LDS Conference Report 1951 Annual

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ANNUAL

MfEREIlCf
OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS

Held in the Tabernacle


Salt Lake City, Utah

fipjuL 6, 7, 8 arut 9,

1951

With Report of Discourses

Published by the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Salt Lake City, Utah

Printed in the United States of America


"THE ENIGMA OF PMMYRA"
For more than 100 years vigorous, but futile attempts have been
made to explain him away, only to be rejected, discredited or
abandoned.
One explanation survives the tests of time and truth. Read it,

and many-sided manifestations in these books:


its

JOSEPH SMITH, AN AMERICAN PROPHET $3.50


By John Henry Evans

JOSEPH SMITH, THE PROPHET $3.50


By Preston Nibley

TEACHINGS OF THE PROPHET


JOSEPH SMITH $2.75
By Joseph Fielding Smith

PROPHECIES OF JOSEPH SMITH AND


THEIR FULFILLMENT ....$1.75
By Nephi L Morris

One significant and impressive fact to consider about him is the


caliber of men whose love and loyalty he won, and what they
accomplished under the motivation and enthusiasm of their
testimonies:

BRIGHAM YOUNG, THE MAN AND


HIS WORK $3.00
By Preston Nibley

BRIGHAM YOUNG, THE COLONIZER $3.00


By Milton R. Hunter

HEBER C. KIMBALL $3.00


By Orson F. Whitney

DANIEL HANMER WELLS $2.50


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- ALL PRICES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE —

DESERET BOOK COMPANY


"THE BOOK CENTER OF THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST"
44 East South Temple Street, Salt Lake City 10, Utah
The One Hundred Twenty-first Annual

Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ


of Latter-day Saints
The One Hundred Twenty-first Annual Conference of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was held in the Taber-
nacle, Salt Lake City, Utah, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Mon-
day, April 6, 7, 8, and 9, 1951.
President George Albert Smith, President of the Church, having
passed away Wednesday, April 4, President Smith's funeral services
were held in the Tabernacle Saturday, April 7, at 2:00 p.m., which
services are included as a part of this Conference report.
General sessions of the Conference were held at 10:00 a.m.
and 2:00 p.m. Friday and Sunday and at 10:00 a.m. Monday. The
General Priesthood meeting convened in the Tabernacle Saturday
evening, April 7 ,at 7:00 p.m., with overflow assemblies in the
Assembly Hall and Barratt Hall.
The session Monday morning at 10:00 was a solemn assembly,
at which the First Presidency of the Church was reorganized, with
David Oman McKay as President, Stephen L Richards as First
Counselor, and Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Second Counselor.
The full services of the General sessions of the Conference
were broadcast over Station KSL, Salt Lake City, and by arrange-
ment through KSL were broadcast over the following stations:
In Utah: KSUB at Cedar City, KSVC at Richfield, KJAM at
Vernal, KBUH at Brigham City, and KVNU
at Logan.
In Idaho: KGEM at Boise, KID at Idaho Falls, KEYY at
Pocatello, KBIO in Burley, KVMV at Twin Falls, and KRXK at
Rexburg.
The were also broadcast in
services of the general sessions
the Assembly Hall on the Tabernacle grounds and in Barratt Hall,
60 North Main, over a loud speaking system, and by television.
Columbia Broadcasting Company's Church of the Air program,
on which Elder Stephen L Richards was the speaker, was presented
in the Tabernacle Sunday morning, April 8, from 9:00 to 9:30.
A full report of this service is also included in this record.
President David O. McKay, President of the Council of the
Twelve, presided at the general sessions of the Conference. He
conducted the Friday morning, Sunday morning, and Monday
morning services. Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr., of the Council of the
Twelve, conducted the services at the Friday afternoon and Sunday
afternoon sessions and also of the General Priesthood meeting.
2 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Day
General Authorities of the Church Present
The First Presidency: David O. McKay, Stephen L Richards,
and J. Reuben Clark, Jr.*
The Council of the Twelve Apostles: Joseph Fielding Smith,**
John A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E. Bowen, Harold B.
Lee, Spencer W. Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Mark E. Petersen,
Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stapley.***
Patriarch to the Church: Eldred G. Smith.
Assistants to the Council of the Twelve: Marion G. Romney,
Thomas E. McKay, Clifford E. Young, and Alma Sonne.
The First Council of the Seventy: Levi Edgar Young, Antoine
R. Ivins, Richard L. Evans, Oscar A. Kirkham, S. Dilworth Young,
Milton R. Hunter, and Bruce R. McConkie.
The Presiding Bishopric: LeGrand Richards, Joseph L. Wirth-
lin, and Thorpe B. Isaacson.

General Officers and Other Authorities Present


Church Historian and Recorder: Joseph Fielding Smith, and
A. William Lund, Assistant.
Members of General Welfare Committee, Church Welfare
Program.
Members of the Board of Education, Commissioner of Education,
Directors and Associate Directors of Institutes, and Seminary Super-
visors.

Presidents of Stakes and their Counselors, Bishops of Wards


and their Counselors, Presidents of Temples, Patriarchs, High Priests,
Seventies, Elders; General Stake and Ward
officers of Auxiliary
Associations, from all parts of the Church.
Mission Presidents: Richard L. Evans, Temple Square; Salt
Lake City; George Q. Morris, Eastern States; S. Dilworth Young,
New England; Waldo M. Andersen, Northern States; John B.
Hawkes, North Central States; John B. Matheson, East Central
States; J. Orval Ellsworth, Central States; Albert Choules, Southern
States; David I. Stoddard, California; Benjamin L. Bowring, Texas-
Louisiana; Ray E. Dillman, Western States; Thomas W. Gardner,
Northern California; James A. McMurrin, Northwestern States;
Floyd G. Eyre, Canada; Glen G. Fisher, Western Canada; Lucian M.
Meacham, Jr., Mexico; Lorin F. Jones, Spanish-American; Golden
R. Buchanan, Southwest Indian; Carl C. Burton, Great Lakes;
Hilton A. Robertson, Chinese.

*The First Presidency was reorganized at the concluding session of this Con-
ference, with President David O. McKay as President, Stephen L Richards
as First Counselor and J. Reuben Clark, Jr., Second Counselor.
"Elder Joseph Fielding Smith was sustained as President of the Council of
the Twelve Apostles.
***The vacancy in the Council of the Twelve was not filled at this Conference.
FIRST DAY
MORNING MEETING
The opening session of the Conference convened Friday morning,
April 6, at 10 o'clock, with President David O. McKay, President of
the Council of the Twelve, presiding and conducting the services.

President David O. McKay


This is the opening session of the One Hundred Twenty-first
Annual Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. We are convened in the tabernacle on Temple Square in
Salt Lake City.
As you all know, through general announcement already given,
last Wednesday, April 4, at 7:27 p.m., there came to a close, on his
eighty-first birthday, the earthly career ofour beloved leader, Presi-
den George Albert Smith. A
few moments after his heartbeat stopped

one of his daughters I am not clear this morning whether it was

Emily or Edith said, with aching heart, "This is the only way
father could attend conference." Though his chair is vacant this
morning let us hope that the influence of his Christ-like character
will pervade every heart and his high ideals be an inspiration to us
all. Truly he was a noble soul, happiest when he was making others
happy. In his daily life he strove sincerely to apply the teachings of
Jesus to "love the Lord thy God with all thy soul, and with all thjr
mind, and with all thy strength and thy neighbor as thyself."
. . .

President Smith's passing leaves the Quorum of the First Presi-


dency disorganized, and the presiding authority of the Church now
rests with the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. At a meeting this
morning at nine o'clock this Council requested that the counselors
to President Smith conduct the exercises of this General Conference.
President Clark, will you please come forward and take your
place?
(Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr., then took a seat by President
McKay on the upper stand.)
All of the General Authorities of the Church are in attendance.
Elder Joseph Anderson is the clerk of the conference.
These services, and all general sessions of the conference, will
be broadcast in the Assembly Hall and in Barratt Hall over the
loud speaking system and by television.
This service and all general sessions of the conference will be
broadcast over station KSL, Salt Lake City, and by arrangement
through KSL over the following stations:
In Utah: KSUB at Cedar City, KSVC at Richfield, KJAM at
Vernal, KBUH, Brigham City, and at Logan. KVNU
In Idaho: KGEM at Boise, KID at Idaho Falls, KEYY at Poca-
tcllo. KBIO at Burley, KVMV
at Twin Falls, and KRXK at Rexburg.
4 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Day
We are grateful to the stations named for their cooperation in
broadcasting these proceedings and we thank them for their services
which will continue throughout the conference. In the interest of
time, however, we shall not repeat this announcement at every
session.
All general sessions will also be televised over the KSL tele-
vision station, channel 5.
The choir singing for this morning's session will be by the
Brigham Young University combined choruses with Elders Newell
Weight and Crawford Gates conducting and with Elder Frank W.
Asper at the organ.
We morning services by the Brigham Young
will begin the
University combined choruses singing: "Thanks Be To God," con-
ducted by Elder Newell Weight.
The opening prayer will be offered by President Jared J. Trejo
of the Southern Arizona Stake.

The University combined choruses sang: "Thanks Be To God."


The opening prayer was offered by President Jared J. Trejo of the
Southern Arizona Stake.
The Brigham Young University combined choruses then sang:
"Awake, Ye Saints of God, Awake."

Elder Joseph Anderson, Clerk of the Conference, read the fol-


lowing reports:
CHANGES IN CHURCH OFFICERS
STAKE, WARD, AND BRANCH ORGANIZATIONS
SINCE OCTOBER CONFERENCE, 1950
Mission Changes and New Presidents Appointed:

Chinese Mission transferred to San Francisco, California.


Ernest Nelson appointed president of Hawaii Mission to suc-
ceed Edward L. Clissold.
J.
Howard Maughan appointed president of New England Mis-
sion to succeed S. Dilworth Young.
James A. McMurrin appointed president of Northwestern States
Mission to succeed Joel Richards.
Earl S. Paul appointed president of Samoan Mission to succeed
Golden H. Hale.
Golden R. Buchanan appointed president of Southwest Indian
Mission to succeed S. Eugene Flake.

New Stakes Organized:

Santa Rosa Stake organized January 7, 1951, from Northern


California Mission and Berkeley Stake.
Murray Stake organized by division of Cottonwood Stake, Feb-
ruary 11, 1951.
CHANGES IN CHURCH OFFICERS 5

Wilford Stake organized February 11, 1951, by division of East


Mill Creek Stake.
Santa Barbara Stake organized February 18, 1951, from Cali-
fornia Mission.

Stake Presidents Chosen:


L. Burdett Pugmire, president of Bear Lake Stake to succeed
E. Woodruff Stucki.
EIRay L. Christiansen, president of East Cache Stake to suc-
ceed J. Howard Maughan.
Wm. Howard Allen, president of Granite Stake to succeed
Carl W. Buehner.
Harry E. McClure, president of Gridley Stake to succeed John
C. Todd.
Olin H. Ririe, president of Mount Ogden Stake to succeed Earl
S. Paul.
George H. Mortimer, president of New York Stake to succeed
Wm. F. Edwards.
David B. Haight, president of Palo Alto Stake to succeed Wen-
dell B. Christenson.
Charles B. Richmond, president of Park Stake to succeed J.
Percy Goddard.
David E. Heywood, president of Phoenix Stake to succeed Del-
bert L. Stapley.
Antone K. Romney, president of Provo Stake to succeed Charles
E, Rowan, Jr.
Arthur J. Godfrey, president of new Santa Barbara Stake.
John LaRoy Murdock, president of new Santa Rosa Stake.
George Z. Aposhian, president of new Wilford Stake.
Oral J. Wilkinson, president of new Murray Stake.

New Wards Organized:


Aberdeen Second Ward, American Falls Stake, formed by a
division of Aberdeen Ward.
Blackfoot Fifth Ward, Blackfoot Stake, formed by a division of
Blackfoot Third Ward.
Wellington Second Ward, Carbon Stake, formed by a division
of Wellington Ward.
Cedar Sixth Ward, Cedar Stake, formed by a division of Cedar
Third and Fourth Wards.
Long BeachFifth Ward, East Long Beach Stake, formed by a
division ofLong Beach Third Ward.
Norwalk Ward, East Long Beach Stake, formed by a division
of Bellflower and Whittier Wards.
Ridgedale Ward, Grant Stake, formed by a division of Lorraine
Ward.
Mesa Ninth Ward, Mesa Stake, formed by a division of Mesa
Seventh Ward.
6 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Day
Valley Center Second Ward, Mill Creek Stake, formed by a
division of Valley Center First Ward.
Layton Second Ward, Mt. Graham Stake, formed by a division
of Layton Ward.
Granger Third Ward, North Jordan Stake, formed by a division
of Granger First Ward, with part of Granger Second Ward.
Taylorsville Second Ward, North Jordan Stake, formed by a
division of Taylorsville Ward.
Garfield Second Ward, Oquirrh Stake, formed by a division of
Garfield Ward.
Timp View Ward, Orem Stake, forwed by a division of Wind-
sorWard.
Parowan Second Ward, Parowan Stake, formed by a division of
Parowan East and West Wards,
Thirty-Fifth Ward, Pioneer Stake, formed by a division of
Thirty-Second Ward.
Tahoe Ward, Sacramento Stake, formed by a division of Home-
stead Ward.
Hemet Ward, San Bernardino Stake, formerly a branch in the
California Mission.
Farmington Second Ward, Davis Stake, formed by division of
Farmington Ward.
OjaiWard, Santa Barbara Stake, formerly of the California
Mission.
Oxnard Ward, Santa Barbara Stake, formerly of the California
Mission.
Santa Barbara Ward, Santa Barbara Stake, formerly of the
California Mission.
Santa Paula Ward, Santa Barbara Stake, formerly of the Cali-
fornia Mission.
San Luis Obispo Ward, Santa Barbara Stake, formerly of the
California Mission.
Santa Maria Ward, Santa Barbara Stake, formerly of the Cali-
fornia Mission.
Ventura Ward, Santa Barbara Stake, formerly of the California
Mission.
Santa Rosa Ward, Santa Rosa Stake, formerly of the California
Mission.
Seattle Fifth Ward, Seattle Stake, formed by a division of Seattle
Third Ward.
Seattle Sixth Ward, Seattle Stake, organized from White Center
Branch.
Richfield Fifth Ward, Sevier Stake, formed by a division of
Richfield Second Ward.
Richfield Sixth Ward, Sevier Stake, formed by a division of
Richfield Third Ward.
Crest View Ward, Sharon Stake, formed by a division of Hill
Crest Ward.
CHANGES IN CHURCH OFFICERS 7

Bountiful Sixth Ward, South Davis Stake, formed by a division


of Bountiful First Ward.
Tooele Eighth Ward, Tooele Stake, formed by a division of
Tooele Fifth Ward.
Tooele Ninth Ward, Tooele Stake, formed by a division of
Tooele Fifth Ward.

Ward Name Changed


Holladay Third Ward, Cottonwood Stake, formerly Mt. Olym-
pus Ward.
Holladay Fourth Ward, Cottonwood Stake, formerly Olympus
South Ward.
Long Beach Third Ward, East Long Beach Stake, formerly Park
View Ward.
Compton First Ward, Long Beach Stake, formerly Compton
Ward.
Compton Second Ward, Long Beach Stake, formerly Compton
Center Ward.
Long Beach First Ward, Long Beach Stake, formerly Long
Beach Ward.
Long Beach Second Ward, Long Beach Stake, formerly North
Long Beach Ward.
Long Beach Fourth Ward, Lonq Beach Stake, formerly Virqinia
Ward.
Murray Sixth Ward, Murray Stake, formerly South Grant
Ward.
Parowan First Ward, Parowan Stake, formerly Parowan East
Ward.
Parowan Third Ward, Parowan Stake, formerly Parowan West
Ward.
Sacramento First Ward, Sacramento Stake, formerly Sacra-
mento Ward.
Sacramento Second Ward, Sacramento Stake, formerly Sutter
Ward.
Sacramento Third Ward, Sacramento Stake, formerly Home-
stead Ward.
Sacramento Fourth Ward, Sacramento Stake, formerly Tahoe
Ward.
Lajara Ward, San Luis Stake, formerly Richfield Ward.
Imbler-Elgin Ward, Union Stake, formerly Imbler Ward.

Independent Branches Made Wards:


Dragerton Ward, Carbon Stake, formerly Dragerton Branch.
Fort Collins Ward, Denver Stake, formerly Fort Collins Branch.
Lakewood Ward, East Long Beach Stake, formerly Lakewood
Branch.
Woodland Ward, Sacramento Stake, formerly Woodland
Branch.
8 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
Gallup Ward, St. Johns Stake, formerly Gallup Branch.
San Rafael Ward, San Francisco Stake, formerly San Rafael
Branch.
Oakdale Ward, San Joaquin Stake, formerly Oakdale Branch.

Independent Branches Organized:


Spanish-American Branch, Denver Stake, formerly a branch in
the Spanish- American Mission.
Ditman Branch, East Los Angeles Stake, formerly a branch in
the Spanish-American Mission.
Ruby Valley Branch, Humboldt Stake, formerly part of Wells
Ward.
Superstition Mountain Branch, Maricopa Stake, formerly part
of Mesa Tenth Ward of Maricopa Stake and Mesa Seventh Ward
of Mesa Stake.
Spanish-American Branch, Phoenix Stake, formerly a branch in
the Spanish-American Mission.
Spanish Branch, Sacramento Stake, formerly a branch in the
Spanish-American Mission.
Elsinor Branch, San Bernardino Stake, formerly a branch in the
California Mission.
Spanish-American Branch, San Diego Stake, formerly a branch
in the Spanish-American Mission.
Lakeport Branch, Santa Rosa Stake, formerly a branch in the
Northern California Mission.
Petaluma Branch, Santa Rosa Stake, formerly a branch in the
Northern California Mission.
Sebastapol Branch, Santa Rosa Stake, formerly a branch in the
Northern California Mission.
Willits Branch, Santa Rosa Stake, formerly a branch in the
Northern California Mission.
McNary Branch, Snowflake Stake, formed by a division of the
Lakeside Ward.

Independent Branches Discontinued:


Athol Branch. Spokane Stake, disorganized, membership trans-
ferred to "other branches."
Bay Ridge Branch, New York Stake, disorganized, membership
transferred to Brooklyn Branch.
Rockport Branch, Summit Stake, disorganized, membership
transferred to Wanship Ward.

Stake Names Changed:


Cottonwood Stake, formerly Big Cottonwood Stake.
Mill Creek Stake, formerly Cottonwood Stake.
STATISTICAL REPORT 9

Those Who Have Passed Away:


President George Albert Smith, President of The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Mary L. Morgan, widow of John Morgan, former member of
the First Council of the Seventy.

STATISTICAL REPORT— 1950


Number of Stakes of Zion, December 31, 1950 180
Number of Wards 1,396
Number of Independent Branches 145

Total Wards and Independent Branches 1,541


Number of Missions...., 43

Church Membership:
Stakes 898,478
Missions 212,836

Total Membership 1,111,314

Church Growth:
Children blessed in Stakes and Missions 37,444
Children baptized in Stakes and Missions 22,808
Converts baptized in Stakes and Missions 14,700

Social Statistics:

Birth rate per thousand 37.34


Marriage rate per thousand 9.46
Death rate per thousand 5.95

Missionaries:

Number of missionaries in the missions of the Church 5,313


Number engaged in missionary work in the stakes.... 4,527

Total missionaries —December 31, 1950 9,840


Number of missionaries who received training in the
mission home in 1950 3,014

The congregational singing of the conference was directed by


Elder J. Spencer Cornwall, Conductor, and Richard P. Condie,
Assistant Conductor of the Tabernacle Choir.
The Salt Lake Tabernacle Choir was in attendance at the Sun-
day sessions and presented choral numbers at those meetings. J.
Spencer Cornwall, Conductor, directed the singing of the Choir.
10 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Dag
The Brigham Young University combined choruses furnished
musical numbers at the Friday morning and afternoon sessions. The
singing of the combined choruses was conducted by Elders Newell
Weight, Crawford Gates, and Clawson Cannon.
The Delta Phi (Returned Missionaries) chorus from the Brig-
hom Young University, Elder Ardean Watts, conductor, furnished
musical numbers for the General Priesthood meeting Saturday
evening.
The singing Monday morning, at the Solemn Assembly, was
entirely by the congregation, with J. Spencer Cornwall conducting.
The music and singing of the Tabernacle Choir and organ broad-
cast Sunday morning, from 9:00 to 9:30, as also that of the Church
of the Air broadcast, from 8:30 to 9:00, was directed by J. Spencer
Cornwall, Frank W. Asper was at the organ, and "The Spoken
Word" was by Richard L. Evans.
Accompaniments and interludes on the great organ were played
by Alexander Schreiner, Frank W. Asper, and Roy M. Darley.
Stenographic notes of the conference were taken by Frank W.
Otterstrom and Joseph Anderson.
Joseph Anderson, Clerk of the Conference.

President David O. McKay


You brethren and sisters who are here will understand that
Iam repeating these announcements for the benefit of the thousands
who are listening over the radio.
Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr., of the Council of the Twelve, will
now present the financial statement for the Church for the year 1950
and a summarized report of the Welfare Program of the Church.

THE ANNUAL CHURCH FINANCIAL REPORT FOR THE


YEAR 1950
Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr. read the following report:
We will now
give a summary of the Church financial report
for the year 1950. The report itself will be published in full in the
Deseret News.
The report is in the usual form. The material is given under
the usual headings of expenditures heretofore used in such reports,
and data are shown under the captions: Original Budget, Additions
to Budget, Budget Funds Spent, and Budget Funds Not Spent.
A
word may be said about the "Additions to Budget." It will
be observed that in certain cases, where additions to the budget were
made, more budget funds remain unspent than the amount of addi-
tions made to the budget in such cases. That is, the original budget
for the general group was more without additions than the budget
amounts spent for that general group, leaving an unspent balance
of the original budget.
ELDER ]. REUBEN CLARK, JR. 11

This comes about from the following situation. a principle


It is
of Church expenditures that allocations of Church funds may not
be shifted from one item to another. The original allocation must
stand and any deficiency of funds as to any item must be covered
by an additional allocation and not by a shifting of funds to that
account from an allocation made to some other item of expenditure.
It not infrequently happens that where one particular class or general
category of expenditure covers several accounts, one account may
be exhausted and another account have a surplus. In such cases,
an additional allocation of funds is made to the exhausted account,
instead of transfering funds from some other account to the ex-
hausted account. To meet such situations there was provided in
the budget a so-called "Unallocated Reserve for Contingencies,"
from which these additional allocations to specific accounts could
be made and to which, where needed, additional funds could be
allocated.
The additional funds shown in the report are the net additions
made as to the particular groups of expenditure affected.
The figures given will cover amounts disbursed from the Church
general funds unless otherwise stated. Other figures will be added
later in the report and so identified.
The original budget, plus additions, for the year 1950, came to
$23,105,358. The expenditures from this fund came to $19,949,599,
which was $224,034 more than was spent in 1949. The unexpended
balance of the budget for 1950 was $3,155,759, but a million and a
half of this amount is the sum regularly allocated to the schools as
their budget for the first half of the calendar year 1951.
Taking the individual expenditure groups, —the following ap-
pears:
The administrative expenses of the office of the Corporation of
the President came to $449,205 in 1950 against $380,935 for 1949,
an increase for 1950 of $68,270. The expenditures of the Presiding
Bishop's office for 1950 was $458,364.

These budgets of the two offices, the office of the Corporation
of the President and the office of the Corporation of the Presiding
Bishop, to which may be added some $45,305 for miscellaneous ad-
ministrative expenses, —are more than covered by the non-tithing
income of the Church.
The amounts paid to the stakes and wards in 1950 came to
$7,431,223, as compared with $7,529,460 for 1949,— or $98,237 less
in 1950 than in 1949. There were 1541 wards and 180 stakes at the
close of 1950, and 1,172 stake, ward, and branch buildings to be
maintained. During the year, 259 buildings were under construction
in the stakes and wards, and 8 buildings were purchased for use as
meeting houses, of which number 50 were dedicated.
For the maintenance and operation of the missions of the
Church, including return fares of missionaries, free literature, radio
and publicity expense, and the building program of the various mis-
12 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Dag
sions, $3,822,189 was spent in 1950, against $4,212,138, for 1949, a
decrease for 1950 over 1949 of $389,949. During the year, 1 13 build-
ings were under construction in the missions, and 34 other buildings
were purchased for meeting places, and missionary headquarters.
Of these 147 buildings, some 60 were dedicated.
For the operating expenses of the 8 temples of the Church,
including repairs, construction work, and maintenance, $696,862 was
spent in 1950 and $589,331 in 1949, or an increase in 1950 of
$107,531.
From the Church general funds there was expended for Church
Welfare in 1950, $1,608,454 and in 1949, $1,714,280,— a decrease
for 1950 of $105,826.
For general buildings and grounds at Church headquarters, in-
cluding the Tabernacle and Assembly Hall, the buildings on Temple
Block and on the block on which is located the Administration Build-
ing, including $635,834 granted to hospitals for new construction
and improvements, $1,184,160 was expended for 1950 against
$702,219 for 1949, an increase for 1950 of $481,941.
For schools and educational activities, including the Brigham
Young University, Ricks College, Juarez Stake Schools, 1 7 institutes
and 139 seminaries, the McCune School of Music, the Blanding
Indian School, including the salaries of administrative officers and
teachers, as well as funds for the erection and repair of buildings,
and for purchase of building sites, there was expended during the
calendar year 1950, $3,272,403 from Church general funds. To this
figure should be added for 1950, expenditures of $2,432,820 of funds
collected by the schools for tuition and other services, or a total of
$5,705,223 spent for Church education, as against $3,086,136 for
the calendar year 1949. There were enrolled in the Brigham Young
University, the Ricks College, the L.D.S. Business College, and the
Juarez Stake Academy, for the school year 1949-1950, some 11,437
students; 31,488 others received religious training and activity in
the institutes and seminaries.
For the Genealogical Society there was expended the amount
of $743,145 in 1950, as compared with $750,505 in 1949, a decrease
of $7,360 for 1950. Included in these expenditures, in addition to
sums for research and record-keeping work, are sums spent for
microfilm records in 6 of our States and in 10 foreign countries, the
total microfilm record so obtained having an equivalency of 57,705
volumes of approximately 385 pages per volume.
Other items of expense from the general Church funds will be
found in the printed report, but call for no special comment here.
But in addition to the foregoing expenditures from the tithes
and other income, there has come from the people on various
accounts and been spent for Church purposes, buildings, and build-
ing maintenance, maintenance of missions, welfare, auxiliaries, hos-
pitalization, and educational purposes (already noted), a little more
ELDER ]. REUBEN CLARK, JR. 13

than three fourths as much as spent from the general Church funds,
or the sum of $15,130,536. This is $930,141 more than was similarly
expended in 1949.
The total expenditure of both kinds for 1950 was $35,080,135.
To this could properly be added, as coming from the people, some
$3,000,000 which went from parents and others to maintain the
missionary force in the field. For 1949, the total expenditure was
$33,925,960, or an increase for 1950 of $1,154,175.
The total number of people (wards and stakes and missions)
paying fast offerings and welfare contributions in 1950, is given
as 215,052. The total amount of fast offerings and welfare con-
tributions was $2,581,003, in 1950, and $2,153,434 in 1949, an increase
of $427,569 for 1950. The increase came from both wards and stakes
and the missions.
The total cash expenditures for the Welfare Program for the
year 1950, was $3,399,951, all of which is included in the above
grand total of the budget and other cash expenditures.
From 1938 to the end of 1950 more than 2,721 families have
been helped to become self-supporting, and 17,829 families have
been assisted in other ways. During this same period the Deseret
Industries has provided continuous work for hundreds of handi-
capped and aged persons. During the year 1950 they had an
average of 235 persons working in their plants. The Deseret Cloth-
ing Factory, another branch of the Welfare Plan, has provided con-
tinuous employment for from 30 to 60 individuals, many of whom
were widows and elderly persons.
During the year 1950, 90,800 man days of work were donated
in the production of the budget and 10,500 man days of work were
donated in the construction of Bishops' storehouses and other build-
ings for the operation of Welfare Plan. In addition to these, 94
construction and remodeling projects were completed by the breth-
ren for the benefit of less fortunate members.
Obedient to the command of the Lord that men should be self-
supporting, looking to the Church for necessary help, 3,509 persons
have, during the past eight years relinquished their position on gov-
ernment relief rolls. Of this number, 1,600 have been rehabilitated
and are receiving no aid from the Church nor, so far as known,
from any other gratuitous source; 1,221 are yet receiving part of their
support from the Church; and 688 are receiving all their needs from
the Church.
During 1950, 4,747 persons were given occupational counseling
resulting in the solution of their employment problems, and 5,712
other persons were placed in remunerative employment. Reported
unemployment has decreased 29% during the year.
Our expenditures are heavy, our activities are many, some of
them of considerable size, but we are striving to expend Church
funds with care, without waste, and so far as possible with the least
amount of extravagance.
14 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 i^irst Dan

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FINANCIAL REPORT 15

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16 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Dag

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FINANCIAL REPORT 17

Part II—EXPENDITURES OTHER THAN FROM CHURCH GENERAL


FUNDS 1950

The expenditures budgeted from Church General Funds and paid principally
from the tithes are detailed above. The following expenditures were made from
further contributions by members of the Church:

Paid for stake, ward, and mission building purposes $ 6,116,856


Expended for stake, ward, and mission maintenance purposes; ex-
penses of auxiliary organizations and for recreation 3,553,192
Expended from ward and mission fast offerings 953,484
Expended from welfare contributions 1,445,906
Assistance rendered missionaries.. 297,690
Expended from dues of general boards; children's contributions to the
Primary Hospital, and donations to temples _ 283,007
Expended by educational institutions in addition to amount listed
under budget expenditures, from funds derived from tuitions and
other sources _ 2,432,820
Expended by the hospitals for the care of the sick, in addition to
the amount paid from the tithes and included in Part I — 47,581

Total of Part II (Expended other than from tithes and other


general funds of the Church) 15,130,536

Total Budget cash expenditures from Church general funds, brought


forward from above. (Part I) 19,949,599

Total Cash Expenditures of the Church for the year 1950.... $35,080,135

Part III— THE CHURCH WELFARE PROGRAM— 1950


Fast Offering Data
Number of Church members who paid voluntary fast offerings and
welfare contributions;

In the wards 180,848


In the missions 34,204

Total 215,052

Amount of voluntary fast offerings and welfare contributions:


In the wards
Fast offerings $ 991,419
Welfare contributions 1,465,410
In the missions
Fast offerings $ 124,174

Total Fast Offerings and Welfare Contributions $2,581,003

Percent of Church membership who paid fast offerings 20.3%


Average fast offerings per capita in wards $1.17
Average fast offerings per capita in missions 58
Average fast offerings per capita in wards and missions _ 1.06
Average fast offerings and welfare contributions per capita in wards 2.91
18 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Dag
Welfare Program Cash Expenditures, All Included in Figures Given Above
But Segregated Here
Expended from ward and mission fast offerings and welfare contri-
butions for the care of the needy consisting of food, clothing, rents,
light, heat, hospitalization, burials, etc., and for the purchase of
commodities for storehouses _ $2,399,390
Disbursed by the General Church Welfare Committee for the operating
costs of storehouses and for the overhead expenses of the General
Committee „ 376,505
Disbursed by the Corporations of the President and Presiding Bishop
for direct assistance and for contributions to civic and educational
institutions _ _ 576,475
Expended by the hospitals for the care of the sick 47,581
Total Relief Cash Expenditures for the year 1950, all included in above
grand total of budget and other cash expenditures $3,399,951

Welfare Report
The General Church Welfare Committee makes the following further re-
port, indicating the production and distribution of bishops' storehouse commodi-
ties during the year 1950:

Production and Distribution of Commodities


for Bishops' Storehouses
Production during the year 1950 was 5% lower than in 1949. The decrease
was caused by the loss of the fruit crop. Storehouse commodities distributed in-
creased 7% over 1949.
Assistance Rendered
There have been from 17,913 to 55,460 persons assisted through the Bishops'
Storehouse Program each year since 1938. In 1950 there were 39,537 persons
so assisted in the United States and Canada. This is an increase over 1949 of
1,257 persons.
From 1938 to the end of 1950 more than 2,721 families have been helped
to become self-supporting and 17,829 families have been assisted in other ways.
During this same period the Deseret Industries has provided continuous work
for hundreds of handicapped and aged persons. During the year 1950 they had
an average of 235 persons working in their plants. The Deseret Clothing Factory
another branch of the Welfare Plan, has provided continuous employment for
from 30 to 60 individuals, many of whom were widows and elderly persons.
Contributed Work and Construction Projects
During the year 1950, 90,800 man days of work were donated in the produc-
tion of the budget and 10,500 man days of work were donated in the construction
of Bishops' Storehouses and other buildings for the operation of the Welfare
Plan. In addition to these, 94 construction and remodeling projects were com-
pleted by the brethren for the benefit of less fortunate members.
Persons Relinquishing Government Relief
Obedient to the command of the Lord that men should be self-supporting,
looking to the Church for necessary help, 3,509 persons have, during the past
eight years relinquished their position on government relief rolls. Of this num-
ber 1,600 have been rehabilitated and are receiving no aid from the Church nor,
so far as known, from any other gratuitous source; 1,221 are yet receiving part
of their support from the Church; and 688 are receiving all their needs from the
Church.
Placement and Counseling Service
During 1950, 4,747 persons were given occupational counseling resulting in
the solution of their employment problems, and 5,712 other persons were placed
in remunerative employment. Reported unemployment has decreased 29% dur-
ing the year.
ELDER MARION G. ROMNEY 19

President David O. McKay


Elder Orval W. Adams, Chairman of the Church Auditing
Committee, will now read the report of the Church Auditors, after
whom Elder Marion G. Romney, of the Assistants to the Twelve,
willspeak to us.

REPORT OF CHURCH AUDITING COMMITTEE


Elder Orval W. Adams read the following report:
President David O. McKay and Council of the Twelve
47 East South Temple Street
Salt Lake City, Utah

Dear Brethren:
The Church Auditing Committee has reviewed the annual financial
report of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for the year end-
ing December 31, 1950.
The accounting system and records were found to be adequate, and
are meticulously maintained. Disbursement of Church funds is controlled
through a comprehensive budget system, which properly safeguards ex-
penditures. The funds are being carefully conserved.
The Church is in strong financial position and free from debt.
Respectfully submitted,
Orval W. Adams
Albert E. Bowen
George S. Spencer
Harold H. Bennett
Church Auditing Committee

ELDER MARION G. ROMNEY


Assistant to the Council of the Twelve Apostles

Ye fearful saints, fresh courage take;


The clouds ye so much dread
Are big with mercy, and shall break
In blessings on your head.

can enjoy the Spirit of the Lord, for which I earnestly pray,
If I
I you a message of hope and courage. I am prompted
desire to give
to this desire by the fact that in my recent travels among the people,
I have sensed a growing spirit of uneasiness and foreboding.

Spirit of Uneasiness

Following a welfare meeting held a few months ago on the


Pacific Coast, in which we had counseled the people to obtain
permanent welfare production projects that they might produce the
necessities to carry on our welfare work without calling upon the
Saints year after year for cash contributions, a sister told me she
was comforted by our advice, that she felt it would not have been
20 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
given the people were not to stay there permanently. She had
if
been disturbed and worried by talk that bombs might be dropped
in that area, necessitating their moving inland.
This brought to my mind the experiences of youth, when in the
colonies of Old Mexico we were agitated over whether the troubles
incident to the Madero Revolution would necessitate our leaving
the country. At the peak of the disturbances, our stake president

who was my uncle, Junius Romney planted an orchard of young
apple trees. I well remember how my mind was relieved by hearing
people say that if we were facing expulsion, the stake president
would not be planting trees which would take years to mature.
Notwithstanding the comfort I got out of that assurance, we did have
to leave.

Need for Hope and Courage


was, of course, unable to advise the good sister whether
I
bombs would be dropped, nor did I know whether the city would
have to be evacuated, but I did have a great desire to give her some
comfort and courage which would ease her mind.
I remembered that President Joseph F. Smith had said that

leaders in the Church "should be men not easily discouraged, not


without hope, and not given to foreboding of all sorts of evils to
come," that if they "sometimes feel the weight and anxiety of mo-
mentous times, they should be all the firmer and all the more resolute
in those convictions which come from a God-fearing conscience and
pure lives. It is^a matter of the greatest importance," he concluded,
"that the people be educated to appreciate and cultivate the bright
side of life rather than to permit its darkness and shadows to hover
over them." (Gospel Doctrine, p. 193.)
Calamities Ahead
I could not give her, nor can I extend to you, much hope and

courage based upon an expectation that we are about to enter upon


a period of world peace and security. I do not expect any such
happy circumstances to prevail in the immediate future. As I read
the signs of the times, in light of the revealed word of God, we are
in line for something quite different.
A long time ago the Lord raised the curtain on the scene of de-
struction awaiting the inhabitants of the earth if they followed to
the end the course they were then pursuing. More than a hundred
years ago, he said that a desolating scourge should go forth among
the inhabitants of the earth, and if they repented not, it should con-
tinue from time to time until the earth was empty and the inhabitants
thereof utterly destroyed.
For corrupted before me; and the powers of darkness prevail
all flesh is
upon the earth, among the children of men.
... alleternity is pained, and the angels are waiting the great com-
mand to reap down the earth, to gather the tares that they may be
burned. (D. & C. 38:11-12.)
ELDER MARION G. ROMNEY 21

am convinced that the overwhelming


I majority of men have
chosen to continue down the path they were then following. I can
discern no change in their course sufficient to justify in me a hope
that the calamities which the Lord said he knew would come upon
the inhabitants of the earth will be turned aside.

Courage of Faith
But we Latter-day Saints must not let ourselves be so engulfed
with forebodings that we fail to obtain and enjoy such hope and

courage as is within our reach the hope and courage born of faith
in the power of righteousness to ultimately triumph. I have bound-
less confidence in that power. I am persuaded beyond all doubt

that the destiny of men and nations is in the hands of the Almighty,
who has respect for righteousness, and not in the hands of conniv-
ing politicians whose wisdom has perished, whose understanding has
come to naught, and who have no respect for righteousness. If it
were not so, I should be in utter despair. I believe that the record
and the word of God justify us in so placing our hope.
Charge to Joshua
I cite your attention to the calling of Joshua, the successor to
Moses, whose mission it was to lead Israel over Jordan and divide
among them the promised land which was then inhabited by an
armed and hostile people. It was a difficult and arduous assign-
ment. To strengthen him for it, the Lord gave Joshua a great
promise and a great charge. This is the promise:
There shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of
thy life: as I was with Moses, so I will be with thee: I will not fail thee,
nor forsake thee.

And this is the charge:


Be strong and of a good courage: for unto this people shalt thou divide
foran inheritance the land, which I sware unto their fathers to give them.
Only be thou strong and very courageous. . . .

Now note with care how Joshua was directed to show his strength
and courage, and also that prosperity was to follow his performance.
. . . that thou mayest observe to do according to all the law, which
Moses my servant commanded thee: turn not from it to the right hand or
to the left, that thou mayest prosper whithersoever thou goest.

Moses had been the living prophet during the days of Joshua.
This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth; but thou shalt
meditate therein day and night, that thou mayest observe to do according
to all that is written therein: for then thou shalt make thy way prosperous
and then thou shalt have good success.
The book of the law was the standard church work of that day.
Have not I commanded thee? Be strong and of a good courage; be not
afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee
whithersoever thou goest. (Joshua 1 :5-9.)
22 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Day
As I I felt that Joshua's obedience to the
read this scripture,
teachings of Moses and to the contents of the book of the law was
the test of his strength and courage. The extent to which he was
to prosper, be unafraid and undismayed, and have the Lord with
him, depended upon his rating in that test.
We can demonstrate our strength and courage in the same way,
and be unafraid and undismayed and have the Lord with us whither-
soever we go, by observing the teachings of the living prophets and
observing to do according to all that is written in the standard works
of the Church.

Teachings of Wilford Woodruff


During the last years of President Woodruff's life, his mind
dwelt much upon the calamities which were coming upon the earth,
and he gave many warnings of them. But he did not leave his
hearers in despair. Always he held out to them hope and courage,
conditioned on their righteousness. Here is a sample of his teach-
ings:
Over the millions of people on this earth, there hangs a cloud of dark-
ness almost entirely upon their shoulders. Can you tell me where the
people are who will be shielded and protected from these great calamities
and judgments which are even now at our doors? I'll tell you. The priest-
hood of God who honor their priesthood, and who are worthy of their
blessings, are the only ones who shall have their safety and protection.
They are the only mortal beings. No other people have a right to be
shielded from these judgments. They are at our very doors; not even this
people will escape them entirely. They will come down like the judg-
ments of Sodom and Gomorrah. And none but the priesthood will be
safe from their fury.

But he concluded with this note of assurance:


If you do your duty, and I do my duty, we shall have and
protection,
shall pass through the afflictions in peace and in safety. (The Improve-
ment Era, Vol. 17, pp. 1164-1165.)

On another occasion he had this to say:


I will say to the Latter-day Saints, if they will be faithful, and do
what they should do, and listen to the counsel given to them, they need not
have any fears about anything, for the whole work is in the hands of
God, the destinies of nations lie there. It is better for a people to be wise,
to get righteousness, to be the friends of God, than to occupy any other
positions in life. (/. D. 2, p. 199, February 25, 1855, Discourses of Wilford
Woodruff, p. 6.)

Protection of Righteous
Nephi, speaking of our day which by the power of God he had
seen in vision, said the Lord would not suffer the wicked to destroy
the righteous, but that he would "preserve the righteous by his
power, even if it so be that the fulness of his wrath must come, and
the righteous be preserved, even unto the destruction of their enemies
by fire. Wherefore, the righteous need not fear." (I Nephi
22:16-17.)
)

ELDER MARION G. ROMNEY 23

The Lord renewed this same promise of protection to the right-


eous in 1831 when he said he was angry with the wicked, that he
was withholding his Spirit from the inhabitants of the earth, that he
had decreed wars upon the face of the earth, and that the wicked
should destroy the wicked.
And the saints also shall hardly escape; nevertheless, I, the Lord, am
with them, and will come down in heaven from the presence of my Father
and consume the wicked with unquenchable fire. (D. & C. 63:33-34.)

Two or three months later, he continued:


. . . the hour is not yet, but is nigh at hand, when peace shall be
taken from the earth, and the devil shall have power over his own
dominion.
And also the Lord shall have power over his saints, and shall reign
in their midst. (Ibid., 1 :35-36.)

I am
persuaded that a complete surrender to the principles of
righteousness would lift God's people out of the turmoil of this pres-
ent world. Such has been the record in the past, as witness the ex-
periences of Enoch and his people and the record of the Nephites
following their visit from the risen Redeemer.

Zion a Place of Safety


Ibelieve a similar performance by us in our day would bring
the same results. I not only believe, but I know it would, and that
it will yet be done. I don't know just how soon, but I am looking
forward with certainty to the fulfilment of the words spoken by the
Lord to the Church in its infancy, when he directed the Saints to
gather together their riches to purchase an inheritance in Zion,
which he said was to be a land of peace, a city of refuge, a place
of safety for the Saints of the most high God. There the glory of
the Lord is to be a terror to the wicked and a comfort to the
righteous. Zion's inhabitants are to be the only people that shall
not be at war one with another, and every man that will not take
up his sword against his neighbour must flee unto it for safety.
And it shall come to pass that the righteous shall be gathered out
from among all nations, and shall come to Zion, singing with songs of
everlasting joy. (Ibid., 45 : 71 .

Hope in the Future


Now, I know, my
brothers and sisters, that we will have our
souls tested before we reach these glories of the future, but if we
have them in view and live righteously, we shall thereby be sustained
for the trials we must endure. Paul said it was the glory set before
Jesus for which he endured the cross, and President Young said it
was the vision of Zion as it shall be which sustained the Saints as
they pulled their covered wagons from ruts and mudholes and
trudged across the plains. Therefore, with hope in the future, let

24 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Day
us lift up our hearts and rejoice, and with strength and courage let
us gird up our loins and take upon us the whole armour of righteous-
ness, that we may be able to withstand these evil days, that having
done all, we may be able to stand.
And as we journey through these anxious times,
The Lord bless thee, and keep thee:
The Lord make his face shine upon thee and be gracious unto thee:
The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace. (Num.
6-24-26.)

This I humbly pray in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.


The Combined Choruses of the Brigham Young University
joined with the congregation in singing "High on the Mountain Top,"
conducted by Elder J. Spencer Cornwall.

ELDER ELDRED G. SMITH


Patriarch to the Church

My brothers and sisters, I wish to express my feelings along


with others in this conference regarding the passing of our late Presi-
dent, George Albert Smith. I, for one, have lost a great friend. I
don't think anyone has been more able to take the place of my earthly
father than President George Albert Smith has done.
I think he emulated in his life all of the principles of the gospel,

and no matter what subject is selected during this conference by the


General Authorities or any of those who speak here, it will be a
subject of which President George Albert Smith was an excellent
example.
Key to Happiness
And I pray the Lord will be with me as I express today
what thought I have had in mind on the principles of the gospel
and the foundation upon which we may have happiness in this
life and happiness in the life to come; for no happiness comes without
success, or without growth and progress.
Reading from the Doctrine and Covenants, Section twenty-nine,
verses 36 to 40,
And it came to pass that Adam, being tempted of the devil for, —
behold, the devil was before Adam, for he rebelled against me, saying,
Give me thine honor, which is my power; and also a third part of the
hosts of the heaven turned he away from me because of their agency;
And they were thrust down, and thus came the devil and his angels;
And, behold, there is a place prepared for them from the beginning,
which place is hell.
And it must needs be that the devil should tempt the children of men,
or they could not be agents unto themselves; for if they never should have
bitter they could not know the sweet
Wherefore, it came to pass that the devil tempted Adam, and he
partook of the forbidden fruit and transgressed the commandment, wherein
he became subject to the will of the devil, because he yielded unto tempta-
tion.
)

ELDER ELDRED G. SMITH 25

And reading from Moses:


And in that day the Holy Ghost fell upon Adam, which beareth
record of the Father and the Son, saying: I am the only begotten of the
Father from the beginning, henceforth and forever, that as thou hast
fallen thou mayest be redeemed, and all mankind, even as many as will.
And in that day Adam blessed God and was filled, and began to
prophesy concerning all the families of the earth, saying: Blessed be the
name of God, for because of my transgression my eyes are opened, and in
this life I shall have joy, and again in the flesh I shall see God.
And Eve, his wife, heard all these things and was glad, saying:
Were it not for our transgression we never should have had seed, and
never should have known good and evil, and the joy of our redemption,
and the eternal life which God giveth unto all the obedient. (Moses
5:9-11.)

In both these references we are given the key to happiness in


this life and happiness in the life to come to carry throughout all
eternity.

Adam fell that men might be; and men are, that they might have
joy. (II Nephi 2:25.)

