June 1 ~ From Some Source
“There is no knowledge, no Light, no wisdom that you are in possession of, but what you have received it from some source.”
— Brigham Young

Brigham Young

Mormon leader Brigham Young (1801–1877) was born in Whitingham, Vermont, the ninth of eleven children in a poor Methodist family. He once reflected, “I have never found in all my travels... so rough a country as where I was born.”

After losing his wife to tuberculosis, Young entered a period of spiritual searching during America’s Second Great Awakening. He found direction in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, was baptized in 1832, and soon joined the Council of the Twelve Apostles under Joseph Smith.

“I do not care what men say about me,” he said. “I want my character to stand fair in the eyes of my Heavenly Father.”

A visionary builder and community leader, Young became the second president of the Church and led thousands of pioneers westward to settle the Salt Lake Valley. He was also appointed the first governor of the Utah Territory.

He believed deeply in education and self-reliance: “Education is the power to think clearly, the power to act well in the world’s work, and the power to appreciate life.”

“Never let a day pass,” he urged, “that you will have cause to say, I will do better tomorrow.”

Though controversial in his time, Brigham Young’s legacy endures in institutions, faith, and cities built on determination and divine trust.

sunburst iconA holy spirit lives within you.