I am happy for the privilege of standing before the Saints. It is a
great pleasure to me to associate with those whose feelings are
concentrated in the establishment of peace and righteousness upon the
earth.
Before I heard the Gospel as again revealed in its purity through
Joseph the Prophet, I was tolerably well acquainted with the spirit,
disposition, tact, and talents possessed by the children of men; and
though I was then but about thirty years of age, I had seen and heard
enough to make me well acquainted with the people in their acts and
dealings one towards another, the result of which was to make me sick,
tired, and disgusted with the world; and had it been possible, I would
have withdrawn from all people, except a few, who, like myself, would
leave the vain, foolish, wicked, and unsatisfying customs and
practices of the world. Sorrow, wretchedness, death, misery,
disappointment, anguish, pain of heart, and crushed spirits prevail
over the earth; and apparently, the whole of the intelligence of
mankind is directed in a way to produce cruel and unnatural results.
Since I have been in this Church and kingdom, I have endeavored to
learn and treasure up wisdom and good understanding, and then not to
forget them. I have endeavored to gather to myself every principle
that would promote righteousness in me and those who would hearken to
my counsel.
Read the history of any kingdom or nation, and trace through all the
channels from the history of nations and kingdoms to that of families
and individuals who have not known God nor observed his commandments,
and you will find that sorrow and disappointment have been intimately
mingled in all the gaiety, luxuries, and pretended enjoyments of their
mortal lives. They have found a bitter sting in their happiest moments
and a deadly poison in their cups. There is no man or woman on the
earth who can enjoy solid satisfaction—unalloyed peace and comfort,
but in the holy spirit of our religion—in the Gospel of salvation:
that is the only source of true happiness. Read the history of those
who can command the wealth of the world to minister to their
happiness, and they find it not in authority, station, nor wealth.
From the monarch upon his throne to the most degraded beggar upon the
streets, all who enjoy not the Gospel are destitute of the source of
true happiness. It is not to be found among them.
When the portals of heaven are opened and the Priesthood of God is
given he so blesses the people that they can truly understand the
principles that tend to peace, to glory, immortality, and eternal
lives. That and that alone can give true satisfaction to our spirits,
which are organ ized to receive and continue to increase in
principles of light, intelligence, power, and glory—organized to be
preserved to eternally associate together—to have the privilege of
beholding each other's faces—of enjoying each other's society and the
society of holy beings who have been tried as we have and have to be,
and to enjoy, love, converse with, and look upon the faces of those
beings who have been glorified throughout all ages that are countless
to us. Their identity has been preserved, and they enjoy the smiles of
their friends and associate with their companions who have in a mortal
state passed through the same ordeals they endured while in this
existence. Fathers and mothers associate with their children, children
with their parents, brothers with sisters, and sisters with their
brothers—all in their family circles dwelling in the midst of the
glorified. What else can satisfy a truly intelligent human being—the
immortal spirit that is tabernacled in a mortal tenement? Nothing.
What would induce an intelligent individual to suffer his eyes to be
put out and to live without seeing objects around him—the faces of
his family, friends, and connections? Would money? What would hire an
intelligent person to be deprived of the sense of hearing? Could money
buy his hearing? What would hire you to suffer the destruction of the
organ of speech, or to be deprived of any of the more important
members of your organization? The things of this world could not
induce you to suffer the destruction of any of the vital powers of
your organization; yet the world are seeking after the paltry,
perishable things of time and sense. They are their glory—their
pretended comfort—their god, and their daily study and pursuit. But
the members which God has placed in our tabernacles are worth all the
world to us. We have the power of seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling,
and feeling, enabling us to converse and associate with each other;
and money cannot buy these blessings from us.
Stop then, and consider what use you will make of these powers. Will
you go wild after the things of this world, as do the majority of the
inhabitants of the earth, with whose ways you are well acquainted? How
long will they endure? Their breath is in their nostrils: today they
are—tomorrow they are not. What prospects have they for futurity?