Presence of Good and Evil


Joy comes as a result of progress, as a result of accomplishment
for good. That is why we all shouted for joy when the opportunity
was given to us to come to this earth and partake of the blessings
through obedience, made possible to us through exercising free
agency. For man to exercise free agency he must have both sides
to choose from. In every decision made there must be both a good
and an evil influence; for if we had all of the good or all of the
evil we would be right in the same path which Satan tried to estab-
lish in the first place, that of predestination. And so there must
be both sides to choose from in every case.
As the Lord said in the Doctrine and Covenants in the verse
from which I previously read:
And it must needs be that the devil should tempt the children of men,
or they could not be agents unto themselves; for if they never should have
bitter they could not know the sweet. ( D. & C. 29 39. :

Therefore, in all that we do we must be tempted. Then our


growth depends upon our obedience. The first step in our progress
for the eternities is accepting the gospl of Jesus Christ. do not We
convert others; missionaries do not convert others. teach them We
to think for themselves; and when they have a desire within them-
selves to receive knowledge and express that desire in action, by be-
ing obedient to the desires of God, then they have fulfilled that law
upon which that blessing is predicated, which brings a knowledge of
the gospel to them through the Holy Ghost.
Baptism is the fulfilling of an ordinance which is an act of testi-
fying that we will be obedient in keeping the commandments of God.
GENERAL CONFERENCE
First Day
The greatest blessing promised in the Word of Wisdom is that of
knowledge. The promises given are:
And all saints who remember to keep and do these sayings, walking
in obedience to the commandments, shall receive health in their navel and
marrow to their bones;
And shall find wisdom and great treasures of knowledge, even hidden
treasures. {D .& C. 89:18-19.)

Desire to be Obedient
I am reminded man who once tried to discontinue
of a story of a
the use of tobacco. He became almost a nervous wreck. He worried
himself sick about how much he was going without tobacco. It was
on his mind constantly until he became so nervous and so shaky that
he couldn't hold his hands still. Then later on, the elders the —
missionaries —contacted him and told him about the Word of Wis-
dom and he said, "If that's what the Lord wants, then I'll do it." And
with the idea in his mind that he was going to do it because of obedi-
ence to the commandments of the Lord, he discontinued the use of
tobacco; and he held his hands out in front of the visitors with him
and said, "Look how steady I am; I'm as steady as ony of them and
I have gone without tobacco for some months."
Our mental attitude has much to do with whether or not we
want to be obedient to the commandments of the Lord.
The same is true in respect to paying tithing. If a man pays his
tithing because he wants to be obedient to the commandments of God,
he will receive more blessings as a result, and it will be much easier to
pay. And so it is with all other requirements of the gospel; for ex-
ample, attendance at sacrament meetings. What is said at Church is
not always remembered, but we receive the blessing for being obedi-
ent. As a result we carry the Spirit of the Lord with us in our work
between meetings and in our various activities until we again gather
with the Saints.

Blessings Follow Obedience


Some people sacrifice all the blessings of the temple endowment
and sealing, including the blessings of godhood and exaltation just
because they do not want to be obedient in wearing the temple gar-
ment. The greatest blessing that comes from wearing the garment is
the result of obedience. Then the Lord will bless us. The success of
our entire earth life depends upon how well we learn to be obedient.
There can be no obedience without free agency which gives us both
good and evil to choose from. Thank God for the gospel plan and
the power God gives us to resist evil and choose the right.
And may the Lord be with us and give us those blessings that
we need, to carry us through these troubled times, for as long as we
are obedient to his will and do that which is in our power, the Lord
will take care of the rest of it. And we needn't worry about dis-
ELDER LEVI EDGAR YOUNG 27

tressed times, for as long as we have the gospel plan and live it with
the idea of being obedient to the desires of our Heavenly Father, his
way is the best way, and all other things will be taken care of. Seek
ye first the kingdom of heaven and all else shall be added unto it.
May the blessings of the Lord be upon this people and those at
this conference and those who shall follow me in occupying the time
here, I ask in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER LEVI EDGAR YOUNG


Of the First Council of the Seventy

Death has brought deep sorrow to us all this day. President


George Albert Smith has been called to the great beyond, and
though we know it was the will of our Father in heaven, yet his
passing will be keenly felt by the thousands of people who had
come under his influence. His life was one of noblest effort to attain
a knowledge of the purposes of the Lord. He never held aught
against his neighbor; and every day witnessed a divine act for
someone who was in need. Could each one who knew him vow
to do his little task even as he did his greater one, in the manner of
a true man, not for a day but for eternity, what a better world we
would have. He was the spirit he worked in. As an Apostle and
President of the Church of Jesus Christ, he was a light unto his
people and pointed the way by his purity of life and constancy to
the divine purposes of his God. Traveling hopefully on day by day,
he gave every hour of his life to the dream of establishing the king-
dom of God upon the earth. According to the promise, he looked for
a new heaven and a new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness. He
lived ". . to give light to them that sit in darkness and in the
.

shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace." Luke
1:79.)

His comforting word this day would have been:


Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is
risen upon thee.
For, behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness
the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be
seen upon thee. ( Isaiah 60:1-2.)

I should like to speak briefly to you seventies and to the priest-


hood of the Church in general.

Present-day Conditions
We are greatly concerned with the present-day social and
all
religious conditions of the world. For all the wrongs that are in
the world today, for all the false teachings and terrible wars that
we have experienced, all the tragedies and sufferings of humanity
GENERAL CONFERENCE
First Dag
caused by sin and the loss of faith in God, our children will have
to pay in the future. It was the historian Froude who wrote:
History is a voice forever sounding across the centuries the laws of
right and wrong. Opinions alter, manners change, creeds rise and fall,
but the moral law is written on the tablets of eternity. For every false
word or unrighteous deed, for cruelty and oppression, for lust or vanity,
the price has to be paid at last: not always by the chief offenders, but
paid by some one. Justice and falsehood may be long-lived, but dooms-
day comes at last to them, in revolutions and other terrible ways.

Our civilization has arrived at its present state after ages of


conflict between right and wrong. All its achievements and all its
hopes of greater things are now in a critical hour for better or for
worse. Many men and women in governmental affairs have no
clear idea of their responsibility that humanity should have towards
the future of mankind.

Inspired Men
true that good men do rise to their responsibilities. They
It is
understand the great problems of the hour. There are men who in
the hours of human history have messages from God. They have
been inspired because they approached life with deep faith. Forti-
fied by faith these men have gone quietly about teaching the world
the dream of moral and spiritual perfection. Such men are few, but
their messages are universal. You and I, my brother seventies,
know deeply in our hearts the meaning of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
We are deeply convinced that we have the insight to listen to the
voice from heaven. You must become profoundly convinced of your
divine mission, and you will also come to know that there are men
living today whose lives are lives of revelation. It is from Christ,
our Redeemer, that we learn the lesson of eternal life and become
conscious of the immortality of spiritual values.

A Divine Title
The seventy of the Church bear a noble and divine title. To
understand the words used to designate the meaning of our priest-
hood gives a better understanding of ancient life and thought. We
sense more clearly the deeply religious atmosphere of Biblical life,
which will awaken within us a more ardent missionary zeal. There
was under Moses, and apparently in all ages, a senate or council
of elders numbering seventy or seventy-two on whom lay a special
responsibility as the advisers of the nation. Shortly after leaving
Sinai, a council of seventy was chosen from among the elders or
chiefs of all the tribes except Levi and solemnly set apart to their
dignity by Moses, as a kind of senate to aid him by their counsel.
After being confirmed in their dignity by the people, they assembled
around the sacred tent, and the whole number broke out into
ELDER LEVI EDGAR YOUNG 29

prophetic enthusiasm under the influence of the Spirit of God. The


seventy chosen from all the tribes anticipated, in their prophetic
gifts, a characteristic of future generations. Says Geikie:

It is singular to notice the constant recurrence of the number Seven:


Seven priests go before the Ark with seven trumpets, for seven days, going
seven times round the city on the seventh day. The Passover and the
Feast of Tabernacles each lasted seven days. To ratify an oath was to
"seven it." The number seems to have been regarded as the symbol of
completeness or perfection, and to have been as such, connected inti-
mately with everything relating to God.

We recall the seven virtues or gifts of the Spirit, known in


ancient times to the seventy elders. Balzac, the French historian,
quotes Louis Lambert of whom he writes as declaring that the word
"seven" is the "Formula of Heaven." Therefore as you live and
express your thoughts, as you think, as you act, must be in accord-
ance with the fundamental ideals of heaven. We
see the beauty
and the sacredness of the word "seven." We
understand the mean-
ing of the kigdom of God because we possess its power. are We
reminded here of the saying above the door of the Harvard School
of Music:

To charm, to strengthen, and to teach — these are the three great


chords of might.

People Need the Gospel

The people world need to be taught the gospel of our


of the
Lord and Savior. Teaching is unfolding the divine spark within
every person into its fullest majestic purpose and scope. Teaching
is from within out. A teacher must know something about the subject
he is explaining to a listener. For this reason every missionary
should be a student, and this means hard work. It means self-
discipline and the desire to live the "simple life," the life that reaches
out to God. Of course the missionaries are idealists, caring first for
the welfare of men to awaken them to a sense of what life really
means. No one can deny the force or the beauty of the desire for
extending one's own belief and hopes to others, for imparting to them
the comfort and light of one's own salvation. This was the thing
that characterized the life of Paul the Apostle and that inspires the
mighty hosts of missionaries of today. Life in the missionary's heart
is made over, and no sooner has the faith and the hope of an illumi-
nated future taken hold of him than he is desirous to disseminate
this all the world. It is the power of the gospel truth
possession to
that giveshim what he calls his "testimony." There is a spendor of
spiritand often a grandeur of achievement which bring to him hal-
lowed feelings and a grateful heart for what he, through the Spirit
of God, has been able to accomplish.
30 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Day
Calling of the Twelve and Seventy
At an early period in his ministry, Jesus, after a night of prayer
in a lonely mountain spot, chose twelve men for his Apostles. It
was an important event in history, for it indicated the design of the
Master to organize his ministry that the work of teaching the gospel
might be inaugurated at once. The Apostles were to go forth two
by two that the Master might become known. They were to work
miracles, heal the sick, and bless the lowly. Reverently does James
in his epistle describe how they prayed and anointed the sick with
oil in the name of the Lord. (See James 5:14-15.)
After choosing the Twelve, Jesus called the Seventy. We
read
in Luke 10:1, these words:
After these things the Lord appointed other seventy also, and sent
them two and two before his face into every city and place, whither he
himself would come.

When the Apostles and Seventy were chosen, it is natural to


believe that a discourse on the ideal life, under the sovereignty of
the Father, was delivered by Jesus. This was the Sermon on the
Mount, for he wished to teach his disciples the way of life that they
might enter into the true significance of his doctrines. It was an
ideal of principles, and not a code of rules. This viewpoint, that the
Sermon on the Mount was the ordination sermon, is that of Luke
and many modern writers on the life of Christ.
Jesus founded his Church upon the rock of revelation, and he
set forth in clearness that his Church is an organized reality, small
in numbers, in its beginning, but destined to become a world move-
ment. He inspired his Apostles and Seventies with a definite con-
sciousness of unity. The men he called were not great men in the
ordinary sense; they were representative of the common people,
possessing neither wealth nor great learning. They were qualified
for their calling by their deep desire for goodness and truth. In him
they came to find the Word of Life.

Teachers of Righteousness
Youseventies are the teachers of righteousness to all nations.
You bear your faithful testimonies to the divine light of the gospel
of Jesus Christ. The spirit with which you go forth is that of the
Sermon on the Mount. The results of your teachings will be far-
reaching.
The world of today is awakening and looking to the future with
renewed faith and hope. A spiritual epoch is upon us and a spiritual
freedom is being made by mankind. President Brigham Young once
said that "the one way to scatter doubt is for all to begin work."
Hopes are more real than fears; faith more potent than uncertainty.
Beautiful were the words of the shepherds of old when they said:
"Let us now go unto Bethlehem, and see this thing that has come
to pass." The world must turn to Bethlehem.
ELDER HAROLD B. LEE 31

May we Seventies come to a deeper realization of what our


duties are, and so long as we are pure in heart and humble in spirit,
the way will be made clear by our faith in God. I ask the blessings
of the Lord upon us all, in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

President David O. McKay


Elder Harold B. Lee, of the Council of the Twelve, will now
speak to us.
If President Heber Meeks, former president of the Southern
States Mission, is in the audience, we should like him to come for-
ward, and President Jean Wunderlich' of the West German Mission
also.

ELDER HAROLD B. LEE


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
I sincerely pray for the sustaining power of your faith and
prayers for the few moments that I shall stand before you this
morning.

The Hand of Death


As we morning with the present reminder of the hand
sit this
of death, all of us moved with a common impulse of feeling toward
our great leader, I have recalled a remark that was made to Elder
Lorenzo H. Hatch and myself, as we waited down at Las Vegas,
Nevada, a few weeks ago for a late, delayed train. chanced We
to be in conversation with a life insurance salesman who is reputed
to be one of the outstanding salesmen in America. He expressed a
sentiment that has intrigued me, and I want to repeat it to you
because of the impression it made upon me. He said, "If you ever
want to stir a man into action, you want to back up the hearse and
let him smell the flowers prepared for his own service."

At first that seemed to be a terribly gruesome prospect, but as


I thought about it the more, it seemed to me that after all it was

but a crude way of stating a great eternal truth that has been
thundered to us by the prophets from the beginning. All through
the scriptures we have had a counsel given us that all that we should
do, we should do with an eye single to the glory of God, which glory,
the Lord declared to Moses, was to bring to pass immortality and
eternal life, that very reminder that death draws nearer each day
that we live. It was that same thought expressed by the Apostle
Paul when he said:
If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men
most miserable.
. For as
. . in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.
(7 Cor. 15:19-22.)
)

GENERAL CONFERENCE
First Dag
The Time to Prepare
It was also the great prophet Amulek's testimony in which he
declared,
For behold, this life is the time for men to prepare to meet God; . . .

[and] to perform their labors.


. for after this day of life, which is given us to prepare for eternity,
. .

behold, if we do not improve our time while in this life, then Cometh the
night of darkness wherein there can be no labor performed.
For behold, if ye have procrastinated the day of your repentance even
until death, behold, ye have become subjected to the spirit of the devil,
and he doth seal you his; therefore, the Spirit of the Lord hath withdrawn
from you, and hath no place in you, and the devil hath all power over you;
and this is the final state of the wicked. (Alma 34:32-33, 35.

It was this very reminder that the Angel Moroni gave to the
Prophet Joseph, which he records in that famous Wentworth letter
when he quoted the Angel Moroni as saying that
preparatory work for the second coming of the Messiah was
. . .

speedily to commence; that the time was at hand for the gospel in all
its fulness to be preached in power, unto all nations, that a people might
be prepared for the Millennial reign. (D. H. C. IV:537.)

Gospel to be Preached
In making for that preparation, the Lord has defined certain
great responsibilities for his Church. He said as one of the signs of
his coming that the gospel of the kingdom was to be preached unto
all the world for a witness unto all nations, and then should the end
come, or the destruction of the wicked. (See Matt. 24:14.) That
witness we have understood, was to be a witness of the mission of
the Messiah. It was to be a witness of the divinity of his mission.
It was to be a witness that the gospel of Jesus Christ had been
restored in all its fulness, in this the Dispensation of the Fulness of
Times.
A Light to the World
But there was something else that we were supposed to witness
which is also spoken of in the revelations. Alma spoke of this to
his people who were about to be baptized. As a part of the cove-
nant which they were about to enter, he said that they were to
stand as witnesses of God at all times and in all things, and in all
places that they might be in, even until death. (Mosiah 18:9.) In
one of the earliest revelations given in this dispensation, the Lord
said,

And even so I have sent mine everlasting covenant into the world,
to be a light to the world, and to be a standard for my people, and for
the Gentiles to seek to it. (D. & C. 45:9.)

He again admonished us, on the day when he gave the name


by which the Church was to be called. After giving us the name,
)

ELDER HAROLD B. LEE 33

. .thus shall my church be called in the last days, even The Church
.

of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.


Verily I say unto you all: Arise and shine forth, that they light may
be a standard for the nations. ( Ibid., 115: 4-5.

As I have thought of those scriptures, I have remembered a


statement that was made by an official of the United States Steel
Corporation after I had spent an hour or two with him and his com-
pany of officials down at Welfare Square. He said to me, "This
is a practical demonstration of the gospel of Jesus Christ, in giving
aid to the needy and the less fortunate."

Witnesses Before the World


That was a new concept to me, that in the welfare program
we were standing as witnesses before the world of the divine way
by which the Lord's work was to be done.
So, we witness in our missionary work the magnificent spectacle
of young men and young women, for the most part, to all the ends
of the earth, that by their unselfish services they stand as witnesses
at all times and in all places of the divine responsibility upon the
Church to teach the gospel.
So, in making sacrifice, in the payment of our tithes, and in
fasting and paying our fast offerings, in raising money to pay for
meetinghouses and temples, again we are witnessing that the law
of sacrifice is required of all true Saints if we would claim kinship
to him who gave his life that men might be.
In our social conduct, in our dancing, in our play, we must
never forget that in that play we are witnessing also that we are his
special witnesses of the divinity of the organizations who sponsor
our play.
So, every boy in military service, and every girl in her social
conduct, every businessman in his dealings with his neighbor, is a
witness as to whether or not this work in which he believes is
divine. The Church rises or falls on the tide of these personal wit-
nesses.
A few weeks ago I sat in fast meeting in the South Eighteenth
Ward (Salt Lake City) and heard a lovely girl in her mid-twenties
stand to bear her testimony. It was a thrilling testimony of a beauti-
ful Latter-day Saint girl. She told in her testimony about a morning
out on the farm in a little country district where at four o'clock in
the morning she went out with her father to milk the cows. And as
the father and she went out towards the barn, her father took her
by the hand and said, "My girl, you are the product of this Church
of Jesus Christ, and you are also the product of a true Latter-day
Saint home. If you fail, so far as you are concerned the Church
has failed and your home has failed." That girl from that time has
realized that she, as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ, was a
witness of it to all the world either for good or for bad.
34 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
Oh, the majesty of Joseph sold into Egypt, who shamed the
beautiful but apparently unloved wife of Potiphar, when she would
have tempted him to a serious sin, and he said, "My master trusts
me, and thou art his wife. How can I do this great wickedness and
sin against God?" (See Gen. 39:8.) He, too, felt his great respon-
sibility in being a true witness of the divine truths which he pro-
fessed to believe.
In one of the revelations the Lord said something else that to
me has significance here. He said,

For Zion must increase in beauty, and in holiness; her borders must
be enlarged; her stakes must be strengthened; yea, verily I say unto you,
Zion must arise and put on her beautiful garments. (D. 6 C. 82:14.)

Japanese Missionary Girl


I heard a lovely Japanese missionary girl down at Kamuela on

the island of Hawaii a few years ago make what I think was a per-
sonal application of that principle as it pertained to her home. There
were few missionaries in that day, the war was not yet ended, and
this young lady and her companion were two of the only four
missionaries on that island. We
had in the audience eighty-five
United States marines, all Latter-day Saints, who were being trained
there supposedly for an invasion off Japan, the homeland of these
two lovely missionary girls. Our sister missionary was called to
speak before that kind of audience. Tremblingly she stood at the
pulpit, and this is what she said: "When my father came to me and
told me that they wanted me to go on a mission, I said to him, 'No,
Father, I can't go on a mission.' " He pressed her as to why, and
she said, "Oh, I just can't." But he urged further, and then she said,
"I can't go because if I go out into the mission field I'll be expected
to preach certain principles of the gospel, principles which my own
father and my own family are not living."
The father asked, "What are we not doing that you'd have
to preach?"
"Well," replied his daughter, "I'll be expected to teach the law
of sacrifice. You're not even paying your tithing. I'll be asked to
teach them about family prayers, and we never have family prayers.
I'll be expected to teach the Word of Wisdom; we're using coffee

and tea in our home. I'll be expected to teach the importance of


giving service in the Church, and you are shunning that service.
No, Father, I can't go out and be a hypocrite."
I think that father spent a sleepless night. "The next morning,"

our Japanese sister said, "Father came to me and said, 'You go, my
"
dear, and your father will try to live as his daughter will preach.'
Two days later, I met her over at Honolulu at a missionary
conference, and she had just been home for the first time in nearly
two years. And during the course of the conference I whispered
ELDER HEBER MEEKS 35

to her, "Howdid you find things at home?" She smiled, and tears
were in her eyes as she said, "It's all right. Father is, and I'm happy."
Youth that we send out from us rarely ever will be stronger
than the kind of homes and environment from which they come.
The challenge of this time, what with military service of young men
eighteen years, young girls disturbed in their social life, is to see
that Zion is increased in holiness. We
must increase in beauty. Our
homes, our quorums, our wards, and our stakes must be strength-
ened. Zion must arise and put on her most beautiful garments.

Counsel of Susannah Wesley


A I read wise counsel from a lovely mother,
short while ago
Susannah Wesley, mother of John Wesley, famed in religious
circles. This was what this lovely mother said to her son, which was
a criterion by which he could judge right and wrong, in pleasure,
and for that matter in all the affairs of life. These were her words:
Would you judge the lawfulness or unlawfulness of pleasure? Then
use this rule: Whatever weakens your reason, impairs the tenderness of
your conscience, obscures your sight of God, takes from you your thirst
for spiritual things, or increases the authority of your body over your
mind, then that thing to you is evil. By this test you may detect evil no
matter how subtly or how plausibly temptation may be presented to you.

Oh, I wish that every youth would use that rule and measure
everything presented to him in order that he might choose the right.
God grant that we may strengthen Zion within ourselves, that we
might live nobly and prepare to present ourselves in honor at the
close of our lives here, before him whose name we bear as members
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, I humbly pray
in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER HEBER MEEKS


Former President of the Southern States Mission

Our souls have been fed, our lives enriched, our spirits lifted
up, by the inspired messages which have come to us from these ser-
vants of the Lord. And while there is darkness, confusion, and al-
most utter despair in the world, what a glorious thing it is that
there is a place in the earth, where we may come, as it were, and
sit at the feet of the living prophets of God and receive light and
truth from the very throne of God. Our pathway is thus made sure,
and we can walk among our fellow men in that quiet serenity born
of the Holy Spirit of God, that Spirit which brings a peace to the
human soul that surpasseth the understanding of men.
I bear witness to you, my brethren and sisters, that this Church,

the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is the repository


of those principles and ordinances and sacraments which will redeem
the human soul, that within it is the power to bring the human soul
36 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
to perfection,and that within this Church and only in this Church
is the power and the authority to dispense the light of the everlast-
ing Gospel and administer the ordinances and the sacraments of the
Gospel to the salvation and exaltation of the human soul.
Sister Meeks and I enjoyed our approximately five years pre-
siding in the Southern States Mission. Wewere there during some
very strenuous times. We
went into the mission field as our country
went into World War
II, and the missionaries were leaving the

field. It was not very long until we were without the regular mis-
sionaries, and all of the responsibilities of carrying forward mission-
ary work were placed upon the local people. It was a great blessing
in a way, to the people of that mission. They not only carried for-
ward in the work of the organized branches and districts, but they
also carried forward faithfully in the missionary work. We
had
some five or six hundred of the local people set apart as missionaries
, to carry the Gospel message to the people. Hundreds of Book of
Mormons were sold and distributed. As I recall, in 1947, 480 bap-
tisms were performed in that Mission by our local missionaries, and
it was a marvelous thing to see the growth and development that

came to the local people as they assumed their responsibilities in


the Priesthood, in presiding over the Districts and the Branches.
We endeavored to carry out the full program of the Church, just
as far as we could in the mission field. Wequalified in the same year,
in 1947, 34 of our lesser Priesthood quorums for the Standard Quo-
rum Award; 85 of our Priesthood boys won the Individual Quorum
Award. We
endeavored to carry out the Welfare program of the
Church. I was just talking a few moments ago with President Zap-
pey, of the Holland Mission, to whom we shipped some 29 boxes of
clothing, in which were hundreds of items of clothing, that went to
those good people in Holland. We
also sent to the European Saints
some 10,000 cans of food, which was prepared under the Welfare
program in the Mission. It was our great privilege to have two
Stakes of Zion organized in the Mission, while we were presiding
there, and two of the highlights of our service in the Mission field
were the association we had with President Charles A. Callis and
Elder Harold B. Lee in the organization of the Florida Stake, and
with Brother Bowen and Brother Moyle in the organization of the
South Carolina Stake, and I think largely through the efforts to
carry out the full program of the Church these men and women were
well qualified to become Stakes of Zion, and I think that the wonder-
ful records which they have made since their organization is evi-
dence of their qualifications.
We enjoyed laboring in the Southland among those wonderful
people. has always been a rich field for missionary service. I
It
doubt if is a Stake in Zion where there is not some of the blood
there
of our southern people. It was one of the very early missionary fields
of the Church, and has continued to be fruitful.
The first year that we were in the mission field, 1064 people
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 37

were baptized, and that is about the average record of that mission
throughout the years. We have rejoiced in the opportunity to carry
the Gospel message to the people of the world, for the glorious privi-
lege of witnessing the transformation of the human soul that accepts
the Gospel of Jesus Christ, to see a life passing from darkness into
light, into the light of the everlasting Gospel, to witness the influence
and power of the Spirit of our Heavenly Father upon a human soul.
It is a refining influence. The Spirit of our Heavenly Father is to the
human soul what sunshine is to vine and flower, it brings the human
soul to a full fruition, and that is one of the greatest miracles in all
the world, the redemption and glorification of the human soul under
the power and influence of the Spirit of God.
Irejoice in the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and the glorious message
which it has brought to me, for it tells me that I do not have a com-

mon origin nor a common destiny with the beasts of the field, that
birth into this life was not the beginning of my soul, and that death
is not its oblivion. But it tells me that I am a son of God, an eternal
being; that as a son of God, there is within me all the qualities, all
the powers of my Father which is in Heaven, that there is within me
the power to rise to Godhood, that I may share with God, my Father
in Heaven, forever and ever, all His power and glory and dominion,
through Jesus Christ, our Savior, Amen.

President David O. McKay


We have just listened to President Heber Meeks, former
president of the Southern States Mission. We shall ask President
Wunderlich to be prepared to be called this afternoon. Wetrust
that the anticipation of this responsibility will not interfere with his
luncheon.
We wish to express appreciation for the gift of these beautiful
lillies. I am not sure who gave them, but I think they came from the

Berkeley Stake in California.


We wish also to announce the presence of all the mission presi-
dents laboring on the North American continent, and I believe we
have the president of the Chinese Mission. If he has not arrived
yet, we hope he will be here before the close of the conference.
We wish to acknowledge also the presence of State and City
officials and the presence of the President of the University of Utah,
President of the Brigham Young University and the President of
the Utah State Agricultural College.
It is my pleasure also to announce the presence of President
Israel A. Smith, President of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints, and I believe one or two of his associates or
officials in that Church. W^e welcome them and will be very glad
to do anything we can to make their visit a pleasant one, considering,
of course, the death of their kinsman, President George Albert Smith.
We welcome others who have joined us this morning in this
worship .
38 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
The Brigham Young University combined choruses will now
sing: "Jesu, Word
of God," conducted by Elder Crawford Gates.
The closing prayer will be offered by President Hugh C. Smith
of the San Fernando Stake of California, after which this conference
will stand adjourned until two o'clock this afternoon. The proceed-
ings of that session will be broadcast over KSL
and by arrangement
through KSL over the other stations named at the beginning of this
session. The conference will also be broadcast over the television
station of KSL, channel 5.
Important messages and calls coming to us for persons supposed
to be in attendance at the conference will be announced at the dis-
missal of this meeting over the loud speaking system on the taber-
nacle grounds. Similar messages coming in will likewise be broad-
cast at the close, of each general session of the conference.
The choir music for this session has been furnished by the
Brigham Young University combined choruses, with Elders Newell
Weight and Crawford Gates conducting and Elder Frank W.
Asperat the organ.
After the singing the benediction will be offered by President
Hugh C. Smith.

The Brigham Young University combined choruses sang: "Jesu,


Word of God."
Elder Hugh C. Smith, President of the San Fernando Stake
offered the closing prayer.
Conference adjourned until 2:00 p.m.

FIRST DAY
AFTERNOON MEETING
The second session of the Conference convened promptly at
2:00 p.m. President David O. McKay of the Council of the Twelve
Apostles presided, Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr. conducted the services.

Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr.:

This the second session of the One Hundred Twenty-first


is
Annual Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. We
are convened in the tabernacle on Temple Square in
Salt Lake City, Utah. President David O. McKay, President of the
Council of the Twelve, is presiding, and he has asked me, as a
courtesy to me, to conduct the services this afternoon.
These services, and all general sessions of the conference will
be broadcast in the Assembly Hall and in Barratt Hall, 60 North
Main, over a loud speaking system and by television.
BISHOP LEGRAND RICHARDS 39

The proceedingsof this session will be broadcast over Station


KSL at Salt Lake City, and by arrangement through KSL, over the
stations named in the first session of the Conference.
This session will also be televised over the KSL television sta-
tion,channel five.
The choir singing for this session will be by the Brigham Young
University combined choruses, with Elders Clawson Cannon and
Crawford Gates conducting and Elder Frank W. Asper at the
organ.
We
will begin the services by the Brigham Young University
combined choruses singing: "O Be Joyful All Ye Lands," conducted
by Elder Clawson Cannon.
The opening prayer will be offered by President Wilford H.
Payne of the Seattle Stake, Washington.

The Brigham Young University combined choruses sang "O


Be Joyful All Ye
Lands."
The opening prayer was offered by President Wilford H.
Payne of the Seattle Stake.
The Brigham Young University combined choruses sang: "All
Creatures of Our God and King" conducted by Elder Clawson
Cannon.

BISHOP LEGRAND RICHARDS


Presiding Bishop of the Church

My brothers and sisters, I feel humble as I stand here this day


but grateful to the Lord for my association with his people and his
great Church. I should like to express the love of my father's family
and myself and my wife and children for our worthy president,
President George Albert Smith. He has been a great friend to all
of us, and we have loved him deeply, and we have honored him in
his high and holy calling as the President of this Church.
What I say this afternoon, I pray the Lord will direct, that it
will help to inspire others to want to live nearer to the Lord and keep
his commandments and help to build his kingdom here in the earth.

Visit of Young Lady


A few weeks ago, a young lady phoned me for an appointment;
and when she came to the office, she sat there and cried for a little
while, and then she said: "I guess I'm jittery."
"Well," I said, "that's all right." Then when she had com-
posed herself, she said, "Bishop, what is there for the young people
today? Wehave war. They are taking all the boys; it looks like
another great war is ahead of us. What do we young people have
to live for?"
I looked at her for a few minutes and said, "Have you ever

thought of the other side of the story?"


40 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
She said, "What side?"
"Well," I said, "you remember the story of the two buckets
that went down in the well; as the one came up, it said, 'This is
surely a cold and dreary world. No matter how many times I come
up full, I always have to go down empty?.' Then the other bucket
laughed and said, 'With me it is different. No matter how many
"
times I go down empty, I always come up full.'
I said, "Have you ever stopped to realize that of all the millions

of our Father's children, you are one of the most favored? You
are privileged to live in the Dispensation of the Fulness of Times
that the prophets of old have looked forward to, when there is more
revealed truth upon the earth than there has ever been in any other
dispensation of the world's history, and where we enjoy blessings
and comforts of life that kings did not enjoy a few years ago. Have
you ever stopped to think of that side of the story?"
And left, she decided that probably it wasn't as cold
before she
and dreary a world, after all, as it might be.
I said, "You just go on, and live right, and don't you lose your

courage, and don't think that life isn't worth while and isn't worth
living. Whether you live or whether you die or whether you are
permitted to live a long life or a short life isn't going to be the thing
that is going to determine the success or failure of your life; it's how
you live. And if we only live right, it will not matter whether the
time is short or long; we won't have to worry much about it."

Signs of the Times


As I thought about that conversation, I thought of the words
of the Savior. On one occasion, the Pharisees and the Sadducees
came to him, and tempting him, asked him to show them a sign from
heaven. And Jesus answering said unto them,
. . . When it is evening, ye say, It will be fair weather: for the sky
is red.
And in the morning, It will be foul weather today: for the sky is
red and lowring. O
ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky;
but can ye not discern the signs of the times? (Matt. 16:2-3.)

the world could discern the signs of the times, it would not
If
be them to understand that the God of Israel has set his
difficult for
hand todo a marvelous work and a wonder among his people in
the earth and that there is a kingdom established that is ultimately
destined to fill the whole earth. And it will do it because it is God's
work and not the work of man.
While I was president of the Southern States Mission, one of
our missionaries wrote in from Florida and said, "President Rich-
ards, I have been reading about the signs of the coming of the
Lord." He said, "When the sun darkens and the moon ceases to
give its light and the stars fall from heaven, everybody will know
that he is coming."
BISHOP LEGRAND RICHARDS 41

And Iwrote back and said, "Probably they will know. The
newspapers might announce some great phenomenon in the heavens,
misplacement of planets, that have caused this consternation, and
scientists will have their explanation to make of it, and unless they
have faith in the Living God, unless as Jesus said, they can read the
signs of the times, they may not know anything about what is go-
ing on in the world.
"Why," I said, "if the inhabitants of this earth had the ability
and the power to read the signs of the times, they would know that
already the Lord has given far more than the darkening of the sun
or obscuring the light of the moon or causing the stars to fall from
heaven, for what he has accomplished in the establishment of his
kingdom in the earth in these latter days, and the unseen power oper-
ating in the world for the accomplishment of his purposes, are great-
er signs than any of these phenomena that we read about the —
signs of his coming."

Gathering of Israel
Now, I want to bear my testimony to you that I know God has
set his hand to gather scattered Israel, just as Moroni told the Proph-
et Joseph, as part of this work, before there was any organization
of the Church, before there was any priesthood or power to officiate
in the name of the Lord.
The Angel Moroni told the Prophet Joseph that, quoting the
words of Isaiah, the Lord should gather scattered Israel and bring in
the dispersed of Judah and set up an ensign for the nations. Well,
hasn't he done it? Let us consider what has happened here in these
valleys of the mountains as a part of the fulfilment of the promises
the Lord has made through his prophets of old: how he should cause
the waters to flow down from the high places where it has been
reservoired in these mountains, how the rivers should flow in the
deserts (and if you go up through Idaho and see those great canals
out of that Snake River, you will see that those canals are larger
than the average rivers you see in the world), and how the waters
should spring up in the dry places. When
I was in Arizona recently,

I saw pipes at least twenty inches in diameter running day and

night, all the time, full of water, and as I saw them, I said to myself,
this is what the prophets saw when the Lord declared through their
mouths that he would turn the wilderness and make it to blossom
as the rose. And we are living here in that day.

Prophecies Being Fulfilled


And then he said that he would cause the daughters of Zion
to come up and sing in the heights of Zion, and where in all the
world is there anything to compare with what has gone out of this
tabernacle from the heights of Zion, week after week, for these
twenty-odd years as the Tabernacle Choir has broadcast to the
world?
42 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
Where could you pick a group out of any other school like this
group that is here today? (I'm referring to the mixed chorus from
the Brigham Young University furnishing the music for this session
of conference.)
God bless the youth of Zion. They are following in the foot-
steps of their parents. They love the Church, and they have a testi-
mony of the divinity of it, I know, through my association with these
young people.
And then read the words of Isaiah, where he saw the house of
the Lord established in the tops of the mountains in the last days,
and he saw that all nations should flow unto it, and they would say:
. . . Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the
house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will
walk in his paths. ( Isaiah 2:3)

Has that ever happened in this world before? And if the Lord
is about come, as he has indicated that he would in these latter
to
days, in the establishment of his kingdom, should we not have a ful-
filment of these promises? And then Isaiah goes on to tell us when
that time would be, because he adds:
And he shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people:
and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into
pruninghooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall
they learn war any more. (Ibid., 2:4.)

Ever since I was a small boy, I have thrilled every time I have
heard the words spoken to John upon the Isle of Patmos when the
voice from heaven said, "Come up hither and I will shew thee things
which must be hereafter." (Rev. 4:1.) Then John said:
And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the
everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to
every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people,
Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the
hour of his judgment is come. (Ibid., 14:6-7.)

I have always understood that the coming of this angel with

the everlasting gospel, and there can be no other, should precede


the great judgments of the Lord.

Signs of Second Coming


You remember, when Jesus was upon the Mount of Olives,
will
his disciples to him, and he told them how the temple should
came
be broken down, that there should not be one stone left upon an-
other. Then they said,
Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of thy
coming, and of the end of the world? (Matt. 24:3.)

He them of the wars and destruction that


proceeded to tell
should come upon the nations, and that there should be tribulations
such as had not been known from the beginning of the world and
should not be known until the end.
BISHOP LEGRAND RICHARDS 43

Those of us who know of the numbers who were killed during


the last world war know that we have lived in the day when tribula-
tions have come to this world the like of which the world has never
known from the beginning of time. Of course, we do not know just
what the end is going to be, or whether we have reached that end
or not. As another sign, the Savior made this statement:
And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world
for a witness untoall nations; and then shall the end come. (Ibid., 24:14.)

Missionary System
Afriend of mine sent me a newspaper clipping from Los An-
geles the other day. It gives a report of the growth of the churches.
It goes on to say, "The Mormon Church, devoting a great deal of
effort to the missionary field, is one of the fastest growing orders in
the world" — —
not just in the Rocky Mountains but in the world.
How could the gospel be preached in all the world for a witness
unto nations before the end should come, without a system of hav-
all
ing it preached such as the great missionary system of this Church.
To me it is one of the most marvelous things this world has ever
produced. To think that the Church can send missionaries by the
thousands, and they don't have to be paid for going!
One sister came into my office a few weeks ago for me to in-
terview her missionary boy, and she said: "Bishop, I have a son in
Switzerland. I have a daughter in the Great Lakes Mission. Here's
my last boy." She was not very well clad. And I looked at her and
said, "Sister, can you do it?"
She replied: "We will make it some way."
That the kind of faith that is going to carry the gospel mes-
is
sage to every land and every clime. And that kind of faith has been
in this Church from the very beginning, and it will continue because
it is God's work, and that unseen power that motivates it will con-
tinue to carry it on.

Nebuchadnezzar's Dream
When you read an article such as the one I just quoted from
the newspaper in Los Angeles, it is not difficult for you to under-

stand what Daniel saw when he interpreted Nebuchadnezzar's


dream, when he saw that the God of heaven in the last days should
set up a kingdom, like a little stone cut out of the mountain without
hands, that should roll forth and fall upon the kingdoms of this world,
and they should all be destroyed, and the little stone should become
as a great mountain and fill the whole earth.
Because it is builded
upon eternal truth!
And God can plant in the hearts of his children, for he created
the feelings of the human soul, a willingness to preach the truth until
it shall ultimately triumph over all the kingdoms of this world.
44 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Dag
one of our missionary boys preached on that subject
In Florida,
in one of our meetings. At the close of the meeting I stood at the
door to shake hands with the people, and a minister of the gospel
came up and introduced himself to me.
He said, "You don't mean to say that you think that little stone
is theMormon Church, do you?"
I said, "Why not?"
He said, "It couldn't be."
"Well, why couldn't it?"
He "Well, you can't have a kingdom without a king. And
said,
you have a king, so you haven't a kingdom."
don't
"Oh," I said, "my friend, you didn't read quite far enough. You
just read the seventh chapter of Daniel, and there you will see that
Daniel saw one like the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven,
and there was given him dominion and glory and a kingdom, that
all people, nations, and languages should serve him. Now," I said,
"tell me, how is a kingdom going to be given to him when he comes
in the clouds of heaven if there is no kingdom prepared for him?
Maybe you would like to know what is going to become of that king-
dom. And if you will read a little farther, you will see that Daniel
said: 'But the Saints of the Most High shall take the kingdom, and
possess the kingdom for ever.' And as if that were not quite long
"
enough, Daniel adds, 'even forever and ever.'
That is what the Latter-day Saints are working for. That is
the work they have to do. That is the blessing the Lord has in store
for them. And there is no power under heaven that can stop it
growing because it is his kingdom, and he will see it on to its ulti-
mate destiny. It is the only time in the history of the world that God
has set a work afoot with a promise decreed that it should ultimately
subdue all the powers and the kingdoms of this world and should
stand forever.

Dispensation of the Fulness of Times


My time
is gone. You add to this, in your own thinking, the
coming of Elijah, the prophet, before the great and dreadful day of
the Lord should come, because the whole earth was to be utterly
wasted at the coming of the Lord if Elijah failed to come. Then
add the coming forth of the Book of Mormon, the companion volume
of scripture which the Lord promised he would join to the Bible and
make them one in his hands. Then remember Paul's declaration that
the Lord had made known the mysteries of his will, that in the Dis-
pensation of the Fulness of Times, he might gather together in one
all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on
earth; even in him. There has never been a program to accomplish
that objective in the history of the world, so far as our records indi-
cate, until we had the coming of Eliah with his great sealing power
ELDER EZRA TAFT BENSON 45

of binding the dead that have gone beyond, as Paul said, "for they
without us cannot be made perfect, nor we without them."
Now, brothers and sisters, if your boys and girls are worried
about what is going to become of them, just let them acquire in the
depths of their souls a testimony of the value of being privileged to
live in this the Dispensation of the Fulness of Times, when God
literally has set his hand to do a marvelous work and a wonder, as
he promised to do, and then let us not be like the hypocrites, "Ye can
discern the face of the sky; but can ye not discern the signs of the
times?"
God help us to understand the signs of the times, I pray in the
name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER EZRA TAFT BENSON


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
I pray for the inspiration of heaven and your faith and prayers,
my brothers and sisters, as I stand before you this afternoon. My
soul has been subdued and my heart made tender through the pass-
ing of our great leader, President George Albert Smith. I have

mingled feelings of humility, sadness, and gratitude, at the passing


of a prophet of God. All Israel, I am sure, has been weeping. And
yet, back of it all has been a feeling of thanksgiving for the life of
this great man.
The Lord said in this dispensation:

Thou shalt live together in love, insomuch that thou shalt weep
for the loss of them that die, ... (D. & C. 42:45.)

And so it is we should have sadness in our hearts and


fitting that
should weep at the passing of one we love, and one whom the Lord
loves and has magnified. He was a man without guile, and as
President McKay said this morning, with Christlike attributes.

"A Real Man"


Since Wednesday night there have been going through my
heartand through my mind, these lines under the caption, "A Real
Man":
Men are of two kinds, and he
Was of the kind I'd like to be.
Some preach their virtues, and a few
Express their lives by what they do.
That sort was he. No flowery phrase
Or glibly spoken words of praise
Won friends for him. He wasn't cheap
Or shallow, but his course ran deep,
And it was pure. You know the kind.
Not many in a life you find
Whose deeds outrun their words so far
That more than what they seem, they are,
.

46 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Dag
There are two kinds of lies as well:
The kind you live, the ones you tell.
Back through his years from age to youth
He never acted one untruth.
Out in the open light he fought
And didn't care what others thought
Nor what they said about his fight
If he believed that he was right.
The only deeds he ever hid
Were acts of kindness that he did

What speech he had was plain and blunt


His was an unattractive front.
Yet children loved him; babe and boy
Played with the strength he could employ,
Without one fear, and they are fleet
To sense injustice and deceit.
No backdoor gossip linked his name
With any shady tale of shame.
He did not have to compromise
With evil-doers, shrewd and wise,
And let them ply their vicious trade
Because of some past escapade.

Men are of two kinds, and he


Was of the kind I'd like to be.
No door at which he ever knocked
Against his manly form was locked.
Ifever man on earth was free
And independent, it was he.
No broken pledge lost him respect,
He met all men with head erect,
And when he passed I think there went
A soul to yonder firmament
So white, so splendid, and so fine
It came almost to God's design.
—Edgar A. Guest
(Used by kind permission of the author. Copyright, Detroit Free Press.)

Tribute to President Smith


God bless the memory of President George Albert Smith. I
am grateful beyond my words of expression for the close associa-
tion which I have had with him in the last few years. I am grate-
ful that my family has lived in the same ward and has come under
the benign influence of his sweet spirit. I shall never cease to be
grateful for the visits he made to my home while I was serving as a
humble missionary in the nations of war-torn Europe at the end of
World WarII. Particularly am I thankful for a visit in the still of
the night when our little one lay at death's door. Without any an-
nouncement, President Smith found time to come into that home
and place his hands upon the head of that little one, held in her
mother's arms as she had been for many hours, and promise her
complete recovery. This was President Smith, he always had time
to help, particularly those who were sick, those who needed him
most.
ELDER EZRA TAFT BENSON 47

Last Monday evening at the Lion House, there was held a


party for those who had served on the general boards of M.I.A. in
years past under the leadership of Brother George Q. Morris and
Sister Lucy Grant Cannon. It was to have been an April Fool
party, a fun party, but the gathering turned out to be a spontaneous
meeting of tribute to the man who, probably as much as any other
who has ever lived, inspired and loved the youth of Zion. I wish
you could have heard the tribute paid by dear Sister Ruth May Fox,
ninety-seven years of age, as she stood on her feet and bore testi-
mony to the worth of President Smith and the inspiration which he
has been to the youth of Zion through all the days of his life.
I wish you could have sat with me the past two years in close
association with the National Executive Board of the Boy Scouts of
America and heard leaders of industry, financiers, business execu-
tives, and leaders in the professions speak of the fine life of Presi-
dent George Albert Smith. Their first words after greeting were
usually, "How is my good friend, George Albert Smith?" Many of
them would add, "A man of God, if there ever was one." Then as
we parted they often said, "Take my love and greetings to President
George Albert Smith." He loved all men. They reciprocated that
love. What an example he has set for us all, my brothers and
sisters, in this spirit of love, fellowship, and brotherhood!

Saving of Souls

His great objective has been to help save the souls of the chil-
dren of men. You remember, the Lord said to the Prophet Joseph:
Remember the worth of souls is great in the sight of God;
For, behold, the Lord your Redeemer suffered death in the flesh;
wherefore he suffered the pain of all men, that all men might repent and
come unto him. (D. & C. 18:10-11.)

The Lord said to Moses:

For behold, this is my work and my glory — to bring to pass the


immortality and eternal life of man. (P. of G. P., Moses 1 :39.)

This is our as a Church to build character, to


first interest —
save and exalt the souls of the children of men. President Smith was
interested in this project above all others. He realized that in the
youth of Zion there must be established real character as the one
thing they can take with them into the world to come; that they
must prepare themselves here for exaltation. I am grateful that he
had faith in them. I am grateful for the inspiration that he brought
to the youth of Zion. Yes, we do have faith in them. have faith We
that they will carry on, that they will measure up, that they will
maintain the standards of the past, the standards of their parents
and their grandparents. It often would grieve President Smith when
he would hear people discredit the youth of the Church and suggest
GENERAL CONFERENCE
First Dan
at one time that what they need is a few more models and not so
many critics.
I have faith in the youth of Israel, my
brothers and sisters, in-
spired in large measure by President Smith. I have seen them in
action, as you have. I rejoice to see our missionaries go out into the
world, to meet them on the street corners and hear them bearing
testimony to the truth of this great latter-day work. I thrill as I see
them in action on the basketball floor. I thrilled with them as they
received what was probably the last telegram which President Smith
sent, which went to our B. Y. U. basketball boys back in Madison
Square Garden. I am stirred as I see our boys out in the service
of their country, maintaining the standards of the Church and living
the gospel in the face of temptation, sin, and evil all around them.

