JOURNAL OF DISCOURSES
[ Volume 1, pages 46-53 ]
SELF-GOVERNMENT -- MYSTERIES -- RECREATION AND
AMUSEMENTS, NOT IN THEMSELVES SINFUL -- TITHING -- ADAM, OUR FATHER
AND OUR GOD.
A SERMON DELIVERED BY PRESIDENT BRIGHAM
YOUNG, IN THE TABERNACLE,
GREAT SALT LAKE CITY, APRIL 9, 1852.
It is my intention to preach several discourses this
evening, but how many I do not know.
I will in the first place bear testimony to the truth
of many remarks made by brother Hunter, and especially his exhortation
to the Seventies and Elders, and those men who wish to go on missions.
I wish also to urge the necessity of your proceeding on your missions
immediately, and of going to the place of your destination full
of the Holy Ghost, preaching righteousness to the people; and while
you do this, live up to the principles you preach, that you may
teach also by your example, as well as by precept. Go, ye Elders,
and now consider yourselves from this time forth missionaries. If
the Gospel is in you like a flaming fire, to be poured upon the
people, gather your neighbors together, and give your brethren an
invitation to your house, and set before them the duties of man;
and preach, if you can speak but for five minutes, occupying that
time to the best advantage. Continue to preach, study, and learn,
by faith and prayer, until your minds and mouths are opened, and
you understand most perfectly the love of Christ.
It is not uncommon for Elders to say, "If I could
have a mission, and be sent among strangers, I could speak to them,
because they have not been instructed in the way of life and salvation:
I could lay before them the principles of the Gospel, which have
been taught to me, without that diffidence of feeling, and fear,
which I experience while speaking to my brethren." It is very true
that the first principles of the Gospel taught by the Elders of
the Church are easy to be understood, compared with what it is to
preach them to our families, or to our neighborhood, and to govern
and control ourselves by the principles of righteousness which the
Gospel inculcates. Again, to gather the Saints, to preach the Gospel
to the world, and convince them of the truth, are much easier tasks
then to convince men that you can master yourself, and practise
(sic) the moral principles inculcated by your religion. That is
a small portion of the duty required of you in order to obtain crowns
of glory, immortality, and eternal lives. I will here remark, that
it is natural for the people to desire to know a great deal of the
MYSTERIES: this, however, is not universally the case, though it
is so with a great many of the Elders of Israel. I do not suppose
it will apply to those who compose this congregation; your object
in being here this evening is not to hear some great mystery of
the Kingdom, which you never understood before. The greatest mystery
a man ever learned, is to know how to control the human mind, and
bring every faculty and power of the same in subjection to Jesus
Christ; this is the greatest [47] mystery we have to learn while
in these tabernacles of clay. It is more necessary for the Elders
to learn and practise upon this lesson in the midst of the Saints
at head quarters than in the world; for their facilities for learning
are much greater, and I will tell you wherein. Let a Bishop
a High Priest, a President of any Stake or Quorum, any who are Elders
in Israel, or any individual Saint from the first to the last of
them, fall into error, and it is at once made manifest; he cannot
pursue that course any further, for he is where he can learn his
duties, and know how to walk straight in the paths of righteousness.
Here is the place for you to teach great mysteries to your
brethren, because here are those who can correct you. This
fault the Elders of Israel do not fall into in the Tabernacle, although
they may in private houses and neighborhoods. When a man is capable
of correcting you, and of giving you light, and true doctrine, do
not get up an altercation, but submit to be taught like little children,
and strive with all your might to understand. The privileges of
those who dwell here are greater than the privileges of those who
are abroad. When your duties call you into foreign lands, and you
there exhaust your stock of knowledge and wisdom, and you are not
in possession of the keys to obtain that instruction which you desire,
it is because you are far from the right fountain -- far from the
body, where all the members are in lively operation -- where
the eye can see, the ear hear, the nose smell, and the mouth speak,
and so forth. When your face is turned from the body, let mysteries
alone, for this is the only place for you to be corrected if wrong.
Preach the simple, unadorned truth; work out your salvation with
diligence, and do that which will guarantee you a warranted deed,
and undeniable title to eternal lives.
If you feel prayer in you, pray; and if you feel
the spirit of preaching in you, preach; call in your brethren, and
read the Bible, the Book of Mormon, the Book of Covenants, and the
other revelations of God to them; and talk over the things contained
in those books, and deal them out to your brethren and neighbors;
pray with them, and teach them how to control themselves; and let
your teachings be sustained by your own example. Teach your families
how to control themselves; teach them good and wholesome doctrine,
and practise the same in your own lives. This is the place for you
to become polished shafts in the quiver of the Almighty. This will
answer for one sermon.
