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English Pages xxiv, 740 p. : [792] Year 2005
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^W 56) 62, 64); Whitmer, All Believers, 32; BofM, 212, 223 (Mosiah 27:5; Alma 1:26). BofC, 15:30, 42 (D&C, 18:28, 37). For an argument that twelve apostles were BofC, 3:1, 5:1, 10:1, 11:1,12:1 BofC, 9:14, 16, 14:3
appointed as early as 1830, see Prince, Power from On High, 56-58. According to Michael Quinn, the word "apostle" referred to charisma before 1835. Quinn, Origins of Power, 10-14. 12
(D&C,
BofC, 22:1, 4-5
21:1, 4-5).
Even
in the disillusionment of his later years,
David
Whitmer remembered that "we had all confidence in Brother Joseph, thinking that as God had given him so great a gift as to translate the Book of Mormon, that everything he would do must be right." All Believers, 34. 13
JS to N. C. Saxton, Jan.
14
BofC, 24:7, 6-1
4, 1833, in PlVjfS, 296.
(D&C, 20:6, 5-10). The "Articles and Covenants" is based on the of the Church of Christ" prepared by Oliver Cowdery and printed in
1829 "Articles
1
Faulring, "Section 20," 57-91.
On
the development of this revelation, see Faulring,
"Organizing the Church," 60-69. 15
BofC, 24:50, 21
16
ManH
(D&C,
20:71, 32). 1:304; History [1838 draft], in PJS,
A-i, in PfS,
101-102; HC, 1:117,
n.;
1:244; Porter, Origins,
Deseret News, Mar. 24, 1858; BofC, 34:2-3
(D&C,
31:2);
Chamberlin, "Short Sketch," 4-5; Porter, "Missing Pamphlet," 1 13-40; Porter, "Early Missionary," 316-17. On Marsh, see Anderson, "Thomas B. Marsh," 129, 135. 17
Vogel, Religious Seekers; Bushman, "Visionary World," 183-204. For a combination of radical Protestant
and Masonic influences on early converts, see Brooke,
144-45, 187, 238-39, 306-10. For Brigham Young as Roots," 20-53. 18
19
2
"New York
BioS, 151-53, 166-67.
HnTxley, Stand by gins,
20
Refiner's Fire,
a seeker, see Esplin,
My Servant,
98.
For
a
discussionof the early converts, see Porter, Ori-
32-35, 78-83, 100-105.
Lucy Mack Smith to Solomon Mack, Jan. 6, 1831, in Johnson, "Mormon Women's Letters," 85-89. Anderson, New England Heritage, 148-49; quoted in BioS, 1 56. John Smith later wrote, "We had always been accustomed to being treated with much harshness by our Porter, Origins, 33-34;
brother." 5/05, 155. 22
23
24 25
Knight, "Joseph Knight's Recollection," 37; History [1838 draft], in PJS, 1:248. For the timing of the move of Joseph Smith Sr. and Lucy Smith, see Porter, Origins, 37-38.
ManH A-i, in PJS, 1:305. ManH A-i, in PJS, 1:306-307. For a modern evaluation of the miraculous healing, see Hartley, Standby My Servant, 62-70. FWR,
1-2 (June
9, 1830);
Journal History, June
9,
Joseph's 1838 history says the conference assembled
26
PJS, 1:249. FWR, 1-1 (June
27
History [1838
draft], in
8
History [1838
draft]
2
9, 1830);
ographical Sketch,
29
,
ManH A-i, in PJS,
1830; Cannon, "Licensing," 97.
on June
i.
History [1838
draft], in
1:307-309.
PJS, 1:250.
in PJS, 1:251; Porter, Study of the Origifis, 79-80; Knight,
Autobi-
2.
Kjiight, "Joseph Knight's Recollection," 38; History [1838 draft], in PJS, 1:252-53;
Walters, "Court Trials,"
1
24.
NOTES TO PAGES
588 30
History [1838 niscence (183
draft], in
I
1844, 549-52; A.
i,
W. Benton, Remi-
On conftision about the date of
4:97; Hill, Joseph Smith, 113.
Wahers, "Court Trials," 124-25; Knight, "Joseph Knight's Recollection,"
the
trial,
38;
ManH A- 1, in P75,
see
T&S, June
PJS, 1:252;
EMD,
in
1),
7-12
I I
1:312.
31
Walters, "Court Trials," 125; T&S,]\ine
32
ManHA-i,
33
ManH
1844, 549-50.
i,
in P/S, 1:314-15.
A-i, in PJS, 1:317; Knight, Autobiographical Sketch,
2;
T&S, June
i,
1844,
551-52-
34
History [1838
35
ManH
draft], in
PJS, 2:258; Knight, Autobiographical Sketch,
D&C
A-i, in PJS, 1:318.
(D&C,
[1835], 50:3
2.
27:12); Journal of Discourses,
(May 6, 1882); Addison Everett to Oliver B. Huntington, Feb. 17, 1881, in Boardman Huntington, Journal, Jan. 31, 1881. The exact time of the visit of Peter, James, and John has always been a puzzle in Mor-
23:183 Oliver
mon history. Neither Joseph nor any of the other early chroniclers mentioned the event in their histories. It
is
usually assumed that the visitation
appearance of John the Baptist on
Church on Apr. late
6,
May
15, 1829,
must have occurred
after the
and before the organization of the
1830. Larry C. Porter has placed the visit ofPeter,James, and John in
May 1829. Porter, "Aaronic and Melchizedek Priesthoods," 30-47. Porter relies on
asecondletterof Addison Everett, written to Joseph
F.
