I feel happy for the privilege of again speaking to the Latter-day Saints in this city; and I am also happy for the privilege of being a member of this Church. In this I am exceedingly blessed, and I can say of a truth, that my soul drinketh of that "river, the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the Most High." I am full of peace by day and by night—in the morning, at noon, and in the evening, and from the evening until the morning. I am extremely happy for the privilege of living with those who are seeking to do the will of God. We are gathered together in the tops of these mountains for the express purpose of building up Zion, the Zion of the last days, the glory of which was seen by the prophets of the Almighty from the days of old. "And they shall call thee," says Isaiah, "The city of the Lord, The Zion of the Holy One of Israel." "The Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light, and thy God thy glory." We are removed far away from those who bore rule over us and oppressed us, and who deprived the Saints of their constitutional rights. The Lord has led His people to a land where they can enjoy as much liberty as they are disposed to live for. There is no oppression here; there is no people on earth who have as few encumbrances upon their spiritual and temporal rights as the Latter-day Saints in these mountains. We have all liberty, yet we are not at liberty to do wrong in this community, and have it sanctioned, although many do wrong, which wrongs are in many cases overlooked and forgiven.
The law of liberty is
the law of right in every particular—that is, if we understand it to mean the
privilege of doing anything and everything to promote the peace, happiness, and
well-being of mankind, whether in a national, State, Territorial, county, city,
neighborhood, or family capacity, with a view to prepare them for the coming of
the Son of Man, and to have a place in the presence of their Father and God.
Shall we say that we enjoy this law of liberty to the fullest extent? We do, in
fact, and no power can deprive us of it. We have a good and wholesome
government, when it is administered in righteousness and equity, and its laws
scrupulously obeyed; and it guarantees to all their political, religious, and
social rights. We have the privilege of worshipping God according to the
dictates of our own consciences, and according to the revelations of the Lord
Jesus Christ. It is true our consciences are formed more or less by
circumstances and by the effects of early teachings, until we enter upon the
stage of action for ourselves. Parental influences upon the growing
organization of the unborn infant have much to do in giving character to
conscience. But we always have the privilege of answering a good
conscience. We have the privilege of praying as many times a day as we please;
we have the privilege of praying from morning until evening and from evening
until morning without anyone to molest us. We have the privilege to meet in a
congregational capacity in our great public meetinghouses, or in our ward
meetinghouses, to attend to our sacraments and fasts, and there to tarry, when
we are thus assembled, as long as we please without any restrictions whatever.
There are
circumstances in which it would be right to restrict a person even in prayer
and worship. For instance, if a man should hire another to work for him so many
hours a day, for which he agrees to pay him so much, the employed is thereby
bound by the conditions of the agreement to work the number of hours stipulated,
that he may justly collect his pay, for he is not paid for praying, nor for
holding religious meetings and religious conversations with his fellow workmen.
If this may be called a restriction upon the free exercise of religion, it is a
just one, for the restriction itself becomes a religious duty in order that
mistaken notions of religious freedom may be corrected. In such a case we would
not say that a person is in the least degree abridged in the free exercise of
his religious privileges, but rather, by keeping him to a faithful observance
of his agreement, he is made to exemplify one of the foremost principles of
true religion—namely, honesty. If a man has sufficient to supply his wants, and
the wants of those who depend upon him, and can, without infringing upon the
rights of others, afford to pray all the day long and then all the night long,
he is free to do so.
A great many instances
might here be introduced to illustrate wherein men should not be permitted
to do as they please in all things; for there are rules regulating all good
societies and the business intercourse of men with each other, which are just
and righteous in themselves, the violation of which cannot be countenanced
either by civil or religious usages. It is not the privilege of any man to
waste the time of his employer under any pretense whatever, and the cause of
religion, good government, and humanity is not in the least degree advanced by
the practice, but the contrary is really the case. Men should be abridged in
doing wrong; they should not be free to sin against God or against man without
suffering such penalties as their sins deserve.