I feel much inclined to talk to the brethren: I have
not had the privilege of preaching much for some time, because of
the inconvenience of our former meeting place. Now, as we have a
good, convenient place to meet in, and my health will serve me,
I expect to improve the time. I love to preach at home with the
Saints. I love to meet with them, and look upon their happy countenances,
lit up with the joys of eternity. In short, I love the society of
all good men, and to preach salvation to them.
You may consider what I shall now lay before you
a small matter; but I think it of some importance. When the Elders
of Israel leave this place, and go forth among the wicked, it is
not their privilege to mingle with them in any of their worldly
exercises: for if they do, the devil will obtain an advantage over
them, and succeed in drawing them away from the path of their duty.
For instance -- suppose you and I, with many more of the brethren,
meet together in a convenient place in the Valley, and dance to
the sweet strains of the violin; we could do so with a perfect good
will: but if we should be called to England and there have an invitation
to join [48] with the wicked in their pastimes and recreations,
and we in our feelings bow down to this, and suffer our spirits
to be subject to their commandments, we suffer ourselves to be ruled
over by them, and at once become their servants. While I am here,
I am in the midst of the Priesthood of heaven, and in the centre
of the kingdom of God. We are before the Lord, where every hand
I shake is the hand of a Saint, and every face I see, when I look
upon the assembled thousands, is the countenance of a Saint. I am
the controller and master of affairs here, under Heaven's direction;
though there are those who do not believe this. I invite those who
are not subject to me as their President, not to contaminate my
friends; for were I and my friends to become subject to those who
object to us, we are then on the ground of the devil, and subject
ourselves to him they serve.
Never suffer yourselves to mingle in any of those
recreations that tend to sin and iniquity, while you are away from
the body of the Church, where you cannot so fully control yourselves.
Let the Elders who are going out from this place carry this instruction
with them into the other portions of the earth. Whatever a man does,
let him do it in the name of the Lord -- let him work in the name
of the Lord, let all his acts through life be in the name of the
Lord; and if he wants light and knowledge, let him ask in that name.
You are well aware that the wickedness of the world,
or the apostacy of the Church, is so great, that those who now profess
religion cannot enjoy their own natural privileges in the world.
In many places their folly and superstition are so great that they
would consider they had committed the sin of blasphemy in they happened
tho hear a violin. The whole world could not hire a good,
honest, sound Presbyterian, of the old fashion and cut, to look
into a room where a company of young men and women were dancing,
lest they should sin against the Holy Ghost. This over-righteous
notion ins imbibed by the generality of professors of religion,
but it is because they themselves have made it a sin. Let us look
at the root of the matter. In the first place, some wise being organized
my system, and gave me my capacity, put into my heart and brain
something that delights, charms, and fills me with rapture at the
sound of sweet music. I did not put it there; it was some
other being. As one of the modern writers has said, "Music hath
charms to soothe the savage breast." It has been proved that sweet
music will actually tame the most malicious and venomous beasts,
even when they have been stirred up to violent wrath, and make them
docile and harmless as lambs. Who gave the lower animals a love
for those sweet sounds, which with magic power fill the air with
harmony, and cheer and comfort the hearts of men, and so wonderfully
affect the brute creation? It was the Lord, our heavenly Father,
who gave the capacity to enjoy these sounds, and which we ought
to do in His name, and to His glory. But the greater portion of
the sectarian world consider it sacrilege to give way to any such
pleasure as even to listen to sweet music, much more to dance to
its delightful strains. This is another short sermon.
I wish now to say a few words to the brethren upon
the subject of tithing. It is well known to the majority
of this Conference what transpired, last Conference, upon the stand
in the old Bowery. At that Conference I had good cause to find fault
with the Bishops, and I took the liberty to brush them down a little.
From that day to this there has been more accomplished by our Bishops
in the short space of seven months, than [49] was accomplished by
them for the space of years previously. This gives me great satisfaction.
The Bishops have done as well as men could do: their conduct in
fulfilling the duties of their calling has truly been praiseworthy,
and I feel to bless them, and pray the Lord to bless them all the
day long, for they have done first rate. When we consider the ignorance
of the world, their unbelief in God, and realize that the vail of
the covering is over the face of all nations, and remember the ignorance
we were once in ourselves, having to commence like babes at the
rudiments of learning, knowing also how faltering men are in their
faith, and then look at what this people have accomplished, we are
led to exclaim, "It is marvellous in our eyes!" Were I to say, "Elders
of Israel, you that feel to put your all upon the altar, rise upon
your feet," who would be left? [All present rose up simultaneously.]