Comments of Chaplain
I an incident which occurred shortly after World War II.
recall
With the president of the Northwestern States Mission, I was mak-
ing a tour of that mission, and we were up in Alaska. While there
we visited one of the camps and held a meeting with our servicemen
in the little army chapel. I noted as the service progressed that

sitting down in the far corner of the building at a table was a


Protestant chaplain. Apparently, he was trying to give the impres-
sion that he was working, but we could tell he was listening to
every word that was said in that service. This fine group of service-
men led the singing, offered the prayers, administered the sacred
emblems and bore testimony. As we finished our meeting and were
leaving the building, I went over to the chaplain to express grati-
tude for the use of the building. As I did so, he said in substance,
"I wonder if you realize the kind of young men you have represented
here in this camp. They are truly a marvelous group of boys."
Then he went on to say, "They don't need a chaplain; any one of
them could take my place." I thanked him for the compliment and
started leaving when he added, "One other thing. I have two boys
of my own — —
eleven and thirteen and you know, I couldn't wish
anything better for them than that when they grow a little older,
they become members of your Church and develop into the kind of
young manhood I have seen represented here in your group of
Mormon boys."
Faith in Youth
My brethren and sisters, it ismy conviction that the finest
group of young people that this world has ever known anything
about has been born under the covenant into the homes of Latter-
day Saint parents. I have a feeling that in many cases at least these
choice spirits have been held back to come forth in this day and age
when the gospel is upon the earth in its fulness, and that they have
great responsibilities in establishing the kingdom. I presume that
ELDER EZRA TAFT BENSON 49

no generation has faced more serious difficulties than they face.


They live in an age which seems to question all the standards of
the past, and which is discarding many of those standards. Yes,
they live in a period when even some spiritual leaders, so-called,
point out that the question of smoking, drinking, and carousing has
no relationship to salvation, that these are personal matters.
I have the conviction that these young people, if they have the

benefit and blessing of the full program of the Church, are going to
come through, in spite of the temptations, with colors flying in a
way that will make us proud of them. However, they will need
more than material things. They are going to need more than real
estate, stocks and bonds, life insurance, or even democracy. They
are going to need a sane spiritual foundation, if they endure, if they
are going to be able to live clean and to maintain the standards of
the Church. God expects great things of them. He expects them
to develop into noble characters, into good citizens —citizens which
may eventually provide in part, at least, the leaven which may help
to save this great nation. He expects them to live clean even in a
wicked world. He expects them to grow up with a testimony of the
gospel. He expects these young men to live so that they can
receive the holy Melchizedek Priesthood and so that eventually they
can be married in the temple of God to worthy companions for time
and eternity. He also expects them to know the glorious blessings
of honorable parenthood and eventually to be exalted in the ce-
lestial kingdom of God.
Church Program
I convinced, my brethren and sisters, that we have in the
am
Church the finest program available anywhere to help bring about
these objectives, if our children are only put in touch with this pro-
gram. I am thinking now of the blessings which come to our chil-
dren in the full and rich program of the Primary. They have just
held a convention here on this block. Are we missing any of our
children? Is the Primary program reaching them? And the same
with the Sunday School. Are our children in Sunday School? Are
they being taught the gospel in the Sunday School classes? Are
our boys and girls attending M.I.A.? Are our boys receiving and
enjoying the rich blessings of the program provided through the
scouting and Explorer program? Are they being ordained to the
Aaronic Priesthood, and are they active in the rich program which
is provided?

Scouting
I know that the one great reason why President Smith has been

so active for many years in the scouting program is the fact that the
ideals of scouting follow closely the ideals of the Church. The scout-
ing program is not a substitute for the Aaronic Priesthood program.

50 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Dag
The most important possession that a boy can have is the Aaronic
Priesthood. But scouting is a supplementary, a complementary pro-
gram. It works hand in hand with the program of the Primary,
Sunday School, and the Aaronic Priesthood, and is an important
and vital part of our program for our boys.
Scouting is dedicated to a four-fold program: First, it teaches

the boy his duty to God reverence, observance of the Sabbath, and
the maintenance of the spiritual standards and ideals of his Church.
— —
Second, it teaches duty to country true patriotism a love for the
constitution, for our free institutions and our American way of life.
I was thrilled as I stood in Valley Forge last summer facing over

forty-seven thousand representative boys as they saw depicted be-


fore their eyes that terrible winter of 1777-8 when Washington and
his bedraggled forces all but perished there in Valley Forge. These
boys' hearts were touched as they saw the father of their country
leave his troops and go off into the trees in the snow and bow in
humble prayer before the Almighty that this young nation might be
preserved. This was part of the two-year Boy Scout theme to
"Strengthen the Arm of Liberty." Third, it teaches the value of

service to others willing, unselfish service, and that the greatest

among them must be the servant of all symbolized by the "good
turn." Fourth, it teaches duty to self —
that they must keep them-
selves physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight.
They must be prepared for any eventuality to serve themselves,
their Church, and their country.

There is held up before them the Scout oath and the Scout
laws, which focus attention on those things that are worth while
that a Scout must be trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous,
kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, reverent. To be a
good scout he must be faithful in his religious duties. Scouting pro-
vides a program of training and experience. It is a program for
character development. It is a supplementary educational program,
a program of citizenship training and vocational exploration. Many

boys have found their vocations through this program through the
111 merit badges which are concentrated courses in vocational guid-
ance in fifteen different active fields. Scouting teaches boys the crafts
and the skills and to do something useful with their hands.
And so, in view of the richness of the scouting program and
the fact that these ideals coincide with the ideals of the Church,
President Smith has urged our full support in these words: "It is
my desire to see scouting extended to every boy in the Church."
Under his leadership and inspiration the Church has moved forward
to an enviable position with something over 2290 scouting and Ex-
plorer units, an increase of 180 during this past calendar year. But
there are still approximately fifteen percent of our boys who are not
enjoying the benefits of the scouting and Explorer program.
ELDER JOSEPH F. MERRILL 51

Leadership Needed
One of our great needs, of course, is effective leadership. Some
of our boys are not being reached by this program. Some are not
being reached by the Aaronic Priesthood program. Some of them
are missing the benefits and blessings of Primary. It is largely a
question of leadership. Boys want the scouting program, we want
them to have it; and if we have the right kind of leadership through
real boys' men, they'll have it, enoy it, and receive the blessings
which come from the program. The responsibility rests with the
— —
priesthood stake presidencies and bishoprics to see that this
leadership is provided and that every boy is reached.
And so, my brothers and sisters, we have a well-rounded pro-
gram for the youth of the Church. And we are not dealing with
ordinary young people. We are working with choice spirits who
need the full Church program. We want them to have the benefit
of this program in its fulness, that they might develop into the kind
of young men and young women which the Lord would have them
become. Of course, these programs are not ends in themselves.
They are tools. They are a means to an end. The end is the salva-
tion and exaltation of God's children.
But these programs are not optional programs. They are the
youth program of the Church, approved by the leadership thereof.
May God bless us, my brethren and sisters, that as leaders in Israel
we may have the power and the inspiration to make our young people
want to enjoy the full program of the Church offered through the
Sunday School, the Primary, the M.I.A., and the Aaronic Priest-
hood program, that they might eventually meet the expectations of
their parents, their Church leaders, and our Heavenly Father. God
bless us to this end.God bless the youth of Israel everywhere, that
they may grow and develop into sterling characters, faithful and
true to this great latter-day work, I humbly pray in the name of
Jesus Christ. Amen.

The congregation and the Combined Choruses of the Brigham


Young University joined in singing the hymn, "How Firm A Foun-
dation."

ELDER JOSEPH F. MERRILL


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles

Brethren and Sisters: To stand in this pulpit to address the


many thousands who assemble here and the countless thousands
who listen to the radio broadcasts is to be greatly humbled by a keen
feeling of heavy responsibility to such a vast audience to say some-
thing that will be worth listening to. I am comforted, however, in
my humility, by the thought that Mormonism, the restored gospel
of Jesus Christ, is so fraught with precious truths that any of these

52 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
we may worthy of the attention of every one of us
talk about are
of every normal human being. But are not all Latter-day Saints
familiar with these truths, having previously heard them discussed
many times? Yes, this may be the case, but if they love them, a
restatement or discussion will be listened to with more-or-less satis-
faction. At least this is my experience. I hope it is yours.

A Peculiar People
Mormonism, as I have just defined it, is not a Protestant, Cath-
olic, Jewish, or any other faith as taught by other churches. It is
characterized by many teachings and doctrines not accepted by other
churches. This fact is sometimes indicated by the statement that we

are a peculiar people something of which we are proud yet very
humble and grateful for; for we believe and testify that these charac-
istic teachings are absolutely true because they have come to us
through visitations and revelations from heavenly sources from —
God and his messengers.
It is trite to say that Mormonism is an everyday religion be-
cause it requires its adherents to implement in their daily lives the
teaching that faith without works is dead —
as the Apostle James
stated it; they must practice all those virtues that will make them
Saints in very deed. Some of these virtues, however, are considered
basic to an acceptable Christian life by all Christian churches. A
statement of some of these is found in articles eleven, twelve, and
thirteen of our faith and are as follows:
"11. We
claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God ac-
cording to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men
the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may"
— an ideal statement of religious tolerance, something much needed
today but denied to millions of human beings in the past.
"12. We
believe in being subject to kings, presidents, rulers,
and magistrates, in obeying, honoring, and sustaining the law."
Loyalty to country and obedience to constitutional laws are require-
ments for full fellowship in our Church.
"13. We
believe in being honest, true, chaste, benevolent, vir-
tuous, and in doing good to all men. . . .

the emphasis we place upon some of these things


It is —
chastity,
for example —
that makes our moral standards higher than those
maintained by some other religious groups.

President George Albert Smith


At this point may I digress a moment to say a word of tribute
to our greatly beloved departed President, George Albert Smith.
We have been friends for sixty-two years. Late in the eighties
he and I were fellow students during one year at the University
of Deseret. Since that time I have been more or less closely as-
ELDER JOSEPH F. MERRILL 53

sociated with him in Church work. For several years we were


together in the superintendency of the Young Men's Mutual Im-
provement Association in the Salt Lake Stake, when the stake cov-
ered the entire Salt Lake County. I have said many times that I
have never known a man who I thought tried more sincerely and
harder to love everybody than did George Albert Smith. Not that
he approved all people did, but the farther off the beam they were,
the more he seemed to sympathize with them because of their great-
er need for help.

Moral Standards
Looking out into the world today, what do we see relative to
the moral standards expressed by these three articles of our faith?
No matter in what direction we look, and not going beyond the
boundaries of our own country, we see moral conditions are bad,
in some places very bad. Wickedness of the blackest and most
abominable kinds exists nearly everywhere. I speak of these things
only that we may be reminded that it is our duty, as I see it, to
minimize and eliminate indulgence in these evils among us insofar
as it is in our power. But is there not existent in many places
among us a reprehensible indifference and laxity relative to these
things? Yet do we not teach tolerance and free agency? is a question
sometimes asked. Why interfere with other people's business? This
is a Satan-inspired question. We certainly are expected to defend
ourselves against the marauder, the robber, the despoiler of the
sanctity of our homes and families and the destroyer of things we

hold sacred and dear as life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Free agency is a priceless, God-given right to every child born
in mortality, but it does not include the right to mar, hurt, or destroy
the well-being of our fellow men. Did you read recent newspaper
statements relative to the existence of vicious narcotic rings which
specialize in the teen-age trade and encourage morphine-marijuana
parties of boys and girls that sometimes turn into orgies? You have
heard, of course, of the countrywide slot machine racket, the income
of which amounts annually to billions of dollars; of gambling and

horse-race betting these being other activities where billions are
lost. Evils attendant on the consumption of alcoholic beverages
(the annual cost in America of these is about eight billion dollars)
have also reached an enormous magnitude. To these and many other
evils are we not more or less indifferent?

The Liquor Problem


The National Safety Council and other agencies repeatedly
warn that alcohol is responsible for large numbers of our accidents,
troubles, sorrows, and deaths. Then why do we consume alcoholic
beverages? To what extent is this indulgence due to advertising?
The brewers are reportedly doing a good sales promotion job. Just

54 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
now they are hammering at reaching a consumption of one hundred
million barrels of beer a year and are looking forward to 120 million
barrels. Much of this consumption they want in the home, for it is
there they can best develop the use of beer by women and young
people. So it is said, brewers are giving a great deal of attention to
the principles of store-selling. Most beer advertising is directed to
the home, exploiting the great interest in television; also extensive
use is made of the pictures of young girls on billboards. This in-
vasion of the home to advertise beer by means of the radio and tele-
vision has, of course, met with vigorous denunciation.
What can we do about it? This is a problem that every home
should try to solve. Let us not forget the warning divinely given us
in the Doctrine and Covenants and "evils and designs do and will
exist in the hearts of conspiring men in the last days." Loyalty to
our doctrines and principles demands that we shall be alerted and
active in keeping evils and wickedness as far from us and our fellow
men as we can. Let us not forget, but act.
Relations With Fellowmen
There another class of evils that I desire to refer to evils
is —
that permeate relations with our fellow men. When asked by the
lawyer which is the great commandment in the law,
Jesus said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy
heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.
This isthe first and great commandment.
And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy-
self. (Matt. 22:37-39.)

We accept another statement of Jesus as being another version


of the second commandment. It is as follows:
. . . whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even
so to them: for this is the law and the prophets. (Ibid., 7:12.)

In this streamlined age we call the statement of this law The


Golden Rule. This rule is also obviously implied in the thirteenth
article of our faith.
To what extent do we live the Golden Rule in all of our rela-
tions with our fellows?
Immediately following the outbreak of the Korean war in June
1950, the price of foods and many other things began to go up
not that the cost of production had risen so soon. Then why?
Almost simultaneously, or even before this in some cases, a demand
for an increase of wages was made by the leaders of some organized
labor groups. Why?
Did the Golden Rule motivate those respon-
sible for raises in price of commodities, or those who clamored for
increased wages?
Greed and Selfishness
Oh, but, it is said, the law of supply and demand governs these
things. To say that this is true is an outrage on the ordinarily ac-
ELDER JOSEPH F. MERRILL 55

cepted meaning of the word law as is applied to the phenomena of


nature or to enactments of legally constituted human groups author-
ized to make enactments. To be plain and frank, does not the law
of supply and demand mean, as practised in commercial affairs, "Get
all you can for what you have to sell, whether it be commodities or
labor or services"? And are not greed and selfishness among the
real motivating and dominating forces operating in all our com-
mercial affairs whether they be big or little, whether the participants
be businessmen, professional men, or laboring men?
We —
complain of inflation rising costs that deflate or lessen the
purchasing power of the dollar. In the last analysis are not selfish-
ness and greed responsible for inflation? Who in the U. S. is in-
jured by inflation? Everyone who has bought a government bond
(about eighty million people), everyone who has a savings account,
an insurance policy, or a pension (at least one hundred million
people), everyone who works for wages or a salary that does not
rise, percentage-wise, as fast as the cost of living goes up (about
sixty-two million people), and all other people except the very few
who are paying off debts incurred years ago. Then to avoid injur-
ing people, should not more than ninety-nine percent of us, even
as a matter of self-interest, and more importantly, all of us who want
to be honest and believe in the Golden Rule, do all we can to stop
inflation?
Our country is facing one of the most critical periods in its
history. Selfishness and greed are tearing it asunder. The devil is
riding high and shouting in Satanic glee at the utter foolishness dis-
played on all levels, in all grades and ranks of human society.
In this country we are rapidly preparing for war (to defend
ourselves is perhaps the better expression), arming ourselves with
the most destructive means and implements that human ingenuity
can devise. The amazing advances made in the discovery and im-
plementation of the forces of nature are miraculous marvels of the
modern world. These are due to the achievements of research
scientists and ingenious inventors. What advances have we made
in the realms of social science? The art of living agreeably with one
— —
another our fellow men the finest of all human arts, is still in its
infancy.

The Golden Rule


How can the dangers threatening America, internally and ex-
ternally,and all the world, for that matter, be overcome, and peace
reign everywhere supreme? The answer is short; it is simple. Let
every human being repent and live the Golden Rule. This means
to keep the two great commandments. Then the threat of war would
vanish, troubles would disappear; wickedness would cease, and
righteousness prevail. There is not a sane person in all the world
who can successfully controvert this truth. Then why do we not
56 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
repent and the Golden Rule govern our lives?
let Who has the
answer? Mormonism has it; you have it; Satan has it, and he will
not repent. And myriads of our fellow men will not repent either
because Satan has them in his power. So peace will not come to the
earth and be worldwide until Satan is bound. But the millennium
is coming —
the Lord has said it. But when it will come, no man
knoweth, for neither the day nor the hour has yet been revealed.
However, brethren and sisters, it is your duty and mine, the
duty of everyone who believes in God and his righteous purposes
to try, try, try to bring the Golden Rule into our lives. This we can
do measurably well with the Lord's help, that he will readily
give to each of us if we worthily seek it.
Let me recite two actual occurences relative to the Golden Rule.
Years ago, the winter in Cache Valley was long, and an acute
shortage of hay resulted. A Church official was told by his farm
manager that they could spare several tons of hay and that the
going price was fifteen dollars a ton. The manager was told to ask
only eight dollars a ton, that being the reasonable cost of pro-
duction. I told of this occurrence in the last October conference.
Another one: Years ago an eightroom house in Salt Lake City
was sold on a monthly instalment plan. About two years later the
purchaser said he would have to give up the contract, not being
able, because of financial reverses, to continue it, and he was moving
out into a three-room shack. The vendor asked the man to estimate
the equity his two years' payments had made in the house, the
vendor telling him that the excess payments would be gladly re-
turned. The man insisted that his monthly payments had only been
reasonable rent. He refused to accept any refunds. Notwithstand-
ing the provisions of the contract to the contrary, both parties to
the arrangement were actuated by the spirit of the Golden Rule.

Need to Repent
I said we have several characteristic teachings and doctrines.

To these we are converted, and we readily accept them. But to im-


plement them in our lives is something else. We are human beings
and have more or less inherited the weaknesses of the flesh among
which are unworthiness, selfishness, and greed. Further, we are so
enmeshed in worldly ways of doing things in the conduct of our
businesses and ways of making a living, that we find the easiest way
to get along is to do as the world does. In so doing we may griev-
ously sin by departing more or less widely from the standards of the
Golden Rule. To the extent that we do this, we need to repent.
What have selfishness and greed done? They have brought on
allthe major wars in history, resulting in the misery, suffering, and
death of countless millions of human beings and the loss of billions
of property dollars. They have brought wickedness, crime, de-
bauchery, loss of freedom, and slavery to every part of the earth.
PRESIDENT JOSEPH FIELDING SMITH 57

Need of the Hour


Because of the things I have mentioned and several others,
this country is facing a very critical situation. What is the great
need of the hour? The answer of course is, as I have already stated,
repentance. And repentance is a call that has been made from this
pulpit many, many times. Current threatening conditions are not
likely to improve much unless more-or-less repentance takes place.
And while complete repentance may not be expected until Satan is
bound, there is one source of trouble that I think can be removed,
and all lovers of America should demand its removal the more-or- —
less continuous dispute between management and labor relative
to wages, working conditions, etc. Lockouts, strikes, and mass
picketing should be outlawed. In all disputes of the type indicated,
the public has a vital interest which the law should protect. How can
this be done? My
answer is by compulsory arbitration. It is unlaw-
ful for individuals to settle their differences by fighting with fists,
knives, or pistols. Courts are set up to which they may go for a
peaceful settlement, and this, even though the public may have no
interest in the settlement. But the public always has an interest in
how labor-management disputes are settled. To settle peacefully
such disputes on a basis of what is fair, right, and just to all con-
cerned, can a better agency be found than a qualified, competent
arbitration court?

Yes, the public should demand that such courts be set up.

As I see it, if wise, compulsory arbitration courts had always


been functioning during the past dozen years or so, there would
have been but little if any inflation. This country would have
prospered to a greater degree than it has, and the outlook for
America would be much brighter than it is today.
Brethren and sisters, we who have covenanted in the waters of
baptism and at the sacrament table to keep God's commandments are
in honor bound to be true to these obligations. I pray that with the
Lord's help we may always have the desire, the strength and the
courage to be true to our faith. This I pray in the name of Jesus
Christ. Amen.

PRESIDENT JOSEPH FIELDING SMITH


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles

I humble, and also I feel the loss of our beloved President,


feel
just as you who are assembled here feel that loss. With the help of
the Lord, I shall bear my testimony. I am very grateful to the Lord
for the knowledge that I have of the truth of this divine work. I

was baptized when I was eight years old. It was impressed upon
58 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Dag
me at that time that through had received the remission of
baptism I

sins and stood pure, I had a sister who was


clean, before the Lord.
very kind, as all my sisters were, who impressed upon my mind the
need of keeping myself unspotted from the world. Her teachings
to me the day I was baptized have stayed with me all the days of
my life, and I honor her memory.
Divine Mission of Prophet
I have a perfect knowledge of the divine mission of the Prophet

Joseph Smith. There is no doubt in my mind that the Lord raised


him up and gave him revelation, commandment, opened the heavens
to him, and called upon him to stand at the head of this glorious
dispensation. I am just as satisfied in my mind that in his youth when
he went out to pray he beheld the actual presence, stood in the
actual presence, of God the Father and his son, Jesus Christ; in my
mind there is no doubt; I know this to be true. I know that he re-
ceived later the visitations from Moroni, the Aaronic Priesthood
under the hands of John the Baptist, the Melchizedek Priesthood
under the hands of Peter, James, and John, and that the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was organized on the sixth day of
April 1830 by divine command. These things I know. The Lord has
revealed them to me, and this knowledge I have had since the day
I was baptized. I know that the power of the Almighty is guiding

this people, that we are under covenant to keep his commandments,


to walk in light and truth. It is my firm conviction that every mem-
ber of this Church should be able to bear witness and declare by
words of soberness that these things are true, that the Book of
Mormon is true, that the revelations given to the Prophet Joseph
Smith are true, that the destiny of this latter-day work is true, and,
according to the revelations, must and will be fulfilled.

Second Coming
I believe that the coming of the Son of God is not far away, how

far I do not know, but I do know that it is over one hundred years
nearer than it was when Elijah the prophet came to the Prophet
Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery in the Kirtland Temple on the
third day of April, 1836. Elijah's words point to the fact that we are
that much nearer. And this ancient prophet declared that by the
restoration of those keys we should know that the great and dread-
ful day of the Lord is near, even at our doors. I have opened these
scriptures to the seventh chapter of Matthew, and I want to read
the seventh and eighth verses:

Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it
shall be opened unto you:
For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and
to him that knocketh it shall be opened. ( Matt 7:7-8.)
.
PRESIDENT JOSEPH FIELDING SMITH 59

All May Know the Truth


Is there any good reason why every living soul cannot know
the truth and where it can be found? Is there any reason that any
members of this Church can give why he does not know that Jesus
Christ is the Son of God, that Joseph Smith was and is a prophet of
God, and that this is his work? If we lack that understanding, we
have no one to blame but ourselves. I had perfect confidence in the
sayings of the Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ; and when he says,
"Ask and it shall be given you; seek and ye shall find; knock, and it
shall be opened unto you: For everyone that asketh receiveth," I am
just as sure that every member of this Church may know within him-
self or herself that God lives, Jesus Christ is the Son of God, and that
this is his work which he has established. We have no excuse what-
ever for not knowing and having the absolute faith and confidence
in this restored gospel of Jesus Christ. It is our duty to know. In a
revelation given to the Church many years ago, that is, in the days
of the Prophet, he warned the members of the Church against false
prophets, false spirits, against those who lie in wait to deceive. He
gave us a key then by which we may know, but I repeat, this key,
given by our Savior in his Sermon on the Mount is just as true
today as it was nearly two thousand years ago. It's his word and can
be accepted, can be proved today just as well as it could by his dis-
ciples as he spoke to them in this Sermon on the Mount. In inter-
viewing missionaries I frequently ask them, nearly always do, if
they have a testimony of the truth. Some of them say, "No, I do not.
I think it is true, but I do not know, but I have the assurance that if

I go on this mission I will learn that it is true." Down in their


hearts they give an honest answer, but I think they know better than
they say. However, it is the right of every baptized member in this
Church to know for himself by the revelations of the Spirit of the
Lord that all that I have said in regard to the establishment of this
work is absolutely true. There is no reason in the world why any
soul should not know where to find the truth. If he will only humble
himself and seek in the spirit of humility and faith, going to the
Lord just as the Prophet Joseph Smith went to the Lord to find the
truth, he will find it. There's no doubt about it. There is no reason
in the world, if men would only harken to the whisperings of the
Spirit of the Lord and seek as he would have them seek for the
knowledge and understanding of the gospel of Jesus Christ, for

them not to find it no reason, except the hardness of their hearts
and their love of the world. "Knock, and it shall be opened unto
you." This is my testimony, I know it is true. I know that just as
well as I know I stand here. The Lord has revealed it to me as he
has to my brethren. The Lord bless you all, I pray in the name of
Jesus Christ. Amen.
GENERAL CONFERENCE
First Dag
ELDER MARK E. PETERSEN
Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
When the Prophet Isaiah forecast the coming of the Savior, he
said this:
He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted
with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised,
and we esteemed him not.
All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his
own way; and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all. (Isaiah
53:3-6.)

Despised and Rejected


When the Savior came in the flesh and labored among men,
this prophecy was literally fulfilled. He was despised and rejected
of men. The people did turn their faces from him, and they did go
their own way. They rejected him as they rejected his teachings,
and it grieved him. One day as he stood in their capital city, he
said,
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest
them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy chil-
dren together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and
ye would not!
Behold, your house is left unto you desolate. (Matt. 23:37-38.)

When the Lord used that one little expression, "ye would not,"
he described the stubbornness, the wilfulness, the selfishness, of a
people who would not obey the divine truth, but who turned their
faces from him, each one going his own way.
Oh, that stubbornness! If only they could have realized what
it did to them.

When he first began his ministry, he healed their sick; he even


raised their dead. He fed them by the thousands in a miraculous
way. But when he asked them to keep his commandments, the
crowds melted away. Those who followed him were there no longer.
So great was that falling away that he asked his Twelve:
. . . Will ye also go away?
Then Simon Peter answered him, Lord, to whom shall we go? thou
hast the words of eternal life.
And we believe and are sure that thou art that Christ, the Son of the
living God. [John 6:67-69.)

But the people rejected him. In their blindness and in their


stubbornness, as he offered to bless them and take them into his arms
as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, they turned away.
And in doing so, according to the words of the Savior himself, their
house was left unto them desolate.
Wilfulness of Men
As I have read that scripture from time to time, I have often
wondered about its application to us who live today. I have often
ELDER MARK E. PETERSEN 61

wondered whether Lord


cries out to us, disappointed at our dis-
the
obedience, saying, "How oft would I have gathered you as a hen
gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not." (See
Matt. 23:37.) How many of us are stubborn? How many of us are
selfish and wilful, and turn our faces from him, and would rather
not obey him?
This sort of thing applies in various phases of our lives. It
applies in our own homes, sometimes with our own children. Have
you sons or daughters who are wilful and stubborn and selfish, and
who turn their faces from you, you the loving parents who would
take them into your arms and nurture them even as a hen gathereth
her chickens under her wings? Do they reject you, these children in
their wilfulness? Some of you have them, and you know how they
break your hearts.
And then there are some in the Church who ought to know
better,who have the commandments of God, but will not repent, but
are wilful and stubborn. Even though the blessings of God are
offered to them, they turn their faces, and each one goes in his own
way. Wereject God as we refuse to obey him. must remem- We
ber that faith without works is dead. There is no salvation except
through the Lord Jesus Christ. He has said:
... I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the

Father, but by me. . . .

If ye love me, keep my commandments. . . .

He that hath my commandments and keepeth them, he it is that loveth


me . . .

He that loveth me not keepeth not my sayings. (John 14:6, 15, 21.
24.)

Observance of Commandments
You know whether you keep his sayings or not. Do you
observe the Sabbath day? Do you uphold the Authorities of the
Church? Do you pay a full and honest tithing? Do you fast on fast
day and pay a proper fast offering? Are you honest? Do you pay
your debts? Are you morally clean? Do you keep the Word of
Wisdom? You know whether you keep these things or not. If you
do not, contemplate your disobedience and remember that the Lord
calls out to you and says, "How oft would I have gathered you as
a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not."
Sometimes in our communities we reject the Lord. Have you
ever wondered about the community in which you live? Here in
the state of Utah the Latter-day Saints are definitely in the major-
ity. The Latter-day Saints have the commandments, and among
them is the Word of Wisdom. Judging from our state records, do
we accept the Word of Wisdom as God has given it to us? To what
degree do we break the Word of Wisdom and thus reject the word
of God
62 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday. April 6 First Day
Expenditures for Liquor and Tobacco
Ten years ago in the state of Utah, eleven million dollars was
spent for alcoholic beverages and tobacco. In 1950 that figure was
up three hundred percent. It reached nearly thirty-four million
dollars. In 1948 the figure reached nearly thirty-five million dollars.
What will thirty-five million dollars buy? The last temple built
by the Church was that at Idaho Falls. A temple like that could be
built in forty-two states of the Union with the amount of money
that is spent in the state of Utah in one year alone, for alcoholic
beverages and tobacco.
The amount of money spent here each year for tobacco and
alcoholic beverages is almost identical to the amount we spend in
this state for education. In the fiscal year ending June 30, 1950,
$35,653,000.00 was spent for operating our school system and main-
taining our school buildings in the state of Utah. Think of it! We
spend as much in Utah for "booze" and tobacco as we spend for
education! It is almost incredible.
The amount of money we spend each year in Utah for alcoholic
beverages and tobacco is greater than the combined assessed valua-
tion of the cities of Provo, Logan, and Brigham City.
The amount of money we spend in Utah every year for
alcoholic beverages and tobacco is nearly twice as much as we spend
for the construction and maintenance of our state highway system.
In Utah we spend one hundred times as much for liquor and
tobacco as we contribute each year to the American Red Cross.
In Utah we spend two hundred times as much for alcoholic
beverages and tobacco as we contribute to fight the dread disease
of poliomyelitis.
About half of our state expenditure for alcoholic beverages and
tobacco is spent right here in Salt Lake County. Do you know
that in Salt Lake County we spend fifty times as much money every
year for alcoholic beverages and tobacco as we pay into the Salt
Lake Community Chest?
In view of all this, what do you think about the scripture that
the Lord gives us: "How oft would I have gathered you as a hen
gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not?

Condition of the Nation


What
about the nation? A
century ago the Lord offered the
American people a blessing if they would repent. In a revelation
given over a hundred years ago, the Lord said concerning the
American people:
... I will gather them as a hen gathereth her chickens, under her
wings, if they will not harden their hearts;
Yea, if they will come, they may, and partake of the waters of life
freely. (D.&C. 10:65-67.)
ELDER MARK E, PETERSEN 63

It is estimated that the total crime for the United States


bill
last year reached twenty billion dollars. According to the records
of the F.B.I, last year, a serious crime was committed in the United
States every eighteen seconds. In an average day last year, 301
persons were feloniously killed or assaulted; 146 robberies were
committed; 1129 places were burglarized; 468 cars were stolen;
2861 thefts were committed.
The criminologists of the United States are of the opinion that
in the last few years, a great moral depression has come to the
United States.
}. Edgar Hoover, the head of the F.B.I., in speaking on March
26 of this year before a special committee to investigate organized
crime, said this:
Those who engage in widespread vice activities and rackets could
not long survive without their ally, the political renegade. No community
in the land is contaminated by rackets and corruption without the assistance
of local interests which hold law enforcement in restraint. Law enforce-
ment officers are the people's representatives. They are not persons with
unlimited power. They must obey those under whom they hold office.
If they are dominated by criminal-aligned politicians, ruthless rackets and
and vice are inevitable.

To what extent does America obey the God of the land?


What about the world at large? In their blindness, the nations
cry for peace but at the same time they reject the teachings of the
Prince of Peace. The Lord spoke to the nations in a modern revela-
tion and said this:

O, ye nations of the earth, how often would I have gathered you


together as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, but ye would not!
How oft have I called upon you by the mouth of my servants, and by
the ministering of angels, and by mine own voice, and by the voice of
thunderings, and by the voice of lightnings, and by the voice of tempests,
and by the voice of earthquakes, and great hailstorms, and by the voice
of famines and pestilences of every kind, and by the great sound of a
trump, and by the voice of judgment, and by the voice of mercy all the
day long, and by the voice of glory and honor and the riches of eternal
life, and would have saved you with an everlasting salvation, but ye
would not!
Behold the day has come, when the cup of the wrath of mine indigna-
tion is full. {D.&C. 43:24-26.)

Position of Latter-day Saints


Latter-day Saints, what is your position? Are you willing to
hearken unto the Lord your God who cries out to you and would
nurture you and gather you together even as a hen gathereth her
chickens under her wings? The Lord said something to you also
about this:
Listen to the voice of Jesus Christ, your Redeemer, the Great I Am,
whose arm of mercy hath atoned for your sins;
Who will gather his people even as a hen gathereth her chickens under
her wings, even as many as will hearken to my voice and humble them-
selves before me, and call upon me in mighty prayer . . .
64 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Friday, April 6 First Day
For the hour is nigh and the day soon at hand when the earth is
ripe; and all the proud and they that do wickedly shall be as stubble; and
I will burn them up, saith the Lord of Hosts, that wickedness shall not be

upon the earth;


For the hour is nigh, and that which was spoken by mine apostles
must be fulfilled; for as they spoke, so shall it come to pass;
For I will reveal myself from heaven with power and great glory,
with all the hosts thereof, and dwell in righteousness with men on earth a
thousand years, and the wicked shall not stand. (Ibid., 29:1-2, 9-11.)

I declare to you in all seriousness that I, too, know that God

lives. I, too, know that George Albert Smith was a prophet of


Almighty God. And I know that the man who will take his place
is likewise a prophet and that he holds all the keys, powers, and
authorities that were ever restored to the Prophet Joseph Smith in
these last days.
When he takes up the reins of office here in this Church, he
will preside by virtue of all the powers that were restored through
angelic ministry in these the last days.
God will to you through him, and he will say to you;
speak
"How gather you as a hen gathereth her chickens under
oft will I
her wings, if yeharden your hearts." (Ibid. 10:65.)
will not
May we humbly follow him and obey the Lord our God, I
earnestly pray in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr.:

We have just listened to Elder Mark E. Petersen of the Council


of the Twelve.
As Brigham Young Univer-
the closing song of this session the
sity combined choruses will sing, "The Lord Bless You and Keep
You," conducted by Elder Crawford Gates.
The closing prayer will be offered by President E. Garrett Bar-
low of the Inglewood Stake, California.
After that the conference will stand adjourned until seven o'clock
tomorrow evening when, in accordance with the general custom of
the Church, a General Priesthood meeting of the Church will be
held. Only those holding the priesthood are invited to be present.
Persons not holding the priesthood will kindly refrain from attempt-
ing to enter the building. That session will not be broadcast.
The session at ten o'clock Sunday morning, will be broadcast
over KSL at Salt Lake City and, by arrangement through KSL, over
the stations named in the first session of the conference. That ses-
sion will also be televised over the KSL television station, channel
five.
The Church of the Air broadcast, on which Elder Stephen L
Richards, of the Council of the Twelve, will be the speaker, will
begin at 8:30 Sunday morning. Those desiring to attend this broad-
cast must be in their seats by 8:20 a.m.
ELDER J. REUBEN CLARK, JR. 65

The Tabernacle Choir Broadcast comes from 9:00 to 9:30 Sun-


day morning, immediately following the Church of the Air. As there
is only a thirty second break between these two broadcasts, the doors
will not be opened until the Tabernacle Choir Broadcast is over, at
9.30.
The regular session of the conference will begin at 10:00 a.m.
Tonight at seven o'clock, here in the Tabernacle, there will be a
meeting of ward bishoprics and others, as listed in the published
announcement, under the direction of the Presiding Bishopric.
Tomorrow, as you know and as has been announced in the press,
the funeral for our beloved President, George Albert Smith, will be
held. The services will begin in this tabernacle at 2:00 p.m. All are
invited to attend. The body will lie in state in the Administration
Building, 47 East South Temple Street, from 5:00 to 8:00 this after-
noon and evening, and, as announced in the press, tomorrow fore-
noon.
The choir music for today has been furnished by the Brigham
Young University combined choruses, under the direction of Elders
Newell Weight, Crawford Gates, and Clawson Cannon, with Elder
Frank W. Asper at the organ.
We
would like to renew to this combined chorus our appreciation
and our gratitude. They are a great chorus, as has been said today,
and we pray that the blessings of the Lord will contniue with them,
with the institutions from which they come, and with those who lead
and direct them.
At the conclusion of this meeting the general sessions of the con-
ference will be adjourned until ten o'clock Sunday morning.
The combined choruses will now sing, as we announced, "The
Lord Bless You and Keep You," conducted by Elder Crawford Gates,
and the closing prayer will be offered by President E. Garrett Barlow
of the Inglewood Stake, California.

The combined choruses sang, "The Lord Bless You and Keep
You."
The
closing prayer was offered by President E. Garrett Barlow
of the Inglewood Stake.
Conference adjourned until 10:00 a.m. Sunday morning.
66 GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING
Saturday. April 7 Priesthood Meeting

GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING


The General Priesthood meeting of the Church convened in the
Tabernacle at 7:00 p.m., Saturday, April 7, 1951.
President David O. McKay, President of the Council of the
Twelve Apostles presided and at President McKay's request Elder
}. Reuben Clark, Jr., of the Council of the Twelve Apostles conducted
the meeting.

Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr.:

We will
consider this just another session of the General Con-
ference. of the brethren who are not accustomed to speaking on
Some
Priesthood night might get themselves in readiness.
The singing during this session will be by the Delta Phi (Re-
turned Missionaries) Chorus from the Brigham Young University,
Elder Ardean Watts, conductor, and Elder Roy M. Darley at the
organ.
The opening song by the chorus will be: "See The Mighty Angel
Flying."

Singing: "SeeThe Mighty Angel Flying."


Opening prayer by President Vernal Willie of the North Box
Elder Stake.

ELDER JOSEPH L. WIRTHLIN


First Counselor in the Presiding Bishopric

I sincerely trust, my brethren, that I may have an interest in your

faith and prayers. I feel keenly the responsibility in addressing this


great body of the priesthood of the Lord Jesus Christ.

Hospitality for Ward Teachers


Last night in our bishops' meeting, we discussed the great priest-
hood activity of ward teaching. There was one factor omitted that
I should like to draw to your attention, and that is the manner of
receiving the ward teachers in our homes. Reports have come to us
that in many homes there is an attitude of indifference. Perhaps the
radio is on, or the television, and the proper hospitality is not accorded
the servants of the Lord.
We plead with you bishops, to admonish your people to receive
these servants of God with kindness and consideration. I recall about
two years ago of visiting the home of President J. Reuben Clark, and
as I left, there was a humble man at the door. I heard the president
say to him, "What can I do for you, my brother?" And he introduced
himself as the ward teacher. I was deeply impressed by the degree
ELDER JOSEPH L. WIRTHLIN 67

of hospitality that a member


of the First Presidency extended to this
humble man. I wish that all of us could have the same attitude and
feeling towards these men that are sent to us as representatives of
the bishop; extending to them the highest degree of cordiality, call
the family in, and hearken and listen to their instructions.
About a week ago I was asked this question: Are the general
authorities assigned subjects to discuss in general conference? My
answer was "No." The individual who was asking the question said,
"It seems rather odd that in all of the general conferences there is a
definite theme discussed by the general authorities." And so during
this great conference I could not help but observe that after Brother
Romney gave his wonderful address pointing out the dangers and
the feeling of insecurity, almost every speaker following him talked
on that particular subject. And that subject is on my
mind tonight.

Security Through the Gospel


The other day a sixteen-year-old boy was heard to make this
declaration, "I wonder what kind of a tomorrow there will be for me.
When am I eighteen or nineteen, no doubt I will be drafted into the
armed forces, which will mean a service of at least two years, and if
there is war, it may mean an indefinite period of service." "And after
that, if I'm lucky enough to come out, I want to go on a mission, and
have four years at college. By the time I've done all of these things,
I'll be twenty-seven or twenty-eight years of age." He seemed to
express a spirit of frustration. He was down-hearted and discouraged
because of an uncertain future.
I believe that we can so instruct our youth that regardless of

what events transpire in the world's history, there will be in their


hearts a feeling of security, security given to them through a testimony
of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. I'm sure that our youth will
understand the gospel more fully if there is gospel instruction in the
home, for has not the Lord declared:

And again, inasmuch as parents have children in Zion or in any


of her stakes which are organized, and teach them not to understand the
doctrine of repentance, faith in Christ, the son of the living God, and of
baptism, and of the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands
when eight years old, the sin be upon the heads of the parents. For this
shall be a law unto the inhabitants of Zion or in any of her stakes which
are organized. And their children shall be baptized for the remission of
their sins when eight years old and receive the laying on of hands. And
they shall also teach their children to pray and to walk uprightly before
the Lord.

Instruction of Children
I wonder when a child is approaching the age of eight, whether

or not the head of the family, the father, he who holds the Melchi-
zedek Priesthood, calls his child to his side and gives him some in-
68 GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING
Saturday, April 7 Priesthood Meeting

struction with reference to having faith in the Lord Jesus Christ,


explaining to him what repentance means, the great significance of
the baptismal ordinance, wherein having been baptized their sins
are remitted, and the great significant fact that when they go into
the waters of baptism, they are buried with the Christ in death, com-
ing up out of the water is symbolical of His resurrection. I do not

feel that these teachings are beyond the understanding of a child


eight years old.
I am certain that a child of eight years of age will understand the

significance of the laying on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost.
If a child has been properly taught and has a proper concept of the
Godhead, he will know that there is the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Ghost in the Godhead. And this great spiritual being, called
the Holy Ghost, can be so explained to a child that he will under-
stand what the Holy Ghost is. And along with that, teach him that
when the authorized servants of God lay their hands upon his head,
that individual so laying his hands upon his head has the authority
to do so —
restored authority in these the last days. And through the
imposition of hands and receiving the promise of the gift of the Holy
Ghost, if that child is taught to live a sweet, clean life, the Holy
Ghost will come and be his companion. I think he can understand
that he will be led into the path of truth and light, that he will be
blessed with a sense of perception which will give him the power to
differentiate between that which is good and that which is evil. I

think it would be an excellent practice to read to children the scrip-


ture wherein the Savior declared; found in John 14:16-17, includ-
ing verse 26,

And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another comforter
that he might abide with you forever, even the spirit of Truth, whom the
world cannot receive because it seeketh him not, neither knoweth him. But
ye know him, for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you, But the com-
forter which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name,
shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance what-
soever I have said unto you.

children who are about to be baptized receive these instruc-


If
tions, they will understand the significance of them, creating a desire
to live so fine the Spirit of Truth will come into their souls, giving
them the assurance, yes, more than that, the testimony that their
Heavenly Father lives and that the boy of Nazareth was his son, the
Redeemer of the world; and that a fourteen-year-old boy who went
into the woods asking for divine guidance, was visited by the Father
and the Son, his prayers were answered, and they, too, can have their
prayers answered. The Holy Ghost will give them a blessing of
security as to the future and the eternities, that regardless of what
events transpire, they will understand that their Heavenly Father
rules over all for good.
ELDER JOSEPH L. WIRTHLIN 69

Significance of the Priesthood*


Then there comes the time when worthy young men at the age
of twelve receive the priesthood of God. I do not know of anyone
who is better qualified to sit down with his son than a father and
explain to him the great significance of the priesthood. Define priest-
hood: Point out to him that when he receives the priesthood of God,
there is bestowed upon him Godly power that gives him the right to
represent the Lord and to function in certain assignments when called
upon to do so by those in authority. If these important lessons with
relationship to the priesthood were taught to our sons, these young
men would have a higher regard and respect for the priesthood.
Think if you will of the wonderful relationship in the home,
when a father holding the Melchizedek Priesthood instructs his son
in the ways of the priesthood who holds the lower or the Aaronic
Priesthood. The Aaronic Priesthood is an appendage to the Mel-
chizedek or the higher priesthood, just as a son is an appendage to
his father. I feel that if in our homes fathers will take the time to


teach these young men what the priesthood means its significance,
its powers, what is expected of them who hold it, it will contribute
to the feeling of security that youth is seeking for. If fathers and
mothers invite their sons and daughters to attend Sacrament Meeting
with them, the sacrament meeting will become such a sacred, such a
solemn, and such an impressive meeting that young people would not
miss it. Partaking of the emblems of the Last Supper should be a
source of inspiration and comfort to them, and the obligations they
make with the Lord.
Young people should always feel impressed with the fact that
Joseph Smith actually saw the Father and the Son just as plainly
as I can see you. It had to be so for the world to know what our
Heavenly Father is like and that Jesus Christ is his son.
Then, too, if as fathers and mothers, we are carrying out the
mandate of the Lord wherein he has given us instructions to teach
our youth the gospel, please invite our youth to attend fast meeting,
teaching them first the significance of the fast offering principle, that
they abstain from two meals, giving the equivalent in cash to a mem-
ber of the Aaronic Priesthood who comes to collect it for the bishop,
impressing upon them that their contribution will be used for those
who are in distress.

First Great Commandment


All during this conference, and particularly during the funeral of
President Smith today, the first and great commandment was re-
ferred to many times —
first, to love the Lord our God with all our
might, and secondly to love our neighbor as ourself. Teach the
youth of Israel to love their neighbors as themselves, then they must
do something for that neighbor. Teach them that whatever they con-
70 GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING
Saturday, April 7 Priesthood Meeting

tribute in fast offerings is expressing a real love for the widow, for
the aged, and for the orphan. Love, after all, is something that cre-
ates and demands service. It isn't lip service, but service that goes
for the benefit and the good of someone else. Teaching our children
to observe the fast offering principle, contributing to those who are in
need, inviting them to attend fast meeting with the promise that if
they will stand and bear witness that God lives and his goodness unto
them, God will reward them with a testimony. The spirit of testi-
mony only comes through the gift and the power of the Holy Ghost,
and if they desire to experience the power of the Holy Ghost, the
place to go to have that experience is in the fast meeting.
I am sure there isn't a young man or young woman that bears

testimony to the divine existence of God, but what they feel in their
souls something that is far above themselves, and it is a gift, the gift
of the Holy Ghost. Brigham Young declared that no man can testify
only through the power and the gift of the Holy Ghost that Jesus is
the Christ, so through observing the fast offering principle and at-
tending fast meeting there will come to them spiritual rewards which
will bud into a testimony.