I have looked upon the
community of the Latter-day Saints in vision and beheld them organized as one
great family of heaven, each person performing his several duties in his line
of industry, working for the good of the whole more than for individual
aggrandizement; and in this I have beheld the most beautiful order that the
mind of man can contemplate, and the grandest results for the upbuilding of the
kingdom of God and the spread of righteousness upon the earth. Will this people
ever come to this order of things? Are they now prepared to live according to
that patriarchal order that will be organized among the true and faithful
before God receives His own? We all concede the point that when this mortality
falls off; and with it its cares, anxieties, love of self, love of wealth, and
love of power, and all the conflicting interests which pertain to this flesh,
that then, when our spirits have returned to God who gave them, we will be
subject to every requirement that He may make of us, that we shall then live
together as one great family; our interest will be a general, a common
interest. Why can we not so live in this world? This people have been gathered
together for a further purpose than to prepare them to be one in the faith of
the doctrine of Christ, to be one in the proclamation of the Gospel in all the
world; to be one in our obedience to the ordinances of the house of God. All
this we could have done in the different countries from whence we have been
gathered out. We could have lived and died there, as many have, in faithfulness
to the spiritual requirements of our religion, if the Lord had not had in view
a great spiritual and temporal purpose in gathering His people from the four
winds. The order of God among men is not complete without a gathering. Hence
Jesus says—"O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets and
stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy
children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye
would not." And because they would not be gathered and avail themselves of
the great blessings consequent upon it, their house was left unto them desolate,
etc.
We are gathered
together expressly to build up the kingdom of God. We are not gathered together
to build up the kingdom of this world. The voice of God has not called us
together from the uttermost parts of the earth to build up and enrich those who
are diametrically opposed to His kingdom and its interests. No, but we are
gathered together expressly to become of one heart and of one mind in all our
operations and endeavors to establish Christ's spiritual and temporal kingdom
upon the earth, to prepare for the coming of the Son of Man in power and great
glory.
When the everlasting
gospel is preached by the power of the Holy Ghost, the minds of those who
are honest and worthy of the truth are opened, and they see the beauty of Zion
and the excellence of the knowledge of God which is poured out upon the
faithful. Such men and women have seen in the revelations of the Spirit that
God would gather His people even before the gathering was taught to them by the
servants of God; and they understood the great object of the gathering, they
saw that the people of the Lord could not be sanctified while they remained
scattered abroad among the nations of the Gentiles. When the people first
receive the Spirit you may ask what you will of them, and they will yield it in
a moment; their submission to God and the counsels of His servants is almost
complete. They are ready to give their substance, their houses and lands, they
are ready to leave all and follow Christ; they are ready to leave their good,
comfortable, happy homes, their fathers and their mothers, and their friends;
and some have left their companions and their children for the gospel's sake,
and all this because of the vision of eternity which has been opened to their
minds so that they beheld the beauty of Zion, and they sacrifice all to gather
to the home of the Saints.
We have been assembled
together from among all nations to be corrected in our lives and manners, and
for purification before the Lord. We have come up to these mountains through
trials and tribulations and perplexities, and what do we see when we come here?
The fatigues of the journey have proved and tried the souls of many, so that
they have faltered in their faith; the light of the Spirit within them has
become darkened and the understanding benighted. They look for perfection in
their brethren and sisters, forgetting that in the vision of the Spirit
they saw Zion in her perfection and beauty, and that this state must be
obtained by passing through a strict school of experience. When they arrive
here they find the people like themselves, subject to many weaknesses of the
flesh, and some giving way to them every day. The great majority of the people
are apt to lose the Spirit they at first possessed through the cares of the
world and the many afflictions they pass through in gathering together from the
distant nations of the Gentiles, and through looking for perfections in others
which they do not find and which they themselves do not possess.
Notwithstanding this there exists no other community so dissimilar in their
education and training, and yet so agreed in theological and civil polity as we
are.
What does the Lord
want of us up here in the tops of these mountains? He wishes us to build up
Zion. What are the people doing? They are merchandising, trafficking and
trading. I wish to view them as they are and where they are. Here is a
merchant—"How much have you made this year, 1867?" "I have made
sixty thousand dollars." "Where did you get it? Did the merchants in
the east or the west give it to you?" "No." "Who did give
it to you?" I answer that this poor people, the Latter-day Saints, who
have gathered together in their penury, have put this means into the hands of
the merchant. He has got it from a people, a great number of whom have been
helped here by the means of others; and when they get a dime, a dollar, ten
dollars, they carry it at once to the merchant for ribbons, artificials, etc.,
making him immensely rich. We all have our pursuits, our different ways of
supplying ourselves with the common necessaries of life and also its luxuries.
This is right, and the possession of earthly wealth is right, if we follow our
varied pursuits, and amass the wealth of this life for the purpose of advancing
righteousness and building up the kingdom of God on earth. But how easy it is
to wander from the path of righteousness. We toil days and months to attain a
certain degree of perfection, a certain victory over a failing or weakness, and
in an unguarded moment, slide back again to our former state. How quickly we
become darkened in our minds when we neglect our duties to God and each other,
and forget the great objects of our lives.
