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415. POLYGAMY > 1890 Manifesto > Wilford Woodruff Revelation
Source: James R. Clark, Messages of the First Presidency
(Bookcraft: Salt Lake City, 1966) 3:225-227. Pres. Wilford Woodruff spoke at Brigham City
25 October 1891 and at Logan 1 November 1891 on revelation. The latter was reported and published in in the Deseret News
Weekly. Pres. Woodruff declared that the Lord responded to his prayers and the Manifesto was the result of revelation.
I have had some revelations of late, and very important ones to me, and I will
tell you what the Lord has said to me. Let me bring your minds to what is termed the manifesto. The Lord has told me by revelation
that there are many members of the Church throughout Zion who are sorely tried in their hearts because of that manifesto,
and also because of the testimony of the Presidency of this Church and the Apostles before the Master in Chancery. Since I
received that revelation I have heard of many who are tried in these things, though I had not heard
of any before that, particularly. Now, the Lord has commanded me to do one thing, and I fulfilled that commandment at the
conference at Brigham City last Sunday, and I will do the same here today. The Lord has told me to ask
the Latter-day Saints a question, and He also told me that if they would listen to what I said to them and answer the
question put to them, by the spirit and power of God, they would all answer alike with regard to this matter. The question
is this: Which is the wisest course for the Latter-day Saints to pursue to continue to attempt to practice plural marriage
with the laws of the nation against it and the opposition of sixty millions of people, and at the cost of the confiscation
and loss of all the Temples, and the stopping of all the ordinances therein, both for the living and the dead, and the imprisonment
of the First Presidency and Twelve and the head of families in the Church, and the confiscation of personal property of the
people (all of which of themselves would stop the practice), or after doing and suffering what we have through our adherence
to this principle to cease the practice and submit to the law, and through doing so leave the Prophets, Apostles and fathers
at home, so that they can instruct the people and attend to the duties of the Church, and also leave the Temples in the hands
of the Saints, so that they can attend to the ordinances of the Gospel, both for the living and the dead?
The Lord showed me by vision and revelation exactly what would take place if we
did not stop this practice. If we had not stopped it... all ordinances would be stopped throughout the land of Zion. Confusion
would reign throughout Israel, and many men would be made prisoners. This trouble would have come upon the whole Church, and
we should have been compelled to stop the practice. Now, the question is, whether it should be stopped in this manner, or
in the way the Lord has manifested to us, and leave our Prophets and Apostles and fathers free men, and the temples in the
hands of the people, so that the dead may be redeemed. A large number has already been delivered from the prison house in
the spirit world by this people, and shall the work go on or stop? This is the question I lay before the Latter-day Saints.
You have to judge for yourselves. I shall not answer it; but I say to you that that is exactly the condition we as a people
would have been in had we not taken the course we have.
I know there are a good many men, and probably some leading men, in this Church who have been tried and felt
as though President Woodruff had lost the Spirit of God and was about to apostatize. Now, I want you to understand that he
has not lost the Spirit, nor is he about to apostatize. He has told me exactly what to do, and
what the result would be if we did not do it. I have been called upon by friends outside of the Church and urged to take some
steps with regard to this matter. They knew the course which the Government were determined to take. This feeling has also
been manifested more or less by members of the Church. I saw exactly what would come to pass if there was not something done.
I have had this spirit upon me for a long time. But I want to say this: I should have let all the temples go out of our hands;
I should have gone to prison myself, and let every other man go there, had not the God of heaven commanded
me to do what I did do; and when the hour came that I was commanded to do that, it was all clear
to me. I went before the Lord, and I wrote what the Lord told me to write. I laid it before my brethren-such strong men as
Brother Geo. Q. Cannon, Brother Jos. F. Smith, and the Twelve Apostles. I might as well undertake to turn an army with banners
out of its course as to turn them out of a course that they considered to be right. These men agreed with me, and ten thousand
Latter-day Saints also agreed with me. Why? Because they were moved upon by the Spirit of God and by the revelations of Jesus
Christ to do it.
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