Importance of Prayer
The Lord has admonished us to teach our children to pray. If
they're not introduced to the Lord in the family circle of prayer, they
will not know him. And knowing him not, they will not have faith.
So, one of the first and most important lessons in every Latter-day
Saint home should be teaching our children to pray. I am convinced
that every spirit that leaves the presence of God and comes into mor-
tality has a spark of faith in its heart. Hence the responsibility de-
volves upon the parents to so teach the children that the gospel spark
will burst into a flame of faith. Having faith through prayer and obedi-
ence they will understand the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, and
let come what will, they will know that God lives, that he will be with
them, bless them, and sustain them. And I know that any individual
who has a testimony of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, as Brother
Romney indicated yesterday, will have a feeling of security, will have
a positive, affirmative feeling and not a negative one in spite of all
the terrible events that are transpiring at this time.
If the young of Israel will live the gospel they will know what
the old prophet Joel said would be a reality:
"And it shall come to pass afterward that I will pour out my spirit

upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old
men shall dream dreams and your young men shall see visions, and also
upon the servants and upon the handmaidens in those days I will pour out
my spirit."

And then again the Lord has said:


"Wherefore children shall grow up until they become old. Old men
shall die but they shall not sleep in the dust, but they shall be changed
in the twinkling of an eye."
ELDER JOSEPH L. W1RTHLIN 71

Promises of the Lord

With a burning testimony in their hearts, there isn't any question


but that the youth of Israel will accept the word of the Lord at its
face value, and with the promises involved, why should they be down-
cast, or why should they ask the question, "Will there be a tomor-
row?" There will be a tomorrow for them, not only tomorrows of
mortality but tomorrows of eternity, where they will enjoy every
blessing that the Lord has promised the faithful, the loyal, and the
devoted. For has not the Lord declared:

"And in that day the enmity of man and the enmity of beasts, yea
the enmity of all flesh shall cease from before my face."

For in the day when enmity between man and beast and be-
tween man and man ceases, we shall have eternal peace.
And after we have taught our youth the gospel principles and
in turn they have obeyed them, might they well feel as Paul declared
to Timothy in II Timothy 1 7, :

"For God hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, and of
love, and of a sound mind."

Paul declared to the Corinthians, in I Corinthians 16:13:

"Watch ye, stand fast in the faith, quit ye like men. Be strong."

And the strong people will be the Saints of God, who have lived
his word, and kept his commandments. Finally, when these young
people stand upon the heights of their tomorrow, as Joshua stood
upon the heights of the promised land and looking upon it for the
first time, may our young men hear that sweet, small voice which
said to him:

"Only be thou strong and of good courage; be not afraid, neither be


thou dismayed, for the Eternal One is with thee whithersoever thou
goest."

And in response to that voice, they will declare:

I'll go where you want me to go, dear Lord, over mountain or plain
or sea,
I'll say what you want me to say, dear Lord
I'll be what you want me to be.

Fathers of Israel, teach your children the gospel of the Lord


Jesus Christ in their childhood, and when they are old they will not
depart therefrom, and may the feeling of security and testimony come
into their hearts in the place of fear and doubt knowing the Lord lives
and this is his work, which I humbly ask will be the blessing of every
young man and woman in Israel, in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING


Priesthood Meeting

ELDER RICHARD L. EVANS


Of the First Council of the Seventy

I had assumed a sort of immunity at this session of conference,

and checked my briefcase and my thoughts in one of the outer rooms.


With all respects to President Clark, it takes more than a rounding
up of one's shoulders to give utterance before this congregation, and
I ask for an interest in your faith and prayers as I face this responsi-

bility.

Restricted by Time's Limitations

I heard some weeks ago someone ask one of the secretaries of


——
one of the brethren someone who apparently had tried repeatedly to
make an appointment "What it would require for a humble member
of the Church to have an audience with the First Presidency." The
only answer I could think of was "More time," which unfortunately
we cannot extend or increase.
Also occasionally one hears someone say: "You haven't ever
been out to our ward." When I heard this remark a few weeks ago,
I made a mental note of how many Sabbaths it would take to visit

all the wards in the Church, and it would require about thirty years of
Sundays for any one of the brethren to go to all of the wards and in-
dependent branches now existent. But by the time they got around
that first thirty years, there would probably be another thirty years
of new wards waiting for them, considering the growth of the Church.

by this same question



I made another mental calculation along this same line, prompted

"What would it require for a humble mem-


ber of the Church to have an audience with the First Presidency?"
and multiplied the number of hours in a day by the number of days
in the year, and the number of years in an average life expectancy
(using the scriptural allotment of three score and ten) and found
that in this life, if we are fortunate enough to live that long, we have
only about six hundred thousand hours to do all that we have to
do. But take from that approximately one-third for sleep, and then
take another substantial slice for the years of our youth, for prepara-
tion, for going to and from, for waiting for late people and late ap-
pointments, and a good many other of the essentials, and it reduces
itself down to a very limited time in total hours of life. With a
Church of more than a million people, with a Church which is rapid-
ly growing, it must become apparent, brethren, to all of us, how
much more of the weight of responsibility must continually be car-
ried back in the wards and the stakes, in the priesthood quorums, by
the ward teachers, by all of the organized agencies of the Church
which were set up for this very purpose and which, if functioning
properly, would care for all these needs and would make fewer and
fewer personal demands upon the time of the First Presidency and
of the other brethren here at Church headquarters.

ELDER RICHARD L. EVANS 73

The Basis of Strength and Growth


I know that these brethren, many of them, cannot extend
the
physical limits of their time. I know that President McKay's car, for
example, is down in the parking lot behind the office at six or seven
o'clock almost any morning. And I heard a request made of President
Clark to attend an evening function not long ago, and heard him make
the statement that he was working on the scriptures almost every night
till midnight and after. And with the other brethren it is, in an ap-
proaching degree, at least, a similar situation.
With these fullest of days, full beyond filling them further, with
many weighty decisions to be made, with many demands upon every
hour of every day, and with time not being subject to extension, the
answer is of course a great statement by the Prophet Joseph Smith,
repeated by his successors, frequently quoted, and basically true:
"Teach them correct principles and let them govern themselves."
That's the basis of strength and growth in this Church and kingdom
provided we follow the correct principles. They are there; we have
been taught them; the plan of operation is in the handbooks and else-
where; the scriptures and the revelations are before us. And many of
the decisions, I am sure, that we refer on up rather than take the
responsibility of making them within the limits and scope of the offices
we hold, we could readily avoid passing up, if we would prayerfully
and earnestly follow the correct principles we have been taught and
govern ourselves, each one according to his calling.
The Time Test
About hundred thousand hours of life, brethren, for him who
six
lives three score and ten, minus the years of youth and of prepara-
tion, minus the hours of rest, minus many other things! I wouldn't
be surprised if in a man's effective career, his actual disposable time
might not come down to something more like two hundred thousand
hours, or even less, when all these other things are considered-^-
whieh means that we must be about our Father's business and give
everything we do the time test. It means that there is no time for
any shabby or shoddy thing. In all that we read, in the books with
which we become familiar, which we make our companions, in the
entertainment to which we devote our time, in all else that we do,
we must give it the time test, and as we have been taught, we
must acquaint ourselves with the correct principles and govern our-
selves, and assume the responsibility of the offices and callings to
which we have been called.
Individual Responsibility
The Prophet Joseph Smith made an eloquent utterance on this
question of free agency and of the assuming of responsibility. One
hour of righteous freedom on earth, he said, is worth more than an
eternity of bondage. The Lord has given us our agency and our
individual responsibility. We
have it in the Church and we have it
74 GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING
Saturday, April 7 Priesthood Meeting

in all that do. May we go forward and use our agency in accor-
we
dance with correct principles, and give all that we do the time test,
and relieve the brethren over us as much as we can within the line
of prescribed procedure, within the line of those things which we have
been taught and those things which we read in scripture, I pray in
the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER THORPE B. ISAACSON


Second Counselor in the Presiding Bishopric

President Clark, President McKay, my other beloved brethren


of the General Authorities, and my dear brethren of the priesthood,
truly this is nearly breathtaking, and I feel very humble in standing
here tonight. I am sure we didn't expect this tonight, and I will be
grateful if I can have an interest in your faith and prayers.
Yes, this is very much a humbling experience. I wish all of
you could have the experience I am now having of looking over this
vast audience. I have prayed to the Lord that when I should be
called to occupy this position that he should not leave me. I have
prayed to him first because I believe in prayer and, second, because
I know I need the blessings of the Lord. I confess to you that with-

out those blessings and his sustaining help and influence that I am
nothing.

Prophets of God
Surely one's testimonyis strengthened as he comes here and
listens to the brethren, listens to thewords of the Lord given to us
by by prophets, seers, and revelators of God, our
his servants, yes,
Eternal Father. We often hear them referred to as prophets, but I
am wondering, members of the Church and particularly holders of
the priesthood, if we give serious thought to the full meaning of that
term. I recognize them as prophets of God, I know you do, but
there are times, perhaps, when we pass that thought by lightly. Do
you feel toward these brethren, prophets of the Lord, as you would
had you known the prophets of old? I want to bear my testimony to
you that I know they are prophets of the living God, I know they
are inspired of our Father in Heaven in their calling. I hope you
will have the same feeling burning in your hearts and accept their
teachings, because they are inspired of our Father in Heaven. If,
as members of the Church and particularly the Priesthood, we could
only have the faith and the assurance and the conviction that these
brethren are prophets, seers, and revelators, I believe we would
pay more attention to what they tell us. Yes, spirituality is as es-
sential to a man's soul as vitamins are to his body.

Adult Members of Aaronic Priesthood


As I look into this great congregation tonight, I have been
thinking of the adult members of the Aaronic Priesthood, many of
ELDER THORPE B. ISAACSON 75

them who have never been inside this building. If we could move
this body of men from this building on out to the north and then
fill it again and again with adult members of the Aaronic Priesthood

in the Church we could fill this building just as full as it is now, seven
,

or eight times. You know, I'm one of those who believes the Lord
loves these men. I believe their wives love them just as much as
our wives love us, and their children love them as much as our
children love us. If you had a wayward son, would you love him?
Well, I only have one son, and I love him very much, and if he were
a wayward son, I believe I would love him just the same. What
makes you think that the Lord doesn't love his wayward sons?

Need for Guidance


Many of these men haven't the strength to get back into activity
in the Church on their own power. Therefore, they do need your
guidance, your encouragement and your patience; yes, I'd say they
need you. They need someone to call on them, someone to
come and see them, someone to encourage them and help
them forsake those things that are keeping them out of the
Church. The Lord has asked us to repent, he has asked all
of us to repent, and then he said; If you truly repent and come
unto me, and forsake those things that you're doing, or that you
have done that you shouldn't have done, I will forgive you and
remember them no more. But he wants us to truly repent. I believe
these men would love that privilege. Well, you may say, they have
the privilege. Whydon't they take it? Well, they haven't the
strength yet; until they can absorb some of the teachings of the
Church and of the gospel of Jesus Christ, which they haven't had
for a long time. They have perhaps become spiritually weak,
because of habits that have kept them from church activity or for
other reasons. They're not strong enough yet to put those things
aside. And then you must remember that many of these boys and
men have not been taught in their homes. As Bishop Wirthlin told
us, they were not taught their many duties when they were young.
I believe there are many fathers in the Church today, although I
think they're not justified, that are leaving the teachings of their
sons to you brethren entirely. If you fail, where are they going to
get those teachings? Many adult members of the Aaronic Priesthood,
after they come back into activity, are so delighted and so anxious
that they put a great deal of enthusiasm in their work.
I talked to a brother, who is now a bishop but who was an
adult member of the Aaronic Priesthood five or six years ago. I
couldn't help but recognize the joy and the happiness that has come
into that man's soul. I talked to his wife. She didn't have the ability
nor the words to tell me how grateful they were. Yes, sometimes I
think they're perhaps more grateful than some of the rest of us, after
the spirit has touched their souls and they've accepted it.
GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING
Priesthood Meeting

Workers Needed
Someone has said, "He who knows books knows much, he who
knows nature knows more, but he who knows God has reached the
goal of human wisdom." Many of these men are brilliant men, in
their own right, successful men in their own business, and they do
know books, but they have perhaps neglected their knowledge of
God. As leaders, I hope that you make yourselves acquainted with
these thousands of adult members. It's too big a load for just two
or three in each ward, or a dozen or so in each stake. There are
many stakes in the Church that have four or five or six hundred,
and some stakes with even seven or eight hundred adult members
of the Aaronic Priesthood. Do you know how many men could be
called to work with a group like that, a group of five or six hundred
men? You can't preach to these men in Sacrament meetings, because
they're not there. You don't get them into your priesthood quorum
meetings because they don't come out. Therefore we must put the
shotgun method away. We must now have individual contact and
use the rifle method where we can go in and teach those men the
principles of the gospel, the teachings that you and I were fortunate
and blessed enough to have in our lives, but which many of them,
not of their own fault, have been denied.
Oh, I hope that you'll somehow or other organize yourselves
that you'll be able to touch at least one man. The Lord has said
to us, "And if it so be that you should labor all your days in crying
repentance unto this people, and bring, save it be one soul unto me,
how great shall be your joy with him in the kingdom of my Father!
And now, if your joy will be great with one soul that you have
brought unto me into the kingdom of my Father, how great will be
your joy if you should bring many souls unto me!"

Fathers and Sons


Nowfathers, how close are you staying to your own sons, so
that the group of adult members will not be increased? Do you
fathers have close relationship with your own sons? Can your sons
come to you and tell you all about their problems? Oh, I feel sorry
for a boy that can't go to his dad and tell him all about his mistakes,
all about his sorrows, and all about his problems. I think that that
kind of relationship, in not being able to become close to a father,
can only tend to bring that boy, perhaps, more delinquent than ever.
I know boys will make mistakes, but oh, I feel that if they can go

to their dads and talk over those mistakes with them, that those
boys will be stronger and will not repeat their mistakes too many
times, if they can come to their dads. Do you dare to go to bed at
nights and not know where your sons are? Do you know whom
they're with, or where they are, or do you know when they're
coming home?
ELDER THORPE B. ISAACSON 77

Awhile ago I was dinner party one night, and about eleven
at a
or eleven-thirty, the telephone rang and one of the men was called
to the phone. We couldn't hear the conversation on both sides, but
we could hear what he had to say. When he took his seat his wife
said to him, "who was that calling?" He said, "Well that was our
son John. He just called to tell us that he wouldn't be home at
twelve o'clock." He told his father he was going to a waffle dinner
after the show or the dance, I don't recall which it was, but he called
to tell his father that he wouldn't be home until twelve-thirty or
one o'clock. I turned to that man and said, "How old is your boy?"
I thought he was a youngster calling up. He said, "He's twenty-
three years old." I thought, what a marvelous relationship, what a
marvelous thing that this boy would take the time and make the
effort to call his father at a party to tell him that he would be a little
later than usual.

Only that father said, "We


can go home now tonight, and we
don't need to worry about our children. They're going to be home
at a certain time, or they're going to call us." Well, there isn't
anything wrong in that kind of discipline. It isn't because it's strict
discipline, it's because there is an understanding between father and
son.

Close Relationship
And then, fathers, do your boys, at night, when they do come
home, come into your bedroom and kiss you goodnight? Sometimes
we have encouraged our daughters to do that with our wives, their
mothers, but we fathers perhaps have not practised that with our
own sons. What's wrong with a son coming into his dad's bedroom
at niqht and sitting on the side of his bed and telling him how he
liked his girl, or how the party was, or how they got along tonight.
Don't you think if a boy will do that, don't you think he'll go into
his own bedroom and kneel down and say his prayer after he has
said goodnight to his dad? Don't you think if he is that close to his
dad, that he can pour his heart out to you after he sometimes stubs
his toe or makes a mistake? I don't like to see any boy or for that
matter any man, live with his mistakes, because I think it eats the
best out of him that is in him. Oh, I hope he can go to his father and
tell his father about his problems, and about his mistakes and about
his sorrows. There is no reason, fathers, why we can't be that close to
our sons. Does your boy kiss you goodnight? Does your boy kiss you
when you leave in the day, or when you leave for a trip? Or have
we left that to our wives and our daughters? I'll confess that I was
guilty of that for years, but I'm happy, so happy somehow or other
that I've changed that in my own life. I'm crlad that I can kiss my
boy when he comes around me. I'm glad I can kiss him when I
leave; I'm glad I can kiss him when I return. I don't want to be
denied that beautiful blessing. I recommend to you fathers that
you start living a little closer to your sons, that you love them, that
78 GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING
Saturday, April 7 Priesthood Meeting

you are not so strict with them that they can't come to you with
anything.
Well, brothers, didn't intend to say those things to you.
I May
the Lord bless you that you may try and stay close to your sons, I

pray in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.


The Delta Phi Returned Missionary Chorus of the Brigham
Young University joined the congregation in singing the hymn,
"Now Let Us Rejoice," Richard P. Condie, Assistant Director of
the Tabernacle Choir conducting.

ELDER J. REUBEN CLARK, JR.

Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles

Mybrethren: It is again a great opportunity to face you and


to try tospeak to you for a few moments. You who bear the priest-
hood of God, there is in you, and the rest of us who bear this
priesthood, the greatest power and force that there is in the world.
That power and that force when understood and exercised, in-
volves the control of all the elements that go to make up the uni-
verse; compared to that power and that control the H-bomb is a
mere tiny firecracker.
Guiding Principles
There are certain great principles that underlie our existence
here on this planet and that are to be guiding principles for us. First
there is the great principle of free agency given to us before the
world was. Because of the exercise of that free agency, Satan re-
belled and has since fought from the day of the great council in
heaven until now, the plan of life and salvation that was submitted
by the Son and adopted by the Father. The principle of free agency
is fundamental to all of our freedom and all of our living.

One of the first commandments given to Adam relating to


mortal life, perhaps the we have record of, was to multiply
first that
and replenish the earth. And
behind that great principle and that
commandment lies the eternity of the marriage covenant, the crea-
tion of bodies to tabernacle spirits that our Heavenly Father created,
and to bring them to this earth so that they might have mortal
bodies, live according to the commandments of God, that they might
in their next estate begin and go on through all the eternities in
eternal progression.
Another great principle to which I would like to call your at-
tention is the command given to Adam when he left the Garden
of Eden: "By the sweat of thy face thou shalt eat bread." This is
the great law of work, and the Lord has given us no greater blessing,
given us no commandment that will be more helpful in carrying out
ELDER ]. REUBEN CLARK, JR. 79

law of work. In addition to that, he gave us the


his plan than this
gospel which has been with us since the days of Adam, in one form
or another.
Conditions in the World
Now, my brethren, I wish merely to invite your attention to
what going on in the world today. The principle of free agency
is
has been virtually blotted out among 140 or 150 millions of people,
and that virus, the destruction of free agency, has been scattered
over the world as if by the wind until today it affects us here in in-
creasingly growing proportions. Our agency is being destroyed, and
when it is gone then will your freedom to worship, your freedom
to believe what you wish to believe, your freedom to build your
own lives, your freedom to teach your children, this and all other
freedoms, will go with it.
The commandment to multiply and replenish the earth is being
defeated by those ideologies which are destroying the liberties of
the peoples of the world because they are breaking down the mar-
riage relationship. They are encouraging illicit relations; they are
taking over the children and instructing them to that import. They
are teaching children only what they want them to know for their
own purposes.
Labor, we already know enough about that, even in this

country less work more pay, less work more pay, less work more
pay. Men should have, the Lord intends they should have, a proper
return for their labor, but the Lord does not countenance in any
way my stealing from my neighbor, whether I go out and steal a
horse from his barn or whether I, instead of working, loaf down in
the field where my employer can not see me.
And the gospel, the standards of the gospel,—well, take up
any national magazine, look at the ads and, if you can stand the

filth, read some of the stories they are, in their expressed and sug-
gestive standards of life, destructive of the very foundations of our
society. Hardly an advertisement, that is an exaggeration, but many
advertisements carry illustrations that are intended to suggest and
do suggest illicit sexual relations.
Work of the Devil
All of this, brethren, if you consider it, and I am only sug-
gesting, falls into one pattern. It is the pattern of one great mind, a
near divine intellect. It is the work of the devil. He is back where
he was at the time of the great council in Heaven when he would
have taken away the free agency of men, save them in their sins,
indeed there would have been no sin; thus under his plan there would
have been no development, under his plan eternal progression would
have been ruled out. We would have become mere automatons,
living and breathing, and eating if we could get something to eat,
and breeding like animals. What are we going to do about it,
brethren? I say to you again, that the power of the priesthood
80 GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING
Saturday, April 7 Priesthood Meeting

which we hold can conquer all of this, but we can hot do it as


individuals working alone.
Power to Save the World
And so I come back to my theme song in all of these meetings:
We must have unity. We must work together. We
must submerge
our individual likes and dislikes. We must follow the plan that
has been made and given to us. And if we do, then the body of the
priesthood of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints can
work, not only miracles, but can revolutionize the world. Unity
cannot be manifest nor exercised by fault finding, back biting, com-
plaining about those in authority over us, substituting our ways
for the ways which are given to us by those who are our leaders,
finding this excuse and that excuse for not doing what we are asked
to do. Now, brethren, I appeal to you as earnestly as I know how,
and again I urge the same appeal I have made here, conference after
conference, for eighteen years. Be united, united in our wards, united
in our quorums, united in our stakes. Support the men whole-
heartedly, fully, unequivocally, unhesitatingly for whom we hold
up our hands and vote at our various conferences. And if we do
not do this, then what right have we to ask the Lord to bless us.
Now I know, brethren, I am talking to people who do most if
not all of these things, and when I speak as I do, I do not intend to
speak complainingly. I am only trying to point out the condition of
this world as it seems to me, and I am trying to tell you what I
know as well as I know that I live, that the power which we have
if we would merely magnify our priesthood, will save the world.
May God give us the strength so to do I humbly pray in the name
of Jesus, Amen.
PresidentDavid O. McKay:
Though Brother Clark felt a little irked when his assigned duty
was slightly modified, he has
to direct set a good example to us all.
He did as he was told.
There are in attendance tonight, as reported, a total of 15,050

members of the Priesthood 10,250 in seats, aisles, and doorways of
the Tabernacle; 300 in the Baptistry; 2,200 in the Assembly Hall;
1,000 in the Barratt Hall, and an estimated 1,300 on the grounds.
Six months ago, we were blessed with the presence of our be-
loved President, George Albert Smith. Tonight we are deprived
of his earthly companionship. How uncertain life is. The silent,
inaudible foot of time is marching on bringing each of us nearer and
nearer to the end of our earthly careers. Before his passing there were
a few items scheduled for presntation at this priesthood meeting, and
I shall just mention them briefly before making a few concluding re-

marks.
Missionary Recommendations
One relates to the interviewing of prospective missionaries by
bishops. Will you please be more careful about recommending men
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 81

about whose health may be Missionary work is strenuous


a question.
when it is done properly, and we do not like missionaries to go out
and not do it properly. If there is any question about their health,
please sit down and have a talk with them and tell them that their
services here in the home missions will be just as acceptable to the
Lord as their labors out in a foreign mission. The Lord would like
them to live and serve. Do not put them under an environment that
will probably aggravate some physical weakness. It is surprising how
eagerly the young women and some married women seek calls to go
on missions. We commend them for it, but the responsibility of
proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ rests upon the priesthood of
the Church. It is quite possible now, in view of the present emer-
gency, that we shall have to return to the standard age for young
women, which is twenty-three. The last few months we have been
calling young women twenty-one years of age when they have special
qualifications. Bishops and presidents of stakes will please bear in
mind that from now on they should not recommend young women
under the age of twenty-three. That is merely returning to the
standard already approved by the brethren. Now, that does not
mean that the young girls who have already received calls or whom
you have already interviewed who are only twenty-one may not
have their recommendations completed. In this connection, we ad-
vise that mothers who have dependent children, that means children
who are in their teens or under or unmarried, should not be called on
missions even though the grandparents are willing to take care of
the children. No nobler work in this world can be performed by any
mother than to rear and love the children with whom God has blessed
her. That is her duty, and that is far greater than going out into the
world to proclaim the gospel, because somebody else can do that
who does not bear the responsibility of rearing and loving the chil-
dren who call her mother.
Temple Workers
Last evening we held a long meeting with temple presidents and
out of that meeting comes this recommendation, and there are strong
reasons back of it, brethren! Will the bishops please take more care
in recommending members to do temple work, to perform temple ordi-
nances. Now the great majority of those who are going through
the temple are worthy, and it is a glorious work. But if one or two
unworthy get into the company and make some objectionable remark
or leave an objectionable sign somewhere it tends to retard the spirit
and to discourage some young man or young woman who came an-
ticipating a glorious spiritual feast.

Sunday Schools
Next, has already been recommended that Sunday Schools be
it

not dismissed on quarterly conference day. If the conference is held


in the ward house, of necessity, Sunday School will have to be ad-
82 GENERAL PRIESTHOOD MEETING
Saturday, April 7 Priesthood Meeting

journed, but that is the only exception. The reason for that will be
readily seen if I read you the following letter without giving the
name.
"Last Sunday I was in X
town visiting my son. Feeling that I
should like to visit a Sunday School in X
town on Easter, I drove
there. Calling at the home of a friend I was informed that stake con-
ference was being held and that Sunday School had been cancelled.
I informed the lady of the house that Sunday Schools are conducted

on conference Sundays. She then called one of the Sunday Schol


teachers and was given definite assurance that no Sunday School
service would be conducted in that ward. Three women in the
vicinity dressed their little girls in their Easter outfits and sent them
to the Community Church."

Inspiration of Priesthood Meeting


Now, just a few concluding remarks: One of our business men,
non-member, who attended the funeral this afternoon, looked over
the audience and said, "Look at that audience. It cannot be duplicat-
ed anywhere else in the world." I wish it were possible for him to
see this audience tonight. Ten thousand men who hold the priest-
hood of God. What an inspiration! What an opportunity is ours
to succeed in life!
Bishop Wirthlin referred to some who are discouraged. We
have heard from Bishop Richards also, and others, young men now
being called into the field and into the armed forces, so many young
women without close companionship of young men of their age, some
entered in their school and missions are discouraged. But let me
just give two suggestions that will lead to success in any boy's life or
any woman's life, will lead to the success of any person in the world,
and particularly those who hold the priesthood.

Attendance to Duty
The first is, attend to the immediate duty in hand. No person
Church can say he or she has not an immediate duty.
living in this
It may be attendance at a priesthod meeting; the Aaronic Priesthood
or Melchizedek. It may be fasting on the first Sunday and giving
fast offerings for the poor. Do not say those are insignificant duties;
it maybe the duty of attending worship on the Sabbath day, either
in Sunday School, Priesthood meeting or Sacrament meeting or Mu-
tual at night; it may be visiting a sick neighbor; or it is the payment
of tithing. Whatever the immedate duty, perform it. That is the
first step.
Outside of the Church you have a problem before you in your
business or in social or political circles. Before you take that step
ahead, ask yourself whether you can justify taking it if you were
called into the presence of your Father in Heaven. If you can, take
it. One of our American writers, some do not call him a poet, ex-
pressed this thought very impressively:
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 83

Who does his task from day to day,


And meets whatever comes his way
Believing God has willed it so
Has found true greatness here below.
Who guards his post no matter where
BelievingGod must need him there,
Although but lowly toil it be
Has risen to nobility.
For great and low there's but one test,
'Tis that each one will do his best.
Who works with all the strength he can
Shall never die in debt to man.

Love for Fellowmen


The second great guide to success has been illustrated during
the last week few days, more impressibly right
particularly, or last
in our midst than perhaps we have ever seen it before and it may be
a long time before we see it again. It is the power of the greatest

thing in all the world love for fellow men. The poet Browning
who has Paracelsus say to his friend Festus, "There was a time when
I was happy; the secret of life was in that happiness."

"When, when was that?" asked Festus. "All I hope that answer
will decide."
Paracelsus: "When, but the time I vowed myself to man?"
Festus: "Great God, thy judgments are unscrutable."
And then Paracelsus concluded: "The answer to the passionate
longings of the human heart for fulness is this: Live in all things
outside yourself by love and you will have joy. That is the life of
God; it ought to be our life. In him it is accomplished and perfect;
but in all created things it is a lesson learned slowly and through
difficulty."
I will conclude that thought by reading to you that wonderful
statement of Paul on love. ". .charity is the pure love of Christ, and
.

it endureth forever." (Moroni 7:47) Love suffereth long and is kind.

Love envyeth not, love vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up, doth not
behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked,
thinketh no evil, rejoiceth not in iniquity but rejoiceth in the truth,
beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all
things. Love never fails."
God help us to exemply in our lives that love which was so well
exemplified, ideally exemplified, in the life of our beloved leader.
President George Albert Smith, who sought to approach the love of
Christ, I pray in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

The Delta Phi Returned Missionary Chorus of the Brigham


Young University sang the hymn, "Come Dearest Lord."
President Albert I. Morgan, President of the Spokane Stake
offered the closing prayer.
84 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day

SECOND DAY
MORNING MEETING
Sunday, April 8, 1951.
Columbia Broadcasting Company's Church of the Air was pre-
sented at 8:30 a.m.
The Tabernacle Choir and Organ Broadcast followed immedi-
ately thereafter at 9:00, continuing until 9:30, and the regular session
of the Conference commenced promptly at 10:00 a.m.
The great tabernacle was filled to capacity long before the time
of commencing the Church of the Air program. The Assembly Hall on
the Tabernacle grounds was also filled with people, and many others
who could not find accomodations in the Tabernacle assembled in
the Barratt Hall (60 North Main Street), and on the Tabernacle
grounds.
The Church of the Air program was as follows:

CHURCH OF THE AIR


The Tabernacle Choir, under the direction of J. Spencer Corn-
wall, furnished the music for this service, with Frank Asper at W.
the organ. Richard L. Evans was the announcer.

Music: Organ and humming choir: "Sweet is the Work."


Announcer: The Church of the Air is presented by CBS so that
men of different faiths may bring their messages to a nationwide
congregation of worshipers. Today's service comes to you from the
Tabernacle on Temple Square, through the facilities of Station KSL
in Salt Lake City. The speaker will be Stephen L Richards, a mem-
ber of the Council of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints. The title of Brother Richards' talk is:
Kinship of Spirits. Music is provided by the Tabernacle Choir under
the direction of J. Spencer Cornwall, with Frank W. Asper at the
organ.

The service opens with a sacred song by Arkhangelsky, with


words from the Psalms: "Hear My Supplication, O Lord."

(Choir: "Hear My Supplication"- Arkhangelsky.)
Announcer: We
now hear a hymn of man's eternal march,
with the words of Eliza R. Snow and the music of James McGrana-
han, as arranged by Evan Stephens. It looks back to a time now
closed to the memory of man and forward to an eternal future, and
asks with earnest searching: "In Thy holy habitation did my spirit
once reside? In my first primeval childhood was I nurtured near Thy
side?" —Richard P. Condie and the Tabernacle Choir sing "O My
Father."
(Choir: "O My Father" — arr. Stephens)
ELDER STEPHEN L. RICHARDS 85

Announcer: We
shall now hear on this Church of the Air
service, Stephen L Richards, a member of the Council of the Twelve
Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In
addition to his service as a religious leader, Stephen L Richards has
distinguished himself as a lawyer, business administrator and edu-
cator. He has titled today's talk: Kinship of Spirits.

ELDER STEPHEN L RICHARDS


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
The responsibility which comes to one who is invited to par-
ticipate on Columbia's "Church of the Air" program is very con-
siderable. This occasion is projected as a period of worship an —
invitation to the whole nation, who will listen in, to pause in secular
pursuits and contemplate the ways of God. To stimulate such spir-
itual reflection is a task I approach with the deepest humility for I
am aware of the fact that it is the spirit in man, rather than the mind,
which must be touched to bring divine worship into his soul.

Essence of Worship
If you and I, my friends, were
together in an assembly not too —
large, the task would be easier. Our personalities would react on
each other; we would say, "We could feel of each other's spirit,"
and perhaps a bond of common interest could be established among
us. May it not be that this "feeling of each other's spirit" is of the
very essence of our joint worship?
It is true that declaration of the Word and exhortation have
their place, —
an important place in religious services, but I doubt
if there anything which contributes more to our spiritual uplift,
is
and our good resolutions too, than the stimulus of association of kin-
dred spirits.
I believe God planned that it should be so. are all His We
spirit children in antemortal life. We
come to earth "to be taber-
nacled in the flesh." In earth life we are, in large measure, the crea-
tures of our environment, but we never entirely lose our spiritual
investitures. Perhaps Shakespeare had something of this in mind
when he made one of his famous characters say, "There is a divinity
that shapes our ends, rough hew them how we will." 1

Kinship of Spirits
We are told that the Spirit of God always strives with men,
and the spirit in man which responds to the extent to which the
it is

sensitivity of the spirit has not been drugged or killed by ignorance


or by infraction of His laws. It is doubtful, my brethren and sisters
in the family of our Eternal Parent, that anything is more important

'Hamlet, Act 5, Scene 2


86 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day

and peaceful association in the world than a recognition and


vital to
acceptance of this kinship in the spirits of men.
Herein lies a solid, understandable foundation for the spiritual
brotherhood of the world. It has always seemed to me most difficult
to establish fraternity without paternity. Surely those who acknowl-
edge the Omnipotent God to be the Creator of the Universe, should
Bind no difficulty in according to Him His place of distinction as the

Father of all men "Our Father who is in heaven." How else
could He be "Our Father" except as the progenitor of our spirits,
the begetter of that part of us which is deathless and immortal?
How regrettable it is that man, seemingly oblivious to this
honorable and sacred relationship, should profane His holy name
and blaspheme Christ. Do you think that a son can damn his father
and love him?
Fatherhood of God
Some may say this procreation of spirits is too realistic, involv-
ing an assumption of personality in the Father inconsonant with the
ethereal nature sometimes ascribed to Him. Don't you think, my
friends, that we can safely rely on the recorded words of His Son,
our elder brother, and the prophets in the interpretation of this all-
important relationship of man to God? To those acquainted with the
Scriptures there is no need for quotations; they are filled with refer-
ences to the veritable fatherhood of God and support for a divine
personality which, in terms of human understanding, can be con-
ceived only as one in whose image we are created.
It is doubtful if there are any people in the world today who
retard more seriously the progress of humanity in finding solutions
for the world's problems, particularly the one of living together in
peace, than those who deny and teach denial of the personality of
God and His fatherhood of the spirits of men.
By so doing, they rob brotherhood of its firmest prop, they rob
man of the dignity of a noble lineage, and they take from him the
most impelling incentives to live to be worthy of his inheritance and
to come back again into the eternal presence of the author of his life.
I do not see how it is possible for men of religion to do much for this

sorry world unless they can establish and re-establish this funda-
mental doctrine of the veritable fatherhood of God.
Sovereignty of Savior :.

I grant that good may come, and does come, from teaching
and extolling the attributes of Deity, and particularly the virtues
emanating from the life and ministry of the Savior of the world. His
incomparable teachings to be most effective, must be authentic. We
cannot consistently worship at the shrine of the attributes and deny
the sovereignty of the King. The Lord is a teacher, a persuader, and
a guardian, but He is of all a creator and a lawgiver, and the
first-
Supreme Judge of all. He is not only the exemplar of right; He is
the author and the source of right. There is no right that is not
ELDER STEPHEN L. RICHARDS 87

compatible with His law and His will. To know His mind and His
will should be the quest of every life.

Spiritual Natures
It is ordained that man should have joy. Joy and happiness are
truly achieved where living conforms to law, —
divine law. Divine
law is spiritual in origin and application; its constraints and rewards
are likewise of a spiritual nature. That is why, if we are to have
joyful living, we should be ever conscious of our spiritual natures
and our lineage with the Father.
We keep alive this consciousness in prayer and spiritual exer-
cise. Spiritual association is of immeasurable value in spiritual
growth. Not infrequently you hear a man say, "I don't need to go
to church. I can worship in nature and in the works of creation."
Such a man discounts the value of religious association, the
commingling of spirits and the interaction of personalities. I believe
that man has divine attributes emanating from divine lineage. The
Spirit of the Father is distributed through the Universe, and influ-
ences all life and all things.
There is a spirit in man which, within the limitations of his
contacts in life, radiates from him and touches the lives and things
about him. This spirit may be called personality. Whatever it is
called, it exists and it is a potent force. When once set in motion
it cannot well be controlled, but fortunately it is within our power

to determine the characteristics which go into the structure of our


lives and thus determine the influences and radiations which come
from us. Our living will mold these characteristics into our lives.
I am well aware that these are commonplace statements. There
is no novelty in them. Where, my friends, is there novelty in the
Word of God? The only place I have been able to discover any
failure in the Word is in the novelty of man's interpretations. The
Word of God is not difficult to understand. It is the words of men
about God that perplex us.

Respect for Divine Law


The greatest of all knowledge is to know God, and the greatest
achievement of all life is to so live that the Father can bestow His
highest blessings on us. The spiritual laws of the Universe are just
as inexorable as are the laws of Nature. Every blessing is predicated
on obedience to the law.
This applies to a nation as well as to an individual. There can
be no spiritual growth in a nation which does not respect divine
law, and all nations will die without spiritual growth. Material
prosperity alone will not suffice and will not endure. The measure
and manifestation of spiritual growth is goodness. So, my good
friends, the worship of this hour, and all true worship, is rededica-
tion of self and life to goodness.
We all know how much the world needs that dedication today,
88 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day
but I know of no way of carrying forth the process of spiritual re-
generation except that which seems a painfully slow method of each
person touching the spirit of another with the radiation of his own
innate goodness. The only thing that our country has to fear is
spiritual disintegration within ourselves.

Absence of Spiritual Kinship


I had a striking example of the absence of and the need for the

recognition of spiritual kinship in man a few months ago as I


traveled through the countries of Lebanon, Syria, and Trans Jordan
to Arab Jerusalem. I have never seen before, except perhaps in East
Berlin, such suspicion, distrust, and enmity written on the faces of
men. To an American accustomed to cordial greetings and friendly
smiling faces, although sometimes a bit clouded with aloofness and
pretended snobbish indifference (I say pretended because I believe
that at heart all Americans are friendly and cordial), it was a
distinct shock to see human nature so perverted in the relations
which men in the Lord's providence bear to each other.
This perversion was particularly noticeable and regrettable in
Jerusalem, the very land where the Savior spent much of His earthly
life and performed His transcendent mission. The intense and cruel
animosities built up between the peoples of this so-called Holy Land
were a most painful refutation of everything that was taught and
practiced by the Prince of Peace. I could not discover even a vestige
of adherance to His marvelous doctrine which He left with His dis-
ciples in that loving declaration, "Except ye are one ye are not mine."

Remedy for Sick World


Do you think, my friends, that such a sickly spiritual world can
be cured by the mere external application of economic salves? I
know we all wish and pray that the underprivileged and distressed
peoples of the world might have food, raiment, and shelter; and I
believe that most of us are willing to sacrifice to that end.
I saw the dire need for relief in the terrible conditions prevailing
in the camps of Palestinian refugees around the big cities of the
Near East, but I am just as sure as that I speak to you this day that
there is one, and only one remedy which can bring complete re-

covery and that remedy is of the spirit. I give first place in such
remedy to the teachings of the Lord, some of which I have tried,
very inadequately, to outline for you today.
The Lord keep us humble, free from arrogance and self-suf-
ficiency. May we never forget that He is the Father of our spirits,
that our lineage is noble, that life is not cheap, and that the kinship
of spirits is the foundation of brotherhood. We
long for peace; we
firay for the enduring peace of goodness in the name of the Lord
esus Christ. Amen.

(Choir: "Come, O Thou King of Kings" by Parley P. Pratt,


;
arr. Cornwall. 2 verses.)
)

CHOIR AND ORGAN BROADCAST 89

Announcer: We have heard the Tabernacle Choir recall a


hymn of a promised time, of brotherhood and peace, "Come, O Thou
King of Kings, We've waited long for Thee."
And now the Choir closes this service with an anthem by
Tertius Noble: "Souls of the Righteous in the hand of God."
(Choir: "Souls of the Righteous"- —Noble)
Theme: Organ and humming choir: "Sweet is the Work."
Announcer: You have been attending Columbia's Church of
the Air, coming to you from the Tabernacle on Temple Square,
through the facilities of Station KSL in Salt Lake City, Utah. The
speaker was Stephen L Richards, lawyer, and religious leader, who
is a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church
Music for the broadcast was
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
provided by the Tabernacle Choir under the direction of J. Spencer
Cornwall. Frank W. Asper was at the organ.

CHOIR AND ORGAN BROADCAST


Immediately following the conclusion of the Church of the Air
broadcast, the Tabernacle Choir and Organ presented the regular
Sunday morning broadcast from 9:00 to 9:30 A.M.
This broadcast, which was presented through the courtesy and
of the Columbia Broadcasting System's coast-to-coast net-
facilities
work throughout the United States, was written and announced by
Richard L. Evans and originated with Station KSL, Salt Lake City.
The program was as follows:
(Organ began playing "As the Dew," and on signal the organ
and choir commenced singing the hymn, "Gently Raise the Sacred
Strain," singing the words to the end of the second line, and hum-
ming to end of the verse for announcer's background.

Announcer: Once more we welcome you within these walls with


music and the spoken word from the Crossroads of the West.
The Columbia Broadcasting System and its affiliated stations
bring you at this hour another presentation from Temple Square in
Salt Lake City, with J. Spencer Cornwall conducting the Tabernacle
Choir, Frank Asper, Tabernacle Organist, and the spoken word by
Richard Evans.
We open with a worshipful chorus from the writings of Randall
Thompson: "Alleluia."
(Choir: "Alleluia"- —Thompson)
Announcer: From among some fifty Psalm settings by Benedetto
Marcello, Frank Asper selects an exalted theme: "The Heavens
Declare the Glory of God, and the firmament sheweth His handi-
work."
90 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday. April 8 Second Day

(Organ: "The Heavens Declare" —Marcello)


Announcer: The Tabernacle Choir turns now on Temple Square
to one of the characteristic choral expressions of the eminent Aus-
tralian composer, Cyril Jenkins: "Out of the Silence wake me a
song,
dim."
—wake me a hymn whose sounds
"Out of the Silence."
are like shadows soft and

(Choir: "Out of the Silence" — Jenkins)


Announcer: From the quiet color of the closing day, Charles A.
Stebbins has given us a thoughtful devotional theme which Frank
Asper presents as his next organ offering: "At Dusk."

(Organ: "At Dusk"- Stebbins)
Announcer: Some men live blessedly long, and richly round out
a fulness of years. Some are taken sooner. But no matter how long
we are allowed to live in this life, we are all faced with some un-
certainties, and we are none of us free from some troubles, some
sorrows, some problems and disappointments. We
are all faced with
actual or possible illness or accident, with misfortune or failure or
the fear of failure, and with the troubles of the times. We
are some-
times subject to discouragement and depression of spirit. We
are
all sometimes subject to loss of loved ones —
and to a long list of other
unwanted intrusions upon our peace and plans and purposes. If we
think there are those who are free from all such realities and reverses,
it because we don't know enough about them because we
is likely —
don't know what is hidden in their hearts. But fortunately in facing
life, we
need not be left alone. Fortunately there is the help and the
comfort and the counsel of friends and family and others; and for-
tunately there is help beyond the help of human hands. When, for
our troubled hearts and perplexed thoughts and weary searchings,
and stubborn ailments and gnawing anxieties we need higher help,
there is the sustaining, strengthening power of prayer. It would be
terrible to feel alone in life; it would be terrible to face any serious
situation without the privilege of approaching Him in whose image
men were made and who is mindful of the men He made. In every
problem of every passing day, in the laboratory and shop, in the
factory and the field, and in the family circle, in the classroom, in the
sickroom, in the halls of government and in humble homes, in all our
activities and in all extremities, the power of prayer is (or can be)
a guiding, enlightening, and lifting force; a source of wisdom beyond
the wisdom of the world; a source of the truth for which men are
ever further reaching; a sweet and healing influence; a source of com-
fort, of protection, and of the peace that passeth understanding.
Prayer is an approach to Him who gave us life and whose endless
power and purpose give us settled assurance that life and time and
truth are limitless and everlasting, and that despite all discourage-
ment, all problems, and all perplexities we are not left alone in life.

(Organ interlude)
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 91

(Selection by the choir: "The Lord's Prayer" —Gates)


Announcer: We have heard the Tabernacle Choir sing B. Cecil
Gates' setting for "The Lord's Prayer": "Our Father which art in
heaven, Hallowed be Thy name"
And now Frank Asper moves into a hymn melody by Thomas
Mclntyre: "How Great the Wisdom and the Love."
(Organ: "How Great the Wisdom" Mclntyre) —
Announcer: The Choir closes now from Temple Square with a
prayer for the darkness that follows the day: "Abide with me, fast
falls the eventide; the darkness deepens; Lord, with me abide: When
other helpers fail, and comforts flee, help of the helpless, abide O
with me!"
(Choir: "Abide with Me" —Monk)
Announcer: Once more we leave you within the shadows of the
everlasting hills. —
May peace be with you, this day and always.
This concludes the eleven hundred and twenty-ninth presenta-
tion, continuing the 22nd year of this traditional broadcast from the
Mormon Tabernacle on Temple Square, brought to you by the Co-
lumbia network and its affiliated stations, originating with Radio Sta-
tion KSL in Salt Lake City.
J.
Spencer Cornwall conducted the singing of the Tabernacle
Choir. Frank Asper was at the organ. The spoken word by Rich-
ard Evans.

SUNDAY MORNING SESSION OF CONFERENCE


The regular session of the Conference commenced promptly at
10 o'clock, with President David O. McKay, President of the Coun-
cil of the Twelve Apostles, presiding and conducting the services.
The Choral singing for this session of the Conference was by the
Tabernacle Choir, with J. Spencer Cornwall conducting.

President David O, McKay


This is the fourth session of the One Hundred Twenty-first
Annual Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. We are convened in the tabernacle on Temple Square, Salt
Lake City, Utah.
These services will be broadcast in the Assembly Hall and in
Barratt Hall, 60 North Main, over a loud speaking system and by
television.
We have received word that there are vacant seats in Barratt
Hall, but not in the Assembly Hall. The tabernacle is crowded to
capacity, every seat taken, with the aisles on the sides and the door-
ways filled with those standing.
The proceedings of this session will be broadcast over Station
92 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day

KSL of Salt Lake City and, by arrangement through KSL, over the
stations named in the first session of the Conference.
The choir singing for this morning's session of the Conference
will be by the Tabernacle Choir, with Elder J. Spencer Cornwall
conducting, and Elder Frank W.
Asper at the organ.
We will begin the services by the Tabernacle Choir and the
congregation singing: "Come, Come Ye Saints," conducted by Elder
Richard P. Condie. The congregation will remain seated while
singing.
The opening prayer will be offered by President Edwin S.
Dibble of the Glendale Stake, California.

Singing by the Tabernacle Choir and congregation, "Come,


Come Ye Saints."
The opening prayer was offered by President Edwin S. Dibble
of the Glendale Stake, California.
The Tabernacle Choir sang the hymn, "How Great The Wis-
dom and the Love."

PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY


Brethren and I deeply sense my inadequacy in trying
sisters,
to express in the message I have in my heart this morning. I
words
earnestly pray therefore for your sympathetic mental attitude and
particularly for your spiritual support.

