Our mortal existence is a school of experience. Could we improve every
hour of our time in the best possible way until we attain a ripe old
age, there will be still much to learn pertaining to this world,
pertaining to our natural lives, to the organization of our bodies and
spirits, to the object and design of our existence, and the will of
Heaven concerning us.
Some of our speakers, in their public addresses, express themselves as
seeing great reason to be thankful for the improvements we are making
in self-government, and our rapid advancement towards the fountains of
knowledge. Others have a long experience to relate of constant trials,
tribulations, difficulties, and disappointments which they have now to
pass through, and gloomy forebodings of more in the future; they dwell
upon how we are tried with each other, and become dissatisfied with
each other and with ourselves, &c. Now, this is all good, and if
properly received is for our mutual edification and advancement,
giving us much to reflect upon, and lessons to learn from the
experience of each other. But should our lives be extended to a
thousand years, still we may live and learn. Every vicissitude we pass
through is necessary for experience and example, and for preparation
to enjoy that reward which is for the faithful. Others consider it a
lamentable fact that we have to send abroad and preach the Gospel, and
gather the people, and then they will apostatize. We only understand
in part why we are required to pass through those various incidents of
life. There is not a single condition of life that is entirely
unnecessary; there is not one hour's experience but what is beneficial
to all those who make it their study, and aim to improve upon the
experience they gain. What becomes a trial to one person is not
noticed by another. Among these two thousand persons I am now
addressing there cannot be found two that are organized alike, yet we
all belong to the one great human family, have sprung from one
source, and are organized to inherit eternal life. There are no two
faces alike, no two persons tempered alike; we have come from
different nations of the world, and have been raised in different
climates, educated and traditioned in different and, in many
instances, in opposite directions, hence we are tried with each other,
and large drafts are made upon our patience, forbearance, charity, and
good will—in short, upon all the higher and godlike qualities of our
nature—for we are required by our holy religion to be one in our
faith, feelings, and sentiments pertaining to things of time and
eternity, and in all our earthly pursuits and works to keep in view
the building up of the kingdom of God in the last days. Our work is to
bring forth Zion, and produce the Kingdom of God in its perfection and
beauty upon the earth.
The impulses of our different natures present an almost endless
variety of pursuit, manner, and expression, yet all this under a wise
and judicious direction will accomplish the great end of our existence
and calling as ministers of the Most High. "Br. Brigham teaches that
it is essentially necessary to improve every moment of our time in
some useful and profitable labor, and by frugality and honest care
obtain property by cultivating the earth, raising useful animals, &c.,
and thus make ourselves wealthy and independent, surrounding ourselves
with everything to please the eye, gratify the taste, and gladden the
heart." Now, both you and I are aware that there are persons in our
midst who do not understand this kind of religion; but we hail them as
good brethren. When they address us they are full of faith that the
time will come when the earth and its fulness will be given to the
Saints of the Most High, yet, should the Lord hand out a small portion
of it now, they cannot endure it.
We believe the earth is to be renovated, purified, glorified,
celestialized, and prepared for the habitation of the Saints, who will
possess not only the silver and gold now held by the wicked nations of
the world, but every good thing, for "The young lions do lack, and
suffer hunger: but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good
thing." This "any good thing" will embrace horses, chariots, houses
and lands, gardens and orchards, promenades and places for recreation,
and everything to amuse and delight the heart of man. We are now
beginning to get these things together and devote them to God, but, as
I have remarked, some of this people cannot endure this kind of
blessings. It is written, "The earth is the Lord's, and the fulness
thereof; the world, and they that dwell therein." Again, "And one
cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts:
his glory is the fulness of the whole earth." He will give this
fulness to the Saints. But the actions of some of this people speak in
language like the following: "If you give me any of this riches and
glory, Lord, I will apostatize; if you fill my lap with gold, I will
cease serving you, and go to the Devil."