Have they any promise? Yes. What is it? Death. Have they the promise
of life eternal? They have, upon certain conditions; but they care no
more about those conditions than did certain characters that Paul
wrote about: they are even like the dumb beasts that are entirely
ignorant of futurity. Fatten an ox and lead him to the slaughter, and
he knows nothing of what awaits him. So it is with the great majority
of the inhabitants of the earth: they have no knowledge of their
future condition; they merely know that death will terminate their
present career. We are blessed with the words of eternal life, with
the everlasting Priesthood, and the keys thereof, with principles
that, if rightly acted upon, will secure to us those blessings we now
enjoy, and which you hear the brethren often speak about.
I am happy; I am full of joy, comfort, and peace: all within me is
light, for I desire nothing but to do the will of my Father in heaven.
I delight not in unrighteousness, but in righteousness and truth. I
seek to promote the good and happiness of myself and those with whom I
am associated. We have the privilege of securing to ourselves that
eternal bliss that can never fade away, and of preserving our
identity, that, when millions of ages have rolled away, we can then behold each other as we do today, and can converse together. One
thousand years hence, probably many of this congregation will talk
over difficulties we are now passing through.
You hear some of the brethren surmise that we are going to have
trouble. You need not expect any trouble, except you take a course to
bring it upon you. You need never expect to see sorrow, unless your
own conduct, conversation, and acts bring it to your hearts. Do you
not know that sorrow to you can exist only in your own hearts? Though
men or women were in the mountains perishing—though they be in
overwhelming depths of snow, freezing to death, or be on a desolate
island starving to death for want of food—though they perish by the
sword or in any other way, yet, if the heart is cheerful, all is light
and glory within: there is no sorrow within them. You never saw a true
Saint in the world that had sorrow, neither can you find one. If
persons are destitute of the fountain of living water, or the
principles of eternal life, then they are sorrowful. If the words of
life dwell within us, and we have the hope of eternal life and glory,
and let that spark within us kindle to a flame, to the consuming of
the least and last remains of selfishness, we never can walk in
darkness and are strangers to doubt and fear. Yet we see people among
us who are still selfish, and that principle we must abandon: we must
strip off selfishness, and put covetousness far from us. We must
become of one heart and mind, in order to fully enjoy the blessings we
anticipate.
Brother Phineas correctly observed, in his remarks, that if ten men
are united in these mountains, they are not to be overcome by their
enemies. Are this whole people perfectly united? I fear not. When I
undertake to present before this people the true principles of the
Priesthood, I almost shudder, because so many do not yet understand
them and cannot receive them. I go into my room where we have our
prayer circle, and among twelve men there will perhaps be twelve
different prayers offered up—one praying for one thing and another for
another thing. You may reduce the number to three, and let them be
clothed for secret prayer; and while one is praying aloud, each of the
others will be praying for that which the one that is mouth is not
praying for, unless they are better taught in regard to prayer than is
the Christian world. Ask the people if they understand the principle
of prayer, and many reply, "We do not know: we pray with all our
might;" and at the same time it is a scene of confusion and
distraction of mind.
We are in a land of liberty; and our fathers have taught us—especially
those born in America, that every man and woman and every child old
enough to speak, argue, read, reflect, &c., must have minds of their
own, and not listen to anybody else. They are taught to shape their
own opinions, and not depend upon others to direct their thoughts,
words, or actions. That system of teaching reminds me of the old
saying, "Every man for himself, and the Devil for them all." Such
views, though entertained by the human family at large, must be
checked in this people. Yet when I undertake to strip off the garb of
erroneous tradition, and to teach the people true principles of faith,
prayer, and obedience, there are many who cannot receive those
principles in their understanding and hearts. I have told you, and
will now tell you again, that you have to bring your minds right to
the authority of the Gospel—to the true Gospel line. Let an Elder pray
here, and then ask a brother in the congregation what has been prayed
for, and he cannot tell you. Ask a sister what has been prayed for, and she cannot tell you. She may say, "I was so fervent in prayer
myself that I did not hear what was prayed for." And so it is with
hundreds of people who congregate here. And I think that I may venture
to say that you will scarcely find an individual in the whole
congregation that can tell what the person who prays has prayed for.