Testimony of Redeemer
"For I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand
at the latter day upon the earth:
"And though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my
flesh shall I see God:
"Whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold, and
not another; though my reins be consumed within me." (Job
19:25-27.)
Thus was spoken the heartfelt assurance of Job, expressed in
humiliation when everything else was taken from him and even his
body utterly wasted in affliction.
If a few more million men in theworld could feel that testimony
—the testimony of the reality of our Redeemer — selfishness would
be less manifest, war among nations would be eradicated, and peace
would reign among mankind. Do you believe that, my fellow
workers?
"What think ye of Christ?" was the question Jesus put to a
group of Pharisees when they, with scribes and Sadducees, sought to
entrap, to confound the Great Teacher by asking him entangling
questions. He silenced the Sadducees in their attempt to ensnare
him with regard to paying tribute to Caesar. He satisfied the scribes
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 93

regarding the first and great commandment. Now he put to silence


the Pharisees regarding their anticipated Christ.
To this congregation, to the Church, and to the world, I repeat
this question as being the most vital, the most farreaching query in
this unsettled, distracted world.

Contributions of Great Men


Great minds in all ages who have contributed to the better-
ment of mankind have been inspired by noble ideals.
History is replete with men who, as Wordsworth expresses it,
"By the vision splendid, were on their way attended." There is
John Milton, for example, inspired with a desire as a boy of twelve
to write a poem that would live for centuries. As a result, the world
has Paradise Lost, and later in life, though blind, the poet as he ap-
proached the closing moments of his life, exclaimed: "Still guides
the heavenly vision." Sir Walter Scott, as you know, wrote almost
day and night to pay off a debt for which he was not really respon-
sible.
George Washington, guided by the desire to build a noble
character and to be of service to his country, cried: "I hope I may
always have firmness and virtue enough to maintain what I con-
sider to be the most enviable of all titles —
the character of an honest
man." Abraham Lincoln's lofty soul, expressing himself thus: "with
malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right
as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work
we are in, to bind up the nations wounds, to care for him who shall
have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan to do all
which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among our-
selves and with all nations." (Second Inaugural Address.)
These and others who live to their best are the men "who
realize in daily life their luminous hours and transmute their ideals
into conduct and character. These are," continues the writer, "the
soul architects, who build their thoughts and deeds into a plan; who
travel forward, not aimlessly, but toward a destination; who sail
not any-whither but toward a port, who steer not by the clouds,
but by fixed stars. High in the scale of manhood these who cease-
lessly aspire towards life's Great Exemplar."
Highest of All Ideals
But let me explain again, the highest of all ideals are the teach-
ings and particularly the life of Jesus of Nazareth, and that man is
most truly great who is most Christlike.
What you sincerely in your heart think of Christ will deter-
mine what you are, will largely determine what your acts will be.
No person can study this divine personality, can accept his teachings
without becoming conscious of an uplifting and refining influence
within himself. In fact, every individual may experience the opera-
94 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday. April 8 Second Day

tion of the most potent force that can affect humanity. Electricity
lightens labor in the home, imprisons alike on a disc the warbling
tones of the mockingbird and the convincing appeal of the orator.
By the turn of a switch, it turns night into day. The possibilities
of the force resulting from the breaking up of the atom seem to be
limitless either for the destruction or the blessing of life. Other and
greater forces are already glimpsed.

The Man of Galilee


None, however, is so vital, so contributive to the peace and happi-
ness of the human family as the surrendering of our selfish animal-
like natures to the life and teachings of our Lord and Savior, Jesus
Christ. George R. Wendling in The Man of Galilee confirms this
thought as follows: "Believe it! The most wonderful work in all the
world is not to take iron, steel, and brass and make a locomotive;
nor is it to take gold and diamonds and cog-wheels and make a
watch; nor is it to take canvas and colors and brush and paint an
Angelus; nor yet is it to take pen and parchment and write an Iliad
or Hamlet, but an infinitely greater work than all is to take an
ignoble, cruel, impure, and dishonest being and transform him into
an upright, gentle, noble, and pure man. Here we touch the creative

power of the Galilean and bow before the mystery.
"Here we find the crowning glory of all the evidences, attested
by millions of intelligent men and women, the fact, mysterious but
not illusory, that His very presence is found, is realized, is verified,
and that He is as helpful, as vital, and as inspiring now as when
the matchless Beatitudes fell upon the ears of a listening multitude
two thousand years ago."

Peter and Paul Transformed


Peter, the chief Apostle, is a striking example of this trans-
forming power. He was a humble, reputedly a rough, uncultured
fisherman to whom Jesus of Nazareth became an inspiration. The
vision that bade him say, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living
God," became the guiding light of his life. Conditions occasionally
made him falter, but he regained the lightened pathway. Bigots
scoffed at him; religious zealots, political charlatans arrested, im-
prisoned, and shackled him as a dangerous enemy to society, but the
heavenly vision lightened the darkened dungeon, burst open prison
doors, struck off the fetters that bound his wrists, as well as his
wavering soul, and gave him courage and strength to face his ac-
cusers with the sublime testimony: He "whom ye crucified, Jesus
Christ, is the only name under heaven given among men, whereby
we must be saved." (See Acts 4:10, 12.) Only a comparatively well-
to-do man, making a fairly good living by fishing, of whom the
world would never have heard had he not been inspired by a testi-

mony of the divine mission of the Man of Galilee just a humble
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 95

fisherman, who, by the light of that inspiration to him and to other


members of the Twelve, and disciples, "many of the world's loveliest
things have been created, many of the world's finest minds inspired."
Another good example is Paul, a contemporary of Peter, whose
early life and teachings were entirely different from those of the
fisherman, but who, when the vision of the Risen Lord pierced his
prejudiced mind, was inspired throughout the remainder of his days
by one guiding thought expressed on the occasion of his great vision:
"Lord, what wouldst thou have me do?"
Paul, as Peter, had his hours of discouragement. Pride some-
times perturbed him, and conformity to church authority was oc-
casionally difficult. He, too, was mobbed, beaten, and imprisoned,
put in stocks in a dungeon, but the heavenly vision of the Risen Lord
ever guided his footsteps.

Example of Joseph Smith


May I remind you also of the Prophet Joseph Smith, who
declared: "... I had actually seen a light, and in the midst of that
light saw two Personages, and they did in reality speak to me; and
I
though I was hated and persecuted for saying that I had seen a
vision, yet it was true; and while they were persecuting me, reviling
me, and speaking all manner of evil against me falsely for so saying,
I was led to say in my heart: Why persecute me for telling the truth?

I have actually seen a vision; and who am I that I can withstand

God, or why does the world think to make me deny what I have
actually seen? For I had seen a vision; I knew it, and I knew God
knew it, and I could not deny it, neither dared I do it; at least I

knew that by so doing I would offend God, and come under con-
demnation." (P. of G. P., Writings of Joseph Smith, 2:25.)
Through railings, scoffings, mobbings, arrests, imprisonments,
persecutions that led to martyrdom, Joseph Smith as Peter and Paul
before him, ever strove to the utmost of his ability to follow the
light that had made him a "partaker of the divine nature."

Influence of Savior's Mission


quote these three outstanding leaders in the realm of religion
I

to show how the assurance of the divine mission of our Lord and
Savior not only transformed their personal lives to a greater or less
degree, but also influenced for good the entire world.
Since man's first advent on earth, God has been urging him to
rise above the selfish, groveling life of the purely animal existence
into the higher, more spiritual realm. After several thousand years
of struggling, mankind even now but dimly recognizes the fact that
the greatest of the world's leaders are those who most nearly ap-
proach the teachings of the Man of Galilee. This is psychologically
sound, because the thoughts a man harbors determine the realm in
which he serves. "Be not deceived," writes Paul to the Galations,
96 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Dag

"God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also
reap. For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corrup-
tion; but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life ever-
lasting." (Galatians 6:7-8.)

Great World Drama


At moment there is being enacted a great world drama, the
the
final act of which we can only dimly surmise. In Korea, one of the
bloodiest wars of modern times is raging. But here is a singular
thing. Engaged in it are soldiers from South Korea, United States,
Great Britain, France, Turkey, Greece, Netherlands, Australia, Can-
ada, New Zealand, Thailand, the Philippines, South Africa, and one

or two other nations all enlisted under the United Nations' banner.
Political relationships leading up to their fighting as an inter-
national army need not concern us this morning, but there is one sig-
nificant fact most worthy of attention: Battling for the same cause
are Buddhists, followers of Confucius, Moslems, and Christians.
Opposed to these are Communists, openly avowed to be anti-Christ.
Two hundred twenty-nine thousand casualties are already reported
in this conflict! It would almost seem to be the beginning of the great
battle of Armageddon.
More destructive to the spreading of Christian principles in the
minds, particularly of the youth, than battleships, submarines, or
even bombs, is the sowing of false ideals by the enemy. Particularly,
during the last five years, Communist Russia has gained for the time
being conquests over the satellites under her domination, including
China, and is now threatening Japan by sowing seeds of mistrust in
the body politic.
Misrepresentation, false propaganda, innuendoes soon sprout
into poisonous weeds, and before long the people find themselves
victims of a pollution that has robbed them of their individual liberty
and enslaved them to a group of political gangsters. Let us draw a
lesson from this.

Thoughts Determine Destiny


So it is with evil thoughts that may be permitted insidiously to
enter and to find lodgment in the human mind. Thoughts harbored de-
termine destiny.
"My spirit," says the Christ, "will not dwell in unclean taber-
nacles." The corruption that is in the world through lust, as men-
tioned in one of Peter's epistles, has its source in thoughts and
schemes harbored in the individual mind. A
man who takes advant-
age of his neighbor in a business deal when the opportunity offers
has prepared himself for the occasion by dishonest thinking. Young
couples do not lose their chastity, named by the Book of Mormon as
"precious above all things" without their having previously in
thought justified the act.
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 97

The husband who coolly turns from a loyal wife and family
and seeks illicit relationship elsewhere, perhaps with a disloyal wife
of a neighbor, has previously poisoned his soul with immoral ideas.
Disgruntled members of society, faultfinders in wards and stakes,
do not become such merely because of some offense, real or imag-
ined. What they say and do have been preceded by selfish desires
or unattained ambition.

Corruption from Within


I mentioned Communism in its war against individual liberty

and free enterprise as surreptitiously sowing poisonous seeds with-


in the body politic. It is also from within, morally speaking, that
our cities become corrupt; not from outward, open assaults on virtue,
but from insidious, corrupt actions of trusted individuals. Our
government, as you know, has recently uncovered a gambling ring
that covers a twenty billion dollar business in vice. Many large
cities in the United States are connected with it and contaminated
by it.

Too many of these city officials license darkened rooms wherein


men and women, and not infrequently teenage boys and girls, may
guzzle beer and whiskey and indulge in other vices sought by per-
sons of low ideals. For the permission and perpetuation of such
dens of iniquity in our cities, the public is not entirely free from

blame. However, those who are elected to office commissioners,

peace officers, trusted servants of the people are most directly re-
sponsible.
Generally speaking, these men are honest in their intentions
and actionsto enforce the laws and if possible to eradicate, at least
to reduce to a minimum, the evils upon which the underworld
thrives. One or two, or a half a dozen unprincipled men, however,
can frustrate the most earnest efforts of the upright officials. For
example, officers informed that minors are permitted to enter a cer-
tain "joint" will find when they get to the place that the proprietor
has been "tipped off" and seemingly everything is within the law.
If and when appreciation for such "tips-off," and other favors,
is expressed in secretive payments of money, those participating in
the graft may meet in a room, a club, or in a private residence,
ostensibly to play a social game of poker, and under this guise
divide their ill-gotten gains. Thus do our cities, as individuals, be-
come corrupt from within.
Such exploitation of the poor unfortunates whose thoughts and
desires lead them only to gratify their appetites, indulge their pas-
sions to exist by deceit, cunning, and crime, are among the cor-
ruptions that Peter says "are in the world through lust."
Let us always remember that, "There is no vice so great but
we can kill "and conquer it if we but will."
98 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday. April S Second Day

Christ Our Ideal


Christ to redeem the world from sin. He came with love
came
in his heart for every individual, with redemption and possibility
for regeneration for all. By choosing him as our ideal, we create
within ourselves a desire to be like him, to have fellowship with
him. We perceive life as it should be and as it may be.
The chief apostle Peter, the indefatigable Paul, the Prophet
Joseph Smith, and other true followers of the Risen Lord recognized
in him the Savior of the individual, for did he not say, "This is my

work and my glory to bring to pass the immortality and eternal
life of man?"- —
not the sacrificing of the individual for the perpetua-
tion of the socialistic or communistic state.
Members of the Church of Christ are under obligation to make
the sinless Son of Man —
their ideal the one perfect being who ever
walked the earth.

Sublimest Example of Nobility


God-like in nature
Perfect in his love
Our Redeemer
Our Savior
The immaculate Son of our Eternal Father
The Light, the Life, the Way
I know he lives and
his power is potent; that he is the Son of
God, and that he has restored in this dispensation the complete plan
of salvation. God bless us all that we may hold him as our ideal
and pray for power to be like him, I ask in the name of Jesus Christ.
Amen.

ELDER JOHN A, WIDTSOE


0[ the Council o/ the Twelve Apostles
My dear brethren and sisters, I am always glad to bear testi-
mony to the faith within me. Yet I confess that standing before
such an audience, I feel a sobering effect. Brigham Young felt it
in his day. He declared that since we are all children of God, there
is within each one of us a part of God's very nature, and that to
stand before a great group of Latter-day Saints, the accumulation,
so to speak, of their godliness, lifts a man to a feeling that he stands
before the great dignity of the Maker of us all.
I have listened with great interest to the messages of this con-

ference. We
have had a good time together. I know we have all
been touched by the eloquent words just spoken by President Mc-
Kay. He has touched the very center of our spiritual being, of our
membership in the Church of Christ.
ELDER JOHN A. WIDTSOE 99

Kindness of George Albert Smith


During the events of the last few days, many memories have
crowded in upon my mind. In a late afternoon of a warm, sultry
day in August or September, I sat in my office rather tired after the
day's work. The University of Utah had had internal dissensions
which had been fanned by enemies into a nationwide scandal. I
had been called in to assist others who were trying to return the
institution and its work to a normal condition. It was the third time
in my life that I had been obliged to serve my state in such a capacity.
I was weary. Just then there was a knock upon the door, and in
walked George Albert Smith. He said, "I am on the way home after
my day's work. I thought of you and the problems that you are ex-
pected to solve. I came in to comfort you and to bless you."
That was the way of George Albert Smith. Of the many
friends I have throughout the state and beyond, he was the only
one, except a few of my intimate friends, who took time to give me
the loving help in the work I had to do. Of course I appreciated
that; I shall never forget it. We talked together for awhile; we
parted, he My heart was lifted. I was weary no longer.
went home.
You which we have spoken so much during this
see, love, of
conference, is not a mere word or a sensation within. To be a
worthy love, it must be brought into action. President Smith on that
occasion did that. He gave of his own time, his own strength, to
me. I hope that those of us who have attended this conference
these last few days will understand that the test of love is whether
the person who loves gives of himself, of his powers, to the loved
one. There is no true love unless that is done. The husband must
give of his own self, in a large sense, to the wife he loves; and she
must give of herself, surrender perhaps, for him, the things that she
would like to keep and have. Parents and children must have the
same relationship. There is no true love without sacrifice for the
loved one. Since we have spoken so much about love, perhaps we
might keep that in memory.

Theme of Address
Shortly before the death of President Smith, I heard one of his
addresses, perhaps it was his last, I am not quite sure. He chose as
his theme, the unhappy condition of the world at the present time.
He laid down a principle which I believe to be correct and inspired,
that there will be no peace, no final solution to the world's problems,
until this body of people, comprising the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, cleanse themselves, accept the doctrines of the Lord
Jesus Christ, spoken of so beautifully this morning, and set to work
to battle for righteousness and for truth; only then can we hope for
peace. He admitted that of course it was a tremendous claim, but
the claim is eternal. Truth is always the winner; truth is never de-
feated. In the words of the old poet: "Truth crushed to earth will

100 GENERAL CONFERENCE


Sunday, April S Second Day

rise again." He left on that occasion the message to me and to


others that we must cleanse our hearts, as said here today by Presi-
dent McKay. We
must gather up our courage, and we must set
forth to battle for righteousness in the world. Then, just as a leaven
leavens the lump, so we shall leaven the whole world. tremendousA
mission, isn't it? Tremendous to think about — that this handful of
people have within themselves the power, if properly used, to change
the whole world for good or for evil.

Examination of Testimonies
I have felt on many occasions, especially after that sermon, that
what we need to do, each one of us, is to begin to examine our own
testimonies of the truth. After all, with our testimonies as our chief
weapon, we go out to battle evil. We
speak of a testimony, yes;

we say we have a testimony but is the testimony of a kind that
will enable a man to accept and obey the gospel of the Lord Jesus
Christ under any and all conditions? It might be good for us Latter-
day Saints to begin to re-examine our own testimonies. man who A
goes into battle cleanses his sword, looks after his gun, and he is
ready for the battle when it comes. We
are in the midst of a great
battle today, the battle of the ages, foretold by prophets through-
out the long ages of the past. We
must begin with a certain under-
standing of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ and a willing, ready
acceptance of it, as indicated by President McKay. There is no
other way. But have we done that? Have we looked into our own
hearts, to our testimonies, and added that which is wanting, taken
out that which is unworthy? We
should be fit for the battle.
In the words of President Smith, we, like the leaven, shall
leaven all people. His life of love was merely an illustration of that
larger view of the concern of all who follow the Christ.

A Unique People
I think that we Latter-day Saints can afford to be a unique

people. Once in awhile I meet a young person, sometimes an older


person who says, "Well, that may all be true, but I don't want to
be different from other people. I want to be like other people.
Why can't we be like the others? It's so much easier then to go
through life."
But we can't help it, my brethren and sisters, if we are different.

We are different —
in righteousness, in virtue, in the teachings of

the eternal gospel we are different. We
can't escape it. If our
testimonies are sound and true, we know that we cannot be like
other people unless they, too, accept the truth as we possess it.
I don't know of a figure in the last two thousand years who was

more different from the mass of humanity, the millions of men and
women, than the Prophet Joseph Smith. He stands alone, unique
the only such religious leader in two thousand years, since the days
of the Christ. He received his commission from God himself; he
ELDER JOHN A. WIDTSOE 101

was instructed by Godhimself; he spoke at one time with God him-


self. No other man in the midst of the great apostasy from simple
truth has ever been able to make that claim. And we know it to
be true. Of course we are a different people. Since I musn't take
— —
too much time today many of us are yet to speak let me say
to you that we have the right, in searching our testimonies, in get-
ting them ready for this great battle, to remember that a testimony

is a living thing, not a static, dead thing it is alive and sometimes

fills a man and a woman until the visions of heaven are opened to

him or to her. By that token of life, a testimony must be fed, cared


for and nurtured, kept in its right place and position, protected if
needs be. In doing that, we have the right and the need to take all
evidences that lie about us, all evidences of the truth of this great
latter-day work. The Lord himself told us so to do. We may read
in the Doctrine and Covenants, section twenty, when the founda-
tions of this Church were laid, when our Church constitution, so to
speak, was written (you will find that evidences are there men-
tioned), that by the evidences that lie all about us we shall be
judged. Joseph Smith set up evidence after evidence of the reality
and truth of all that he said and did.

Witnesses to Prophet's Work


I am
thinking of one great argument in favor of Joseph, debated
and talked about for over a hundred years: He had witnesses, hu-
man flesh and blood witnesses, such as we are, of his work. He was
alone in the grove when the first vision came; he was alone when
Moroni called; the Church had not then been organized, hardly
begun. But from that time on, almost everything he did of a spiritual
nature, his communions and communications with the Almighty and
divine beings, were shared by him with others. It is really a won-
derful thing. The great spiritual leaders of the last two thousand
years have gone into the woods, fasted and prayed, and come back
with these messages, alone. They have gone into caves Moham-—

med, for example always alone. But this great latter-day prophet,
after the beginning of the work, had companions who shared with
him his great experiences. Twelve honorable men of unquestioned
probity saw the plates of the Book of Mormon; when the priesthood
was restored by John the Baptist, Oliver Cowdery, an honest man
whose integrity has never been questioned, received the priesthood
with Joseph. When Peter, James, and John came to give the higher
priesthood, Oliver Cowdery was there. When the great messages
in the Kirtland Temple came, which we frequently overlook in their
greatness, Oliver Cowdery was by his side. When the message
that men shall be judged by their works —a tremendous doctrine in
that day of apostasy —was given, Sidney Rigdon was with the
Prophet Joseph Smith. And other men, ancestors of some of you
men who are here today, were in the room with the Prophet time
102 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day

and time again when God came to him. Some of


the revelations of
them have described how
occurred.
in writing it

We don't stand alone. We


have witnesses to our faith. We
are a unique people. All about us are witnesses to the truth of this
great latter-day work. It might be well in building our testimonies,
to begin with the simple foundation events. —
Ultimately we will
then win that greater testimony, the testimony of the spirit which
is the testimony, but which we must achieve little by little, in a
natural manner that the Lord has prescribed:

A World Message
So brethren and sisters, let us look into our testimonies. Are
they just words on our tongues, or do they really represent our con-
victions? If they need mending, mend them; if they need building,
build them. Remember that our message is a world message I have —
said before from this stand that we are not confined to these val-
leys and mountains —
our message is for the whole world. For every
nation, every tongue, and every kindred, we have responsibility.
God bless us and be with us, not only in our search for truth,
but also in our use of truth, for the accomplishment and the com-
pletion of the great purposes of the Lord in these days, I pray in
the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

The Choir and congregation sang the hymn, "O Say, What
Is Truth?"

ELDER MATTHEW COWLEY


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles

I have been thinking, my brothers and sisters, since the meeting


of the Twelve in the temple on Thursday, of the words of the Master
when he was about to take his departure from the Twelve, and he
said unto them:

Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of


the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded
you: and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.
(Matt. 28:19-20.)

Quorum of the Twelve Apostles


As Council of Twelve met in the upper room of the temple
this
on Thursday, the Spirit of God bore witness to my spirit that Christ
was saying there to the Twelve: "... and, lo, I am with you always,
even unto the end of the world." And where there is no Quorum of
Twelve in God's ministry upon the earth, Christ is not there as the
leader of his Church and his kingdom. This testimony has sunk
deep into my heart since that meeting and during this conference,
which has been presided over by the Council of the Twelve with
ELDER SPENCER W. KIMBALL 103

President McKay as its presiding officer. When Christ came to


the earth he organized his Church, and at the head, under his leader-
ship, he had Twelve Apostles. And when he left, he left his Church
under the direction of the Twelve. When he came to the American
continent he organized his Church, and at the head of that Church,,
under his leadership, he placed Twelve Disciples. And when he
left them, he left his Church and his Saints under the leadership of
that Twelve. And when the gospel was restored again, Christ came
back and appeared unto him who was raised up to be the Prophet
at the head of this dispensation. And under his direction the
Church was organized for the last time, and at the head of the
Church under the Presidency of the Prophet were the appointed
Twelve. And when the Prophet was taken from the earth, sealing
his testimony with his blood, the Church was left under the direc-
tion of the Twelve. And down through the years when the leader-
ship of the Quorum of the Presidency has been taken away, the
keys have remained with the Twelve.
". . . and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the
world."
As God has borne witness to me in that meeting in his holy
house and in this conference, so I bear witness to you that where
there no Quorum of the Twelve, the true organization of Christ's
is
Church is not here upon the earth, and that is my testimony to you,
which I bear in all humbleness and in the name of Jesus Christ.
Amen.

ELDER SPENCER W. KIMBALL


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
My brothers and sisters, these are momentous days. The ex-
periences of this week we will not soon forget. I am impressed, too,
as Brother Cowley expressed, with the importance of the body to
which I belong. This is the first general conference I have ever at-
tended which was conducted by the Council of the Twelve.
Statement of Paul
I am reminded of the statement by Paul to the Ephesians when
he said:
And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evan-
gelists and some, pastors and teachers.

And then he outlines carefully for what purpose they were called:
For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the
edifying of the body (the Church) of Christ.

Andthen he goes further and makes a statement that I think is


very important indeed to every Latter-day Saint:
104 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day
That we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and
carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and
cunning craftiness whereby they lie in wait to deceive. (Ephesians 4:11-
12, 14.)

Chosen Leaders
In many
other places Paul also warned us against the deceivers
who would come even before his departing. And they have con-
tinued to come, and they are among us today. The authorities
which the Lord has placed in his Church constitute for the people
of the Church a harbor, a place of refuge, a hitching post, as it were.
No one in this Church will ever go far astray who ties himself se-
curely to the Church Authorities whom the Lord has placed in his
Church. This Church will never go astray; the Quorum of the
Twelve will never lead you into bypaths; it never has and never will.
There could be individuals who would falter; there will never be a
majority of the Council of the Twelve on the wrong side at any time.
The Lord has chosen them; he has given them specific responsibili-
ties. And those people who stand close to them will be safe. And,
conversely, whenever one begins to go his own way in opposition
to authority, he is in grave danger. I would not say that those

leaders whom the Lord chooses are necessarily the most brilliant, nor
the most highly trained, but they are the chosen, and when chosen
of the Lord they are his recognized authority, and the people who
stay close to them have safety.
I am reminded of when Moses was called to his tremendous re-

sponsibility of leading the children of Israel out of bondage, and he


complained to the Lord and said, "I am weak, I am slow of speech,"
and the Lord gave to him a voice in his brother Aaron. But the
Lord didn't replace him by that voice.

Need of Being Valiant


The Lord is at the helm, brothers and sisters, and he will con-
tinue to be there, and his work will go forward. The important
question is whether we, as individuals, will be going in that same
direction. It's up to us. This is a gospel of individual work. I wish
our Latter-day Saints could become more valiant. As I read the
seventy-sixth section of the Doctrine and Covenants, the great vis-
ion given to the Prophet Joseph Smith, I remember that the Lord
says to that terrestrial degree of glory may go those who are not
valiant in the testimony, which means that many of us who have
received baptism by proper authority, many who have received
other ordinances, even temple blessings, will not reach the celestial
kingdom of glory unless we live the commandments and are valiant.
What is being valiant? I believe that John, in the book of Rev-
elation, says something about valiancy. He is speaking to the
people at Sardis, one of the cities which Paul had proselyted. He
is speaking to the Saints, mind you, not to the people in the world.
ELDER SPENCER W. KIMBALL 105

He says: "I know thy works, that thou hast a name that thou livest,
and art dead." (Rev. 3:1.)
Spiritually Dead
There are many peoplein this Church today who think they
live,but they are dead to the spiritual things. And I believe even
many who are making pretenses of being active are also spiritually
dead. Their service is much of the letter and less of the spirit.
Again I notice he speaks to another group, the Laodiceans, and
says:
I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou
wert cold or hot.
So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will
spue thee out of my mouth. (Ibid., 3:15-16.)

Those were Saints who had been baptized into the kingdom,
received the Holy Ghost, we would assume, and were supposed to
be on theirway to exaltation. But they weren't faithful, they weren't
valiant. The Lord says again in these verses through John:
Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God,
and he shall go no more out: and I will write upon him the name of my
God, and the name of the city of my God, which is new Jerusalem, which
cometh down out of heaven from my God: and I will write upon him my
new name. {Ibid. 3:12.)
He says again of these Sardis members of the Church:
Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their
garments; and they shall walk with me in white: for they are worthy.
He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment; and
I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his

name before my Father, and before his angels. (Ibid., 3:4-5.)


I remember a great people of long ago who belonged to the

Church of our Lord, who became so righteous as a group that they


were translated into heaven. And I wonder why other groups have
not been taken. The only conclusion that I can reach is that whole
groups have not been sufficiently righteous. buried a righteous We
man yesterday. If all of the people in this Church were as righteous
as he was, perhaps there might be further translations. But we are
not living the commandments of the Lord as well as we know.
Many of us are not valiant.

Greater Church Activity


I pray the Lord will bless us all, that we may catch a vision of

greater activity in this Church, all of us. That none of us may stand
by and feel self-righteous as did the hypocrite who with the publi-
can went to the temple to pray:
The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself, God, I thank thee,
that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as
this publican.
I fast twice in the week, I give tithes of all that I possess. (Luke
18:11-12.)
106 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday. April 8 Second Day

Then Jesus goes on to say:


And the publican, standing afar off, would not lift up so much as his
eyes unto heaven, but smote upon his breast saying, God be merciful to
me a sinner.
I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the

other: for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased; and he that
humbleth himself shall be exalted. (Ibid., 18:1344.)

We are all sinners. We all need to repent. We all need to change


our lives and to make them more righteous, and become valiant as
the children of Enoch were valiant, so that we may receive the
blessings which are promised to us and which we are striving for.
Many of us have not yet surrendered, or if it has been a surrender it
has been a conditional surrender, with many reservations.
God help us, brothers and sisters, that we may unconditionally
surrender to the Lord and his program and to the spirit of the work,
I pray in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER JEAN WUNDERLICH


Formerly President of the West German Mission
First of all, brothers and sisters, I wish to express my thanks to
our Father in Heaven that my family and I had the opportunity to go
to Germany and fill a mission there in that much-tried land. I have
been back four months now. I have resumed my profession and have
had an opportunity to look around among those that have stayed
home, and I would say that nothing in an earthly way could repay
the blessings that my family and I have enjoyed while we were away.
Many people talk of sacrifices in the work of the Lord, but I am con-
vinced that it is not possible to sacrifice in the work of the Lord, that
no matter what we do, when the ledger is balanced our side of it is
always in the red.
If I can express one sentiment that all the Saints in Germany
would want me to convey to the body of the Church, it would be a
sentiment of thanks for the Welfare help that they have received.
It is difficult to describe the condition under which these people had
to live. For many of them, the food which came when it did, meant
the difference literally between life and death, and for many of them,
most of them, the clothing when it came, meant the difference be-
tween freezing and being cold, and being warm and comfortable.
I do not want to describe conditions in detail, but perhaps one little

incident will illustrate. I asked a good brother in private, confiden-


tially, about a year before I left, "How much of the clothing that you
now wear on your body did you have before the Welfare help
came." He hesitated and said, "Just one pair of spats, all the rest of
it is from the Welfare." This is not an isolated case, but hundreds,

yes, I would say, thousands are in the same position.


I would also like to say something about our missionaries. It

took a long time before the door was opened again for our American
ELDER JEAN WUNDERLICH 107

young men tocome over there and preach the Gospel. But before
they came there were a few valiant men and women of the Germans
themselves who left their families and their homes and filled full-
time missions for the Church. That same man who mentioned the pair
of spats as belonging to him before the Welfare help came, went into
the mission field and left at home a wife and seven children, only
one of whom was old enough to earn her own keep.
Those are the few to whom we owe so much in Germany, but we
owe a great deal also to you fathers and mothers who sent your sons
over there.
Naturally, you- are anxious to know how they are getting along.
May I assure you that there is no cause for alarm, as to their physical
well being. At the present moment there is nothing in Germany that
cannot be obtained if one has the price for it, and it can be obtained
legitimately. Many of the German Saints are not fortunate enough
to be able to afford all the beautiful things that are obtainable there,
again, but as I say, none of our missionaries need to suffer. And I
will add that as long as any German Saint has a crust of bread it
will be shared with the missionaries. Ever since the days of Tacitus,
the Germans have been renowned for their hospitality, and this is
still one of the virtues which they have left.

I remember an occasion when things were still scarce, and when


housewives were sorely tried. We
came to a Conference. A lady
invited us to dinner. We
had potato soup and dry bread. In this
potato soup was the only shortening or fat which this particular
family had obtained for several weeks. That shortening or fat, 50
grams, all, was really meant for their child, but they shared it with
us. I hasten to add, that the child did not suffer.

You may wonder what the prospects of missionary work are in


Germany. They are excellent. Of course the German people have
become highly critical. They do not fall, I believe, as easily as they
once did, for propaganda. I hope they have been cured. I think that
in some ways they have become more discriminatory. Before the
21st of June, 1948, we had no difficulty in bringing people into our
Church, because they came of their own accord. But since that time
the currency reform was enacted which changed economic conditions,
and by reason of that fact we are in competition again with the entice-
ments of the world, with the movies, with restaurants, with travel
and with sports. Wehave to go to the people, and as we do, hun-
dreds of them become interested. There are 50 cities in Western
Germany alone, each with over 25,000 people, where the Gospel
has never been preached, so that the field is ripe there. I hope the
Lord will grant us a long time in order to preach His word, so that
we may reach the honest in heart.
I thank my Heavenly Father again. I see the time is up. It is
not possible to give an adequate report in a short time. I thank iny
Father in Heaven again for his kindness to me and my family, and
108 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April S Second Day
for the kindnesswhich he has inspired others to extend unto us, both
here and in Germany. May the Lord bless you, may the Lord bless
the dear Saints in Germany, that they may have the things which
they so much desire, and which they so much deserve, I pray in the
name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER CLIFFORD E. YOUNG


Assistant to the Council of the Twelve

My brethren and sisters, this has been a most impressive con-


ference. I think in my experience I have never 'attended one more
impressive, and it has been my privilege to attend conferences since
the passing of President Woodruff when vacancies have been filled
in the presidency of the Church. I remember President Woodruff
well. He knew me by my first name, largely because my father at-
tended him professionally, and it was my privilege to drive my fa-
ther from place to place as a boy. So, I say, in my recollection I
never remember a more impressive conference.
Gospel Brings Peace
It'sa great pleasure and a privilege and a blessing to be here
and to feel the warmth of the hearts of the people. Although there
has been a shadow of sorrow in all of our hearts, yet there has been
that peace that comes to the human soul through the gospel of
Jesus Christ. Weare all striving for peace, and we wonder how
it's going to come. I sometimes think we look upon it as sort of a

tangible thing and perhaps there are some tangible aspects to it, but
in a larger sense, it is most intangible. I think we were conscious

of that yesterday as we assembled in this room paying our respects


and showing our love to our great leader. As we sat here, I couldn't
help but think, here we are evidencing peace in the world. Our
hearts are free from strife; that's what peace means. We have noth-
ing but love and kindness one toward another, and regardless of
creed, regardless of color, and there were many here yesterday,
who are not of the white race, we were all dedicated to one purpose
and that was peace and love. It's true, that was inspired by our
leader, but leaders can do that, and they will do it, and peace will
come through the inspiration of men whom God will raise up and
who will establish in the hearts of men, because of their righteous
lives, these great concepts of peace.

Peace Through Suffering


And then, too, we had another most striking experience as we
sat here. Welistened to that lovely blind woman, Sister Jones, pay
her tribute, one from whom the beauties of this world have been shut

out I mean the tangible beauties. I couldn't help thinking of it as
I saw those beautiful flowers. She couldn't see them; she can't see
ELDER CLIFFORD E. YOUNG 109

the shadows of a fleeting day or the rising sun, or these delicate lilies.
Tennyson, you know, it was, as he was going along one time, seeing
a little flower in a crannied wall, said:
Flower in the crannied wall,,
I pluck you out of the crannies,
I hold you here, root and all, in my hand,
Little flower —but if I could understand
What you are, root and all, and all in all,
I should know what God and man is.

This lovely girl can't see those flowers. But she does see some-
thing, my brothers and sisters, beyond what you and I see. She
has a perception of beauty; she has peace in her soul; she has some-
thing Christ-like that God exemplified, and it brings home the fact
that there is great wisdom in the experience of suffering and sorrow,
and it's in that suffering and sorrow that we acquire these divine
attributes. God understood it; he didn't let the cup pass when Jesus
supplicated that it might. He knew. And so, some have to go
through life missing some of the tangible things you and I enjoy, but
partaking of some of those intangibles that transcend them all. We
had a great lesson here yesterday, not only of how peace may come
into the human soul, but also of how men and women exemplify the
teachings of our Lord and Savior ad the great virtues of love and
sacrifice.

Story of Blind Woman


I remember many years ago of reading, I believe it was in the

old Juvenile Instructor, a beautiful story, and it has stayed with me


all these years. It is said that on one occasion President Young left
his home, over where the Bee Hive House stands, and started down
State Street. There used to be a stream of water, part of City
Creek, flow down the street, and the sidewalk, such as it was, or
the trail, meandered along this ditch; and as President Young was
making his way down he saw coming up the trail an old lady with
a cane, following her way along the ditch. She couldn't see. In
the goodness of his heart President Young stopped and, taking her
by the hand, he said, "My dear sister, God bless you. Let the light
of the gospel be the light that shines beyond the rays of the setting
sun." It's the gospel of Christ that brings peace to all of us and
as was said here, appropriately, the reason that we could feel it so
impressively yesterday is because we were paying tribute to one
who had exemplified these divine virtues.
Exercise of Agency
And so, sisters, there is hope for all of us. There's
brethren and
hope President Clark called our attention
for this suffering world.
last night toone very potent thing, however: namely, that we can
lose our agency. We
have the agency to make these things pos-
GENERAL CONFERENCE
Second Day

sible; we also have


the agency to lose them because God, in giving
his promises to his children, has not taken it from us. We
have
the right to do, or not to do, and we have the right to establish right-
eousness. We
have the will to do it or the will not to do it. Therein
lies the great danger, and if we fail, or if failure occurs, it will be
because of us who know better. But we have great hope as we
visualize what has happened these last hundred years. Someone has
said that one man alone with a message of peace and righteousness
can revolutionize the world. The Prophet Joseph stood alone a
hundred and twenty years ago. Today we number 1,100,000 peo-
ple, and that's not counting the hundreds and thousands who have
passed to the other side. It merely illustrates what one man alone
can do. Jesus stood alone when he stood before Pilate, even Peter

had deserted him he knew him not, he said, and thus Jesus stood
alone. One man alone can give hope and life and vitality to this
world. And one man stood alone a hundred and twenty years ago,
and today we're the recipients of his great message of eternal truth.
I bear you my testimony, my brothers and sisters, again thank-

ing my Heavenly Father for the blessings of the gospel of Jesus


Christ and for the peace that it brings to the human soul, and I do
it in the name of Jesus. Amen.

President David O. McKay


We have just listened to Elder Clifford E. Young, one of the
Assistants to the Council of the Twelve. We
have a few moments
to hear a brief report from Elder Arwell L. Pierce, formerly Presi-
dent of the Mexican Mission of the Church. He is now coming
forward and will speak to us for a few minutes.

ELDER ARWELL L. PIERCE


Former President of the Mexican Mission
My
Brothers and Sisters, this is a humbling experience for me.
I have been coming to this Tabernacle, to attend conferences, for the

past 47 years. The first time was in 1904 when I came to Salt Lake
City to be set apart as a missionary to Mexico. A
few years later I
came here in my callings as Branch President and as Bishop in El
Paso, Texas, and as a member of the Juarez Stake Presidency. Also
during the more than seven and a half years Sister Pierce and I pre-
sided over the Mexican Mission, we came frequently to these
General Conferences where we received instruction and inspiration
to help us with our work. This is however the first time I have ever
spoken in a General Conference. Sister Pierce and I are thankful
for the privilege we had of living in Mexico City, and of laboring
in many places in the Republic of Mexico, as well as in the Central
American republics doing missionary work for the Church.
ELDER ARWELL L. PIERCE 111

I amgrateful to the Lord that my grandparents on my father's


side accepted the Gospel, and became members of the Church, in
1833, only three years after the Church was organized. My grand-
father Pierce lost his life in the persecutions of the Church in those
early days, when he was but thirty years old. My widowed grand-
mother crossed the plains and came to Utah with her three small
boys in the year 1852, just five years after the first pioneers came
to this great valley. I am proud of that heritage. I am proud also of
the fact that my Pierce forefathers were among the early settlers
of this great land of America. They came over from England as
early as 1620 to 1625.
I am grateful that my father was a Pioneer in the L.D.S.
Colonies in Mexico. He went down there with his family in 1890,
just five years after the first Pioneers arrived, and helped establish
those Colonies. I have often wondered why my father went to Mexico
with his family at that time. He not only moved down there that
he might live unmolested with his family, but also that his posterity
might become missionaries among the Mexican people. My father's
children and grandchildren have given 47 years of missionary ser-
vice in the Mexican Mission. Sister Pierce and I very greatly enjoyed
our missionary labors in Mexico and Central America.
I remember that several years ago, it was in 1906, two mem-

bers of the Council of the Twelve, Elders John Henry Smith and
Francis Marion Lyman were Stake Conference visitors in the Colo-
nies in Mexico. On their return trip to the border, I met them in
Ciudad Juarez, across the river South from El Paso, Texas, and
took them to the office of the American Consul, where I introduced
them as Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
In his reply to the introduction, Elder John Henry Smith, in that
well known diplomatic way of his, said very impressively, "Yes,
Consul Edwards, we are members of the Church of Christ which
is the first-born Church of America. As Christ is the first born of
His Father, so the Church which bears His name, The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is the first-born Church of
America." So far as I know that statement is true, for all the other
churches of that time had their origin in the old world, the eastern
hemisphere.
President George Albert Smith visited El Paso in the year
1926,on his way to visit the Mexican Mission. President Rey L.
Pratt,with Apostle Melvin J. Ballard was in South America to open
up missionary work there. Brother Smith couldn't go into Mexico
then because of revolutionary troubles, so he stayed in my home
with me for several days resting. One Sunday morning, one of my
good friends, an attorney, who was teacher of the Bible class in his
Church, phoned and invited me to give a talk to his class that
morning. I was happy to tell him that Brother George Albert Smith,
one of the Apostles of my Church, was visiting in my home. The
attorney then invited Elder Smith to speak to his Bible class that
112 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday. April 8 Second Day

Sunday morning, which he did willingly. As Elder Smith stood


before that Bible class he held up a book and said, "This is the
Mormon Bible." The men were intensely interested of course. Elder
Smith then turned the book over, so they could see the title of it.
He then said, "This is the King James Translation of the Bible. It is
the same Bible you have, and it is our Bible also." Brother Smith
then remarked, "You of course are interested in seeing what the
world calls the Mormon Bible." He then held up the Book of Mor-
mon and said, "Well, this is the so-called Mormon Bible, known to us
as the Book of Mormon." Brother Smith then explained to the
men's Bible class that the Book of Mormon is really the Bible of the
people of America, and it contains the word of God just as much
as does the book known to the world as the Bible.
I recall with much interest the visit of President George Albert

Smith to the Mexican Mission in May of 1946. The special reason


for his visit was to officially receive back into the Mission and the
Church some 1200 members who for ten years had been separated
from the Church under their own leaders. It was arranged during
President Smith's visit to Mexico for him and his party to call on
the President of Mexico, General Manuel Avila Camacho, and
present him with a copy of the Book of Mormon in the Spanish
language. Secretary of Economy Gustavo P. Serrano, who intro-
duced President Smith and his party to the President of Mexico,
had requested of us that we tell President Camacho about our
Mormon colonists in Northern Mexico, which we were pleased to
do. President Camacho then commented saying, "I want you to
know that I have received many good reports about your American
Latter-day Saint colonists in Chihuahua. I know them to be a virtu-
ous people; an honest people, and an industrious people. If there
is anything I can do at any time for you or for your people I stand
ready to do it."
After we had explained briefly to President Camacho about
our mission and our work in Mexico, we said, "Mr. President we
are not just another sect that has come into your midst, for we come
with a special message for you and your people. We are here to tell
you of your forefathers and of the restored Gospel of Jesus Christ."
We then asked, "Mr. President, do you have a history that gives
the origin of your people?" The President replied saying, "We do
not; unfortunately, we do not know our origin." We then said to
him, "We have a book that purports to be the history of your
people. It tells of a great prophet who with his family and others,
left Jerusalem 600 years before Christ, and came to this country,
this great land of America, known to them as a 'land of promise,
choice above all other lands'. This Book of Mormon tells also of
the visit of Jesus Christ to this continent, and that He organized His
Church and chose His twelve disciples."
After hearing about this book, President Camacho became very
interested and anxious, saying he had never heard about the Book
ELDER ARWELL L. PIERCE 113

of Mormon. He then asked, "Would it be possible for me to get a


copy of the Book of Mormon? I have never before heard about it."
President Smith then presented President Camacho with a leather
bound copy of the Book of Mormon in Spanish. We called attention
to the special reference sheet we had posted in the front of the book
and observed that he might want to read only the passages listed
therein, for lack of time. President Camacho replied, "I shall read
the entire book, for this is of great interest to me and to my people."
I was so happy that President Smith could make that trip, for
he seemed to enjoy it immensely. As you may know, President Smith
had a keen sense of humor. Well, he was determined to climb to the
top of the Pyramid of the Sun, so two missionary Elders, one on
either side of the President, helped him climb those many steep
steps to the top. About half way up President Smith stopped and
with a smile looked at first one then the other Elder and said, "Well,
I might help one of you up here, but why should I help two of

you?" (laughter)
Brethren and Sisters, the work of the Lord is growing rapidly in
Mexico and Central America. We have found among those people
many who are deeply religious. They love the Book of Mormon, once
they receive it and learn what it purports to be, the history of their
forefathers. They carry it with them and teach the Gospel from it.
The Book of Mormon is a great missionary in Mexico.
Since returning to our home in El Paso, Texas, I have had many
Gospel talks with friends, both American and Mexican. Recently
the Juarez Rotary Club, ( Juarez is just South across the river from
El Paso, Texas) of which I was a member before going on my
mission to Mexico, invited me to talk to them and give a report of my
eight years of absence from home and the club. As I stood before
the group I remarked, "Friends of Rotary, I cannot give you a
report of what I have been doing in Mexico during the past eight
years without saying something about my Church and the things
it teaches." They responded saying, "Go ahead, we will be glad to

listen to what you have to say." I then told them of our interview
with President Manuel Avila Camacho, and of the story of the
Book of Mormon, which is the history of their forefathers, and their
Bible. Those men listened attentively to all I had to say, and
when had finished my talk, they loudly applauded, as they arose to
I

their feet. The President came up and gave me the traditional


Mexican embrace, to show his appreciation. After the meeting several
of the club members asked my sons who were present, if it would be
possible for them to get one of those Books of Mormon.
I would like to say, brethren and sisters, that it has been my
privilege to visit many men in high political positions in Mexico and
in Central America. Besides three Presidents of republics, and
several cabinet members, I have visited governors of states, mayors
of cities, presidents of universities, doctors, lawyers, and business

men, all of whom have received me graciously. Not one has re-
114 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day

fused to receive me and my message. Each has expressed himself


as being grateful to the Lord and to us for bringing such interesting
and wonderful messages.
Recently I met a prominent minister friend of mine, at a local
hospital in El Paso. I had gone to the hospital to visit a sick member
of my High Preists quorum. The minister was at the hospital to
visit one of his church members. The minister and I have been good
friends for many years, so when we met he asked,, "Bishop Pierce,
when did you return home, we are surely glad to have you back
with us again. How did you enjoy your years in Mexico?" I will not
take time to tell of all the details of our very interesting talk. I
finally asked my minister friend if he had ever read the Book of
Mormon. He said he had never read it and indicated he didn't care
to read it. I told him the Book of Mormon is the Bible of America, and
just as much the word of God, as is the Bible, for it is a new witness
for Christ. I pointed out the reasonableness of the Americas having
their Bible as well as the Eastern Hemisphere, for the peoples of both
hemispheres were children of our Heavenly Father. I then suggested
he was neglecting his education by not reading the Book of Mormon.
I explained to him that the Book of Mormon told of Christ's visit to

this the American continent, as well as many other interesting things


about the book. He seemed pleased with the truths of the Book of
Mormon as I gave them to him, and then he asked, "Where can I
get a Book of Mormon? I believe I would like to read that book."
I told this minister that he was just as much entitled to the truths of

the Gospel as I, and I was sure he would enjoy reading the Book of
Mormon. I feel as President George Albert Smith often expressed it,
"We cannot force people into doing things, but we may love them
into doing what is right, and into righteousness." Ministers are also
prospects if only we can touch their hearts with the message of the
restored Gospel.
I desire to express my gratitude to the First Presidency and

the Council of the Twelve, as well as to others of the General


Authorities, for the splendid support and encouragement Sister
Pierce and I received from them while we were presiding in the
Mexican Mission. We had the honor and blessing of having two
members of the First Presidency visit us during our presidency.
One visit from President George Albert Smith as already related,
and two visits from President David O. McKay. On his visits Presi-
dent McKay did much to encourage and help us, in the planning for
the building of meeting houses. When Sister Pierce and I entered
the Mission in 1942 we did not have nice meeting houses as we now
have. It has been expressed by some of our Anglo-American mem-
bers that since the Mexican members are poor and accustomed to
poorly equipped homes, most any kind of cheap adobe hall is good
enough for them as meeting houses. I feel however that since we
have the very best philosophy of life in the restored Gospel of Jesus
Christ, to give to the Mexican people, why should we not give them
SUNDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 115

meeting houses to correspond in value with the truths of the Gospel


we give them.
May God bless us and may we continue to be faithful and true
to the Gospel which we have received. Sister Pierce and I are now
back in our home in El Paso, following our mission and 45 years
of leadership work in the Church. We
are enjoying our home and a
brief rest. The Lord bless us all, I pray, in the name of Jesus Christ,
Amen.