The revelation that Br. James Cummings read is true. The people, at
the time that revelation was given, were slow to remember the Lord in
the day of their prosperity, and were covetous. I was not there, but
was acquainted with many who were. I knew them before they went there,
and I know they were covetous and filled with greediness. I know, if
the Lord had blessed them with the good things of this earth, which he
had prepared for the Saints at that day, not any of them would have stood. It would have been as Joseph said to me in Kirtland,
"Brother Brigham, if I was to reveal to this people what the Lord has
revealed to me, there is not a man or a woman would stay with me." In
the day of prosperity now the people are slow to follow the Lord. If
he were now to bless this people with gold and silver, houses and
lands, with everything to make them wealthy and comfortable here in
Deseret or Utah, a great many would turn away from him to worship
their idols.
"But," says one, "this will not do for us; if we are the children of
God we must be poor, we must see sorrow and affliction, and pass
through much tribulation." I have no fear but that every child of God
will receive all the suffering he can bear while passing to his
exaltation. Those who have suffered from sore eyes, I am satisfied,
are contented not to suffer another moment with that dreadful malady,
should they live on the earth a thousand years. The sisters who have
been afflicted with sick headache never want to suffer from it another
moment. Do you wish to have any more toothache? No, you think that you
have suffered enough from that ache, and never wish to have it again
while you live. So we may say of fevers, pains, aches, and diseases of
every kind to which the human body is subject. I might inquire of the
Nauvoo Saints whether they ever want to endure another chill and fever
while they live. I am satisfied there is not one of them that would
wish to pass through another day of their Nauvoo experience in
sickness. Again, I ask the brethren who have come from the different
nations of the earth, who have there suffered hunger, nakedness, cold,
and oppression, are you satisfied with what you have suffered, without
passing through the same in this land? I think you are. I have seen
the time that I had not food to satisfy the craving of my nature, and
I have suffered enough in this line of suffering. I know what it is to
be hungry, and need not suffer hunger again to give me that kind of
experience. I know what it is to be in poverty, and to be destitute of
the raiment necessary to keep anybody warm. Many of you have also had
this kind of experience, and we do not wish to pass through it again.
Many of us know what it is to be in the midst of false brethren, which
is the most hateful thing of all. Are you satisfied with what you have
suffered from tattlers and busy bodies? Yes. Do you wish any person to
bear false witness against you, to take away your liberty, and turn
you out from your houses and possessions, and thirst for your life? Do
you wish to see the Prophets and servants of God imprisoned, bound in
chains, and sacrificed in blood? When you are brought face to face
with suffering, you see nothing in it that is desirable, then why
cultivate a morbid desire for suffering? You will find all you can
bear, though you surround yourselves with all the comforts and
conveniences of life, and enjoy them as gifts from the Lord,
acknowledging his hand, offering unto him constantly the incense of a
grateful heart. Leave this kingdom, and I will promise you more
suffering than the tongue of man can utter, until you are consumed
soul and body—until you are wasted away—the body in the death
pronounced upon it, and the spirit in the awful sufferings and
torments attending the second death. Then stick firmly to the kingdom,
and be satisfied with the pains, aches, and afflictions you have
already suffered.
The time has come for us to begin to glorify our Father in Heaven with
the earth and its fulness, and let the gold and the silver, and the
fruits of the earth, and all precious things produced by the
industry of man praise God, and let all men acknowledge his name,
honor his character, bow to his divinity, glory in his supremacy, and
admire the wonders of his providence over the earth and its fulness.
The time has come for us to put forth our best efforts to bring forth
the Zion of God and gather all things in one, even in Christ Jesus.
There is a great variety of talent among this people, but as a people
they know but little as to the uses of the world in which they live,
and the design of God in its creation. There is not one in a million
of mankind that is filled with that intelligence that an intelligent
being should be filled with, but they pass from this stage of action,
are no more, and are apparently forgotten. This is decidedly the case
with the world outside, and, very much so with many of this people who
have been gathered out from the world. Here they have to think and do
a little for themselves, which gives them a course of useful
experience. This is not so much so with the outside world, for the
great masses of the people neither think nor act for themselves, but
are acted upon, and act accordingly; and think as they are thought
for; it is, as with the Priest so with the people. I see too much of
this gross ignorance among this chosen people of God.