Where is there another people upon the earth who would have done
this? I have no tithing, but all -- all I have is the Lord's. You
know the word sacrifice: as brother Banks said to-day, it
is a mere burlesque -- a nonsensical term. No man ever heard me
say I had made a sacrifice. I possess nothing but what my heavenly
Father has been pleased to give me, or in other words, He has loaned
it to me while I remain here in this mortal flesh.
Is it not marvellous, considering the weakness of
man, to see the willingness of this whole people to die if necessary
for the truth? How do you suppose it makes me feel? Though I may
sometimes chastise my brethren, and speak to them in the language
of reproof, there is not a father who feels more tenderly towards
his offspring, and loves them better than I love this people; and
my Father in heaven loves them; my heart yearns over them with all
the emotions of tenderness, so that I could weep like a child; but
I am careful to keep my tears to myself. If you do wrong, it grieves
my heart, and it also grieves the heart of my heavenly Father. I
feel continually to urge my brethren to cease from all evil, and
learn to do well.
The fulness of the heavens and the earth is the Lord's
-- the gold and the silver, the wheat, the fine flour, and the cattle
upon a thousand hills; and when we fully understand His works, we
shall know that He is in all the earth, and fulfils His will among
the children of men, exalting and debasing them according to His
pleasure; for the systems, creeds, thrones, and kingdoms of the
world are all under His control. "Shall there be evil in a city,
and the Lord hath not done it" -- or that He doth not control? The
Lord controls the whole; and in the end you will find He has regulated
all things right, for all will be consummated to His glory.
The children of men are made as independent in their
sphere as the Lord is in His, to prove themselves, pursue which
path they please, and choose the evil or the good. For those who
love the lord, and do His will, all is right, and they shall be
crowned, but those who hate His ways shall be damned, for they choose
to be damned.
As I was meditating on the philosophy of the day,
it occurred to my mind how visible it must appear to all eyes that
the Lord does indeed work, that it is He who blesses this people;
and yet it seems as though they cannot see His hand. The Lord fills
the immensity of space. What saith the Psalmist? "Whither shall
I go from they Spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence?
If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there; if I make my bed in
hell, behold thou art there; if I take the wings of the morning,
and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there shall thy
hand [50] lead me." I was trying to think of the place where God
is not, but it is impossible, unless you can find empty space;
and there I believe He is not. If you can find such a place,
it will become useful for a hiding place to those who wish to hide
themselves from the presence of the Lord, in the great day of accounts.
I will close this sermon, as I intend to preach another before I
present the subject I more particularly wish to speak upon.
My next sermon will be to both Saint and sinner.
One thing has remained a mystery in this kingdom up to this day.
It is in regard to the character of the well-beloved Son of God,
upon which subject the Elders of Israel have conflicting views.
Our God and Father in heaven, is a being of tabernacle, or, in other
words, He has a body, with parts the same as you and I have; and
is capable of showing forth His works to organized beings, as, for
instance, in the world in which we live, it is the result of the
knowledge and infinite wisdom that dwell in His organized body.
His son Jesus Christ has become a personage of tabernacle, and has
a body like his father. The Holy Ghost is the Spirit of the Lord,
and issues forth from Himself, and may properly be called God's
minister to execute His will in immensity; being called to govern
by His influence and power; but He is not a person of tabernacle
as we are, and as our Father in Heaven and Jesus Christ are. The
question has been, and is often, asked, who it was that begat the
Son of the Virgin Mary. The infidel world have concluded that if
what the Apostles wrote about his father and mother be true, and
the present marriage disciple acknowledged by Christendom be correct,
then Christians must believe that God is the father of an illegitimate
son, in the person of Jesus Christ! The infidel fraternity teach
that to their disciples. I will tell you how it is. Our Father
in Heaven begat all the spirits that ever were, or ever will be,
upon this earth; and they were born spirits in the eternal world.
Then the lord by His power and wisdom organized the mortal tabernacle
of man. We were made first spiritual, and afterwards temporal.
