. They all come
from the elements. Then cannot God increase our grain in the bin, as
well as He can increase it in the field?
Brother Brigham and I once started with $13.50 and traveled 500
miles, paying $16 for every hundred miles travel, and paying for from
two to three meals of victuals a day, and once in a while paying 50
cents apiece for a night's lodging; and when we got through, we had
not quite as much money as when we started. But if we had not any, it
was quite a miracle, though we had some money left. We performed that
journey with the means I have mentioned. That money we spent was in
the elements, or else an angel of God went where it was, and got it,
and put it into our pockets. Brother Brigham kept the purse; I put my
money with his, and he kept paying out; and if it had been in the line
of our duty to have kept traveling to this day, we should had money
unto this day. And once in a while we would take a weak sling, for we
were so weakened by disease that both of us could not take a common
trunk two feet long and ten inches square and put it in a wagon. We
were feeble, and we continued so until we landed on Europe's shores,
and then disease left us. The Devil meant to afflict us, to see
whether he could not back us out; but he had two hard fellows to deal
with.
The Lord was with us, and His angels went before us; and when we went
to Kirtland, the people would not let us preach there only once
apiece. I preached once, and compared them to a mess of old cracked
pots, and everything else I could think of, and declared that I would
not preach there again. I never wanted to. They said that we were
under the censure of the Almighty, because we were sick and afflicted.
The Lord suffered it to be so, that He might try their righteousness
and virtue.
Let us go to work, every man and woman of us, and lay up our stores,
and build good storehouses, and increase. If we will do this,
brethren, we will have some of the finest seasons you ever saw. Our
grain will increase, and we will lay a foundation for the world and
the ungodly, and we will buy them for our servants. They will be glad
to come and work for us for bread, and each one of us will be like
Joseph in Egypt was to his father's house. They will come to us and
buy grain and the good things of this world; for I know that we are
the people who have got to do that thing.
Will you be slack, brethren, and let the evil come upon us, when we
forewarn you of the future events that are coming? Now, supposing that
I had not the spirit of prophecy upon me, then I had better sit down.
If a man gets up here and lets the Spirit of God dictate him, he
cannot help prophesying, for the Holy Ghost is the Spirit of
prophecy, and he will foretell future events, and you cannot help it.
We are telling of what the prophets have said—of what the Lord
has said to Joseph. Wake up, now, wake up, O Israel, and lay up your
grain and your stores. I tell you that there is trouble coming upon
the world. They have a pretty good drouth in some places this year. I
do not know whether brother Amasa has told you, but almost everything
is burnt up in Southern California. They have got to live there and
get bread, and probably will be glad to take a handcart.
Is it so in the United States? It is. They have got to eat that dish;
and when famine, pestilence, and starvation come upon us in a small
degree, it will increase upon them fourfold, packed down and running
over, and they cannot help it. Let them exult. There never was such a
prejudice existing against this people as there is at this day. The
Devil is stirring them up because we have commenced that Temple; and
we will build it, and they cannot help themselves; and we will lay up
the grain for seven years, and thousands of them will worship us for a
little johnny cake, and I will live to see it: so will you. And when
you see it, you will then have knowledge, won't you?
We do not so much care whether you have any confidence in our being
Prophets, or not; but if you will go to and do as you are told, you
shall see these things, and have a knowledge of all we tell you. That
is practical religion, if all men go to work and till the earth, raise
grain, and live our religion, and not come up here as a few of you
dandies do, and suck our vitals out of us by getting into fancy shops,
and this, and that, and the other. You are no better than we are, and
not half as good. We are the saviors of men, and we have got to work
for it—to dig and scrape; and the harder we scrape the quicker it will
come about. This people work, and they are the best people that ever
did live; but there is a great chance for improvement.
I improved yesterday: I worked and made all the improvements I could,
and did the best I could; but it came night, and I laid down to take a
nap, which is typical of death. This morning I have risen up and again
commenced my labors; and I am going to improve today, and do better
than I did yesterday. But in comes another night of sleep; I lay down,
which is typical of death; and I rise in the morning, which is typical
of the resurrection, and I renew my labors. I have to begin where I
left off; but you cannot realize but that you have to take one jump
away ahead, when you come to leave your bodies and go into the spirit
world. That is not so, for you will have to commence to hoe your row
where you left off.
People talk about running races for a wager. No person can gain the
wager, only those that run lawfully through to the place appointed.
These half runs will not gain the prize. There are a great many that
turn back and run the other way, but their road will be a thousand
times longer than ours; and the straighter we run the nearer we get to
the point we have to gain.
As for our storehouse ever being empty again—if we will take the
course laid down to us, it will never be. And we have to increase our
storehouses more than a hundredfold; and if this people take that
course, the granaries will be fuller than they are now; and they must
be built in a more substantial manner. And when we have built this
Temple, it is hardly a comparison to what we will build the next time;
and the Devil will still rage worse and worse, and he will rage, and
rage, and foam; but if we will do right he never can come over these
mountains; or, in other words, he may get here, but the tabernacles he wants to come here never can—no never, for they will fall
without our touching them. [Voice: "And it will be laid on the
'Mormons.'" ] Yes, they lay the killing of Babbitt and Gunnison to the
"Mormons," and they say that Dr. Bernhisel will kill Brigham in one
year [laughter in the stand and in the congregation], because he has
got jealous of him. I must confess that would be the biggest miracle
that I ever saw. Almost every evil that has been committed during the
past twenty years has been laid upon the "Mormons;" and they are
trying to make themselves believe that the "Mormons" have Danites, or
destroying angels, in every nook and corner.
Now, you may call that extravagant, but the world believe it. I never
saw people so foolish as are the world at this time, and they never
can affect us. I want you to keep that in view. That is my text; they
never can trouble us, if we do as we are told. And when brother
Brigham crooks his little finger, let our hands move. I am preaching
what they say.
We shall prosper, and the soil and the mountains will grow rich, and
we will never lack for anything. We may draw wood out of the mountains
continually, as we need it, and there will still be as much as there
is now. We will eat bread to all eternity, and our bins will still be
full. You may wear dresses to all eternity, if you will make them, and
there will always be plenty.
I am in my element when I am among this people and speaking to them;
and my prayer is, by night and day, that I may be as simple as a child
in my communications, and speak the truth. As for my praying that God
will make me eloquent, as the world call it, I never want it, but that
He may make me eloquent in the truth, to speak it in its plainness and
simplicity.
Brethren and sisters, here in these mountains is the center of
government; here is headquarters for the whole earth; and this will
be headquarters until this headquarters make another. And when
headquarters are made at Jerusalem, we shall make them. Why? Because
this is the dispensation of dispensations; and where Israel has
dropped down, we have got to build them up and establish them, just as
much as men and women have to be raised in the resurrection where they
lie down, by the authority of God.
The earth is the Lord's, and we are His servants; and let every man,
according to the authority he possesses, dedicate his houses, the
material of which they are built, the earth they stand upon, and his
orchards and fields; and they will be blessed, and I know it. We are
in the best place on the earth in which to sanctify and bless the
earth and the inhabitants upon it, and the mountains, and the little
hills, and the fountains of water. That is our business, and to bless
each other, and build each other up, and raise up a pure and a holy
people. That is what we are here for; and if you do not honor the
calling you are called to, you will be good for nothing.
God bless you, brethren; God bless you, sisters; and God bless your
children, and the earth, and all there is in it, for your sake. Amen.
- Heber C. Kimball