The purpose of the
Lord is to get the Saints together, and then preach to them the doctrines of
the kingdom of God by the voices of His servants, and it is the duty and the
privilege of all His people to conform to them in their lives, in all their
daily pursuits, until they became one in all things, in every day's operations
in life, for the obtaining of our bread and meat and clothing of every
description, being one in the exercise of our ability in gathering together the
various comforts of life around us, sustaining ourselves and the household of
faith, and still being kind to the stranger. The Lord has not called us here to
make our enemies rich by giving to them our substance for considerable less
than it has cost us to produce it from the elements. They would use that means
for our destruction. This course is against the mind of the Holy Spirit,
against the mind of the angels who watch over us, against the commandments of
the Almighty, against the mind of every faithful and true Latter-day Saint, and
against the cause of God and truth. As Elder Orson Hyde has said, I would that
all the inhabitants of the earth would repent of their evil ways and become
righteous, and then work the works of righteousness all their days.
As Latter-day Saints
it is our business, morning, noon, and night, all the day long, all the week
long, all the month long, all the year long, and all our life long, to sustain
those who sustain the kingdom of God. Does not the religion which we have
embraced incorporate everything which is in heaven and earth and under the
earth? Yes, if there is a truth among the ungodly and wicked it belongs to us,
and if there is a truth in hell it is ours. Everything that will produce good
to the people is within our religion. With our religion we have embraced all
good, but we have not engaged to sustain the powers of Satan and the kingdoms
of this world. We have left them and engaged to sustain the good—the wine and
the oil—until we become one, and act as with one voice in maintaining every
temporal and spiritual interest of the political kingdom of our God on earth,
whose officers shall be peace and whose exactors shall be righteousness. Our
judges will be of our own selection, who will deal out justice and
righteousness to the people. We are looking forward to this state of things. We
expect to see the day when there will be none in our midst but those who are
for God and truth and who are valiant for His kingdom on earth. As the Prophet
has said—"Thy people also shall be all righteous; they shall inherit the
land forever, the branch of my planting, the work of my hands, that I may be
glorified." We are longing for this state of things, then why not begin to
work for it today? Why not commence the work today by ceasing to do evil, by
ceasing to give strength to the hand which would pierce us through with many
sorrows? Why not begin today by sustaining those who will sustain the
kingdom of God? This is my text for the Latter-day Saints, and I wish it to be
constantly held before them until they exemplify it in their lives, by becoming
of one heart and of one mind in all things in righteousness and holiness before
the Lord.
To observe the Word of
Wisdom is nothing more than we ought to have done over thirty years ago.
Touching this matter, I tell the people the will of God concerning them, and
then they are left to do as they please in obeying it or not. It is a piece of
good counsel which the Lord desires His people to observe, that they may live
on the earth until the measure of their creation is full. This is the object
the Lord had in view in giving that Word of Wisdom. To those who observe it He
will give great wisdom and understanding, increasing their health, giving
strength and endurance to the faculties of their bodies and minds until they
shall be full of years upon the earth. This will be their blessing if they will
observe His word with a good and willing heart and in faithfulness before the
Lord.
I am talking to the
bishops continually almost, giving them instruction and advice, but it is hard
for them to get the people to be guided by them. Now, for example, we will take
the least ward in the city, and suppose the people all consent to be guided and
controlled by the word of the Lord in all things, to be faithful in their labor
and in the discharge of every duty, being economical, prudent, and industrious
in all their labors, taking care of everything, abstaining from the use of
spirituous liquor, tea, coffee, and tobacco, etc., also to let doctors alone,
and faithfully abide the word of the Lord relating to the sick, manufacturing
what they need to wear, and raising what they need for food; saving their
dollars as they happen to get them by the sale of some of their products,
sustaining themselves in all things, wanting only what they can produce in the
country from the elements and the labor of their hands—suppose, I say, they
were to take this course, three years would not pass away before the people of
that ward would be able to produce everything they need in life. Thus, by a
union of purpose and a concentration of action, that little ward would soon be
able to buy out their neighboring wards, who would persist in pursuing the
opposite course; and perhaps fifteen years would not pass away before this
prudent ward would be able to buy out and own this whole city, if they
continued to do as they were desired to do, and the rest of the wards pursued
their own way. I pray my brethren the Bishops, the Elders, the Seventies, the
Apostles, yea, every man and woman and child who has named the name of Christ
to be of one heart and of one mind, for if we do not become of one heart and
mind we shall surely perish by the way.