President David O. McKay


The Tabernacle Choir will now sing "Crossing the Bar."
The closing prayer will be offered by President Clifton G. M.
Kerr, South Bear River Stake, Utah, after which this conference
willstand adjourned until two o'clock this afternoon. The proceed-
be broadcast over KSL at Salt Lake City and,
ings of that session will
by arrangement through KSL, over the stations named in the first
session of the Conference. That session will also be televised over
the KSL television station, channel 5.
The choir music for this session has been furnished by the
Tabernacle Choir, with Elder J. Spencer Cornwall conducting and
Elder Frank W. Asper at the organ.
The Choir will now sing "Crossing the Bar."

The Tabernacle Choir sang, "Crossing the Bar."


President Clifton G. M. Kerr of the South Bear River Stake
offered the closing prayer.
Conference adjourned until 2:00 p.m.

SUNDAY AFTERNOON SESSION


Conference reconvened Sunday afternoon, April 8, at 2:00 p.m.,
with President David O. McKay presiding and Elder J. Reuben
Clark, Jr., conducting the services.

Elder J. Reuben Clark, Jr.:

This is the fifth session of the One Hundred Twenty-first Annual


Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. We
are convened in the tabernacle on Temple Square, Salt Lake City,
Utah.
President David O. McKay, President of the Twelve, is presid-
ing. He has asked myself, Brother J. Reuben Clark, Jr., of the Coun-
cil of the Twelve, to conduct the service.
The services will be broadcast in the Assembly Hall and in
Barratt Hall over a loud speaking system.
The proceedings of this session will be broadcast over Station
KSL of Salt Lake City, and, by arrangement through KSL, over
the stations named in the first session of the conference.
116 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April Second Day

This session will also be televised over the KSL television


station, channel 5.
The choir music for this session will be rendered by the Taber-
nacle Choir, Elder J. Spencer Cornwall conducting and Elder Alex-
ander Schreiner at the organ.
We will begin the afternoon services by the Tabernacle Choir
singing: "God's Eternal Plan."
The opening prayer will be offered by President George L.
Reese of the Smithfield Stake, Utah.

Singing by the Tabernacle Choir, "God's Eternal Plan."


President George L. Reese of the Smithfield Stake offered the
invocation.
Singing by the Tabernacle Choir, "Fierce Was the Wild Bil-
low."

ELDER DELBERT L. STAPLEY


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles

My brothers and sisters, I rejoice in being with you in this con-


ference today. I feel very weak and humble in this position, and I
do earnestly pray for an interest in your faith and prayers.
I wish to extend my appreciation and gratitude to the great
number of you who received me so kindly in this appointment. I
appreciate the many prayers that have gone up in my behalf. With
you, I feel a keen loss in our beloved President George Albert Smith.
Coming from an outside stake, I feel in a measure that I represent
the good people who live on the fringe of the Church, who do not
always have opportunity to express the love that is in their hearts
for these great leaders who depart from among us.

Loved by All
PresidentGeorge Albert Smith was close to me, he always
seemed be around for some of the important events of my life.
to
I appreciated sincerely his confidence and love, and I rejoice that it
was he who called me to this present assignment. As a boy, I re-
member his coming into my father's and mother's home to attend
quarterly conferences representing the General Authorities of the
Church. And as I relive those occasions, I rejoice in the goodly
effect that he had upon my life. He was loved by all good members
of the Church everywhere. He radiated a kindly and lovable spirit.
Wherever he went, he brought good will to the Church and its
people. As has been said, he was a man without guile. I think he
has left with us a gem of counsel as so many times in his talks he
has advised us to stay on the Lord's side of the line. That counsel
will live throughout eternity in our hearts. A very simple state-
ELDER DELBERT L. STAPLEY 117

ment, yet one that will produce great good in the lives of individuals
if they will but follow it.
The eighth chapter in the leadership of this Church has been
closed in the departing of this good man. As I reflect back over the
eight spiritual leaders of this people, in my heart I feel that God
wanted each of them to lead his people, and that each was specially
fitted and endowed for the work of his time and generation. The
chapter now closed in the book of the life and activities of President
George Albert Smith is a glorious one of great attainment on the
part of the Church. He built ably upon the foundation laid, so now
this people can continue to go ahead in the accomplishment of the
great purposes that God has for his people to accomplish.

God at the Helm


As I have thought about the past three days and all that has
taken place, my testimony has increased in relation to the work we
are engaged in. All plans have gone forward for this great general
conference of the Church. And almost on the eve of the conference
meetings, the Lord took from us our beloved President. At first there
was a great feeling of loss, but I don't think ever a feeling of frustra-
tion, for the Quorum of the Twelve realized that vested within them
were all the powers, authorities, and keys necessary to carry for-
ward the important work of this great Church. Committees were
appointed to plan the services that would honor and recognize our
beloved prophet-leader. Everything seemed to fit into a proper pat-
tern, the services were held, and our hearts were touched by the
beautiful thoughts expressed, the consolation given to members of
the family and to all of us who mourn the passing of our President.
Yet the 121st annual conference went on as scheduled and there
was a feeling that God was at the helm; that the affairs of his Church,
even at such a critical time, were being properly handled. And so
we come here today, not disturbed in our faith, not disturbed in the
leadership now handling the affairs of the Church. Everything has
fit into a pattern, for God established the pattern, and the people

know where the authority of leadership is vested when the President


prophet-leader is taken. There has hardly been a ripple in the scene
of our work or activities, and yet we have paused properly to honor
and recognize our great spiritual leader.
Brothers and sisters, this is to me a testimony of the strength
and divinity of this work. In my heart, I feel that God is with us and
directing his work, that as we go from this conference to our homes,
we will not be confused, nor will we feel in our hearts that this work
will stop; there will be unity in our faith, we will go away in confi-
dence, knowing that the work of the Lord will continue to go for-
ward and fulfil its destiny in the earth. And as I reflect upon these
things, I remember what the Lord said to the Prophet Joseph Smith
before the Prophet had been endowed with the priesthood and be-
)

118 GENERAL CONFERENCE


Sunday. April 8 Second Day

fore the Church itself had been organized. He said that "a great
and a marvelous work is about to come forth unto the children of
men"; and surely this is a great and marvelous work which we rep-
resent. Very shortly after the organization of the Church, less than
a year and a half, the Lord speaking to the elders of the Church said:
Wherefore, be not weary in well-doing, for ye are laying the founda-
tion of a great work. And out of small things proceedeth that which is
great. (D. & C. 64:33.)

According to the law that God had revealed, and in keeping


with the law of the land, this Church was established with only six
members. Yet the early rise of the Church from that humble begin-
ning was great and marvelous, the Lord was pleased, and the breth-
ren engaged in the work of the ministry had been very diligent and
devoted. The Lord didn't want them to be weary in well-doing
because they were laying the foundations of a great work. In the
preface to the book of Doctrine and Covenants, the Lord said:
. . . those to whom these commandments were given, might have
power to lay the foundation of this church, and to bring it forth out
of obscurity and out of darkness, the only true and living church upon the
face of the whole earth. (Ibid., 1 :30.)

And then again, a little later the Lord said:

For Zion must increase in beauty, and in holiness; her borders must be
enlarged; her stakes must be strengthened; yea, verily I say unto you, Zion
must arise and put on her beautiful garments. ( Ibid., 82 14.
:

Men of Strength
We know the Church passed through many trials and many
tribulations, that brethren along the way deserted the Prophet, and
the Saints suffered mobbings and all types of hardships and priva-
tions, but there were in the Church men of strength and character,
men who believed in this great latter-day work; and the power of
the Lord rested with them. They were undaunted in the face of
these difficulties. But the work of the Lord went on, and our people
were led here to the valleys of the mountains by President Brigham
Young. He had the vision of enlarging the borders of Zion and
sent out groups to colonize and settle the fertile valleys of these
mountains, both north and south and east and west. Thus the great
work of the Church has continued to grow, even until the present
time, and each of our prophet leaders took his place, gave of him-
self and of the talents that God had blessed him with to establish
firmly the foundations of this work. And as surely as we are here
today, it has been brought forth out of obscurity and out of dark-
ness, and stands as a beacon of light upon the hill to all peoples and
nations of the earth. We
have witnessed in the progress of the
Church, a great enlarged program to take care of our people. This
program encircles the entire life of the Church membership and gives
ELDER DELBERT L. STAPLEY 119

them every opportunity for growth, for development, and for train-
ing. Surely in this work, the Lord has been with his people; so today
with pride in our progress we claim almost sixteen hundred wards
and branches of the Church, 184 stakes, scattered up and down this
western area with some to the east of us. We also have many mis-
sions established throughout the world, and with all our program
and activity, the Church itself is known far and wide and assuming
its place of leadership and of power in shaping the lives of men and
of nations.

Proselyting in Stakes
And seems to me, my brothers and sisters, that the Lord in
it

this enlargement of our borders has been with this people, and has
so arranged it that we are now established in the population centers
of this western area. We
have built our places of worship, our
places of recreation, and in all this building, and in all this planning,
and in all this preparation, the leadership of the Church under the
inspiration of God have not had in mind only that we should take
care of our own, but that the facilities we have provided should be
made available to our friends. We
have been counseled to warn
our neighbors, not to hide our light under a bushel, but to place it
where it can be seen of men, that they may have the opportunities
and the blessings this Church affords and that you and I enjoy.
And does seem to me, brothers and sisters, in this present
it

where it is impossible to send all the missionaries


critical situation
we need to send, that we must take advantage of
into foreign fields
the proselyting opportunity that is ours in the branches, wards, and
stakes of the Church; and through our stake missionary program
make available to those who are investigating, the facilities of our
Church, that the children of our friends and investigators can come
to Primary, to Sunday School, the young men and women to Mu-
tual, the mothers to Relief Society, and all to our sacrament meet-
ings. If we as God's people would warn our neighbors, and if we
would be friends with our neighbors, we will invite them to come
with us and investigate this thing we know to be true and of God.

Invitation to Come and See


I think it was only a year ago
that President George Albert
Smith from this pulpit said that we
should invite our friends and
our associates to come and see. There is much in the Church for
people to come and see, and if we who are members of the Church
would live as we should live, we would never be ashamed of that
which our friends and our associates do see. Not so long ago in
attending a conference, I heard a young lady missionary in making
her report say that in her missionary experience she felt the Spirit
of the Lord working with her. And I thought what a grand thing it
would be if all people of the Church felt that in their callings and
120 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day
appointments the Spirit of the Lord was working with them. I am
just as confident as I can be that regardless of our calling and ap-
pointments or holding the priesthood, we who are the men of the
Church, that unless we have the Holy Spirit of the Lord abiding
with us in our work and ministry, we will never accomplish the
purposes of God. We
need the Holy Spirit; we need its power
and its gifts and its influences with us in our callings and offices,
if we carry out successfully the responsibility associated with those

callings and appointments.


I have a testimony of this work; I know it is true. I hope and

pray, brothers and sisters, that we will devote ourselves to its high
responsibilities. It is the most important thing we have at hand to
do. May we be appreciative of the Church, of its leadership, of
its doctrines, and all the blessings we enjoy, I humbly pray in the
name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER ALBERT E. BOWEN


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
Naturally the thoughts of the speakers at this conference have
turned to President Smith, so recently departed. Mine run the same
way. If he were standing here today where I stand, I can easily
conjecture him as pleading with the people to live their religion,
that is, to live in practice up to the high standards of what they have
been taught.
Judged According to Works
I should like, if I may, to say a little about that, with particular
reference to the personal responsibility of each individual for what
he turns out to be.
It was permitted to John the Revelator to glimpse the future as
the revelation of things to come passed in panoramic view before
his vision. Among other things, he says:
And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; . . . and
they were judged every man according to their works. {Rev. 20: 12.)

Two lines of thought closely related and of tremendous conse-


quence to all of us are stimulated by this graphic statement. First,
there is implicit in it the thesis that death is not the end of man.
Those marshalled for rating had died, for it was the dead whom
John saw. Second, their classification and recompense depended
upon their own
deeds, what they had done while they yet lived. It
is this second feature of the vision to which I wish to direct atten-
tion.
As the hosts from the dead passed before the throne, they were
judged every man, according to his works. That is justice in the
highest sense of the term. It is judgment founded in righteousness.
ELDER ALBERT E. BOWEN 121

It reaches completely up to the perfect ideal. No fault can be found


in it, for every man is to be classified and rewarded on the basis
of his own individual performance. It has always been the con-
ception of enlightened nations of free men, particularly those whose
laws are rooted in the Christian code, that only to that degree in
which judgments have embraced righteousness have they approxi-
mated justice. Long ago the Prophet Amos coupled the two together
in their proper relationship, and no right-thinking man has ever
been able, or tried to sever the bond which inseparably unites them.
Amos admonished his nation:

... let judgment roll down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty


stream. (Amos 5:24.)

Meaning of Righteousness
I hesitate to use the word righteousness because it has come

to have attached to it the malodor of hypocrisy. Too commonly,


one who is spoken of as possessed of the quality of righteousness
is derisively sneered at, as if the term characterized him as a pre-
tender, a self-exalter, one who arrogates to himself superior virtues,
as exemplified in the parable of Jesus about the Pharisee who publicly
thanked God that he was not as other men and loudly proclaimed
his own virtues. Jesus said that the publican who, standing apart,
alone, humbly prayed God to be merciful to him a sinner would be
justified before the other.
No sense of opprobrium properly attaches to the term righteous-
ness. It signifies that which is in accordance with right, or character-
ized by uprighteousness or morality. There is no other word to
take its place. I am therefore obliged to use it and trust to its being
understood in its proper sense.
John's statement about the basis of judgment must be read as
affirming that there are things which everybody is expected to do.
The promise of rewards based upon works presupposes that there
are requirements prescribed. Where there is no law, there can be
no judgment under the law is a principle of divine as well as secular
governance. The prescribed requirements, naturally, are to be
sought in the teachings of Jesus for John was his disciple. And by
his revelation, John tells us, he was shown the things he saw.

Observance of Law
On his final visit to the disciples before his ascension, as has
before been stated today, Jesus commissioned them to carry his mes-
sage to all people, telling those whom they proselyted to observe
all things whatsoever he had commanded them. Here, then, is the
law on the basis of which all are to be judged. So far as I can dis-
cern, there is not one thing in all that Jesus taught that would not,
if practised, promote righteousness and justice in the earth. Nobody

would be harmed by universal conformance to every rule governing


122 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day
human conduct which he promulgated. One cannot think that it
was ever intended that man should be consigned to live perpetually
in this earth amid the carnage and bestiality and bickering and hat-
red and cruelty; the plundering of one by another; the deception and
greed; the striving for advantage of one over another; the despoiling
of fellow creatures; the stifling and crushing out of all sentiments of
mercy and human kindness by the violence of brute force and by
submerging righteousness and everything that makes life beautiful,
under the vile, putrid, hideous, and ugly flocks of vice which swirl
over the land. All this and all the groveling ugliness of human
degradation paraded before us in the daily press are in direct an-
tagonism to the benevolence and brotherhood, the worth and dignity
of the human soul with its God-given right to be free from the
bondage of oppression; the admonitions to love and mercy, to be
pure in heart, and to hunger and thirst after righteousness, expound-
ed as guides to righteousness and abundant living by the Christ.
The other day J. Edgar Hoover told the Senate committee in-
vestigating syndicated crime in America that gambling could be
cleansed out at once if officials in states and cities would honestly
enforce the law, instead of conniving with those who are willing to
pay the price of protection for the violation of the law. Following
gambling would go the whole brood of loathsome evils spawned by
it. If that could be done, how infinitely more could the earth be
cleansed by a simple observance of the laws laid down as the basis
for divine judgment and justice.

Be Ye Therefore Perfect
On another occasion, even before his crucifixion, holding up to
view the mission and purpose of life, the goal of man's striving, his
ultimate destiny, the Lord said, "Be ye therefore perfect, even as
your Father which is in heaven is perfect." (Matt. 5:48.) This
terse sentence epitomizes all that Jesus taught about the mission of
life and the destiny of man. It seems on its face a hard saying, and
many have felt that it sets a task beyond all possibility of accomplish-
ing, and that there is no use trying; that it projects an ideal so utter-
ly unrealistic as to make it of little value. There might be some
validity to this objection, if life is to be thought of only in terms of
mortal probation. To get full value of the admonition we need a
broader understanding of the work of life.
President Brigham Young let some light in on that in one of his
sermons. After quoting the saying, he remarked: "If the passage
. . .

I have quoted is not worded to our understanding, we can alter the

phraseology of the sentence, and say: Be ye perfect as ye can,' for


that is all we can do."
"When we are doing as well as we know how in the sphere and
stationwhich we occupy here, we are justified in the justice, right-
eousness, mercy, and judgment that go before the Lord of heaven
ELDER ALBERT E. BOWEN 123

and earth. We
are as justified as the angels who go before the
throne of God. The sin that will cleave to all the posterity of
Adam and Eve is that they have not done as well as they know
how." (J. D. 2:129.)
Righteous Judgment
That puts the admonition to be perfect on a practical working
basis. It is within the range of the possibility of attainment. It
tells us, too, something about how high a prerogative rendering
judgment is. It requires for righteous dispensation of justice divine
omniscience. That is perhaps why God reserved judgment to him-
self. They whom John saw stood before God.
He would have complete knowledge of all the essential facts,
which mortals rendering human judgments perhaps never have, and
which so often results in miscarriage of justice. God would have com-
plete understanding of all the influences that have gone into the shap-
tive have always been inspired of God. I am glad that I was born in
ing of the life to be judged; the knowledge possessed and the oppor-
tunity for knowing; the capacity for understanding what he had
been taught; the kind of association and society he has the capacity
to mingle congenially with; and from all the manifold factors in-
volved, put the one judged where he belongs, which is what final
judgment really is.
Progressive Beings
This interpretation introduces the principle that it is not intend-
ed that we shall accomplish everything in this life, but that we are
expected to be progressive beings, growing toward our final destiny.
But that principle in no way excuses us from doing the best we can,
or from acquiring all the knowledge that we have capacity and op-
portunity to assimilate as we go along. We
have some very specific
teachings about that. The scriptures say:
Whatever principle of intelligence we attain unto in this life, it will
rise with us in the resurrection.
And if a person gains more knowledge and intelligence in this life
through his diligence and obedience than another, he will have so much the
advantage in the world to come. (D. & C. 130:18-19.)

Intelligence has been interpreted as the ability to comprehend


and respond to light and truth. But it is clear from what has been
quoted that knowledge and intelligence are congenial companions;
and moreover, that to achieve them requires industry, study, dili-
gence, and obedience. Their acquisition is governed by the uni-
versal law of reward for effort. They do not come as gratuitous
bestowals upon the idler or the indifferent.
Excellence Through Effort
This is the point I wanted especially to emphasize here today,
and it is the reason, perhaps, for all that I have said before. There
124 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Dag

is nothing in all the history and experience of the race, nothing in


the teachings of Jesus, nothing in the doctrines of the Church, which
warrants the assumption that excellence may be attained without
effort, either in the spiritual realm or the temporal domain; or that
high exaltation may be achieved by a mere profession of faith, or
passive adherence to a creed or body of doctrines. Jesus made that
abundantly clear in saying:
Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of
heaven; but he that doeth the will of my father which is in heaven. (Matt. 7:21.)

It is to be noted that the teachings of Jesus pertained mostly


to this life. From time to time he gave us glimpses of a glorious fu-
ture. But these were conditioned upon what we do here, just
as by John's revelation the dead were judged by the works they had
done while they lived. Weare not here just to prepare to die,
but rather to live, and to use all our powers to perfect ourselves by
acquiring knowledge, developing our talents, building virtue unto
ourselves, conquering evil, by practising the things we know. The
progress we make here determines our status hereafter.

A Practical Religion
We have a very practical religion. It pertains to our lives
now. And
the reward of observance of the law is not altogether
postponed to a future on the other side of the grave. Building up
the kingdom involves some very practical things. It is not alto-
gether concerned with the non-material lying out in the ethereal
realm. The building of meetinghouses, places of worship, schools,
temples, for example, clearly is for spiritual purposes. But they
involve a large element of the material. They are essential to the
building up of the kingdom of God. And where would you classify
the beautifying of your home; the making of refined surroundings?
It is necessary to provide the things that sustain life, to master
the arts and crafts and trades that meet the needs of progress and
improvement. I do not think I can find the line that divides the
spiritual from the temporal.

Nobody in this life can gain proficiency in all the realms of hu-
man knowledge or skills or endeavors, yet they complement each
other,and each is essential to the completeness of the whole. By
the cooperative endeavor of all in an organized body, each doing
what his talent suits him for, the kingdom can be prepared. I sup-
pose the Tightness of what either one does depends upon the pur-
pose or the motive which stimulates the pursuit, whether that be
the promoting of good among men, the furtherance of righteousness,
or whether it be the gratification of a selfish ambition, to be achieved
without regard to consequences to others, or its influence on human
progress or improvement.
ELDER HENRY D. MOYLE 125

Growth Through Activity

Knowledge lying dormant and not employed to useful purposes


is of very value. One may attain membership in the Church,
little
for example, by complying with all the requisite initiatory ordi-
nances, but if he stops there, as some do, he may not assume that his
salvation is assured, no matter how correct in the abstract his per-
sonal conduct may be. One must progress or retrograde. One can-
not stand still. Activity is the law of growth, and growth, prog-
ress, is the law of life. Obedience to the governing law, coopera-
tion with others, helping them to build up the kingdom of God is in-
dispensable.
There are, properly speaking, no laymen in this Church. There
is labor for all, and labor, toil, effort in harmony and accord with
established law is the only known road to progress. Salvation is a
relative term, admitting of varying degrees. There can be no other
meaning to John's revelation that "each will be rewarded according
to his works." The slothful or indolent or indifferent can expect no
high rating, no matter how voluble in professions of faith, or how
profuse they may be in protestations of devotion to their creeds.
And I humbly pray that each of us as we go from here will go
with a full realization that whatever we hope for, whatever we
aspire to achieve will be dependent upon our willingness to pay
the price in individual endeavor. We may not lean upon any other
human being but can be aided by the help we receive from God if
we serve him faithfully and keep his commandments every day,
which I pray we may do, in the name of Jesus. Amen.

The Tabernacle Choir and the congregation joined in singing


the hymn,"We Thank Thee, O God, For A Prophet."

ELDER HENRY D. MOYLE


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles

My brethren and sisters, I feel deeply grateful for the experi-


ences that have been mine the past four years, and I sorrow with
you in the passing of President George Albert Smith. It was he who
advised me four years ago of my call to the Twelve, and no man
could have shown more love or affection or consideration for a new
member of the Quorum than did President Smith. If I were to be
called upon today to express the chief characteristic of the brethren
with whom I associate, I should say that it is that virtue which has
been so properly credited to President George Albert Smith.
There is an eternal truth, the verity of which I am certain, that
love begets love, and as we love one another, our ability to love
increases. This has been my experience as I have labored so closely
during the past four years with these brethren whom I love so dear-
GENERAL CONFERENCE
Second Day

ly. have been conscious in my own life that as the days and the
I

months and the years have gone by, my ability to love my fellow
men has correspondingly increased.
President Smith's Example
I doubt that I have ever in my life seen an example of the love

and devotion of one man for another more than that exhibited by
President George Albert Smith for President George F. Richards.
As our boat docked in the harbor of Honolulu last August, word was
brought on board that President George F. Richards had that morn-
ing passed away. To me, it was a testimony of the virtue of our
great past President to see the love and the affection that he bore
for his companion of more than forty years in the Presiding councils
of this Church. His heart was filled with grief, and though he was
not well, even then, and certainly not physically strong, his first im-
pulse, his first impression was to fly home. He turned to me and
said, "Brother Moyle, don't you think we ought to get off the boat
and fly right back to attend the funeral and to pay our respects to
the life's work of President Richards?" Well, it seemed to be wis-
dom to advise the President to conserve his strength to remain and
perform the special mission upon which he had embarked and had
so graciously taken me with him. Then, finally, when word arrived
from his good Counselors here at home, he was satisfied that it was
the wise and the discreet thing to do to stay there. But that did not
minimize the love or the affection that President Smith bore Presi-
dent Richards in the sorrow he felt at his passing.
I want to bear testimony today that it has been my choice privi-

lege during these recent past years to become intimately acquainted


with two of the choice sons of our Heavenly Father who have now
been called home. I don't know that a father could have shown a
son, even his favored son, more affection than President Richards
bestowed upon me during the years that I had the privilege to serve
under him in the Quorum of the Twelve.

Love Among Brethren


I want to my brethren and sisters, to supplement
say today,
what Brother Cowley said this morning, that just as certain as it is
necessary to have a Quorum of the Twelve upon the earth, so it is
necessary that that quorum should be comprised of men who love
one another. I bear this humble testimony to you today that the
men who constitute the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are men who are devot-
ed, not only to the service to which they have been called, but also
to one another. I was grateful for the words of Brother Cowley

this morning when he referred to our meeting in the temple Thurs-


day. A
like number of men could not be gathered anywhere in this
world under any other circumstances and find in their hearts the
ELDER HENRY D. MOYLE 127

love and the devotion, the loyalty for one another that exists in
this, the Presiding Council of this Church today.

Interest in Individuals
I was very greatly impressed when President Smith became
president of this Church. One of his early responsibilities as presi-
dent was to attend a welfare meeting of the General Committee on
Friday morning. His conduct there was indicative of the life that
he had lived, the service that he had rendered his people, the knowl-
edge that he had of the individual members of this Church. That
first morning a case came before us for his consideration. It was the
application for assistance of a humble Saint. He had come from a
country in Europe, had not been here long, unknown to most of us
although some of us had labored as missionaries in that some coun-
try. In the presentation of his case we were just a little impersonal
and had not particularly emphasized his name. But the mere men-
tion of it caused President Smith to ask if that man was not a former
resident of Berlin. And when we told him that he was, he said,
"How can we refrain from giving consideration to his case? His
generosity in the Church deserves our help. It was my privilege to
eat at that man's table." We
found out later that he and his family
had saved of their earnings for a week and had little or nothing to
eat for that week, practically fasted in order that they might have
the means with which to spread what they thought was an approp-
riate dinner before a servant of God who had been sent into their
midst, one of the Quorum of the Twelve, George Albert Smith. I
tell you, his interest in the people of this Church individually can
hardly be excelled. He was interested in the smallest details.

Care of Church Funds


I just wantbear witness to one other incident. On one of
to
the Friday mornings when we were presenting our usual matters of
business, there were some items that involved not more than five
dollars or ten dollars or fifteen dollars, and the question was raised
as to whether it was necessary to bring such trivial items to the at-
tention of the First Presidency for their approval. The matter was
taken under consideration, and I confess I expected that there might
be some limit below which the Welfare Committee might act without
bringing it for the final approval of the Presidency and our advisers
on the Friday morning. But no, when the next Friday came, President
Smith said, "We'll continue to follow the rule which you have
always followed, and there will be no item too small for the con-
sideration of the brethren here at this Friday morning meeting."
Now, when we have men of that kind entrusted to the high
offices of thisChurch, there are none of us that need to worry about
the manner which the Church and its affairs are taken care of.
in
The meticulous care with which the funds of this Church are guarded
128 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day

isa revelation to me, because that kind of care does not exist in the
ordinary businesses of mankind in the world.

A Great Missionary
President Smith was a great missionary. As we were going
over Hawaii on the boat, on the night of the captain's dinner
to
President Smith felt that he should do something for the captain
and not merely be the recipient of some favor from him. And so, as
we went to the dining room that evening, President Smith had in his
hand one of his favorite copies of The Improvement Era. It was,
of course, a formal affair at the captain's table; the ladies and the
men were dressed in formal attire. It took a man of the courage of
President Smith to do what he did, because before that dinner was
over he had gone to the captain of that ship and given to him The
Improvement Era and paid his respects to him and his guests.
There were some of us on board the vessel who felt that, had
the captain known the precious soul that his ship bore, he would
have done him the honor of having called upon him and would have
had his table graced by the presence of one of God's anointed. The
fact that he didn't did not prevent President Smith from proceeding
to give to that captain the missionary message which The Improve-
ment Era contained.
God bless the memory of these brethren, and may that same
spirit continue to be with the Twelve and with all of the General
Authorities. May it continue to reach out as it does into the stakes
and into the wards of this Church, that we may in very deed be a
people known the world over for the love and the affection and the
loyalty we have for one another, I pray humbly in the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER STEPHEN L RICHARDS


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles

try three sermons in three minutes.


I'll First, a tithing is not
a or a thirtieth or a twentieth; a tithing is a tenth.
fiftieth
Second, the inflated dollar is worth a hundred cents for one
purpose: paying debts.
Third, I knew a missionary once who had marvelous success
in the mission field. I asked him something about his method.
Among me that whenever he went to talk to
other things he told
people, however much they
tried to get him to digress from his main
theme — about politics, talk about the weather, current affairs,
talk

the crops he said, "I always politely told the people that I was
sent out to talk the gospel to them. I never had time for anything
else."
Talent for Friendship
We've been talking about a man during this conference who
ELDER ALMA SONNE 129

had a remarkable gift and talent for friendship. I've been with him
on many occasions when he met some old friends or business ac-
quaintances. He always had the courage to say, in substance,
"John, how's your faith? How are you feeling about the Church?"
And I've seen many a man blush a little, stammer a little, and yet
be willing to talk with him about his faith and about the Church.
There was probably never a time, my brethren, when we so
much needed men who could go out and cultivate a talent for friend-
ship and talk frankly to their own associates in the priesthood who
have become careless and delinquent, to their business friends and
to their neighbors, about the gospel and give to them the great bless-
ing which we ourselves enjoy. May we make note of the oppor-
tunities that lie ahead of us, I pray, in the name of Jesus.- Amen.

ELDER ALMA SONNE


Assistant to the Council of the Twelve

My brethren and sisters, 1 trust I may have the benefit of your


faith and prayers during the few minutes I shall stand before you.
First of all, I want to express my gratitude for the strength, the com-
fort, the consolation, and the increased confidence which have come
to the members of the Church in the passing of President George
Albert Smith. I think, in one way or another, he must have touched
all of us more or less closely during his entire ministry.

Sermons of President Smith


I remember as a boy in my teens I heard President Smith for

the first time deliver a sermon in the Logan Tabernacle. The theme
of his discourse was "Observance of the Sabbath Day." It was a
timely message because at that time, in Logan, particularly, there
was some controversy as to what extent Sunday amusements should
be commercialized and carried on. President Smith's sermon was
powerful. He said, among other things, "Sabbath observance is
one of the great pillars of civilization." I have thought of it many
times, and I am sure as I have reflected upon it that President Smith
was right in his conclusions.
Years later I heard him discuss before an audience in the same
place theTen Commandments. As he often did, he referred to each
one of these Commandments, and after he had made his comments,
he turned to the audience and said, "You may break these com-
mandments if you want to, but if you do, they will break you."
I have never forgotten those words.

And so, President Smith has brought a vital message into the
lives of each of us. When I was first called to the position in the
Church which I now hold, one of the first assignments given me
was to the St. Johns and the Snowflake stakes in Arizona. To my
130 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday, April 8 Second Day

surprise and to my delight, President George Albert Smith was to


be my companion. We journeyed together to St. Johns, where the
conference was held. During the afternoon session, a telegram
came to President Smith, who was at my side. He opened it and
read it, folded it up, put it in his pocket, and when the session was
ended, he came to me and said, "I have been called back to Salt
Lake City. It will be necessary for you to fill the appoint-
ments which I have made." He thereupon handed me a little sheet
of paper, and on it was a schedule of meetings which he had ar-
ranged in the little villages and settlements around St. Johns and
Snowflake. I mention this fact only because it illustrates the zeal,
the energy, and the diligence with which President Smith assumed
his responsibilities in the ministry.

"Give the Lord a Chance"


When I leftEurope to take on a great responsibility, one
for
I felt that was altogether too great for me to assume, President Smith
called me to his office. He gave me only a very brief admonition,
and I suspect he has given it to many. Said he, "Remember, Brother
Sonne, give the Lord a chance." I believe that admonition remained
with me throughout my mission over in Europe. I'm not sure that
I needed it so much, for I was very humble and prayerful in the work
I had to do, but the advice was so good and so sound, that I never

forgot it. .And I feel what success came from our endeavors over
in Europe during a crucial time was due in large measure to the help
which we received from our Heavenly Father.
And so I hope and pray that the members of the Church and
particularly those who bear the Holy Priesthood, will put forth the
same effort which our great leader has demonstrated in his life.

Devotion of Latter-day Saints


I recall at this moment a testimony which I heard from a young

missionary in the French Mission. He had but recently arrived


in the field. As he stood up, he said something like this: "My
grandparents joined the Church in Southampton, England. S 00n
after being baptized, they emigrated to Nauvoo, Illinois. They
bought a home and expected to live there indefinitely. But," said
the missionary, "a mob burned the home, and they were left prac-
tically destitute. Then my grandparents loaded all of their earthly
possessions on a handcart and pushed it over the plains to the Rocky
Mountains. I thank God," said this young man, "for the faith and
the integrity, the determination and the conviction, which prompted
my grandparents to be thus faithful to their trust." Such devotion
has been characteristic of the Latter-day Saints and their leaders
from the beginning.
I rejoice, brethren and sisters, in my testimony of the truth. I

know God has spoken from the heavens and established his Church
ELDER ANTOINE R. WINS 131

upon the earth. We have received a great shock during the past
few days; we'll receive other shocks, in all probability, but I tell you
this Church will never receive a setback. It will go forward in the
future as it has in the past, and truth and righteousness will triumph
in the earth. I pray that it may be so, in the name of Jesus Christ.
Amen.

ELDER ANTOINE R. IVINS


Of the First Council of the Seventy

My brethren and sisters, I crave an interest in your faith and


prayers as I add my testimony to those which have been borne to
us during this conference. I can in all propriety say that I conform
fully to all the tributes that have been paid to our late President.
There are many of you who knew him better than I did and more
intimately, but I did know him and his sterling qualities. I have

been on trips with him in the reorganization of stakes and have met
him on many other occasions rather closely and have felt his love.
I knew his father, as a matter of fact I slept on the sands of

Mexico with his father and prepared his breakfast and dinner for
him along with my uncle, President Grant, who recently passed
away. I got out of my bed many times for those brethren and have
had more or less intimate association with them. I want to bear
testimony to the fact that in my experience, their purpose and mo-
tive has always been inspired of God. I am glad that I was born in
the Church because I don't know what might have happened to me
had I not been. I am glad for the testimony which my father in-
spired in me as to the truth of the gospel and for the example of
service which he gave to me.

Power in Gospel
In the month of June it will be twenty years since I read in
the newspapers in Honolulu that I was appointed to preside over
the Mexican Mission and to become one of the First Council of the
Seventy. And in that twenty years I believe it has become no easier
for me to stand here and bear my testimony, not that I don't have
a testimony, but because I realize the importance of bearing that
testimony to you brethren, and that it will fall flat unless I can gain
the Spirit of God in it. There is, in the gospel of Jesus Christ, a
power that you can't realize any other place. It breaks down all
the barriers of nationality, of race hatreds, and all the enmities that
go between peoples because of their selfishness, once we accept
it into our lives and apply it. It is that love whidh was exemplified
in the life of our President which makes it possible for us to receive
unto us the various nations of the world and forget the differences
of nationality. I have had the experience in my life (I was going
132 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Sunday. April 8 Second Dag

to say my
short life, but it's three score and ten next month), of
laboring with the Mexicans, and the Maoris; the Hawaiians and the
Filipinos; the Chinese, the Japanese, and the Koreans; the Portu-
guese and the Spanish, as well as with some of the other peoples,
and I have seen them come together and affiliate in a brotherhood
that you can't realize out of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. Because of its wonderful effect upon people, because of its
essentiality to their exaltation, we have a tremendous obligation
to carry that message to the world.

Especial Responsibility of Seventies


Istand before you as a representative of the group in the
Melchizedek Priesthood which has that especial responsibility.
Right now, because of the national emergency that we are facing,
the flow of young men into the mission field has been very, very
greatly reduced. And as I think of it, quite naturally, I think of
an army of twenty thousand seventies, every one of whom is
pledged to the service of his God and of his fellow men, and I wonder
if we can get from that group of men now the recruits that we shall

need to carry on this missionary work. It is true that there are many
men in the field at the present time, but they are coming home
rapidly, and their replacements are not going out. You brethren of
the seventies, think of it, and if you can arrange your affairs so as
to do it, tell your bishops that you are ready, that you would like to
go. Now, if you love your fellows in the spirit in which we have
been talking during this conference, you'll make an effort to do that
very thing, for that is your calling as long as you are in the seventies
quorum in the Melchizedek Priesthood, to bear testimony to the
restoration of the gospel of Jesus Christ and to carry that testimony
to people who haven't yet heard it.

Testimony
I bear you my testimony that I know the gospel is true. I

feelwithout the shadow of a doubt the reality of God our Heavenly


Father and Jesus Christ, which is the departing point between us and
other Christian denominations. They must be taught the personality
of God, the authority and the restoration of the priesthood, and
there is nobody else to do it. Now, you seventies, will you come
and help us; I pray that God will give you the spirit and open up the
way for you to do it, which I do in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

ELDER CORNELIUS ZAPPEY


Former President of the Netherlands Mission

Six months ago, my brothers and sisters, I was standing in the


aisle, behind the rope held by the usher, wishing, as many of us have
done, that all Stake Presidents and Bishops would not be on time.
ELDER CORNELIUS ZAPPEY 133

Standing in the end of the row two sisters behind me were speaking
the Scandinavian language. It did not take long before they were
in front of me, and in some way, soon they were at the very front,
but while they were yet in front of me speaking their native tongue,
a brother in front of them turned around and asked: "Swensk?" and
the sisters said "Ja, Ja." This brother, putting his hand upon his
chest said, "Norsk." It did not take long until the sisters were in
front of this brother also. (Laughter) I never before understood
better and more fully the statement that "The race is not to the swift
but to the one that endureth to the end" than I did at that time.
But while the sisters were working their way to the front, right up
to the usher holding the rope, lo and behold I recognized in the
brother assisting the usher a German brother and when the rope
was taken down and I with the rest had captured one of those coveted
places I discovered in front of me an English brother. Then when
all the congregation arose in honor of the Prophet of the Living God
appearing on the stand I could not help but notice President Clark
also, who, as I remembered at that time, came from English parentage,
and there came President David O. McKay who has said to me so
often, "Son, do not be ashamed of being born in Holland, my parents
were born in Scotland and England." I also saw Elder Petersen
come and Elder Widtsoe who was born in Norway. Then as I
sat down I realized more than ever before that I was but a Holland
boy who came to Zion and became an adopted son of this country
over forty years ago, when I was but a youth of about 17 years of
age.
Brothers and sisters then and there it was as if I heard Micah
say as Isaiah had said before him:
And it shall come
to pass in the last days, that the mountain of
the Lord's house shall be established in the top of the mountains, and
shall be exalted above the hills; and all nations shall flow unto it.
And many people shall go and say. Come ye, and let us go up to
the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob."

They would not come because they would not know the Lord,
the God of Jacob for Isaiah and Micah said they would declare:
"And he will teach us of his ways."

When I read the sermon by President Clark, in the Deseret


— —
News I suppose we all take it when I read it in the Deseret
News at the headquarters of the Mission, telling of "The Last
Wagon," I cried like a baby. Now, every day, "last wagons" are
pulling in, and why is it that when the emigrants come in at the
stations or by bus line, why is it that the first thing they ask is,
"Where the temple?" In the last days, brothers and sisters, the
is
House of the Lord is established in the tops of the mountains, and
many are flowing unto it, "and many people shall go and say, Come
ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of
the God of Jacob."

134 GENERAL CONFERENCE


Sunday, April 8 Second Day
May I conclusion ask this of the mothers and fathers of Zion:
in
Will you teach your boys and girls, your young ones and your

old ones too will you teach them all, that God really lives, that
Jesus is really the Christ, the Son of God; that it is not only a
beautiful story but that He really arose the third day; and that all
those who lead us have the Priesthood of God, yes even the keys
thereof. Oh, teach them these things. And may I ask this, as one
born of an infidel father but of a faithful mother: teach them by
day and by night the revelation, the greatest one to me: That God
really appeared and His Son, the Redeemer, to Joseph the Prophet
and although the world, kings and potentates might not send
bejeweled gifts to our leaders to curry their favor, they are and
always shall be living servants of God. I testify of it in the name
of Christ, the Redeemer, the Son of God. Amen.

Elder J.
Reuben Clark, Jr.:

We have just listened to Elder Cornelius Zappey, former Pres-


ident of the Netherlands Mission.
The
closing song, by the Tabernacle Choir, will be "Inflam-
matus." The solo will be sung by Sister Ewan Harbrecht.
The closing prayer will be offered by President Lester H.
Belliston of the Juab Stake, Utah, after which this conference will
stand adjourned until ten o'clock tomorrow morning when we will
meet in this building in Solemn Assembly.
The Deseret News this morning— —
I hope you all take it de-
scribes the way in which the seating will be carried on tomorrow
morning. The body of the hall will be reserved for the priesthood
the patriarchs here (pointing to the south of the stand), the seven-
ties on the main floor under the north gallery, the elders under the
gallery in the south part of the building, the high priests here (point-
ing to the center part of the hall), the bishops near the back and
the Aaronic Priesthood at the rear. The wives of the Authorities are
sitting over here on the stand at Brother Clark's left. The balance
of the meeting house will be for the other membership of the Church.
The singing for the service will be by the congregation.
The Deseret Sunday School Union Conference will convene
in this building at seven o'clock tonight. All Sunday School workers
will wish to be in attendance.
The choir music for today's sessions of the conference has been
furnished by the Tabernacle Choir, with Elder J. Spencer Cornwall
conducting and Elder Frank W. Asper at the organ for the morning
session and Elder Alexander Schreiner at the organ for the after-
noon session.
Again we wish to express to the Tabernacle Choir our grateful
appreciation for the music they have given us today. But more than
that, we wish to give them our grateful appreciation and our thanks
for the great service which they are doing as a missionary unit in
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 135

the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The service which


they render is beyond all power of calculation.
The Choir will now sing.

Singing by the Choir, "Inflammatus," solo by Sister Ewan


Harbrecht.
The closing prayer was offered by President Lester H. Belliston
of the Juab Stake.
Conference adjourned until Monday, April 9, at 10:00 a.m.

CONCLUDING SESSION SOLEMN ASSEMBLY


The final session of the great Conference convened in the
Tabernacle at 10:00 a.m., Monday, April 9, with President David
O. McKay presiding and conducting the services.

President David O. McKay


This is the sixth session of the One Hundred Twenty-first An-
nual Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
We are convened in the tabernacle on Temple Square, Salt Lake
City, in a formal Solemn Assembly of the body of the Church, to
express the voice of the Church in a sustaining vote for a new Presi-
dent of the Church.
These services will be broadcast in the Assembly Hall and in
Barratt Hall over a loud speaking system and by television.
The proceedings of this session will be broadcast over Station
KSL at Salt Lake City and, presumably by arrangement through
KSL, over the stations named in the first session of this conference.
This session will also be televised over the KSL television sta-
tion, channel 5.
The singing will be by the congregation.
We will open by singing the hymn, "O, Ye Mountains High."
Elder J. Spencer Cornwall will lead us. Immediately following the
singing the invocation will be offered by Elder Albert E. Bowen
of the Council of the Twelve.

Singing by the congregation, "O, Ye Mountains High."


The opening prayer was offered by Elder Albert E. Bowen.
President David O. McKay
Elder J. Spencer Cornwall, the leader of the Tabernacle Choir,
will now lead the congregation in singing, "Praise To The Man
Who Communed With Jehovah." If the students of the Brigham
Young University are in session in the Joseph Smith Memorial
Building, we shall be pleased to have them join in singing, and
we shall be pleased to have any other group of individuals listening
in also participate in the exercises.

Singing by the congregation, "Praise To the Man."


136 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday, April 9 Third Day

President David O. McKay


Weshall now ask President J. Reuben Clark, Jr., to conduct
the exercises pertaining to the reorganization of the First Presi-
dency and the sustaining vote of all the other General Authorities
and General Officers of the Church.

ELDER J. REUBEN CLARK, JR.