Now hear it, O inhabitants of the earth, Jew and
Gentile, Saint and sinner! When our father Adam came into the garden
of Eden, he came into it with a celestial body, and brought
Eve, one of his wives, with hem. He helped to make and organize
this world. He is MICHAEL, the Archangel,
the ANCIENT OF DAYS! about whom holy
men have written and spoken -- HE is our FATHER
and our GOD, and the only God with whom
WE have to do. Every man upon the earth, professing
Christians or non-professing, must hear it, and will know it
sooner or later. They came here, organized the raw material,
and arranged in their order the herbs of the field, the trees, the
apple, the peach, the plum, the pear, and every other fruit that
is desirable and good for man; the seed was brought from another
sphere, and planted in this earth. The thistle, the thorn, the brier
(sic), and the obnoxious week did not appear until after the earth
was cursed. When Adam and Eve had eaten of the forbidden fruit,
their bodies became mortal from its effects, and therefore
their offspring were mortal. When the Virgin Mary conceived the
child Jesus, the Father had begotten him in his own likeness. He
was not begotten by the Holy Ghost. And who is the Father?
He is the first of the human family; and when he took a tabernacle,
it was begotten by his Father in heaven, after the same manner
as the tabernacles of Cain, Abel, and the rest of the sons and daughters
of Adam and Eve; from the fruits of the earth, the first earthly
tabernacles were originated by the Father, and so [51] on in succession.
I could tell you much more about this; but were I to tell you the
whole truth, blasphemy would be nothing to it, in the estimation
of the superstitious and overrighteous of mankind. However, I have
told you the truth as far as I have gone. I have heard men preach
upon the divinity of Christ, and exhaust all the wisdom they possessed.
All Scripturalists, and approved theologians who were considered
exemplary for piety and education, have undertaken to expound on
this subject, in every age of the Christian era; and after they
have done all, they are obliged to conclude by exclaiming "great
is the mystery of godliness." and tell nothing.
It is true that the earth was organized by three
distinct characters, namely, Eloheim, Yahovah, and Michael, these
three forming a quorum, as in all heavenly bodies, and in organizing
element, perfectly represented in the Deity, as Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost.
Again, they will try to tell how the divinity of
Jesus is joined to his humanity, and exhaust all their mental faculties,
and wind up with this profound language, as describing the soul
of man, "It is an immaterial substance!" What a learned idea! Jesus,
our elder brother, was begotten in the flesh by the same character
that was in the garden of Eden, and who is our Father in Heaven.
Now, let all who may hear these doctrines, pause before they make
light of them, or treat them with indifference, for they will prove
their salvation or damnation.
I have given you a few leading items upon this subject,
but a great deal more remains to be told. Now, remember from this
time forth, and for ever, that Jesus Christ was not begotten by
the Holy Ghost. I will repeat a little anecdote. I was in conversation
with a certain learned professor upon this subject, when I replied,
to this idea -- "if the Son was begotten by the Holy Ghost, it would
be very dangerous to baptize and confirm females, and give the Holy
Ghost to them, lest he should beget children, to be palmed upon
the Elders by the people, bringing the Elders into great difficulties."
Treasure up these things in your hearts. In the Bible,
you have read the things I have told you to-night; but you have
not known what you did read. I have told you no more than you are
conversant with; but what do the people in Christendom, with the
Bible in their hands, know about this subject? Comparatively nothing.
I will now again take up the subject of tithing.
The brethren have done well. They have been willing and obedient,
no people could have been more so; for this I thank my Father in
Heaven. I could not wish a people to work more kindly in the yoke
of Jesus than this people do; the yoke grows more and more easy
to them. It seems that every man will not only pay his tithing,
but give all he has if the Lord requires it: still I see wherein
they may do better. I asked the people to day to assist to pay our
Church liabilities. The offer of three or four yoke of oxen only,
we do not want; but I will lay before you what we wish you to do.
By the manifesto which has been read, you have learned the precise
situation of the property of the Church. What has incurred this
debt? Why does it exist in the shape in which it now appears? And
wherein could we have obviated the difficulty, and done better?