Before I close my
remarks I will again remind my brethren and sisters that we have a duty to
perform in sending for our brethren and sisters who are in foreign lands. We
wish to gather them together. As to whether they will stick to the faith after
they are gathered I know not, neither do I care. It is better to feed nine
unworthy persons than to omit feeding one who is worthy among the ten. So it is
with clothing the needy and sending for the poor. They must have the same
opportunities for salvation that we have, for the neglect of which they will be
held accountable in the day of judgment as we will also be. Let us send for the
poor. We are doing considerable, though we are not doing as much as we should
do. If I could only have power sufficient with God I think I should accomplish
the desire of my heart in this matter and that of my brethren and sisters. We
do desire to have our friends relieved from their bondage, and brought to these
valleys of the mountains to share with us the blessings we enjoy. It would be a
blessing to the poor if we could only exercise the faith that Elijah had
in the case of the widow's meal and cruse of oil, that the little we do get for
the emigration of the poor may accomplish, under the blessing of God, much more
than is natural for us to expect from it. If we can only obtain faith to
multiply the means we do get, we may make a little reach out so far as to
accomplish the desires of our hearts.
May God bless you.
Amen.
Journal of Discourses, Volume 12, pages 151 - 157
TIMES AND SEASONS
ReplyDeleteBrigham makes an interesting assertion: “We are gathered together in the tops of these mountains for the express purpose of building up Zion, the Zion of the last days.”
He goes on to say
“This people have been gathered together for a further purpose than to prepare them to be one in the faith of the doctrine of Christ, to be one in the proclamation of the Gospel in all the world; to be one in our obedience to the ordinances of the house of God. All this we could have done in the different countries from whence we have been gathered out. We could have lived and died there, as many have, in faithfulness to the spiritual requirements of our religion, if the Lord had not had in view a great spiritual and temporal purpose in gathering His people from the four winds….We are gathered together expressly to build up the kingdom of God….we are gathered together expressly to become of one heart and of one mind in all our operations and endeavors to establish Christ's spiritual and temporal kingdom upon the earth, to prepare for the coming of the Son of Man in power and great glory.”
If that was the purpose of the Lord in separating the Saints to the valleys of the West, then the window of opportunity was nearing its end. The next year, 1869, the first regular trains on the transcontinental railroad would begin arriving in Utah, and our separation from the world, which had been slowly eroding, would begin to collapse. The tension between the goal of establishing a separate, higher economic and political order and the pull of integration with an increasingly proximate national economy and polity would remain for several decades, however. At this point the brethren are still urging economic separation:
“We are not gathered together to build up the kingdom of this world. The voice of God has not called us together from the uttermost parts of the earth to build up and enrich those who are diametrically opposed to His kingdom and its interests….The Lord has not called us here to make our enemies rich by giving to them our substance for considerable less than it has cost us to produce it from the elements. They would use that means for our destruction. This course is against the mind of the Holy Spirit, against the mind of the angels who watch over us, against the commandments of the Almighty, against the mind of every faithful and true Latter-day Saint, and against the cause of God and truth.”
Historical question – Did the glory of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ that was being proclaimed abroad included at this time a description of the Zion the saints were attempting to build? It would be an interesting subject for future research. Brigham says –
“When the everlasting gospel is preached by the power of the Holy Ghost, the minds of those who are honest and worthy of the truth are opened, and they see the beauty of Zion….because of the vision of eternity which has been opened to their minds so that they beheld the beauty of Zion…they sacrifice all to gather to the home of the Saints.”
PRINCIPLES
ReplyDelete1) I start with one heck of a good question –
“I have looked upon the community of the Latter-day Saints in vision and beheld them organized as one great family of heaven, each person performing his several duties in his line of industry, working for the good of the whole more than for individual aggrandizement; and in this I have beheld the most beautiful order that the mind of man can contemplate, and the grandest results for the upbuilding of the kingdom of God and the spread of righteousness upon the earth. Will this people ever come to this order of things? Are they now prepared to live according to that patriarchal order that will be organized among the true and faithful before God receives His own? We all concede the point that when this mortality falls off; and with it its cares, anxieties, love of self, love of wealth, and love of power, and all the conflicting interests which pertain to this flesh, that then, when our spirits have returned to God who gave them, we will be subject to every requirement that He may make of us, that we shall then live together as one great family; our interest will be a general, a common interest. Why can we not so live in this world?”
2) In a little thought experiment, Brigham asserts that a “union of purpose and concentration of action” in meeting a neighborhood’s economic needs (coupled it should be noted with revelatory wisdom and righteousness) would actually prove to be more efficient and successful than the disunited self-seeking of the surrounding “normal” economy.