This, brothers and sisters, is a very solemn occasion. We so
approach and should so conduct it. It will take quite a time, but
it

if we are in the frame of mind and spirit which we should be in,


I am sure it will not be tedious.
Weshall follow the exact proceedings that were followed in
connection with the installation of President George Albert Smith.
The same script will be used except for the necessary changes in
names.
We
are met in the tabernacle on Temple Square, Salt Lake City,
in a formal Solemn Assembly of the body of the Church to express
the voice of the Church in a first sustaining vote for a new President
of the Church. This proceeding is in accordance with the practice
of the Church from the first sustaining vote cast by a General Con-
ference for President Taylor, until the present time.
The Priesthood of the Church, in so far as the building can ac-
commodate them, is seated in the Tabernacle by Priesthood quorums.
The First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve, with their
Assistants, the Patriarch to the Church, the Presidents of the First
Council of Seventy, and the Presiding Bishopric occupy their usual
seats on the Tabernacle stand.
The Patriarchs of the Church occupy the seats to the south of
the stand, both lower seats within the railing and those on the stand
level.
The High Priests of the Church, including Presidents of Stakes
and their Counselors, the High Councilmen, the Presidencies of
quorums, the quorum members, the ward bishoprics, occupy the cen-
ter of the building on the main floor, as far to the eastward as the
galleries. The ward bishoprics are seated just in front of the east
gallery.
TheSeventies occupy the north part of the building on the main
floor under the north gallery, including the seats inside the railing
to the north of the stand.
The Elders occupy the south part of the building on the main
floor under the galleries.
The Lesser Priesthood ( Priests, Teachers, and Deacons) occupy
the seats on the main floor, just back of the bishoprics, under the
gallery on the east.
The general membership of the Church occupy the rest of the
building.
ELDER J. REUBEN CLARK, JR. 137

The voting be by Priesthood quorums first, and then by


will
the Conference assembly.
The quorums and groups of quorums will vote in the following
order:
1. The First Presidency.
2. The Quorum of the Twelve.
3. The Patriarchs.
4. The High Priests, including the Assistants to the Twelve,
the Presidents of Stakes and their Counselors, the High
Councilmen, Presidencies of quorums, quorum members,
the Presiding Bishopric, and Ward Bishoprics.
5. The Seventies.
6. The Elders.
7. The Lesser Priesthood (Priests, Teachers, and Deacons).
8. The whole congregation here assembled, including the
Priesthood.
The voting will be in the following manner:
As each quorum or group is called, they will be asked to vote
to sustain the officer proposed: Those voting will when called upon,
arise to their feet. When the affirmative vote is called for, those so
voting will bring their right arms to the square to witness to the Lord
that they sustain the officer for whom they are voting. They will
then drop their hands. Then those opposing will be asked to bring
their right hands to the square to bear witness to the Lord that they
are not willing to sustain the officer whom they are called upon to
sustain.
When both affirmative and negative votes are cast, the mem-
bers of the quorum will resume their seats.
All of the quorums will vote in this manner.
Every one is perfectly free to vote as he wishes. There is no
compulsion whatsoever in this voting. When you vote affirmatively
you make a solemn covenant with the Lord that you will sustain,
that is, give your full loyalty and support, without equivocation or
reservation, to the officer for whom you vote.
After all the quorums have so voted, a vote will be called of the
whole congregation, those bearing the priesthood and those not
bearing it. All will arise. Those voting to sustain will raise their
right hands to the square, to witness that they sustain the officers
for whom they vote. After they lower their hands the opposing vote
will be called for and will be manifested by raising the right hand to
the square.
The Officers so to be voted for by quorums are the following:
The President of the Church.
The First Counselor to the President of the Church.
The Second Counselor to the President of the Church.
The President of the Quorum of the Twelve.
138 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday, April 9 Third Day

The Council of the Twelve.


The Patriarch to the Church.
The Sustaining of the Counselors
in the Presidency, the Council
of theTwelve, and the Patriarch, as Prophets, Seers, and
Revelators to the Church.
After the vote by quorums to sustain these officers, the rest of
the General Authorities, the General Officers of the Church, and the
General Auxiliary Officers of the Church will be sustained by voting
as in the ordinary General Conference. This is in accordance with
the procedure set by President John Taylor.
Please be ready to begin voting. Only Church members are
entitled to vote.
Only one quorum, orgroup of quorums, as the case may be,
will stand at a time in voting by quorums. Each quorum, or group
of quorums, will please arise when requested and remain standing
until requested to be seated.
May the Lord guide us and may His Spirit attend us as we
go forward in this solemn service, established by the Lord so that
each member of His Church may have a voice in sustaining those
whom He has called to preside over it and to direct its work, to the
salvation and exaltation of mankind.
We shall first vote by quorums to sustain the President of the
Church and his Counselors.

VOTING ON FIRST PRESIDENCY


The First Presidency will please arise.

It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Prophet,


Seer, and Revelator, and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Stephen L Richards as First Coun-
selor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Sec-
ond Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The First Presidency will please be seated.
The Quorum of the Twelve will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Prophet,
Seer, and Revelator, and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
SUSTAINING OF CHURCH AUTHORITIES 139

proposed that we sustain Stephen L Richards as First Coun-


It is
selor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Sec-
ond Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Council of the Twelve will please be seated.
The Patriarchs of the Church here assembled, including the
Patriarch to the Church, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Prophet,
Seer, and Revelator, and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Stephen L Richards as First Coun-
selor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
proposed that we sustain Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Sec-
It is
ond Counselor in theFirst Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Patriarchs of the Church will please be seated.
The High Priests of the Church here assembled, including the
Assistants to the Twelve, the Presidents of Stakes and their Coun-
selors, the High Councilmen, the Presidencies of Quorums, the quorum
members, the Presiding Bishopric, and Ward Bishoprics, will please
arise.
It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Prophet,
Seer, and Revelator, and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Stephen L Richards as First Coun-
selor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Sec-
ond Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The High Priests of the Church will please be seated.
The Seventies of the Church here assembled, including the
Presidents of the First Council of Seventy, the Presidencies of other
quorums of seventies, and quorum members, will please arise.
140 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday. April 9 Third Day

It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Prophet,


Seer, and Revelator, and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifestit by the same sign.

It is proposed that we sustain Stephen L Richards as First Coun-


selor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Sec-
ond Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Seventies of the Church will please be seated.
The Elders of the Church here assembled, including the Presi-
dencies of quorums and quorum members, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Prophet,
Seer, and Revelator, and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifestit by the same sign.

It is proposed that we sustain Stephen L Richards as First Coun-


selor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Sec-
ond Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Elders of the Church will please be seated.
The Lesser Priesthood of the Church here assembled, including
the Presidencies of Teachers and Deacons quorums, and members of
Priests, Teachers, and Deacons quorums, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Prophet,
Seer, and Revelator, and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Stephen L Richards as First Coun-
selor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Sec-
ond Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Lesser Priesthood of the Church will please be seated.
SUSTAINING OF CHURCH AUTHORITIES 141

The entire congregation of the Church here assembled, all the


members of the Church, those bearing the priesthood, and those not
bearing it, will please arise. We suggest that those seated in the
Assembly Hall and Barratt Hall, likewise arise and join in the voting,
and likewise all those listening in on the air.
It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Prophet,
Seer, and Revelator, and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

It is proposed that we sustain Stephen L Richards as First Coun-


selor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

It is proposed that we sustain Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr. as Sec-


ond Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Congregation will please be seated.
President McKay, so far as noted, the last vote and all the other
votes preceding it were unanimous.

VOTING ON THE
PRESIDENT OF THE TWELVE APOSTLES
AND THE
FULL QUORUM OF THE TWELVE APOSTLES
We shall next vote to sustain the President of the Quorum of
the Twelve and then to sustain all the members of the Quorum.
The First Presidency will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Joseph Fielding Smith as President
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as members of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
Joseph Fielding Smith, Tohn A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E.
Bowen, Harold B. Lee, Spencer W. Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Mark
E. Petersen, Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stap-
ley.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

The First Presidency will please be seated.


The Quorum of the Twelve will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Joseph Fielding Smith as President
142 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday. April 9 Third Dag
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as members of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
oseph Fielding Smith, John A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E.
Bowen, Harold B. Lee, Spencer W. Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Mark
i. Petersen, Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stap-
ey.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

The Quorum of the Twelve will please be seated.


The Patriarchs of the Church here assembled, including the
Patriarch to the Church, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Joseph Fielding Smith as President
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as members of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
Joseph Fielding Smith, John A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E.
Bowen, Harold B. Lee, Spencer W.
Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Mark
E. Petersen, Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stap-
ley.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

The Patriarchs of the Church will please be seated.


The High Priests of the Church here assembled, including the
Assistants to the Twelve, the Presidents of Stakes and their Coun-
selors, the High Councilmen, the Presidencies of quorums, the quorum
members, the Presiding Bishopric, and Ward Bishoprics, will please
arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Joseph Fielding Smith as President
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as members of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
oseph Fielding Smith, John A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E.
3owen, Harold B. Lee, Spencer W.
Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Mark
i. Petersen, Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stap-
ley.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The High Priests of the Church will please be seated.
SUSTAINING OF CHURCH AUTHORITIES 143

TheSeventies of the Church here assembled, including the


Presidents of the First Council of Seventy, the Presidencies of other
quorums, and quorum members, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Joseph Fielding Smith as President
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as members of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
Joseph Fielding Smith, John A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E.
Bowen, Harold B. Lee, Spencer W. Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Mark
E. Petersen, Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stap-
ley.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

The Seventies of the Church will please be seated.


The Elders of the Church here assembled, including the Presi-
dencies of quorums and quorum members, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Joseph Fielding Smith as President
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as members of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
oseph Fielding Smith, John A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E.
3owen, Harold B. Lee, Spencer W. Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Mark
i. Petersen, Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stap-
ley.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

The Elders of the Church will please be seated.


The Lesser Priesthood of the Church here assembled, including
the Presidencies of Teachers and Deacons quorums, and members of
Priests, Teachers, and Deacons quorums, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Joseph Fielding Smith as President
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as members of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
Joseph Fielding Smith, John A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E.
Bowen, Harold B. Lee, Spencer W. Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Mark
E. Petersen, Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stap-
ley.
144 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday, April 9 Third Day
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Lesser Priesthood of the Church will please be seated.
The entire congregation of the Church here assembled, all the
members of the Church, those bearing the priesthood, and those not
bearing it, will please arise. Again we suggest that those seated in
the Assembly Hall and Barratt Hall and those listening in on the
Air arise, and join in this voting.
It is proposed that we sustain Joseph Fielding Smith as President
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as members of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
oseph Fielding Smith, John A. Widtsoe, Joseph F. Merrill, Albert E.
3owen, Harold B. Lee, Spencer W. Kimball, Ezra Taf t Benson, Mark
3. Petersen, Matthew Cowley, Henry D. Moyle, Delbert Leon Stap-
ley.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

The Congregation will please be seated.


So far as observed, this voting was unanimous in the affirmative.

VOTING ON THE PATRIACH TO THE CHURCH


We shall next vote to sustain the Patriarch to the Church.
The First Presidency will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Eldred G. Smith as Patriarch to
the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The First Presidency will please be seated.
The Quorum of the Twelve will please arise:
It is proposed that we sustain Eldred G. Smith as Patriarch to
the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Quorum of the Twelve will please be seated.
The Patriarchs of the Church here assembled, including the
Patriarch to the Church, will please arise:
proposed that
It is we sustain Eldred G. Smith as Patriarch to
the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Patriarchs of the Church will please be seated.
SUSTAINING OF CHURCH AUTHORITIES 145

The High Priests of the Church here assembled, including the


Assistants to the Twelve, the Presidents of Stakes and their Counsel-
ors, the High Councilmen, the Presidencies of quorums, the quorum
members, the Presiding Bishopric and Ward Bishoprics will please
arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Eldred G. Smith as Patriarch to
the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The High Priests of the Church will please be seated.
The Seventies of the Church here assembled, including the Presi-
dents of the First Council of Seventy, the Presidencies of other quo-
rums and quorum members, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Eldred G. Smith as Patriarch to
the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Seventies of the Church will please be seated.
The Elders of the Church here assembled, including the Presi-
dencies of quorums and quorum members, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Eldred G. Smith as Patriarch to
the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Elders of the Church will please be seated.
The Lesser Priesthood of the Church here assembled, including
the Presidencies of Teachers and Deacons quorums, and members of
Priests, Teachers, and Deacons quorums, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain Eldred G. Smith as Patriarch to
the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Lesser Priesthood of the Church will please be seated.
The entire Congregation of the Church here assembled, all the
members of the Church, those bearing the priesthood and those not
bearing it, will please arise. Again will those in the Assembly Hall,
and those in Barratt Hall, and those listening in on the air arise and
join in the voting.
It is proposed that we sustain Eldred G. Smith as Patriarch to
the Church.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Congregation will please be seated.
This vote was likewise unanimous in the affirmative.
146 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday, April 9 Third Day
VOTING ON PROPHETS, SEERS, AND REVELATORS
We shall next vote to sustain the Prophets, Seers, and Revela-
tors to the Church.
The First Presidency will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain the Counselors in the First Presi-
dency, the Twelve Apostles, and the Patriarch to the Church, as
Prophets, Seers, and Revelators.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The First Presidency will please be seated.
The Quorum of the Twelve will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain the Counselors in the First Presi-
dency, the Twelve Apostles, and the Patriarch to the Church, as
Prophets, Seers, and Revelators.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Quorum of the Twelve will please be seated.
The Patriarchs of the Church here assembled, including the Pa-
triarch to the Church, will please arise:
It is proposed that we sustain the Counselors in the First Presi-
dency, the Twelve Apostles, and the Patriarch to the Church, as
Prophets, Seers, and Revelators.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

The Patriarchs of the Church will please be seated.


The High Priests of the Church here assembled, including the
Assistants to the Twelve, the Presidents of Stakes and their Counsel-
ors, theHigh Councilmen, the Presidencies of quorums, the quorum
members, the Presiding Bishopric, and Ward Bishoprics, will please
arise.
It is proposed that we sustain the Counselors in the First Presi-
dency, the Twelve Apostles, and the Patriarch to the Church, as
Prophets, Seers, and Revelators.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The High Priests of the Church will please be seated.
The Seventies of the Church here assembled, including the Presi-
dents of the First Council of Seventy, the Presidencies of other quo-
rums and quorum members, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain the Counselors in the First Presi-
dency, the Twelve Apostles, and the Patriarch to the Church, as
Prophets, Seers, and Revelators.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Seventies of the Church will please be seated.
SUSTAINING OF CHURCH AUTHORITIES 147

The Elders of the Church here assembled, including the Presi-


dencies of quorums and quorum members, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain the Counselors in the First Presi-
dency, the Twelve Apostles, and the Patriarch to the Church, as
Prophets, Seers, and Revelators.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Elders of the Church will please be seated.
The Lesser Priesthood of the Church here assembled, including
the Presidencies of Teachers and Deacons quorums, and members of
Priests, Teachers, and Deacons quorums, will please arise.
It is proposed that we sustain the Counselors in the First Presi-
dency, the Twelve Apostles, and the Patriarch to the Church, as
Prophets, Seers, and Revelators.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Lesser Priesthood of the Church will please be seated.
The entire congregation of the Church here assembled, all the
members of the Church, those bearing the priesthood, and those not
bearing it, will please arise. Once more we suggest that those in the
Assembly Hall, and Barratt Hall, and those listening in on the air,
also arise and join in the voting.
It is proposed that we sustain the Counselors in the First Presi-
dency, the Twelve Apostles, and the Patriarch to the Church, as
Prophets, Seers, and Revelators.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
The Congregtion will please be seated.
President McKay, so far as observed, the voting on this pro-
posal was unanimous in the affirmative.

Following the procedure used by President John Taylor the


voting to sustain the other General Authorities, the General Officers
of the Church, not heretofore sustained, and the heads of the auxiliary
organizations will be in the form followed in regular General Con-
ferences. The audience will remain seated while voting; all the mem-
bers will vote at the same time, by the uplifted hand.We suggest that
those in the Assembly Hall and Barratt Hall, and those listening in on
the air, also join in this voting.
It is we sustain as the Assistants to the Twelve:
proposed that
Marion G. Romney Clifford E. Young
Thomas E. McKay Alma Sonne
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain David Oman McKay as Trustee-in-
Trust for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
:

148 GENERAL CONFERENCE


Monday. April 9 Third Day
It is proposed that we sustain a st
the First Council of Seventy:
Levi Edgar Young Oscar A. Kirkham
Antoine R. Ivins Seymour Dilworth Young
Richard L. Evans Milton R. Hunter
Bruce R. McConkie
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as the Presiding Bishopric of the
Church
LeGrand Richards as the Presiding Bishop, with Joseph L.
Wirthlin as his First Counselor, and Thorpe B. Isaacson as his
Second Counselor.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

It is proposed that we sustain as Church Historian and Recorder,


Joseph Fielding Smith, with A. William Lund as Assistant.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

It is proposed that we sustain as the Church Board of Edueca-


tion:
David Oman McKay Spencer W. Kimball
Stephen L Richards Ezra Taft Benson
oshua Reuben Clark, Jr. Mark E. Petersen
oseph Fielding Smith Matthew Cowley
ohn A. Widtsoe Henry D. Moyle
oseph F. Merrill Delbert Leon Stapley
Albert E. Bowen Adam S. Bennion
Harold B. Lee Franklin L. West
As Commissioner of Education, Franklin L. West, and as Semin-
ary Supervisors, J. Karl Wood and Joy F. Dunyon.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we sustain as the Church Auditing Com-
mittee:
Orval W. Adams George S. Spencer
Albert E. Bowen Harold H. Bennett
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
It is proposed that we
sustain as officers of the Tabernacle
Choir, Lester F. Hewlett, President; J. Spencer Cornwall, Conductor;
Richard P. Condie, Assistant Conductor; as Organists, Alexander
Schreiner and Frank W. Asper, and Roy M. Darley, Assistant Or-
ganist.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.
:

SUSTAINING OF CHURCH AUTHORITIES 149

It is proposed that we sustain the Church Welfare Committee


as follows:
Advisers
John A. Widtsoe Clifford E. Young
Albert E. Bowen Alma Sonne
Harold B. Lee Antoine R. Ivins
Matthew Cowley Oscar A. Kirkham
Henry D. Moyle LeGrand Richards
Marion G. Romney Joseph L. Wirthlin
Thomas E. McKay Thorpe B. Isaacson
and The General Presidency of the Relief Society

General Committee
Henry D. Moyle, Chairman
Harold B. Lee, Managing Director
Marion G. Romney, Assistant Managing Director
with the following as members:
Paul C. Child Lorenzo H. Hatch
T. C. Stayner John Longden
Mark B. Garff Walter Dansie
Leonard E. Adams LeRoy A. Wirthlin
J.Leonard Love Andrew Reed Halverson
William T. Lawrence Henry C. Jorgensen
Carl W. Buehner
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

It is proposed that we sustain as the heads of the auxiliary or-


ganizations of the Church
Belle Smith Spafford, as President of the Relief Society of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, with Marianne Clark
Sharp as First Counselor, and Velma N. Simonsen as Second Coun-
selor, with all the members of the board as at present constituted.
George R. Hill, as General Superintendent of the Deseret Sunday
School Union, with A. Hamer Reiser as First Assistant Superinten-
dent, and David Lawrence McKay, as Second Assistant Superin-
tendent, with all the members of the board as at present constituted.
Elbert R. Curtis, as General Superintendent of the Young Men's
Mutual Improvement Association, with A. Walter Stevenson as
First Assistant Superintendent and David S. King as Second Assist-
ant Superintendent, with all the members of the board as at present
constituted.
Bertha S. Reeder, as President of the Young Women's Mutual
Improvement Association with Emily H. Bennett as First Counselor,
and LaRue C. Longden as Second Counselor, with all the members
of the board as at present constituted.

150 l GENERAL CONFERENCE


Monday, April 9 Third Day
Adele Cannon Howells, as President of the Primary Associa-
tion, with LaVern W. Parmley as First Counselor, and Dessie G.
Boyle, as Second Counselor, with all the members of the board as at
present constituted.
Those in favor will raise their right hands; those opposed will
manifest it by the same sign.

President McKay, so far as I have observed, the voting in each


case was unanimous in the affirmative.

President David O. McKay:


Before proceeding further with the exercises of this session, I
am prompted to say a word in answer to a question which undoubted-
ly is in every one of your minds. Particularly to those not members
of the Church, and to members of the Church as well, may I call at-
tention to the policy of the Church with regard to choosing of coun-
selors.

A President Names His Counselors


When a President is chosen and sustained (that includes the
president of the Aaronic Priesthood who is the Bishop of a Ward,
also Presidents of quorums or superintendents or presidents of
auxiliaries it is the practice of the Church to let the president name
his counselors.

Anticipating that the Council of the Twelve would grant to


me that same privilege, I thoughtfully and prayerfully considered
what two men would be most helpful and most contributive to the ad-
vancement of the Church. The impression came, I am sure, directly
from Him whose Church this is, and who presides over it, that
the two counselors whom you have this day approved should be the
other members of the quorum of the First Presidency. Both are mem-
bers of the Council of the Twelve, though counselors might have been
chosen from High Priests outside that presiding body.
I chose these two members from the Council of the Twelve

two men with whom I have labored closely for many years, whose
worth, whose ability I know. I have been associated with Elder
Richards directly in Church affairs and in presiding positions for over
thirty years. I have been associated with President Clark in two

quorums of the First Presidency for over sixteen years. With these
and other facts in mind, the question arose as to the order they should
occupy in this new quorum.
Each man I love. Each man is capable in his particular lines, and
particularly with respect to the welfare and advancement of the King-
dom of God.
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 151

Seniority in the Council of Twelve


I realized that there would be a question in the minds of some

as to which one of the two should be chosen as first counselor. That


question resolved itself in my mind first as to the order of precedence,
seniority in the Council of the Twelve Apostles. That should make
no difference according to the practice of the Church, because mem-
bers of the Council had heretofore been chosen irrespective of the po-
sition a member occupied in the Council of the Twelve. And, as I
have already said, high Priests have been chosen even as first coun-
selors who were not members of the Council.

I felt that one guiding principle in this choice would be to follow

the seniority in the Council. These two men were sitting in their
places in that presiding body in the Church, and I felt impressed that
it would be advisable to continue that same seniority in the new

quorum of the First Presidency. I repeat, not as an established policy,


but because it seemed advisable in view of my close relationship to
these two choice leaders.

Two Counselors Coordinate


Now I mention this because we do not want any member in this
Church, nor any man or woman listening in to harbor the thought for
a moment that there has been any rift between the two counselors who
sustained President Smith in the Quorum of the First Presidency, and
President Grant for the years that we were together with that in-
spired leader. Neither should you feel that there is any demotion.
President Clark is a wonderful servant. You have had demonstrated
here this morning his ability in carrying out details, and he is just that
efficient in everything pertaining to the work.

You should understand further, that in the counselorship of the


Quorum of the First Presidency these two men are coordinate in
authority, in love, and confidence, in freedom to make suggestions,
and recommendations, and in their responsibility not only to the
Quorum but also to the Lord Jesus Christ and to the people generally.
They are two great men. I love them both, and say God bless
them, and give you the assurance that there will be harmony and love
and confidence in the Quorum of the First Presidency as you have
sustained them today.

The congregation arose and joined in singing the hymn, "Re-


deemer of Israel."
152 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday. April 9 Third Day

PRESIDENT JOSEPH FIELDING SMITH


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
We have just witnessed, and taken part in a most solemn,
wonderful manifestation of fellowship, unity, and love.
Pledge of Support
First, I wish to say before this vast congregation of priesthood
and members of the Church that I pledge myself to support my
brethren of the First Presidency. They have my full support, my
love, and fellowship, and I pray that the Spirit of the Lord may
rest upon them in great abundance to guide them and direct them in
all things pertaining to their high and holy callings.
I feel humble in standing here, considering myself the weakest

of my brethren. I love each one of them: the First Presidency, the


Council of the Twelve, and the other brethren whose names have
been presented and approved here this day. And may the Lord be
with us to help each one of us to magnify his calling.
I realize the position I have been called to fulfil is one of great

importance. It makes me humble. I am grateful for the expressions


that I have received from my brethren. They have expressed their
confidence, and already have given me their support.
It is wonderful to see a great body such as we have here today
(composed of the leading brethren of the Church and many others
who have not been called to presiding capacity), raising their hands
enthusiastically, feeling in their hearts to give their support, and
they do give their support with all their hearts to the brethren who
have been sustained.
I thank the Lord for the gospel of Jesus Christ, for my member-

ship in the Church, for the opportunity which has come to me to give
service. I have only one desire, weak as I am, and that is to magnify
to the best of my ability the calling which is mine.

Faith and Prayers Needed


I faith and the prayers of the members of the Church.
need the
These brethren of the Presidency need them, too. We
should
support them, uphold them, sustain them by our faith and by our
prayers, that they may feel the influence that radiates from this
great body of priesthood and from the membership of the Church.
There is an influence that radiates forth. In fact, every individ-
ual radiates some influence. Our influence should be for good, for
the building up of the kingdom of God. We
should have no other
purpose, only to bring to pass this great work and see it established
in the earth as the Lord would have it.

Establishment of Zion
In the early days of the Church the brethren came to the
Prophet Joseph Smith asking what the Lord would have them do.
PRESIDENT J. REUBEN CLARK, JR. 153

The answer given to them was "to bring forth the cause of Zion."
That is our work, to establish Zion, to build up the kingdom of God,
to preach the gospel to every creature in the world, that not one
soul may be overlooked where there is the possibility for us to
present unto him the truth.
As we have heard during this conference, we are all going to
be judged according to our works, every soul. I have often thought
of my place and responsibility in this Church. What a dreadful
thing it would be to be going forth to teach, to lead men, to guide
them into something that wasn't true. I think the greatest crime in
all this world is to lead men and women, the children of God, away
from the true principles. We
see in the world today philosophies of
various kinds, tending to destroy faith, faith in God, faith in the
principles of the gospel. What a dreadful thing that is.
The Lord says if we labor all our days and save but one soul,
how great will be our joy with him; on the other hand how great
will be our sorrow and our condemnation if through our acts we
have led one soul away from this truth.
Testimony
Again I bear my
testimony to you. I know that God lives. I
know that Jesus Christ is the Only Begotten Son in the flesh of our
Father, the great Elohim whom we worship. I have perfect faith
in the mission of the Prophet Joseph Smith and those who have
succeeded him.
I know that we have the truth of the everlasting gospel of

Jesus Christ, just as well as I know that I stand here before you.
If I did not know it, I wouldn't want to be here or have anything to
do with this work. But I know it in every fibre of my body. God
has revealed it to me. May the Lord bless us all I pray in the name
of Jesus Christ. Amen.

PRESIDENT J. REUBEN CLARK, JR.

Second Counselor in the First Presidency


My brothers and sisters, I begin by bearing again my testimony
that this is the work of the Lord, that Joseph Smith is a prophet,
that those who have followed afterward have been his prophets,
and that the one whom we have sustained is the ninth in regular
succession, as a prophet, seer, and revelator to this Church and to
the world.
I know that Jesus is the Christ, the Redeemer of the world.
I the first fruits of the resurrection, and that by and
know that he is
through him we
are redeemed from the Fall, and thus able to over-
come the results of the Fall and get back into the presence of our
Heavenly Father.
154 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday, April 9 Third Day

thank President McKay for his kindly words about myself.


I

I thank you for your sustaining votes, and I earnestly pray that I

may be the beneficiary of your prayers as time shall go on, and that
I may be able to do the things which I am supposed to do with an

eye single to the glory of our Heavenly Father.

Pledge of Devoted Service


In the service of the Lord, it is not where you serve but how.
In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, one takes the
place to which one is duly called, which place one neither seeks nor
declines. I pledge to President McKay and to President Richards
the full loyal devoted service to the tasks that may come to me to
the full measure of my strength and my abilities, and so far as they
will enable me to perform them, however inadequate I may be.
May the Lord help me so to serve, to serve President McKay
and President Richards and to serve the Lord, all for the advance-
ment of his work. This I humbly pray in the name of Jesus. Amen.

PRESIDENT STEPHEN L RICHARDS


First Counselor in the First Presidency

I call to come to my rescue in this, the most try-


upon the Lord
ing hour of my life. It reaches beyond my understanding to know
why I have been privileged in the providence of God to stand before
you, my brethren and sisters of the Church, in the capacity in which
I have this day been presented to you.

Friendship of Great Man


For more than forty-five years I have had a great man as a
friend. I don't know how I have deserved his friendship as he has

given it to me. His friendship has been one of the main factors of
encouragement in my life. My association with him has brought
more richness into my life and my experience than any other as-
sociation outside that of my own flesh and blood.
This great man has stimulated me in times of discouragement
to go forward and give the best I could to this work. I shall never
live long enough to pay the debt of gratitude I owe my friend. I
respond to his call with the deepest humility, with a great sense of
inadequacy, but with an obligation to give to him my best.

Devotion of Willard Richards


One of the few ways in which I can account for this which has
transpired lies in another friendship. My
grandfather, Willard
Richards, was an intimate and close friend of the Prophet Joseph
Smith. I am honored to learn and to know that the Prophet prized
PRESIDENT STEPHEN L RICHARDS 155

his friendship, and is said to have remarked on one occasion that no


one could ever have a finer friend than was Willard Richards.
You recall that at one time he was discouraged by his superiors
to follow the Prophet to Carthage Jail. He replied by an offer of his
life for the Prophet, if he would accept it, and he went with the
Prophet and his brother, witnessed their assassination, and then
with his great love and heavy heart took their bodies back to the
people of Nauvoo, assuaged their excitement, and gave them counsel
to be calm.
I have often felt that the only reason for my being in the pre-

siding councils of the Church is in the devotion of Willard Richards


to the Prophet Joseph Smith. I believe there are councils on the other
side. We have had testimonies of them, and while I cannot under-
stand I can believe that the Prophet, out of consideration for his
friend, has had a voice in bringing me into the Council of the
Twelve through President Joseph F. Smith, and also in that which
has brought me to this position. I would like to be as true a friend
to President David O. McKay as my grandfather was to the
Prophet, and in some measure show to him my appreciation of his
marvelous kindness to me.
President J. Reuben Clark
I have had the pleasure of long acquaintance with President

J.
Reuben Clark, and I have loved him and still love him as an
exemplar, as one of the most true and solicitous friends that a man
can have, and as a man of such high ability and outstanding achieve-
ment as to command the respect of all, not only within the confines
of our Church but also in the nation and the world.
I have gloried in his achievements. I have felt that the credit

he has reflected upon the Church has been of immeasurable value in


setting this work forward. It will be a great pleasure to have even
closer associations with him, and as I pledge my love and support
to the President, I pledge it to him also.

Confidence in Lord's Promises


I cannot go forward in this work, my brethren and my sisters,
without the aid of the Holy Spirit. I must have confidence, however,
in the promises of the Lord that if we will faithfully serve him he
will sustain us. We must have the faith of Nephi of old. If it is of
any qualification for the work, I declare my love for it. I love the
gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. I accept all of its principles. I
accept its authority. I accept the great and marvelous organization
of the Church as being calculated to raise humanity to the highest
destiny men and women may reach.
Testimony of Divine Origin
I know that it is of divine origin. I am realistic enough to be-

lieve every word that the Prophet Joseph Smith gave to us regarding
156 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday. April 9 Third Day

his early experiences in the restoration of this work. There is


nothing about his story that is not literal to me. I know it is the
truth, and I know that he lives, as we sang today, in the heavens
above, and has gone to a reward, the like of which few, if any, men
shall ever be permitted to attain.
I know that Jesus Christ is our Elder Brother and our Lord
and our Savior and the God of this earth, and that testimony
permeates every fibre of my being.
I saw one of my brethren down here in the audience today —
President Piranian. He will remember when he guided us into the
land of Jerusalem, concerning which we spoke a little yesterday.
As I went to the places made memorable and now preserved as
shrines by the works and ministry of the Savior, my heart was full
of meditation.
I never saw a thing in the actions of men, I never saw a thing

in the paganistic buildings that have been constructed to remind


me of the Savior, but I remember that it was here that he labored,
and I said to myself with the deepest humility, "Brother Piranian
and I are the only men in all of this so-called Holy Land who really
represent the Christ about whose shrines those ignorant, deluded
people were quarreling and fighting —
the only men having the
priesthood of Almighty God given from an angel of the Lord," and
I was subdued as this overpowering thought came to me.
I know that this priesthood is divine. I know that it is more

than a mere name. I know that there is virtue and essence in it, if
I can discern anything by the interpretative senses God has given

me. I have felt the essence and virtue of this Holy Priesthood go
out as I have administered the ordinances of the gospel.

Appeal for Blessings

thank the Lord from the bottom of my heart for this great
I

power that has come to men and been so generously and widely
bestowed among them, and I pray to him that I may be worthy of
the investiture of that power and use it for the building up of his
kingdom and the blessing of his children.
I humbly pray that the administration which has come into

being this day by your concerted action may prove to be a boon to


this work that shall go beyond anything which we now may con-
template, and I humbly invoke the blessings of God upon our beloved
leader, that vision may be given him to see the way in which we
shall go. I ask God to bless us all that we may follow him and sup-
port him to accomplish the mighty works that God has in store for
his people. I do so humbly in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 157

PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY


My
beloved fellow workers, brethren and sisters: I wish it
were within my power of expression to let you know just what my
true feelings are on this momentous occasion. I would wish that
you might look into my heart and see there for yourselves just what
those feelings are.

Responsibility of Leadership

It is just that the realization came to me


one week ago today
that this responsibility of leadership would probably fall upon my
shoulders. I received word that President George Albert Smith had
taken a turn for the worse, and that the doctor thought the end was
not far off. I hastened to his bedside, and with his weeping daugh-
ters, son, and other kinfolk, I entered his sickroom. For the first
time, he failed to recognize me.

Then I had to accept the realization that the Lord had chosen
not to answer our pleadings as we would have had them answered,
and that he was going to take him home to himself. Thankfully, he
rallied again later in the day. Several days preceding that visit,
as President Clark and I were considering problems of import per-
taining to the Church, he, ever solicitous of the welfare of the
Church and of my feelings, would say, "The responsibility will be
yours to make this decision," but each time I would refuse to face
what to him seemed a reality.

Need for Support


When that reality came, as I tell you, I was deeply moved. And
I am today, and pray that I may, even though inadequately, be able
to tell you how weighty this responsibility seems.
The Lord has said that the three presiding high priests chosen
by the body, appointed and ordained to this office of presidency, are
to be "upheld by the confidence, faith, and prayer of the Church."
No one can preside over this Church without first being in tune with
the head of the Church, our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. He is
our head. This is his Church. Without his divine guidance and
constant inspiration, we cannot succeed. With his guidance, with
his inspiration, we cannot fail.
Next to that as a sustaining potent power, comes the confi-
dence, faith, prayers, and united support of the Church.
I pledge to you that I shall do my best so to live as to merit the

companionship of the Holy Spirit, and pray here in your presence


that my counselors and I may indeed be "partakers of the divine
spirit."
158 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday, April 9 Third Dag

Spirit of Unity
Next we
plead with you for a continuation of
to that, unitedly
your love and confidence as you have expressed it today. From you
members of the Twelve, we ask for that love and sympathy ex-
pressed in our sacred Council. From the Assistants to the Twelve,
the Patriarch, the First Council of the Seventy, the Presiding
Bishopric, we ask that the spirit of unity expressed so fervently by
our Lord and Savior when he was saying good-by to the Twelve,
may be manifest by us all.
You remember he said, as he left them: "And now I am no more
in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to thee. Holy
Father, keep through thine own name those whom thou hast given
me, that they may be one, as we are."
"Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall
believe on me through their word;
"That they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in me, and I in
thee, that they also may be one in us that the world may believe that
:

thou hast sent me." (John 17:11, 20-21.)


Brethren and sisters, brethren of the General Authorities, God
keep us as one, overlooking weaknesses we may see, keeping an
eye single to the glory of God and the advancement of his work.

Help of Membership
And now to the members of the Church: We
all need your help,
your faithand prayers, not your adverse criticisms, but your help.
You can do that in prayer if you cannot reach us in person. The
potency of those prayers throughout the Church came to me yester-
day when I received a letter from a neighbor in my old home town.
He was milking his cows when the word came over his radio which
he has in his barn that President Smith had passed. He sensed what
that would mean to his former fellow-townsman, and he left his
barn and went to the house and told his wife. Immediately they
called their little children, and there in that humble home, suspend-
ing their activities, they knelt down as a family and offered prayer.
The significance of that scene I leave for you to understand. Multi-
ply that by a hundred thousand, two hundred thousand, half a million
homes, and see the power in the unity and prayers, and the sustain-
ing influence in the body of the Church.
Today you have by your vote placed upon us the greatest
responsibility, as well as the greatest honor, that lies within your
power to bestow as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints. Your doing so increases the duty of the First
Presidency to render service to the people.

Example of Service
When the Savior was about to leave his Apostles, he gave
them a great example of service. You remember he girded himself
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 159

with a towel and washed his disciples' feet. Peter, feeling it was
a menial work for a servant, said, ". dost thou wash my feet?
. . . . .

Thou shalt never wash my feet."


The Savior answered "If I wash thee not, thou hast no part
with me."
"Nay then," said the chief Apostle, "Not my feet only, but also
my hands and my head."
"He
that is washed needeth not save to wash his feet, but is
clean every whit.
"What I do thou knowest not now; but thou shalt know here-
after." (See John 13:6, 8-10, 7.)
And then he washed his feet, and those of the others also. Re-
turning the basin to the side of the door, ungirding himself, and
putting on his robe, he returned to his position with the Twelve, and
said:
"Ye call me Master and Lord: and ye say well; for so I am.
"If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet; ye
also ought to wash one another's feet." (Ibid., 13:13-14.)

What an example of service to those great servants, followers


of the Christ! He that is greatest among you, let him be least. So
we sense the obligation to be of greater service to the membership
of the Church, to devote our lives to the advancement of the king-
dom of God on earth.

Blessing and Testimony


God bless you, brothers and sisters. May the spirit of this oc-
casion remain in our hearts. May it be felt throughout the utter-
most parts of the earth, wherever there is a branch in all the world,
that that spirit might be a unifying power in increasing the testi-
mony of the divinity of this work, that it may grow in its influence
for good in the establishment of peace throughout the world.
I bear you my testimony that the head of this Church is our

Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. I know the reality of his existence,
of his willingness to guide and direct all who serve him. I know
he restored, with his Father, to the Prophet Joseph Smith the gospel
of Jesus Christ in its fulness. I know that these brethren whom you
have sustained today are men of God. I love them. Don't you think
anything else. God's will has been done.
May we have increased power to be true to the responsibilities
that the Lord and you have placed upon us, I pray in the name of
Jesus Christ. Amen.
160 GENERAL CONFERENCE
Monday. April 9 Third Dag
President David O. McKay
We will now all join in singing, "God Be With You 'Till We
Meet Again," led by Brother Cornwall. Both organists, Elder Alex-
ander Schreiner and Elder Frank W. Asper, have been at the organ.
After the singing we will ask Elder John A. Widtsoe to offer
the benediction and this conference will be adjourned sine die.

Singing by the congregation, "God Be With You 'Till Meet We


Again."
The benediction was offered by Elder John A. Widtsoe of the
Council of the Twelve.
Conference adjourned sine die.
FUNERAL SERVICES
PRESIDENT GEORGE ALBERT SMITH
Held in the Tabernacle,
Salt Lake City, Utah,
Saturday, April 7, 1951,
at 2:00 p.m.

President David O. McKay, President of the Council of the


Twelve Apostles, conducted the services.
The Tabernacle Choir was present and rendered musical num-
bers. Elder J. Spencer Cornwall, Conductor, directed the singing
of the Choir; Elder Alexander Schreiner was at the organ.

President David O. McKay:


President George Albert Smith, beloved father, honored leader,
this vast congregation filling the Tabernacle to overflowing, the
Assembly Hall, Barratt Hall, and those listening in over the radio,
say to you the love you have shown to your fellow men is recipro-
cated fourfold. It is hard for us to express our love, but this is one
manifestation of it, for truly the love you have given throughout
your life is reciprocated in our hearts for you, and we pray for
power to emulate your example throughout our lives.
Though the hour has not yet fully arrived, we take this op-
portunity of reading to you and to all who are listening in sentiments
of regard and respect sent from various parts of the world.
Hundreds of telegrams, messages, resolutions, etc., have been
received from people in different parts of the world, including
corporations in the United States, Government officials and Com-
missions, ministers of various churches, Presidents of Educational
Institutions, officials of transportation by steamship, rail and air,
and from distinguished citizens not only throughout the United States,
but, as say, in various parts of the world. It will be impossible, of
I
course, with the limited time at our disposal, to read these messages
to you but here are a few which the family desire me to read as rep-
resentative of the sentiments expressed.

The White House,


Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Emily Smith Stewart:
The death of your father causes me great personal sorrow. He not only was
my friend and the grandson of a friend of my grandfather, but I looked upon him
as one of our country's great moral leaders. Mrs. Truman joins me in extending
sympathy in your bereavement.
Harry S. Truman
President of the United States
162 PRESIDENT SMITH'S FUNERAL
Albany, New York
Mrs. Robert Murray Stewart:
Mrs. Dewey joins me in sending our deepest sympathy to you and your family
in the great loss of your distinguished father. He was a great man and spiritual
force for good in our country and the world. All of us who had the privilege of
his friendship were enriched by it. I know you will be greatly comforted in these
days by the countless people who will be sharing your grief and also your satis-
faction in the great leadership your father gave.
Thomas E. Dewey
Governor of the State of New York
Omaha, Nebraska
President David O. McKay:
In humility and profound personal sorrow, we pay tribute to the late President
George Albert Smith of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Our
personal sense of loss is heightened by appreciation of his fine useful and kindly
life. A believer and worker for the best in all men. His influence for good has been
world-wide. The continued high standing of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-
day Saints is a monument to his memory.
A. E. Stoddard
President Union Pacific Railroad

President J. Reuben Clark, Jr.:


To you and President McKay, as well as to all members of the Mormon faith
and to the people of the state of Utah in general, all of us in United States Steel
send a message of deep sympathy on the death of your great leader and citizen,
George Albert Smith. It has been our good fortune during recent years to know
and work with President Smith in connection with our steel operations in your
great state. All of us have come to respect and admire greatly President Smith,
not only for his unselfish devotion to the interests of the Mormon Church, but also
for his fine human qualities and for his desire to advance the welfare of Utah.
You have lost a great leader and citizen and we a true friend.
Irving S. Olds
Chairman Board of Directors
United States Steel Corp.

Nukalofa, Tonga
Just heard over radio in far away Tonga of the passing of President Smith.
Sympathy extended.
Evon W. Huntsman
President of the Tongan Mission

The National Society Sons of the American Revolution mourns the passing
of one of its most distinguished and beloved compatriots who for 30 years has
given unselfishly of his time, energy, and thoughtful cooperation to the good of
our country and society. We
extend our deepest sympathy to his family and to
the Church of which he was such a great leader.
Wallace C. Hall
President General

Mrs. Emily Smith Stewart:


The loss of the American scene a man whose
George Albert Smith takes from
qualities of heart and mind and soul were everenlisted for the betterment of all.
This hard-working, humble, pious man, spiritual leader of a great faith through
the years was an especial friend of children stricken by polio and other afflictions.
He will indeed be mourned yet will be enshrined in the memories and remembered
in the prayers of all who knew and loved him.
The National Foundation for
Infantile Paralysis
MESSAGES 163

To the Family of President George Albert Smith:


Four thousand Brigham Young University students mourn the of our
loss
greatest mortal inspiration.We loved President Smith because of his great soul,
kindly spirit, and righteous example. We are better because of him. May the
memory of his wonderful life continue to inspire thousands of future Brigham
Young University students.
Brigham Young University Student Body

To Family of President George Albert Smith:


the
The Regents, Administration, Faculty and Students of the University share
with you, and all who knew him, locally and internationally, a deep sorrow at the
passing of your father. We lost a counselor of infinite patience, understanding,
compassion, and love. At the University a special bond of affection binds us to
his memory. He had a love for truth, a passion for the pursuit of knowledge,
and a sympathetic understanding of the problems of his fellow men. These same
talents which have made him so beloved a father to you, have made of him a
priceless counselor to us in the development of our University policy. We want
to express our appreciation to you for so generously sharing him.
not possible to relieve your burden of grief, but it may comfort you to
It is
know we with millions of others would like to reduce that burden by sharing
that
it. If at death can be felt only in proportion as we love in life, then we
sorrow
would not want to grieve less; rather we can even feel some gratitude for the
cleansing beauty of a sorrow born from no human frailty but rather from the
passing of a perfect friend.
Albert Ray Olpin
President, University of Utah

As I have said, these are but illustrative of hundreds of other


messages equally sincere and impressively expressed.
All the songs of this service are favorites of President Smith.
The prayer at the home was given by President Smith's Bishop,
Bishop A. G. Olofson of Yale Ward. The floral offerings have been
under the care of the General Board of the Relief Society, with the
assistance of the General Board of the Primary and Primary children
here at the Tabernacle, and the General Board of the Sunday School
and Sunday School children while he was lying in state at the
Church Administration Building.
Members of the family have requested me, also, to express
publicly their appreciation to the following people who have worked
in very close personal relationship with President Smith, some of
them for many years, and others particularly during his last illness.
The list is certainly not all inclusive, but it is representative. As I

have read this, I want to add the names of two his loving brother
Winslow and his devoted son-in-law Robert Murray Stewart, and
others of the immediate family who have shown a love and devotion
most commendable. Those named outside of the family are as
follows:
Dr. Henry Raile
Dr. J. LeRoy Kimball
D. Arthur Haycock, Secretary
Geraldine Bearnson, Secretary
Louisa Grint, Housekeeper
Fred Kemmethmueller, Houseman
164 PRESIDENT SMITHS FUNERAL
And the following nurses:
Mrs. Iva Basing er
Mrs. Norma Carlisle
Mrs. Carroll Wirthlin
Mrs. Eva Gotberg
Mrs. Evelyn Wilcox
Mrs. Odetta Bramwell
We have not included, but we wish space allowed us to, the names
of manyother medical consultants and hospital people who gave not
only their skill but their hearts.

The Choir will now sing, "Kind Words Are Sweet Tones of the
Heart," (Alexander Schreiner is at the organ), following which
the invocation will be offered by Presiding Bishop LeGrand
Richards.
(Singing by the Choir, "Kind Words Are Sweet Tones of the
Heart")

INVOCATION
By Presiding Bishop LeGrand Richards
Our Father who Heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thou
art in
seest that we are met here this day as family members, loved ones,
friends, and fellow saints of Zion, in this beautiful and sacred
building to offer our appreciation and pay tribute to the life and the
labors of thy worthy servant, thy prophet, seer, and revelator unto
thy great Church.
Father in Heaven, our hearts are heavy with sorrow because
of the loss of friendship, privileges and associations that we have
enjoyed with thy worthy servant in the past. We
do not sorrow,
Father, because of him, for we feel that his life has been as fine an
example to thy children everywhere as any man we have known.
He has walked in thy ways. He has kept thy commandments. He
has labored for the salvation and the blessing of his fellow men. In
this he has been unselfish and devoted all the days of his life.
We thank thee Father that his life has been such that we have
been able to listen to the tributes that have already been read in our
hearing this day. For these we thank thee, and for the many others
that have not been read. And we pray now, Father, that as we are
thus gathered together, that thy Holy Spirit may be poured out upon
those who take part in these exercises, those who furnish the music,
and the Brethren and those who have been asked to speak, that
they may speak words of comfort and consolation, that may be an
encouragement and a comfort to those who mourn most, the inti-
mate loved ones of thy servant.
Father, as these exercises come to a close and we have listened
ELDER MATTHEW COWLEY 165

to the tributes that will be paid, may there be added to them the
tribute that each of us feels in his heart for his association with
him and for his wonderful kindness and his noble example, for we
do love him, Father. Thou knowest all things, and thou knowest
the love we bear for him.
Father in Heaven, as he has brought honor to the name that he
bears and has proven himself worthy to stand in the presence of his
father and his grandfather, both of whom have occupied positions
in the presidency of thy Church, we feel that nothing would please
him more nor please thy Church more than that his posterity unto
the latest generation of time may continue to bear lustre to that
name, and be worthy to bear it among the children of men and the
saints of Zion everywhere.
Now Holy Father, thou hast declared through thine Only
Begotten Son, "For blessed are they which do mourn, for they shall
be comforted." We
ask that these services this day may prove a
comfort to all who mourn, that thy spirit may be present in rich
abundance, that we may do honor to thy noble servant, all of which
we ask, and we thank thee for all our blessings in the name of the
Lord, Jesus Christ, our Redeemer, Amen.