A fourth part of the money already paid out, did not come in upon
tithing. This money we have had to borrow in order to keep the public
works in progress. You may say, wherein could be have done better,
for we have paid our tithing punctually? But has that brother, who
sent $100 back to the [52] East for merchandize (sic), paid $10
of it into the tithing office? Or did the brother who has sent $500
back, let us have $50? No; these have used it themselves, and thereby
involved those who bear the responsibilities of the Trust. Again,
those who have not possessed sufficient money to send back for merchandize,
have been necessitated to pay out what they had. Thousands of dollars
have been paid here for merchandize. Has one-tenth of all that money
been paid into the tithing office? It has not. And where is the
tithing that should have come in from England and California. Instead
of tithing their money, they have used it for other purposes, and
paid it in property, with which we could not pay our debts. This
is wherein we have failed to liquidate our debts. The people go
to these Gentile stores, on the Saturday, in crowds, to purchase
goods. I think we shall not over-rate the amount, if we say that
$500,000 has been paid, in these vallies, to the merchants. But
suppose they have received no more than $50,000 from this community,
$5,000 of that money ought to have been first paid into the tithing
office; and we could have sent it to the States, and purchased goods
ourselves, for one-third or one-half less than we have to pay the
merchants here. And $25,000 more should have come into the tithing
office from the Church in the United States. The brethren in California
have made no less than $100,000, the tenth of which is due this
tithing office. For want of this money, we are brought into bondage;
and we must now apply our faith and works to raise means to liquidate
our indebtedness, which has accumulated by purchasing goods at high
and extortionate prices. I find no fault with the merchants, for
they came here to gather gold by the hundred weight.
Now, brethren, and Bishops, look over this matter,
and try to think what your feelings would be if you were laid under
the same responsibility that I and my brethren have upon our shoulders.
We are required to see the Gospel preached to the nations afar off,
to build council houses and temples, to cope with the united wisdom
and craft of legislative assemblies, and with the powers of darkness
in high places; and then place yourselves in the circumstances we
are now placed in! Besides all this, see the hundreds who come to
us every day to be administered to in various ways: some want fruit,
some sugar, others tea, and all want clothing. &c. Then step
into our private rooms, where we commune with the people, and you
will see and hear all this, and a great deal more. Instead of every
man bringing his picayune, or his sixpence, or his $5, &c.,
as tithing on the money in his possession, it is all used for something
else, and the storehouse of the Lord is left empty. Suppose nothing
had been put in there but what the people have put in, the workmen
would have been naked. Walk into the storehouse, and examine for
yourselves. To be sure there has been a little clothing put in lately;
for instance, there was an old silk dress put in for $40, that had
been lying for years rotting in the chest: this is a specimen of
the rest. What are such things worth to our workmen? Why, nothing
at all. We wish you to put in strong and substantial clothing. Good,
strong, homemade stuffs make the most suitable clothing for those
who are building up the public works.
Will you help us out of this thraldom, and have it
credited to your future tithing? There is already a great deal more
due than would liquidate all our debts, but we cannot command it
now. Do you feel willing to put your shoulder to the wheel, and
continue to roll it forward, and still continue, you that have faith
to con- [53] tinue, to increase in faith? for the business of this
kingdom will increase, and the responsibility also; the labor will
and must grow, and continue to increase, until the kingdoms of this
world become the kingdom of our God and His Christ. So much on tithing;
you see where the failure is; it is in theat point, and nowhere
else.
It is not for any man to think he is a cipher --
that what he can do will not tell in this matter, and say, "They
will get along well enough without me;" but it is every man's duty
to lay it to heart, and help what he can with his earthly substance;
though I wish you to understand distinctly that it is not commandment
-- you are left to act freely.
Let all the sheep stay in the Valley; also the cows;
for they will give milk and butter, and replenish the stock. But
when we speak of the horses, mules, and oxen, let every man look
up his spare stock of this description, and with them help
to liquidate these debts. Stock will now pay debts. I will use my
stock for this purpose, and my brethren will do the same, until
we have enough. I do not enjoin this upon you, as you have already
paid the tithing which is required of you; except in some instances
in the money tithing. Had we received the money due
to us, we should have had no debts; but this failure has been, and
is now, in existence. I will take every kind of spare stock I have,
except my cows and sheep, and wipe off these debts until they are
cancelled; and now every man who will do the same, let him rise
upon his feet. [The whole congregation of two thousand men rose
up to a man.] Do you suppose we want to deprive you of your
teams? It is not so, but we wished to know the state of your faith,
so that when we are ready to call upon you, we can be sure our call
will be responded to. I would not cripple any man, I would rather
give him five yoke of oxen, than destroy his team, and you know
it. [Some of the brethren in the stand, not believing their own
eyes, that the whole congregation rose, it was tried over again,
to satisfy them, when the congregation all rose again to a man.]
Brother Hunter now knows what to do. Many of the brethren are killing
their calves; don't do this; if you cannot raise them, it will be
better to give them away to those who can.
I bless you, and may the Lord bless you, in the name
of Jesus Christ. Amen.
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