Do you not know that to be a fact? I will appeal to your own minds.
When a man opens or closes a meeting with prayer, every man, woman,
and child in the congregation who professes to be a Saint should have
no desire or words in their hearts and mouths but what are being
offered by the man who is mouth for all the congregation. If all would
follow out that principle, where would it lead the people? They would
act with one heart and mind in all their acts through life, and
promote the kingdom of God on the earth.
How many times I have attended prayer meetings among the Methodists,
in my youthful days, when perhaps one hundred men and women would all
be praying aloud at once? I did not then know but that it was all
right. I neither said nor cared anything about it. It often used to be
father Joseph Smith's custom, when he took the lead of a fast meeting,
to request all present to pray aloud at the same time, and there would
be as many different prayers as there were persons. Where was the
concentration on a single and united thread of faith? It is like the
cable that holds the ship. Unwind a cable, and you will find several
hundred small cords; unwind the small cords, and you will find
fourteen strands in each cord; unwind each strand, and there are
thousands of fibers; and you have parted the cable of a ship fastened
to a sure anchor, and the ship is free and wafting unmanageable
before the furious tempest. So it is with prayer. You say you want to
be united and want the blessings of heaven.
How many times have I said here, within the last three months, I pray
that God would so lead us and our enemies that there will be no blood
shed? And how many have come to meeting and prayed in their hearts
that "our enemies would come on, for we want to slay them, for we have
been mobbed and hunted enough;" and another would pray the same
prayer, with a disposition to desire the spoil. One of the brethren
prayed in camp that the snow might fall 40 feet deep on our enemies. I
am satisfied if it falls only four or five feet deep.
I will tell you my faith in regard to the brethren now in the
mountains. General Wells takes the charge; and when I write to him, I
counsel him to do as the Holy Ghost shall dictate him, and inform him
that whatever he may order and perform, he has my faith and influence
to sustain him.
I pray God to turn away our enemies, to put hooks in their jaws and
turn them wherever he will, with their gold, their horses, and all
they possess. They do not know the "Mormons;" they are strangers to
this people, and are full of wrath and malice towards us; but they
know not why. They know not that they are stirred to anger against us
by the enemy of all righteousness. Should those who instigated the
sending of this army undertake to come here, there will be another
scenery, for they are more or less acquainted with us and know that we
are the most upright people on the earth; and they will not be able to
shield themselves in the garb of ignorance. I will not talk about
them, for you know their history, and you know and have seen much of
the squalid wretchedness of the wicked inhabitants of the earth. Is
there honor or virtue among them? Where is the man or woman
among them that is to be trusted? If there is here and there any
semblance of goodness or virtue, it is at once overcome by every
fiendish art in their power. Women are overcome by sycophants, by
those who rule the nation, and those who have power and influence in
the various States, parties, and religious sects. Man is overcome by
man; they cuddle, and wink, and gamble, and run to and fro in
abominations of every grade, and lift their voices for and against
each other, as did the Paddy in his petition to the king for an
office, wherein he stated that he would vote for or against him, fight
for him or fight him, just as he wished it.
Colonel Alexander—probably one of the best men in the army now near
Bridger ruins, told one of our messengers, when replying to a piece of
advice I had given him to resign his commission rather than be found
operating against an innocent people, that he was compelled to remain
in the army; for, if he resigned, he knew not how to manage to sustain
his family. He said, "I have no other means of support: I cannot throw
up my commission, for then I should have no means to support my wife
and children." As an American, shame and confusion would overwhelm me,
were I to even think of trying to sustain my family by siding with
tyranny and oppression. That is the only circumstance I wish to name.