President McKay:
The song, "King of Glory," will now be sung by the Taber-
nacle Choir, soloist Sister Jessie Evans Smith. Following that we
will hear from Elder Matthew Cowley of the Council of the Twelve,
born and reared in the Seventeenth Ward, and President Smith's
first appointment to the Council of the Twelve.
Singing by the Choir, "King of Glory," Jessie Evans Smith
soloist.

ELDER MATTHEW COWLEY


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
This is indeed the most humbling experience of my life, and
I pray God to strengthen me in my humility, that I may give utter-
ance to what I have to say under the direction of God's inspiration.
Seventeenth Ward Associations
The kindest, the most generous, the most appreciative, the
most considerate, the most forgiving, the most loving neighbor I
have ever known has passed on. His mortal remains lie here within
a stone's throw of where he was born. North West Temple ex-
tends from South Temple on the south to First North on the north.
From my early childhood to my early manhood I lived in that
area. No better people ever lived than lived within those two blocks
on West Temple during that period of my life. No greater, no
sweeter, no kinder neighbors ever lived than lived there.
166 PRESIDENT SMITH'S FUNERAL
At head of the street on the south was the home of this
the
man of God. At the head of the street on the north was one of
the homes of his wonderful father. Their homes were properly
placed on that street of good neighbors. Since the day of his birth
until his passing, this man of God traveled a million miles or more
abroad in the earth in doing good.
He loved the people in the old Seventeenth Ward, but he had
so much love that he could not spend it all in that small area, and
so God called him from the Seventeenth Ward and gave him to
the world, and he went about the world among all nations giving
his love and the love of God to his fellow men.

Friends in South Pacific


I journeyed with him to New Zealand in 1938. I know how
the people of the Pacific loved him, and he loved them. When the
message from Tonga was read by President McKay I was remind-
ed that on my first visit to Tonga about three and a half years ago,
I called at the office of the Prime Minister, Mr. Ata. The first thing
Mr. Ata asked me was, "How is my good friend, George Albert
Smith?" He said, "I have never met a grander man in all my life
than that man."
When I called on the crown prince, the Honorable Tungi, he
brought from the drawer of his desk an Improvement Era which
he had just received from President Smith.
In all the islands of the sea he is loved and revered, and on
his last visit to Hawaii during the centennial of that mission, in his
last testimony to those people, he said, "It is an honor to have my
name numbered among yours upon the membership records of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints."

Good in Every One


All those million miles which he traveled during his lifetime
were used in distributing love wherever he went. Only a few weeks
ago I went to the hospital to inquire about his health. On hearing
that I was out in the hall he sent for me to come in, and when I
went in, I walked up to his bedside and he reached out and took
me by the hand, and gripping my hand firmly he said. "Young man,
remember all the days of your life that you can find good in every-

tion to me

one if you will but look for it." The last message, the last instruc-
"Remember always you can find good in everyone if
you will but look for it."
He loved everyone because he could see the good within them.
He did not look upon sin with the least degree of allowance, but he
loved the sinner because he knew that God was love, and that it
is God's love that regenerates human souls and may, by that pro-
cess, transform the sinner into a saint.
ELDER MATTHEW COWLEY 167

Maybethere are sinners who mistook his love for respect. He


didn't respect the sinner, but he loved him. I am sure that love
found response in the hearts and in the lives of those whom he loved.

An Approachable Man
I have never metin all my life a more approachable man. I

never hesitated to go to him for confession and for counsel, and


I always received that for which I went, whether it was forgive-

ness of shortcomings, or counsel which I would need in the work


to which I have been called and to which he ordained me and set
me apart.
Truly he forgave all men. He was aware in all of his life of
the commandment of God: God will forgive whom he will for-
give. As for us, we must forgive all men. He could do that,
and then refer the matter to God. As he forgave I am sure he
forgot. When one who forgives can forget, then truly that man
is an unusual man, indeed a man of God!
When he moved from the Seventeenth Ward, he just left the
geographical area. He never left his neighbors. I read a letter
from a man who was in the army of occupation in Germany follow-
ing the first war. He was a Seventeenth Warder, and he said in
that letter, "While I was on furlough in Italy, President George
Albert Smith came to Coblentz to see me." He always knew where
his neighbors were, and he was always concerned with their well-
being.

When he left New Zealand for Australia in 1938 he spent a
month in Australia —and when he came back he said, "I saw one
of our good Seventeenth Ward neighbors way over in west Aus-
stralia. He came down from the mining camps to see me." This
man was a mining engineer.
I said, "How did he know that you were there so he could come

down to see you?" And he said, "I sent him a telegram." That man
had not lived in the ward for many years, but his neighbor knew
where he was, and he sent for him to come down and see him.
President Smith's Creed
President George Albert Smith had a creed. To those of us
who knew him, it is not necessary to read that creed because his
life was the creed. All of us who knew him could have written his
creed. What an achievement! What an accomplishment! To be
able to write the creed of your fellow man by the life which he
lived.
If it is possible that there is someone within the sound of my
voice who didn't know this wonderful neighbor, who has not
heard nor read his creed, I will take the time now to read it.
"I would be a friend to the friendless and find joy in minister-
ing to the needs of the poor.

168 PRESIDENT SMITH'S FUNERAL


"I would and the afflicted and inspire in them a
visit the sick
desire for faith to be healed.
"I would teach the truth to the understanding and blessing of
all mankind.
would seek out the erring and try to win him back to a
"I
righteous and a happy life.
would not seek to force people to live up to my ideals but
"I
rather love them into doing the thing that is right. I would live
with the masses and help solve their problems that their earth life
may be happy.
"I would avoid the publicity of high positions and discourage
the flattery of thoughtless friends.
"I would not knowingly hurt the feelings of any, not even one
who may have wronged me, but would seek to do him good and
make him my friend.
"I would overcome the tendency to selfishness and jealousy and
rejoice in the success of all the children of my
Heavenly Father.
"I would not be an enemy to any living soul.
"Knowing that the Redeemer of mankind has offered to the
world the only plan that will fully develop us and make us really
happy here and hereafter I feel it not only a duty but a blessed
privilege to disseminate this truth."
It would be easy for us to memorize this creed, my brothers and
sisters and friends, because it can all be briefed into one word
love. That was his creed. And with what grandeur he has swept
the threshold of heaven as he has passed with this, his creed! How
his heart and soul and his virtue and strength went out to the dis-
tressed, to the unfortunate, even to the criminal. I am reminded

that someone once touched the garment of the Master, and he felt
virtue or strength go out from him.
Everyone in distress, everyone beset with illness or other ad-
versity, whoever came within the presence of this son of God, drew
virtue and strength from him. To be in his presence was to be
healed, if not physically, then indeed spiritually.

His Heart Was Pure


During the span of his life he was nigh unto death on several
occasions. Many men more robust in health could not have sur-
vived the illnesses which beset him periodically during his life.
But his strength was as the strength of ten because his heart was
pure, and so he survived.
Men never die. He is an eternal being. God attracts
like this
the godly, and I am
sure that the shortest journey this man of God
ever made in of his travels has been the journey which he has
all
just taken! God love. George Albert Smith is love. He is godly.
is
God has taken him unto himself.
I have loved his family. I have grown up with them. I have
ELDER ELBERT R. CURTIS 169

been at school with them. All I can say now to them and to all of
us is we can't honor a life like this with words. They are not adequate.
There is only one way to honor his virtue, his sweetness of charac-
ter, his great qualities of love, and that is with our deeds. Let us
walk in his footsteps, we who knew him. We know what he want-
ed of us. We must never let him down.
Let us all be a little more forgiving, a little more tender in our
associations with each other, a little more considerate of one an-
other, a little more generous of each other's feelings. Let us so honor
him that when we come to die we may be saved and exalted in the
celestial presence of God our Father, and in that presence we will
find his noble and prophetic son, George Albert Smith.
God grant that that boon and blessing may be ours I pray in
the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

President David O. McKay:


Representing the Young Men's and Young Women's Mutual
Improvement Associations of the Church,, Elder Elbert R. Curtis,
General Superintendent of the YMMIA will now speak to us.

ELDER ELBERT R. CURTIS


General Superintendent of Y.M.M.I.A.

I earnestly pray that the sweet spirit that characterized the


services yesterday, and and is so in evidence here this afternoon,
will accompany my brief remarks this afternoon.
It would be interesting to know on how many occasions Presi-
dent George Albert Smith stood in like position, giving words of
comfort and counsel and blessing. I love the man.
Labors in European Mission
They say if you want to know about a man, ask his secretary.
I count being the personal secretary of President George Albert
Smith and living in his home in far away England about 30 years
ago, perhaps the greatest privilege and blessing of my life. To pray,
to eat, to live with the family of this good man was indeed a bless-
ing. His saintly wife mothered me, his noble son and daughters
adopted me as a brother. When you live with people you know
them. Theirs was a Latter-day Saint home. The Spirit of the Lord
was there in abundance.
President Smith was one of the hardest working individuals
that I have ever known. Many times I have taken dictation from
his bedside where he handled much of his work, lest he waste one
single moment of his waking hours. He was "anxiously engaged"
in his Father's business. He accomplished a great and noble work
there.
170 PRESIDENT SMITHS FUNERAL
He was so appreciative and so kind that it was a labor of love,
and hours didn't seem to matter. That was a time of persecution
and bitterness and hatred in the British Isles. His influence has
lived through the years in the lives of the missionaries who served
in post war Europe, in the hearts of the Saints of those lands, and
in the attitudes of the influential individuals with whom he came
in touch.

His Life an Inspiration


His life has been an inspiration and particularly I think to
the young people of the Church and of the land. He loved them
dearly. It seems to me that his life of achievement from errand boy
at the early age of 13 at the old ZCMI to the pinnacles in civil and
political life, and ecclesiastical positions is almost a Horatio Alger
story of success. It gives courage and hope to every lad.
Elder Cowley mentioned that President Smith was never very
robust, physically. He accomplished all this in spite of physical
limitations.
When I think of him I recall the story of the soldier kneeling
with bowed head, who overheard a girl whisper, "Does he think
he will recover his two lost legs." The soldier paused in his prayer
to reply quietly, "No, but I shall receive courage to carry on with-
out them." President Smith found courage to meet life, to meet
it with a zest, and he was blessed with a great ability to inspire

others to noble achievements, especially the young.

Interest in Youth
He kept alive his interest in youth and in youthful undertakings.
Mention was made of the gathering at the Brigham Young Uni-
versity this afternoon. I have watched with interest his great pride
in the development of the Brigham Young University, its campus,
itsbuilding of science, its field house, the athletic program.
I think all of us were touched as we heard of his telegram,
delivered to the dressing room of the basketball team in New York
City so recently, just before their final game. Listen to this from a
man nearly 81 years of age, sent to a basketball team from his sick
bed.
"From the top of the Rockies, I send my love and blessing.
Many thousands share my pride in your record. I have faith in
your abilities. Play clean, play hard, play fair, play to win. God
bless you" Signed, George Albert Smith. Its effect was electrical.
Here was a friend of youth, and here was a formula of success.
One of his many expressions of love for youth was found in his
untiring efforts in the great Boy Scout movement. He was a mem-
ber of the executive board of the national council. He had been
awarded the Silver Beaver and the Silver Buffalo, the highest
awards within the power of this great organization to award.
ELDER ELBERT R. CURTIS 171

I believe that I not only speak for the youth of our Church,
but for the two and a quarter million scouts and scouters of this land
as I pay this tribute to a truly greift scouter, President George Al-
bert Smith. They do love him, and his influence has been felt and
will be felt throughout the land.

SUPERINTENDENCY OF Y.M.M.I.A.
During the period he was General Superintendent of the
YMMIA, our Church and this state became the leader nationally in
this great Scout movement.
As you know his name was almost synonymous with MIA for
many years. Under his guidance and wise leadership that organ-
ization made great strides for the blessing of our young people.
A partial summary of accomplishments during his MIA ad-
ministration included tremendous gains in enrollment, the introduc-
tion of the SeniorM Men and Vanguard departments, the huge 50th
Anniversary Jubilee, the annual festivals have been carried on, the
development of the great M Men basketball league, the Word of
Wisdom exhibit at the Chicago's World Fair, and many other
notable accomplishments.
The message from the then First Presidency at the time of
his release asMIA superintendent (that was in 1939) included these
words: "As echoes roll from soul to soul, and go forever and for-
ever, so will your worthy efforts continue to live in the lives of
those whom you have inspired." He did inspire.
In behalf of our youth and their leaders, the executives, and
members of the general auxiliary boards, may I express our love,
our deep gratitude for his life. Others have and doubtless will re-
count his numerous accomplishments. His marvelous creed has
been referred to, but we remember him as the Apostle and Presi-
dent of Love, and who indeed was loved and is loved by all of us.
He endeared himself to us all. He was kindness personified. He
personally achieved the goal of peace and good will in his own
heart for all of his Father's children. Perhaps no words were used
quite as often by him as that very term "Our Father's Children."
The sweetness of this hour is the result of that testimony, which
he helped give to all of us.
God bless his memory! He will continue to inspire us all. May
our Heavenly Father bless you, his family, and near kin, love you,
comfort you as your father did. It came from God our Father.
We do extend our love, our sympathy, and our blessing, and
express the prayer that the peace that only He can give may be
yours in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

President David O. McKay:


We who have had the privilege of associating in public affairs
with Mr. John F. Fitzpatrick are happy indeed in the fact that the
172 PRESIDENT SMITH'S FUNERAL
family has chosen him to represent the business men of the State.
We shall now hear from Mr. John F. Fitzpatrick, local business man
and friend of President Smith.

MR. JOHN F. FITZPATRICK


Friends, Ideeply honored that the family would ask me
feel
to say a word my friend, President George Albert
at the bier of
Smith. I feel humble and inadequate. Would that I could clothe
with words the thoughts that are in my heart as I stand here before
you.
Sincerity of Friendship
Ihave known President Smith, George Albert, as he was so
affectionately known to us for a long, long time. He was an easy
man to know. He was a man you would just like to know. His
friendly smile, his hearty handclasp, and the warmth of his greeting
made you feel inwardly, in your heart, the sincerity of his friend-
ship for you and for his fellow man. He was most gracious.
I well remember the arrival here in Salt Lake City of the young-

sters from the grade school at Antimony in Garfield County. Most


of those youngsters had never been beyond the range of their vis-
ion in Antimony itself. You can well imagine their feelings of ex-
citement and thrill at seeing the sights and things of which they
had only been told or dreamed.
Yet, as they repeated to me their experiences one of the greatest
thrills in that entire trip was their meeting here with President Smith,
who so gladly took time from his busy day to see and meet and
friendly greet each and every one of those children. They will re-
member that as long as they live, and I know their prayers are for
him today.
Nobility of Character
He had a creed, as was read to you a moment ago, a philosophy
of and he lived it every day. He was a most interesting man.
life,
In this world today, torn with dissension, bitterness and strife,
with envy and hatred abroad, that true charity stands out and well
portrays the nobility of this man's character. That is the keystone
of the high respect, the admiration, and the real affection in which
he was held by legions of us outside this Church.
He was a man of peace, striving ever for the contentment as

well as for the progress of the people all of the people in the com-
munity. He was intensely interested in the building up of com-
munities, both from the standpoint of the economic as well as cul-
tural values.He welcomed any project that would afford employ-
ment or enjoyment of the arts. For these, his door was open to
Church and non-Church members alike and to all gave a sympa-
thetic hearing.
SISTER IRENE JONES 173

He was noble, forthright and true. He was an American. And


now he has departed this life. By all of us he will be sorely missed,
but also he will be long remembered. The Almighty in his wisdom
and mercy has now called this beloved man, this true Christian
gentleman, to his just and eternal reward.

President David O. McKay:


Sister Irene Jones of the Society For the Aid of the Sightless
recently wrote a tribute to President Smith, entitled "An Under-
standing Heart." Sister Jones, at the request of the family, will
now read that tribute.

SISTER IRENE JONES


My dear brothers and sisters, in Isaiah, the 42nd chapter, 16th
verse, the Lord has made a promise unto the blind wherein he
says: "And I will bring the blind by a way they know not. I will
lead them in paths they have not known. I will make darkness light
before them, and crooked things straight. These things will I do
unto them, and not forsake them."
The more than twelve hundred blind of Utah are mourning
today the passing of President George Albert Smith. For we feel
that through him this promise has been fulfilled.

Kindness to the Blind


Many, many times have I heard him say, "These sightless peo-
ple are God's children, and if we who can see do not help them, we
are going to have to answer to our Father in Heaven."
Now, as he stands before the heavenly throne he can truth-
fully say, "Father, I lent a comforting, sustaining hand to your
children, my brothers and sisters who are traveling life's highway
in darkness. I brought light into their lives, I made crooked things
straight before them, and, Father, I did not forsake them."
Through the loving spirit of President George Albert Smith,
the work for the blind in the Church has expanded, and reached
out to touch the lives and enrich the lives of Latter-day Saints and
Gentiles. He believed in us and, bcause of that faith, we have
learned to believe in ourselves and have been brought by a way we
knew not.
Even in his illness he did not forget us, but sent messages of
encouragement and inspiration by his secretary and daughters.
Wednesday, April 4, 1951 was a dark day in the lives of the
blind, for we feel that we have lost one of the dearest friends we
will ever know, and one of the greatest humanitarians that ever
lived. For consolation I have played the record of his dear voice,
which he gave me at Christmas time, and, as I listened, I felt that
he was very near and that he would always be close at hand to
guide us.
174 PRESIDENT SMITH'S FUNERAL
He not dead. Such
is men forever live in the boundless meas-
ure of the love they give.

An Understanding Heart
At a reception given in his honor on his 70th birthday, I wrote
and presented a tribute to him. Almost every year after that he has
called me by telephone or has written to me to thank me again for
those lines. The family has requested that I repeat them here
today, and it is with deepest gratitude and humility that I comply
with their request in a tribute to the understanding heart of Brother
George Albert Smith:
When life beats hard with stormy hands
And bitter teardrops fall,
When friendless winter chills my soul
And empty echoes call,
'Tis then I turn with eager hope,
My steps though spent and lame,
To find an understanding heart
Where burns a friendly flame.
A heart where gentle wisdom dwells
Compassionate and kind;
Whose faith in God and man has taught
A like faith to the blind.

I lay my troubles at his feet,


Each trial, each bitter loss,
The burdens of a hundred more
He helps us bear the cross.
Consecrated by our Lord with apostolic light,
Consecrated in his soul,
He makes our darkness bright.
A loving radiance he sheds
That comes from God to man.
And we who walk in life-long night
Can see as others can.

Although his tender, loving face


From us is shut apart,
We see the gracious wisdom
Of his understanding heart.
We feel the peace within his soul
And know a peace our own;
We hear his silent prayer that tells
We do not walk alone.
His faith in us will give us strength,
As unseen paths we plod
Our souls uplifted by a man
In partnership with God.
ELDER SPENCER W. KIMBALL 175

May our Heavenly Father look down upon all of us in tender


mercy at this time and bring into our darkened lives the healing
light of his great and everlasting love is my prayer and I ask it in
the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
The Tabernacle Choir sang the hymn, "I Know That My Re-
deemer Lives," soloist, Elder Harold H. Bennett.

President David O. McKay:


Elder Spencer W. Kimball of the Council of the Twelve,
Chairman of the Indian Committee of the Church, of which work
and people the President was so fond, will now speak to us.

ELDER SPENCER W. KIMBALL


Of the Council of the Twelve Apostles
I stand
reverential awe, almost breathless awe, in this
in
auspicious moment in these services of President George Albert
Smith.
A
scribe came to the Lord Jesus Christ one day and said:

Which is the first commandment of all? And Jesus answered him . . . Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
allthy mind, and with all thy strength: . . .

Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. There is none other commandment
greater than these.

And then the scribe added that to love the Lord and to love his
neighbour more than himself ". is more than all whole burnt
. .

offerings and sacrifices." And then the Lord said, "Thou are not
far from the kingdom of God."
Whenever I thought of our beloved President, I have always
felt that he was very, very near that kingdom.
It seemed to me that every act, every thought of our President
would indicate that with all of his heart and soul he loved the Lord,
and loved his fellowmen. Is there a mortal being who could have
loved them more?

Interest in American Indians


As his great love for his fellowmen began to grow into a great
compassion, he saw in vision a certain whole people who went
down from the proverbial Jerusalem to Jericho and they fell among
thieves. He saw them stripped of their raiment and sorely wound-
ed. He saw them deserted and deprived. He saw priests come by
who saw their plight and passed by on the other side. He saw
modern Levites who came and looked and passed by on the other
side. President Smith determined it was time to do something con-
structive for these Indian people who had fallen into misfortune.
176 PRESIDENT SMITH'S FUNERAL
He determined that it was time to bind up their wounds, and to pour
thereon the oil.
He went to President Heber J. Grant, (President Smith was
then in the Council of the Twelve), and asked him for permission
to do work among the Indian people which was granted. A com-
mittee was organized and the work began in a small way as many
programs do.
These words he said in one of his talks: "I have been intensely
interested in doing something for the American Indians. I have

traveled through several of the reservations; I have seen the need


of something more being done for these children who are growing
up. It remains for us who know and feel that these Indians, as we
refer to them, are our Father's children.
"These Indians are descendants of a phophet of God who left
Jerusalem 600 years before the birth of Christ. I have been in their
homes, in many places, and have seen their poverty, their patience,
and their forbearance." And then he went on and said: "I have
had an interest in those Indians, and felt the urge to help, and only
within the last two or three years have I had this opportunity and
power to do something." He lived to see this work grow, from an
infant organization, the Navajo-Zuni Mission, to the full fledged
Southwest Indian Mission with more than a hundred missionaries.
He had already seen the effectual work among the Lamanites
down in the South Sea Islands, in Mexico, in Spanish America, and
in other places, and now he was to see practically every North
American mission with vigorous proselyting work being done
among the Indians. And then he lived to see many of the 184
Stakes of Zion with intensive proselyting being done in the Stakes
among the Indians.

Latter-day Saint Indians Present


He loved to see many, many hundreds of Lehi's descendants
join the Church, receive the priesthood, and their endowments, and
be organized into branches, and today there are in this congrega-
tion, more than a hundred of the Indian brothers and sisters from
far up in the north to far down in the south, representing the Nava-
jos and the Zunis, the Hopis and the Apaches, the Cocopohs and
the Yumas, the Utes and the Piutes, the Walpis, and many, many
others.
Never before, in modern days at least, has there been in a
conference, and at a funeral, such a large aggregation of Latter-
day Saint Indians, and I know that if President Smith could see
them here today his heart would go out to them in compassion,
love, and appreciation.

Visit to Navajo Reservation


About four years ago President Smith made a visit to the Navajo
Indian Reservation, taking Elder Cowley and myself with him.
ELDER SPENCER W. KIMBALL 177

It was a missionary meeting, and ministers pres-


there being priests
ent from many of the sects and denominations. A hundred and
fifty men and women were there. There were some disputations.
Apparently some missionaries had gone to the hospital patients of
other sects to bring relief and succor, and heated suggestions were
made to restrict missionaries to visit only their own people.
President Smith in majesty stood up, and obtained the floor and
said: "My friends, I am perplexed and shocked. I thought people
went to the hospital to rest and get well. If I were ill, it would
please me very much if any good Christian missionary of any de-
nomination would be kind enough to visit me and bind up my wounds
and pour on the sacred oil."
And then President Smith went on to tell them that this Church
not only believes in tolerance, but also in understanding, and ex-
pressed the thought that long years ago Father Scanlan, a Roman
Catholic Priest, conducted mass in the St. George tabernacle at
the suggestion and with permission of one of the Council of the
Twelve and the president of the stake, who were there.
That happened on May 25, 1879. The priest had complained
that he had no place in which he could conduct a mass for his people
in southern Utah. The suggestion came from our brethren, and
the mass was held. He had said, "We have no one to sing the
Mass." The brethren had said, "You furnish the score; we will
furnish the singers." And Catholic mass was conducted in a taber-
nacle.
He also told the group of ministers that the Church had also
assisted some of the Protestant denominations to get started in Salt
Lake City, and in Utah.
There was a general applause from these church dignitaries
and was as though a magic word had been spoken, like the Master
it

spoke when he said "Peace, Peace, be still." The waves of suspic-


ion and antagonism became calm and placid.

Perfection of Life
The Lord Jesus Christ told us, "Be ye perfect even as your
Father, which is in heaven is perfect." And so to compare Presi-
dent George Albert Smith with our Lord and Master I do not count
a sacrilege, for perhaps he came nearer than the great majority of
his contemporaries to that perfection.
The Savior said, "When ye come into an house, salute it, and
ifthe house be worthy let your peace come upon it." And President
Smith was much like that. There are homes from ocean to ocean
and then from ocean to ocean again who have felt the peace that a
great prophet has left in their home.
And the Lord said "Be ye therefore wise as serpents, and
harmless as doves," and we have all seen the harmlessness of this
good man as well as his wisdom and his inspiration.
178 PRESIDENT SMITH'S FUNERAL
The Lordsaid "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit
the earth," and we have seen in him personification of meekness and
lowliness of heart, for the Savior said of Himself, "I am meek and
lowly in heart," and President Smith has approached it closely.
And then He said, "Well done thou good and faithful servant,
thou has been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over
many." He was good, he was faithful, and he has been ruler over
many, but he will yet rule and reign over the many things through-
out the eternities.
Way up in the north of this Palestinian country, the Lord
asked Peter and his associates, "Whom do men say that I, the Son
of Man, am?" and Peter said, "Thou art the Christ, the son of the
living God." And then the Lord said, "Blessed art thou Simon
Barjonah, for flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee, but
my Father which is in Heaven."
May God bless his memory and bless us that we may follow
him in the righteous things which he has exemplified to us, I
pray, and bear you my testimony also, that I also know that this
is the truth, that he, President George Albert Smith, was a prophet
of God and that he followed several others who were also prophets
of God, and that the Gospel has been restored, and it is here for all
the billions of peoples in this world. This I bear in great solemnity,
and with a great love for my leader, in the name of Jesus Christ.
Amen.

President David O. McKay:


President J. Reuben Clark, Jr., President George Albert Smith's
first counselor in the Quorum of the First Presidency, will now
address us.

PRESIDENT J. REUBEN CLARK, JR.

First Counselor to President George Albert Smith

My brothers and sisters, and friends: Under all circumstances


it is difficult for me, with the words at my command, to express the

thoughts and the feelings that are in my heart. But on this occasion
it is particularly difficult because it is hard for a man to control his

feelings and his thoughts, on occasions such as this, when he has


lived and worked as closely as have I and President McKay with a
great man of whom it has been properly suggested that his real
name was Love.
A True Servant to the Lord
He was universally kind and considerate of both of us who
were privileged and honored to work with him. I fully endorse from
my own knowledge and observation all of the good that has been
PRESIDENT }. REUBEN CLARK, ]R. 179

said of him here today, and nothing but good has been said, or could
be said.
There before us the worn and wilted suit of clothes he wore
lies
here; all that we knew and
loved and admired, all that led to his ac-
complishments, all that inspired his love, all that helped him to live
righteously, still lives, and is, and will live throughout the eternities
to come; he lives, a great soul who spent his life, his strength at the
expense of his health in the service of his master.
It was impossible to get him to ease up. He never would quit
he had to go to bed. Time and time again we have urged him,
till

that he go home and rest. Time and time again he has indicated
that he would, and an hour or two hours or three hours later, I have
looked him up and found him still working. He could refuse nobody
an opportunity to talk with him, and no one ever came to him, as has
been said here, and went away empty. He was a true servant to
the Lord.

Helpfulness of Loved Ones


I should say a word regarding the family, and particularly
like to
the two daughters, Emily and Edith. No father ever had tenderer
care, more solicitous attention than these two gave to President
Smith, their father. It was Emily's opportunity, because she lived
in the home with him, to be a little closer to him in the sense of ad-
ministering to his wants and needs. Emily has been on duty for
weeks past 24 hours a day and Edith has always been at hand to
help.
The Lord will bless you two daughters for what you did for your
father.
The
son, Brother George Albert, was not here. His lot was in
other places, but as soon as he returned, he, too, did all he could to
help his father as a devoted son.
While not a member of the family I should like to add just a
word to what has already been said regarding Brother Arthur Hay-
cock. No father ever had a son more devoted, more loyal, more
willing, more available, day or night, than Brother Arthur was avail-
able and willing to help President Smith. President Smith could not
have lived so long as he did save for the help which this good, de-
voted, loyal young man gave to him, and the Lord will bless him, too,
for that.

Another Leader Will Come


But, should like to say to the people that another leader will
I

come in due course. Another leader will carry on. He, too, will
have love in his heart for you. He, too, will live as President Smith
has lived, near to the Lord, and this work, under him and under those
who will follow him, will roll forward just so surely as we live.
The world expected the Church to go to pieces when the Prophet
180 PRESIDENT SMITHS FUNERAL
Joseph died. did not. People thought that when Brigham Young
It
passed, great soul that he was, that the work would dwindle and fade
away. We used to hear that the Church could not survive the third
generation. We are in the fifth and the sixth, and the Church still
lives and grows.
So to the Saints I say, while you mourn today be of good cheer,
for the Lord has not forgotten you, nor will he, and he will lead you
in the future as he has in the past.

Strength of Testimony
I repeat, his was a great life. He knew the truths that lie behind
those immortal words of that great tragic figure of all time, Job. He,
too, could say, "I know that my redeemer liveth." That was the
moving, the guiding, the energizing testimony that kept President
George Albert Smith going. He never forgo"t that, and that testi-
mony never dimmed. It was with him as the merest youth. It was
with him the day of his death, and every day and hour that lay be-
tween.
He also knew what we all know, that there will be a resurrec-
tion. The body and spirit shall be reunited to make the soul. He
knew the truth expressed by Martha in that great interview between
Martha and Christ at the time of the raising of Lazarus.
"Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died."
Jesus said, "Thy brother shall rise again." "I know," replied
Martha, "that he shall rise again in the resurrection at the last day."
Then came those great statements, "I am the resurrection and
the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he
live:
"And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die.
Believest thou this?"
"Yea, Lord: I believe that thou art the Christ, the son of God,
which should come into the world."
That was the testimony which burned in the heart of President
George Albert Smith.
His Work Finished
We shall miss President Smith, miss all the qualities of which
so said and deservedly said, and truthfully said, which
much has been
he possessed but we shall not grieve, because his body was worn and
torn; living, he would have been an invalid. His work, I am sure,
was finished and more than once he expressed himself to me and to
others that he wished to live no longer than the Lord wanted him to
live. He was ready to go as the Lord desired.
He greatly exemplified those wonderful words of Paul: "I have
fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith."
What a summation of a life, and how true that summation is of this,
our beloved and departed president, George Albert Smith.
PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY 181

May God give to his family and to the people, for I assure you,
the family, that the people of the Church mourn with you, may he
give to you and to them the peace which He alone can give, the peace
of which the Savior spoke on the last night in the chamber, the night
before the crucifixion: "Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto
you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be
troubled, neither let it be afraid."
May God give this to you, the bereaved immediately, and to us,
the Saints, whom he loved so much, and to the world for which he
had likewise a deep and undying love; that all of us may profit by the
great example which he set, so that we, too, may live righteously,
loving our fellow men that we may be with him in the times to come,
through all the eternities that are to follow, I humbly pray in the name
of Jesus. Amen.

PRESIDENT DAVID O. McKAY


President of the Council of the Twelve Apostles and Second
Counselor to President George Albert Smith

In the announcements made of groups who have sent messages


of condolence and sympathy, we mentioned ministers of other church-
es. May I announce to you today that the president of the Re-

organized Church, President Israel A. Smith, kinsman of President


George Albert, is here in person paying his respects to the family and
is sitting among the mourners.
The family very graciously asked if I would speak on this oc-
casion. Out of consideration to you and in face of the fact that
much has been said in tribute to our departed brother, which need
not and should not be repeated, I will content myself to a few words
of summary, and trust that this will be acceptable to my dear friends
who are members of this illustrious family.
Purpose of Services
The purpose of these services is to pay tribute to our departed
brother, and, secondly to bring solace, and peace to the sorrowing
hearts of the bereaved. We have listened to tributes, as great I
think, as could be paid to any great leader.
May I now say a word about the second purpose of a funeral

service: To bring solace and comfort to sorrowing hearts. This is


done by three principal means.
First, in contemplation of the fact that he, whose departure
strains the heart strings, has lived a useful, noble life. What con-
solation that will bring to any bereaved father, mother, or child.
Second, comfort in the consciousness that loved ones were true
and loyal as his children and kinsfolk, and that particularly during
illness they did everything humanly possible to administer to his
needs, to alleviate his pain, and to give him comfort.
182 PRESIDENT SMITH'S FUNERAL
And third, comfort in the assurance of the immortality of the hu-
man soul; the assurance that their father is just away.
In the highest degree you children and kinsfolk should find peace
and consolation from these three contributing factors.

Comfort in Bereavement
Secondly, and I speak advisedly here, for I have seen these chil-
dren, son and daughters in action, the tender attention, thoughtful,
efficient care rendered by you daughters and by Albert and other
members of the family, your having left nothing undone, nothing
unapplied, which might contribute to your father's restoration or to
his comfort, should now in this hour of bereavement bring consola-
tion to your aching hearts. And not only in this hour, but through-
out the coming years.
And thirdly, as sure, as certain as Christ's spirit visited other
spirits in the eternal realm while his body lay in the borrowed tomb
of Joseph of Arimathea, so lives the immortal spirit of your father,
our friend, our beloved leader, President George Albert Smith. We
said in the opening that we believed he is aware of our presence here
today. Why shouldn't he be? Christ was conscious of the near-
ness of His Father when he stood at the grave of Lazarus and said,
"I know thou hearest me always."
Last Tuesday night Brother George Albert Smith lifted his
hand to Sister McKay and me and said, "Goodnight." That was
his last word to us. Twenty-four hours later he awoke in a glorious
morning in the presence of those loved ones who had gone before,
and realized the truth of Christ's saying on earth, "In my Father's
house are many mansions, if it were not so, I would have told you.
I go to prepare a place for you."

God bless his memory and bring comfort to your souls today
and always, you choice children and members of an illustrious fam-
ily, I pray in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

President David O. McKay:


After the singing and the benediction will the audience please
remain standing until the casket, the General Authorities, and the
family have made their exit from the building. You will do this in
respectful tribute, I am sure.

There will be a program


at the graveside: Singing by the Gleaner
Girls quartet, East Mill CreekWard, and the dedication of the grave
will be by Elder Winslow Farr Smith, President Smith's brother.
The Choir will now sing another favorite of President Smith's,
"Do What Is Right," after which the benediction will be offered by
President Richard L. Evans.
Singing by the Choir, "Do What Is Right."

GRAVESIDE SERVICES 183

BENEDICTION
By Elder Richard L. Evans
Our Father in Heaven, we thank thee for the peace and sweet
assurance that we have felt here. We
thank thee for the privilege
that has been ours of association with thy son, President George
Albert Smith, in whose passing we have sorrowed, and in whose
life we have found reason to rejoice.
Grant our Father that the spirit of love and peace and kind-
liness,which was exemplified by him may move increasingly among
men, and that the principles of the Gospel by thy Son, Jesus Christ,
to which he devoted his life may speedily move forward in the earth.
We thank thee for the assurance of life everlasting, and for the
promise of renewal of association with men such as he whom thou
hast taken home.
Comfort and sustain his family our Father, and as he so often
prayed and pleaded, grant that we may all live so as to find our
names written in the Lamb's Book of Life.
Go forth with us from here with thy peace and protection, with
thy guidance and direction and with renewed earnestness in pur-
suing thy purposes, and let the spirit of thy Son, the Prince of Peace,
prevail in the earth, we pray in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

GRAVESIDE SERVICES
With President David O. McKay presiding

The Gleaner Girls quartet of the East Mill Creek Ward sang
the hymn, "O My Father," after which the grave was dedicated by
Elder Winslow Farr Smith, as follows:

DEDICATION OF GRAVE
By Elder Winslow Farr Smith
Father in Heaven, we have assembled here to lay in mother
earth the mortal remains of our loved one, thy servant. By the side
of his beloved wife, are we laying him.
Here on this immediate spot of ground are his brothers and sis-
ters thathave gone before, also his father and mother, his grandfather
and grandmother, and his great-grandfather and great-grandmother,
all in theimmediate vicinity of this grave. Father, we feel the spirit
of his noble ancestors and loved ones who are today looking on him
to whom we are bidding earthly farewell.
We are grateful, Father, for the life of this, our beloved one
for the humility; the faith; the love for his children, brothers, and
sisters,and for the leadership he has been to us as members of his
father's family.
Father, we now bid farewell, and pray that his spirit —
the spirit
184 PRESIDENT SMITHS FUNERAL

of love, the spirit of peace may be in the hearts of every one of us
who are his Father's children. May we never forget what he has
been to us. Father, accept him, we pray thee.
We bless this land, this spot, and dedicate it as the permanent
resting place, and ask, Heavenly Father, that thou wilt accept this,
thy son. Guard him well, and guard us well that we may be worthy
to come and be with him and come forth on the morning of the first
resurrection with him.
We dedicate this grave in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
INDEX
PAGE
Adams, Elder Orval W 19
Anderson, Elder Joseph - 4
Auditing Committee, Church —Report 19
Authorities and Officers Present 2
Authorities and Officers Sustained 138
Benson, Elder Ezra Taft 45
"A Real Man" 45, Tribute to President Smith 46, Saving of Souls 47,
Comments of Chaplain 48, Faith in Youth 48, Church Program 49,
Scouting 49, Leadership Needed 51.

Bowen, Elder Albert E. 120


Judged According to Works 120, Meaning of Righteousness 121, Ob-
servance of Law 121, Be Ye Therefore Perfect 122, Righteous Judg-
ment 123, Progressive Beings 123, Excellence Through Effort 123,
A Practical Religion 124, Growth Through Activity 125.

Changes in Church Officers and Organizations 4


Choir and Organ Broadcast 89
Church of the Air 84
Clark, Elder J. Reuben, Jr
10, 38, 39, 64, 65, 66, 78, 115, 116, 134, 135, 136, 153
Clark, Elder J. Reuben, Jr. 78
Guiding Principles 78, Conditions in the World 79, Work of the
Devil 79, Power to Save the World 80.

Clark, Elder J. Reuben, Jr. 136


Instructions Concerning Voting 136, Voting on First Presidency 138,
Voting on President of the Twelve Apostles and the Full Quorum
141, Voting on Patriarch to the Church 144, Voting on Prophets,
Seers and Revelators 146, Voting on Other General Authorities and
General Officers 147.
Clark, President J. Reuben, Jr 153
Pledge of Devoted Service 154.

Clark, President J. Reuben,


Jr. 178
President Smith's Funeral 178, A True Servant to the Lord 178,
Helpfulness of Loved Ones 179, Another Leader Will Come 179,
Strength of Testimony 180, His Work Finished 180.

Cowley, Elder Matthew 102


Quorum of the Twelve Apostles 102.

Cowley, Elder Matthew 165


President Smith's Funeral 165, Seventeenth Ward Associations 165,
Friends in South Pacific 166, Good in Every One 166, An Approach-
able Man 167, President Smith's Creed 167, His Heart Was Pure 168.

186 INDEX
Curtis, Elder Elbert R. 169
President Smith's Funeral 169, Labors in European Mission 169, His
Lifean Inspiration 170, Interest in Youth 170, Superintendency of
Y.M.M.I.A. 171.
Deaths 9

Evans, Elder Richard L. 72


Restrictedby Time's Limitations 72, The Basis of Strength and
Growth 73, The Time Test 73, Individual Responsibility 73.

Evans, Elder Richard L. 84


Church of the Air 84, Choir and Organ Broadcast 89.

Evans, Elder Richard L. 182


President Smith's Funeral 182, Benediction 182.

Financial Report 10

First Day—Afternoon Meeting 38

First Day—Morning Meeting 3

Fitzpatrick, Mr, John F. 172


President Smith's Funeral 172, Sincerity of Friendship 172, Nobility
of Character 172.

General Authorities and Officers Present 2

General Authorities and Officers Sustained 138


General Priesthood Meeting 66
Isaacson, Elder Thorpe B. 74
Prophets of God Adult Members of Aaronic Priesthood 74, Need
74,
for Guidance 75, Workers Needed 76, Fathers and Sons 76, Close
Relationship 77.

Ivins, Elder Antoine R. 131


Power in Gospel 131, Especial Responsibility of Seventies 132, Testi-
mony 132.

Jones, Sister Irene 173


President Smith's Funeral 173, Kindness to the Blind 173, Poem
"An Understanding Heart" 174.

Kimball, Elder Spencer W. 103


Statement of Paul 103, Chosen Leaders 104, Need of Being Valiant
104, Spiritually Dead 105, Greater Church Activity 105.

Kimball, Elder Spencer W. 175


President Smith's Funeral 175, Interest in American Indians 175,
Latter-day Saint Indians Present 176, Visit to Navajo Reservation
176, Perfection of Life 177.

Lee, Elder Harold B - 31


The Hand of Death 31, The Time to Prepare 32, Gospel to be
Preached 32, A Light to the World 32, Witnesses Before the World
33,Japanese Missionary Girl 34, Counsel of Susannah Wesley 35.

Meeks, Elder Heber 35


INDEX 187

Merrill, Elder Joseph F. 51


A Peculiar People 52, President George Albert Smith 52, Moral
Standards 53, The Liquor Problem 53, Relations With Fellowmen
54, Greed and Selfishness 54, The Golden Rule 55, Need to Repent
56, Need of the Hour 57.

Moyle, Elder Henry D 125


President Smith's Example 126, Love Among Brethren 126, Interest
in Individuals 127, Care of Church Funds 127, A
Great Missionary
128.

McKay, President David O. 3, 4,


10, 19, 31, 37, 38, 80, 91, 92, 110, 115, 116, 135, 136, 150,
157, 160, 161, 165, 169, 171, 172, 173, 175, 178, 181, 182, 183

McKay, President David O. 80


Missionary Recommendations 80, Temple Workers 81, Sunday
Schools 81, Inspiration of Priesthood Meeting 82, Attendance to
Duty 82, Love for Fellowmen 83.

McKay, President David O. 92


Testimony of Redeemer 92, Contributions of Great Men 93, Highest
of All Ideals 93, The Man of Galilee 94, Peter and Paul Transformed
94, Example of Joseph Smith 95, Influence of Savior's Mission 95,
Great World Drama 96, Thoughts Determine Destiny 96, Corruption
from Within 97, Christ Our Ideal 98.

McKay, President David O. 150


A President Names His Counselors 150, Seniority in the Council of
Twelve 151, Two Counselors Coordinate 151.

McKay, President David O. 157


Responsibility of Leadership 157, Need for Support 157, Spirit of
Unity 158, Help of Membership 158, Example of Service 158, Bless-
ing and Testimony 159.

McKay, President David O. 181


President Smith's Funeral 181, Purpose of Services 181, Comfort in
Bereavement 182.

Petersen, Elder Mark E. 60


Despised and Rejected 60, Wilfulness of Men 60, Observance of
Commandments 61, Condition of the Nation 62, Position of Latter-
day Saints 63.

Pierce, Elder Arwell L. 110

Presentation of General Authorities and Officers 138

Priesthood Meeting —General 66

Richards, Bishop LeGrand 39


Visit of Young Lady 39, Signs of the Times 40, Gathering of Israel
41, Prophecies Being Fulfilled 41, Signs of Second Coming 42, Mis-
sionary System 43, Nebuchadnezzar's Dream 43, Dispensation of the
Fulness of Times 44.

Richards, Bishop LeGrand 164


Invocation, President Smith's Funeral 164.
188 INDEX
Richards, Elder Stephen L 85, 128, 154
Richards, Elder Stephen L 85
Essence of Worship 85, Kinship of Spirits 85, Fatherhood of God
86, Sovereignty of Savior 86, Spiritual Natures 87, Respect for
Divine Law 87, Absence of Spiritual Kinship 88, Remedy for Sick
World 88.

Richards, Elder Stephen L 128


Talent for Friendship 128.

Richards, President Stephen L , 154


Friendship of Great Man 154, Devotion of Willard Richards 154,
President J. Reuben Clark 155, Confidence in Lord's Promises 155,
Testimony of Divine Origin 155, Appeal for Blessings 156.

Romney, Elder Marion G. 19


Spirit of Uneasiness 19, Need for Hope and Courage 20, Calamities
Ahead 20, Courage of Faith 21, Charge to Joshua 21, Teachings of
Wilford Woodruff 22, Protection of Righteous 22, Zion a Place of
Safety 23, Hope in the Future 23.

Second Day—Afternoon Meeting 115


Second Day—Morning Meeting 84
Smith, Elder Eldred G. 24
Key to Happiness 24, Presence of Good and Evil 25, Desire to be
Obedient 26, Blessings Follow Obedience 26.

Smith, President George Albert —Funeral Services


Messages of Condolence 161, Bishop LeGrand Richards 164, Matthew
161

Cowley 165, Elbert R. Curtis 169, Mr. John F. Fitzpatrick 172, Irene
Jones 173, Spencer W. Kimball 175, President J. Reuben Clark, Jr.
178, President David O. McKay 181, Richard L. Evans 182, Winslow
Farr Smith, 183.

Smith, President Joseph Fielding 57


Divine Mission of Prophet 58, Second Coming 58, All May Know
the Truth 59.

Smith, President Joseph Fielding 152


Pledge of Support 152, Faith and Prayers Needed 152, Establish-
ment of Zion 152, Testimony 153.

Smith, Elder Winslow Farr 183


President Smith's Funeral 183, Dedication of Grave 183.

Solemn Assembly 135

Sonne, Elder Alma 129


Sermons of President Smith 129, "Give the Lord a Chance" 130,
Devotion of Latter-day Saints 130.

Stapley, Elder Delbert L. 116


Loved By All 116, God at the Helm 117, Men of Strength 118,
Proselyting in Stakes 119, Invitation to Come and See 119.

Statistical Report , 9
Sustaining of General Authorities and Officers 138
INDEX 189

Tabernacle Choir and Organ Broadcast 89


Third Day —Solemn Assembly 135

Widtsoe, Elder John A 98


Kindness of George Albert Smith 99, Theme of Address 99, Ex-
amination of Testimonies 100, A
Unique People 100, Witnesses to
Prophet's Work 101, A
World Message 102.
Wirthlin, Elder Joseph L. 66
Hospitality for Ward Teachers 66, Security Through the Gospel
67, Instruction of Children 67, Significance of the Priesthood 69,
First Great Commandment 69, Importance of Prayer 70, Promises
of the Lord 71.

Wunderlich, Elder Jean 106

Young, Elder Clifford E. .108


Gospel Brings Peace 108, Peace Through Suffering 108, Story of
Blind Woman 109, Exercise of Agency 109.

Young, Elder Levi Edgar 27


Present-day Conditions 27, Inspired Men 28, A Divine Title 28,
People Need the Gospel 29, Calling of the Twelve and Seventy 30,
Teachers of Righteousness 30.

Zappey, Elder Cornelius — 132


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