“Now, for example, we will take the least ward in the city, and suppose the people all consent to be guided and controlled by the word of the Lord in all things, to be faithful in their labor and in the discharge of every duty, being economical, prudent, and industrious in all their labors, taking care of everything, abstaining from the use of spirituous liquor, tea, coffee, and tobacco, etc., also to let doctors alone, and faithfully abide the word of the Lord relating to the sick, manufacturing what they need to wear, and raising what they need for food; saving their dollars as they happen to get them by the sale of some of their products, sustaining themselves in all things, wanting only what they can produce in the country from the elements and the labor of their hands—suppose, I say, they were to take this course, three years would not pass away before the people of that ward would be able to produce everything they need in life. Thus, by a union of purpose and a concentration of action, that little ward would soon be able to buy out their neighboring wards, who would persist in pursuing the opposite course; and perhaps fifteen years would not pass away before this prudent ward would be able to buy out and own this whole city, if they continued to do as they were desired to do, and the rest of the wards pursued their own way.”
PRINCIPLES
ReplyDelete1) How might one prove/apply the superiority of cooperative economics, of “a union of purpose and a concentration of action?” I can cite the Scott Bader Company and the Mondragon cooperatives to show that cooperative principles can be AS effective. But superior and more efficient than the modern economy?
2) The political left has spent a lot of time trying to harness individual economic choices to support environmental and social justice goals – “buy green,” “fair trade.” Brigham asks the Saints of his day to do something very similar, to ask who their economic purchases were enriching, who they were supporting.
3) He also asks Mormon merchants to question the extent to which their practices exploited their own people –
“What does the Lord want of us up here in the tops of these mountains? He wishes us to build up Zion. What are the people doing? They are merchandising, trafficking and trading. I wish to view them as they are and where they are. Here is a merchant—"How much have you made this year, 1867?" "I have made sixty thousand dollars." "Where did you get it? Did the merchants in the east or the west give it to you?" "No." "Who did give it to you?" I answer that this poor people, the Latter-day Saints, who have gathered together in their penury, have put this means into the hands of the merchant. He has got it from a people, a great number of whom have been helped here by the means of others; and when they get a dime, a dollar, ten dollars, they carry it at once to the merchant for ribbons, artificials, etc., making him immensely rich.”
4) He leaves frustratingly open the question as to how to balance the need to engage in economic activity and to build up Zion.
“We all have our pursuits, our different ways of supplying ourselves with the common necessaries of life and also its luxuries. This is right, and the possession of earthly wealth is right, if we follow our varied pursuits, and amass the wealth of this life for the purpose of advancing righteousness and building up the kingdom of God on earth. But how easy it is to wander from the path of righteousness. We toil days and months to attain a certain degree of perfection, a certain victory over a failing or weakness, and in an unguarded moment, slide back again to our former state. How quickly we become darkened in our minds when we neglect our duties to God and each other, and forget the great objects of our lives.”
5) A beautiful description of the end goal --
“The purpose of the Lord is to get the Saints together, and then preach to them the doctrines of the kingdom of God by the voices of His servants, and it is the duty and the privilege of all His people to conform to them in their lives, in all their daily pursuits, until they became one in all things, in every day's operations in life, for the obtaining of our bread and meat and clothing of every description, being one in the exercise of our ability in gathering together the various comforts of life around us, sustaining ourselves and the household of faith, and still being kind to the stranger.”
APPLICATION
ReplyDeleteWe might apply the spirit of Brigham’s exhortation to the saints for more support for the Perpetual Emigration Fund (specifically designed he says to gather in and take care of the poor) to a renewed support for the Perpetual Education Fund in our own day –
“Before I close my remarks I will again remind my brethren and sisters that we have a duty to perform in sending for our brethren and sisters who are in foreign lands. We wish to gather them together. As to whether they will stick to the faith after they are gathered I know not, neither do I care. It is better to feed nine unworthy persons than to omit feeding one who is worthy among the ten. So it is with clothing the needy and sending for the poor. They must have the same opportunities for salvation that we have, for the neglect of which they will be held accountable in the day of judgment as we will also be. Let us send for the poor. We are doing considerable, though we are not doing as much as we should do. If I could only have power sufficient with God I think I should accomplish the desire of my heart in this matter and that of my brethren and sisters. We do desire to have our friends relieved from their bondage, and brought to these valleys of the mountains to share with us the blessings we enjoy. It would be a blessing to the poor if we could only exercise the faith that Elijah had in the case of the widow's meal and cruse of oil, that the little we do get for the emigration of the poor may accomplish, under the blessing of God, much more than is natural for us to expect from it. If we can only obtain faith to multiply the means we do get, we may make a little reach out so far as to accomplish the desires of our hearts.”