I will now portray a little of the feelings and conduct of the
laboring classes. When a man can only earn a dollar a day, and has no
way of increasing his finances only by his labor, he is obliged to be
frugal, if he is honest, and he manages to keep a wife and a few
children comparatively comfortable. By-and-by the times improve and
wages rise so that he can earn ten dollars per week instead of six.
"Now, wife, we will allow a little more for the bread, and more for
the meat, and more for the tea, the coffee, sugar, fruit, spices, &c.
We must buy our daughter a pair of fine shoes, and our little boy must
have a whistle, and the baby a doll, and you shall have a new bonnet
by-and-by, and I must have a pair of fine boots, and a new coat and
other things in keeping, for you know, wife, I am now getting ten
dollars per week, and by-and-by I may yet double or treble that
amount." In this way they manage to live out all their means. This is
a peculiarity in the majority of the old country people, and you can
see the same thing here. You say you would rather hear something else
than this. I would rather hear this. I am as far ahead in the Gospel
and power of God as any of you, I know as much about it as any man in
the Church, yet I need to know more. I think it is necessary, however,
that you should learn to live today, and tomorrow, this year, and
next year, and learn to honor your lives continually. We must prepare
for that which is coming, and be ready to receive that which the Lord
has in store for us.
I know how you live. Do we see poverty here? We do. How many are there
who declare that they cannot pay their emigration expenses, and cannot
give anything to bring their friends? You could, if you had a
disposition to try. Use just enough of your earnings to make your
bodies and your families happy and comfortable, and save the residue.
I probably support more than any ten men in the Territory or in this
State. I feed and clothe multitudes of men, women and children—and I
like the man that gets me in debt to him. I consider that such a man
has calculation and management, and is preparing himself to be useful,
and to have something in his hands to use and to devote to noble
purposes. But I pay men nine, ten, twelve, and twenty-five dollars per
week, and when the year comes to a close they are owing me
hundreds of dollars, when, if they had managed properly, there would
have been a large credit in their favor. There is a class of men here
who do not know but what they will apostatize by-and-by, and they do
not wish anybody in debt to them, nor do they wish to owe anybody. You
had better be about square, the whole of you that wish to apostatize
and go off, for you cannot leave the country with your debts unpaid.
The better way is to keep in the faith, and pay your debts. When some
men are doing well they will become anxious for a change, and they
want to raise stock, or possess a farm in Weber or Cache Valley; they
go and stay year after year until they are reduced to poverty in
consequence of their inexperience in that class of industry, and
by-and-by they come back deploring their lack of sense in not knowing
when they were well off. I have such persons here to deal with, and I
have to keep along with my brethren at this slow rate of progression,
until we know how to gather the heavens and the earth.
If there was impatience in heaven they would be impatient with the
slothfulness of the Latter-day Saints. The heavens are waiting to be
gracious, and are ready to shed forth all the blessings heaven and
earth can bestow on the Saints, as soon as we can receive them and
make use of them to the glory of God. If we do not first learn the
little things, we cannot learn the greater things. "He that is
faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much: and he that
is unjust in the least is unjust also in much. If therefore ye have
not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your
trust the true riches? And if you have not been faithful in that which
is another man's, who shall give you that which is your own?"
Every moment of human life should be devoted to doing good somewhere
and in some way. We are all dependent upon a Being greater than
ourselves, and we owe our talent, time, and every pulse of our nature
to the Supreme of the Universe. We have nothing of our own, and ought
to devote ourselves to usefulness; we ought to learn to be economical,
which, coupled with industry, will make us wealthy. And while we are
handling the things of this world, let us not neglect to become rich
in faith, in humility, and to learn the ways of God, and be constantly
and actively devoted to his service and the building up of his kingdom
upon the earth, or the riches of this world will do us no good.