They are sent ostensibly to civilize this people. But I do not wish to
talk much about such nonsense. The whole world are wrapt up in the
garment of corruption, confusion, and destruction; and they are fast
making their way down to hell, while we have the words of eternal
life.
How ought we to live? Look at yourselves and see whether your faith is
concentrated with those who are appointed of the Lord to lead you and
have rule over you. See whether all your desires are one with theirs.
If not, it must come to that point. Let every Saint, when he prays,
ask God for the things he needs to enable him to promote righteousness
on the earth. If you do not know what to ask for, let me tell you how
to pray. When you pray in secret or with your families, if you do not
know anything to ask for, submit yourselves to your Father in heaven
and beseech him to guide you by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, and
to guide this people, and dictate the affairs of his kingdom on the
earth, and there leave it. Ask him to put you just where he wants you,
and to tell you what he wants you to do, and feel that you are on hand
to do it. These are a few of my reflections upon that point, and only
a very few of them.
Let this people be brought to the straightforward thread of the
Gospel; and what more have we than what has been taught us from the
beginning of this work? Nothing. And the only difficulty there has
been is, that we were not prepared to receive it. Do you know how to
direct your own minds? Where is there an honest man or woman on the
face of this earth—one who has any knowledge of the Supreme Being, any
feeling of the operation of an invisible agency, but what pleads with
that God, whether they know him or not, to dictate their minds,
affections, and conduct? Where is there an honest man or woman on the
earth, but what that is their desire?
Many do not know what to pray for. They need someone to dictate them.
Will the Lord come and personally dictate them? You know that he will
not. Will he send his holy angels to talk with you? You could not
endure their presence: you are in a sinful world. What do you need?
That invisible agency, called the Spirit, to dictate your minds.
The whole world are sadly in want of what they call a
master-spirit. That is what the Government of the United States are
deprived of. There is not one to be found among them, neither in the
Cabinet of the President nor in the Senate of the United States. They
are all gone, and there is no one in their midst competent to lead and
dictate in the affairs of our General Government; but, as they say, it
is with them a period of mediocrity. It has been acknowledged by Great
Britain that the master-spirits are fled: there are none in the
British Parliament, and they know not what to do. Let this people come
to that condition, and say that they have no person capable of
dictating and leading them, and you will be in the whirlpool of
delusion. It will be every man for himself, and you would not know
what to do: you would not know how to dictate your own affairs. It is
this which overwhelms the world in confusion and makes it Babylon,
while the Priesthood elevates mankind and dictates the husband, the
wife, and the children, and all they have.
A feeling exists in the minds of many of this people that they would
be glad to submit to their presiding Elder or Bishop, but they do not
think that he has knowledge sufficient to lead them. Says a wife, "I
would be glad to submit to my husband; but I wish I had a husband that
I could look upon as my superior—that I could look up to and receive
his words and counsel: that would be my highest delight. O that I had
a husband capable of dictating me; but, alas! I have not." Go among
some of the children, and they say, "I would be glad to mind my
parents in all things, but I believe that I know more than they do."
Go into one of our cities, and you find somebody on the whiz, whiz,
like the wind passing through a broken window in December; and so it
goes throughout the settlement. Somebody has imagined that the
President does not understand his duty and is not capable of
dictating, and that is all the Devil wants to begin with. If he
succeeds in getting one toe into the stocking, he will work until he
gets his whole foot in, and confusion and discord will reign
predominant. How many times have you observed such instances? You have
not lived in the Church one year without seeing them.
In such cases a presiding Elder may not always know but what he has
done something wrong, and may be suspicious that this or that is not
right. My maxim is, and it is a rule I have established in the
Legislature of this Territory, never to oppose anything unless the one
making the objection can present something better. Do not oppose when
you cannot improve. If you are not capable of dictating your brethren,
do not say that you will dictate them until you have found out a
better path than the one in which they are walking. Before you oppose
your Bishop as a man unworthy of your best feelings, first point out a
better path to him; and then you shall have the right of going to the
higher authorities to show that you know more than your Bishop.