I heard it said to a young lad, "I will give you a dollar and a half
a day and board you." After a little reflection the young lad said,
"If you will pay me three dollars a day, I think I will work for you a
spell." The principle of the thing flashed before me, like a flash of
light, that such a course would be ruinous to this people. I could
see, under such circumstances, that the lad could not live here two
years before he would not know how to secure himself a pair of
pantaloons; he might receive great wages, and yet be in the depths of
poverty; he might be paid more than he earned, and still be needy. "I
am getting three dollars a-day," says a brother. What next? He must
have as fine a pair of boots as any man wears in this community, and
he will have them. When I was a boy a young man in our neighborhood
went into a hat shop to buy a five dollar beaver. He said to Mr.
Merrill. "Have you any five dollar hats?" "No, but I have some very
nice three dollar hats." The young gent did not want such a hat; he
would not wear such a hat, but said, "I want a five dollar hat." "Can
you make me a five dollar hat?" "Yes." "When shall I call for it
?"
"In two weeks." Merill took a three dollar hat that fitted the
young man, marked it, and put it by. In two weeks the young man called
for his hat, when the hatter reached down the same hat the young man
had tried on before, saying, "that is a five dollar hat." "Ah, that is
the hat I want; what is the price?" "Five dollars." He paid five
dollars for a three dollar hat, and was perfectly satisfied. That is
the case with hundreds of my brethren; they do not know the difference
between a three dollar and a five dollar hat. I do not wish to
tantalize anyone's feelings, though I know that I often use extreme
cases in comparison.
We have had to feed, clothe, and find house, room, firewood, &c., for
quite a number of people in this community. The first place we set
apart and devoted to the poor, was a house built by Enoch Reese, in
the 13th Ward; we bought that place, and the Bishop prepared it for
the poor to live in. We appointed Dr. Doremus to take care of that
house. Could we get anyone to occupy it? No, but "if you will build
us a house close by the Temple block we will live there, otherwise we
will live with our neighbors where we can, and be at liberty to go
where we please; we will not have your charity unless we dictate." Is
this not about so, Bishops? (Voices, "Yes." ) Unless a Bishop will
suffer himself to be dictated by those who need his aid, they will not
have his charity. This, I know, is the extreme in such cases.
What causes poverty among this people? It is the want of discretion,
calculation, sound judgment. I am paying men more or less by the day,
and where do you see those who get the least wages? Seated back in the
barber's chair three or four times a week. Next at a store to get a box
of blacking to put upon fifteen dollar boots, if they can get them.
They must have four or five dollar hand kerchiefs, as fine things for
their wives and children, and as much in quantity as any other man
has. At the end of the year there are two or three hundred dollars on
the debit side of their accounts. This is not good policy in them.
Suppose that they want to go on a mission to California after gold, or
to apostatize and go away, they have debits upon them that will
perplex them. Other poor men want a yoke of cattle, and must have the
best yoke that can be had; they want the best wagon that can be
bought; and there goes two hundred dollars more. Then they must hire a
man to drive the team, and the hired man goes to the canyon with the
model team and wagon, and returns home with one of the wheels on the
gearing, and a pole under the axletree. "Well, where is the wood?"
"Oh, it is yet in the canyon." "Where is the new axe I bought?"
"I
forgot it, it is up in the canyon, I expect." It costs him ten
dollars to get the wagon repaired, he pays his teamster a dollar and
fifty cents a day, has lost a new axe, and has no wood.
With us the Bible is the first book, the Book of Mormon comes next,
then the revelations in the book of Doctrine and Covenants, then the
teachings of the living oracles, yet you will find, in the end, that
the living oracles of God have to take all things of heaven and earth,
above and beneath, and bring them together and devote them to God, and
sanctify and purify them and prepare them to enter into the kingdom of
heaven. Gold and silver, houses and lands, and everything possessed by
the Saints will be purified and cleansed by the power of God, and
prepared to enter into the new Jerusalem when the earth is sanctified.
We have to learn to handle all things which pertain to the heavens
and earth in a way to glorify God, and devote all to the
building up of his kingdom, or we cannot magnify our Holy Priesthood
and calling.
Some go away because they are poor, some because there is no
revelation, some because they have too much revelation, and others
because they have gathered gold and silver and enriched themselves by
filching from the Saints. I say to all such, go, but first pay your
debts, and then steal nothing.
May God bless the righteous. Amen.