Is there a fault in some of the presiding Elders? Yes. What is it?
Some of them are subject to a feminine, pusillanimous feeling. A man
rises up and says, "I will dictate and oppose my Bishop," and some of
the Bishops will dodge, and say, "I do not know but that I am wrong:
wife, am I right or wrong?" —and say to every brother they meet, "What
do you think about it?" and run round and get the opinion of
everybody, to know whether they will sustain him or not. When men
learn their duty and calling, and walk up to the best light they have,
then, if they do not know precisely how to guide to the best
advantage, they are right, if they do the best they can, and can tell
all who find fault, "I ask no odds of you: I have done as I have, and
have done the will of God, according to the best of my knowledge." And
let every man treat his wives and children in the same way; and when a
wife says, "O no, my dear, I think I understand this matter as well as
you do, and perhaps a little better; I am conversant with all the whys
and the wherefores, and am acquainted with this little circumstance
better than you are, and I think in this case, my dear, that I know
better than you;" reply, "Get out of my path, for I am going yonder,
and you may whistle at my coattail until you are tired of it." That is
the way I would talk to my wives and children, if they intermeddled
with my duties. And I say to them, If you cannot reverence me, tell me
where the man is you can reverence, and I would speedily make a
beeline with my carriage and servants and place you under his care.
I told the people in Nauvoo, before they wished me to stand as their
President, that if there were any Latter-day Saints that did not wish
to take the counsel of the Twelve, they could go to hell their own
road: we asked no odds of them, for the Twelve were capable of
building up the kingdom of God on the earth. You know whether I here
ask much odds or not. I also told them that if they were not Saints at
that critical juncture, they ought to repent of their sins, and get
the Holy Ghost, and not live another twenty-four hours without the
spirit of revelation within themselves, for who knows but what you are
the elect; and you know that false prophets were to arise in the last
days, and, if possible, deceive the very elect, and that many false
shepherds would come and pretend to be the true shepherds. Now, be
sure to get the spirit of revelation, so that you can tell when you
hear the true Shepherd's voice, and know him from a false one; for if
you are the elect, it would be a great pity to have you led astray to
destruction. But if you are not the elect of God through the
sanctification of the Spirit of truth upon your hearts, then you can
go as quickly as you please, for we do not want you.
We feel just the same now. Every man and woman that will not strive to
sanctify themselves before the Lord God, and to possess within
themselves the spirit of revelation to know the voice of the true
Shepherd from a false one, the quicker they go out of the Territory
the better it will be. Take ten men whose hearts, when they pray, are
upon one sentence and upon one idea at a time, when they ask God for
anything, or to bring this or that to pass, do you think that the
powers of hell can hinder what they ask for? No. It is as true as the
heavens—as firm as the mountains that rest upon these valleys—as sure
as eternity, that nothing can fail which they agree upon; for God will
grant it.
What is our difficulty? When I go to my prayer room, among men who
have been with me for years, there is too great a diversity of feeling
and desires to be in accordance with the Gospel. There is too much of
Babylon in that. When that is the case, and when I am praying for one
thing and others for another, our faith comes in contact and we do not
receive what we ask for. How many times have I said that I would
rather have one hundred true Saints in the mountains than five
millions that are not Saints, if I had to contend against the whole
world? What, with the sword? Yes. Let me have the Gideonites that can
kneel down and lap the water, and one will chase a thousand, and two
put ten thousand to flight. Whether the Lord will require this people
to use the sword, or not, I do not know, neither do I care; but
I believe that if the faith of this people were united, all hell
cannot get armies in here to disturb our settlements.
How gladly I would tell the people what to pray for. But if I tell
them, in ten minutes afterwards they pray for something else. It is too
much so in the Quorum of the Twelve and among my Counselors. Go into
meetings, and you may hear thirty different prayers, if there are so
many offered up, for everything but what I tell them to pray for. You
may think I undervalue you. I do not. I tell you that if we strive
with all our powers, by-and-by the time will come that we will be
Saints indeed. I have not said that we are Saints. We are trying to
be, and we profess to have the keys that will lead us in the path of
eternal life. When we become so advanced that we are no more in
darkness and doubt, nor in any way under the power of the Devil, then
we have a certain victory over ourselves and over every foul spirit;
the Lord God is sanctified in our hearts, and we are his servants and
handmaids—his children, that can never be destroyed.
Take the congregation now before me, and they pray a thousand
different prayers. Tonight, mothers, wives, and little children,
observe how the head of the family prays, and see if he does not pray
for nearly everything but what he should pray for. Perhaps I am wrong,
but I think that he will be sure not to pray for the things he ought
to. He will pray that himself and family may have plenty to eat and
live in peace, and probably stop at that. His prayer will be something
like a certain old man's blessing at his meals: "O Lord, bless me and
my wife, my son John and his wife—us four, and no more: Amen." You
will hear the brethren pray, "O Lord, bless me, and my wife, and
children; but the rest I care nothing about." When you pray, pray for
the things that the kingdom needs, and be not so very careful about
yourselves. Your selfish notions ought to be out of sight. Pray God to
promote his kingdom and preserve you in it, and not as I have known a
tolerably good man to pray. He was so ignorant that he would cheat a
widow woman out of her last cow, and then go down on his knees and
thank God for his peculiar blessings to him! Do not be so abominably
ignorant. Instead of thanking God that you have been able to wrong one
man out of a horse, another out of a yoke of cattle, &c., pray that he
will give you the disposition to make the most righteous use of the
property he has entrusted to your care. Pray that this people may be
preserved—that the kingdom of God may roll on—that our Elders on the
islands in the Pacific, in the United States, and in foreign lands may
be so blessed as to come safely home. Pray for the honest in heart,
and that the ungodly may be so filled with fear and trembling that
they may leave us, that we may live here as Saints, and build up the
kingdom of our God, and prepare for the return of this people to the
Center Stake of Zion, where we can lay the foundations for a New
Jerusalem. Pray for the promotion of this cause and kingdom, instead
of praying that you may be able to wrong somebody out of something.
All eternity is before you, and everything you can ask for will be
given to you in due time; for the heavens and the earth are the
Lord's, and the fulness thereof. If I have horses, oxen, and
possessions, they are the Lord's and not mine; and all I ask is for
him to tell me what to do with them. A great many say that the Lord
takes, and gives as he pleases, and I think that if I act as the Lord
does I shall do pretty well. Again, some say that the Lord is going to
fight our battles, and enquire, "What is the use of our
brethren being out in the mountains?" He will use his people as he
pleases; and in the sequel you will find that God fought the battle,
and not we.
It has also been observed that God will provide for you. Still many
want to shade a little, rather than to work hard for an honest living.
Such practices must be put away, and this people must become
sanctified in their affections to God, and learn to deal honestly,
truly, and uprightly with one another in every respect, with all the
integrity that fills the heart of an angel. They must learn to feel
that they can trust all they possess with their brethren and sisters,
saying, "All I have I entrust to you: keep it until I call for it."
The world have no confidence in each other; but that principle must
prevail in the midst of this people: you must preserve your integrity
to each other.
Live your religion. How much you are exhorted—how much have we pleaded
with you to live your religion—to live in the light of God's
countenance—to live with the Holy Spirit so reigning in you as never
to be led astray, that you may know how to promote the kingdom of God
on the earth. Let selfishness be out of sight, and ask the Lord to
preserve you in the truth, and do with you as he pleases, and dispose
of you to his glory.
May God bless you. Amen.