Smith, Jan. 16, 1882, a year after
The second letter says that Joseph and Oliver went to Colesville while translating the Book of Mormon and received the Melchizedek Priesthood while returning to Harmony, fixing the event in 1829. The letter is problematic, the
first letter
cited in the text.
however, not only because
it
contradicts the
first,
in
which no mention
is
made of trans-
seems to mix up events in 1829 and 1830. It says that Joseph moved from Harmony to Fayette in August 1829 when he actually moved in June. It was in lating,
but because
it
1830 that he moved in August. There are, moreover, no mentions in other records of a May 1829, or of persecution there, or ofa trial involving Mr. Reed,
visit to Colesville in
conditions Everett associates with the the
trial,
visit.
and the assistance of Mr. Reed are
of 1830. Joseph inserted the
first
On
all
the other hand, the visit to Colesville,
well-attested occurrences in the
reference to Peter, James, and
John
summer
in a revelation
is why in the text above the visit of Peter, James, and John is summer of 1830. But the difficulties with both of the proposed dates summer 1829 or summer 1830— means that we will not know for certain until more information is uncovered. See also B. H. Roberts's note in HC, 1:40-41 n.; Anderson,
dated Aug. 1830. That
assigned to the
"Reuben
Miller," 277-78, 282-85. Fo"" th^ various accounts of priesthood restoration,
see Anderson,
"Second Witness," 15-20; Cannon and
BYU Studies
staff,
"Priesthood
Restoration Documents," 162-207, reprinted in Welch, Openingthe Heavens, 215-63.
36
The
twins,
who
Mormon
died at birth, were possibly premature. Newell and Avery,
Enigma, 39.
{D&C,
25:4, 7-8, 11).
37
BofC, 26:3, 6-7, II
38
Indenture, Joseph Smith and payment to Isaac Hale, see EMD, 4:427-35. Porter, Origins, 62, presents evidence from the federal census that a boy between ten and fifteen was living with Joseph and Emma that summer and attending
BofC, 26:10, 25:14, 7-8,
5,
28
Isaac Hale, Aug. 25, 1830,
{D&C,
JSC.
On
25:10, 24:9,
5, 3, 18);
the loan and
school.
39
Porter, Study of the Origins, 63; History [1838 draft], in PJS, 1:261-62.
Lewis statements about Joseph Smith are found
40
History [1838
41
History [1838
42
draft], in
in
MoU,
The Hale and
162-6'j.
PJS, 1:259-60.
PJS, 1:260; ManH A- 1, in PJS, 1:320. Knight, "Journal," 64-65; History [1838 draft], in PJS, 1:263; Whitmer, All draft], in
Believers,
31-36,42,49,53,55-56,58. 43
ManH A-I, in PJS;
1:323; History [1838 draft], in PJS, 1:263;
MC,
30:12-13;
(Sept. 26, 1830); Knight, "Journal," 64-65; Journal History, Sept. 26, 1830.
FWR,
3
NOTES TO PAGES I2I-I28 (D&C,
44
BofC, ii:\; 30:2-3, 5-6
45 46
Knight, "Journal," 64-65; BofC, 30:1
589
21:1, 28:2-3, 5-7). 1
(D&C,
28:1
1);
ManH A-i, in PJfS,
1:323.
At the same time, David Whitmer remembered, Joseph handed the seerstone to Oliver Cowdery, saying "that he was through with it, and he did not use the stone any more." All Believers, 32.
Brodhead, "John Brown," 535.
47 48
BofC, 2:6
49
Ravenna (Ohio)
{D&C,
y.iS).
8, 1831; BofC, 30: 8-9 (D&C, 28:9); Revelation 21:2; BofM, Nephi 21:23). BofC, 29:8-9, 17-24 (D&C, 29:7-8, 14-21). For the New Jerusalem in the broader context of Mormon millenarianism, see Underwood, Millenarian World, 30-41.
Dec.
Star,
566, 501 (Ether 13:4; 3
50 51
Porter, Study of the Origins, 37-38, 118; BioS, 159, 171; YiiW, Joseph Smith,
5
BioS,
53
1
70;
ManH A-
1
,
in PJS,
i :
1
18-19.
348.
Rigdon, "Life and Testimony," 18-25; Chase, "Sidney Rigdon." 0-2 2 1 in PJS, 1:33 9-44; Hill, Joseph Smith, 1 2
54
ManH A-
55
Whitxn&r, All
56
Porter, Study of the Origins,
57
BofC, 39:1, 4 (D&C, 37:1, 3); Porter, Study of the Origins, 1 17-18. The Painesville Telegraph reported the arrival of Whitmer in the week prior to the paper's issue of
,
Believers, 35;
BofC, 37:5-6, 18-22, 24-25 1
(D&C,
35:4, 17-20, 23).
16-17; Knight, "Joseph Knight's Recollection," 38.
Jan. 18, 1831.
58
ManH
(D&C, 38:28, 31-33, 22); Porter, Lucy wrote her brother Solomon Mack on Jan. 6, 1831, new and everlasting covenant and all that will hear his
A-i, in PJS, 1:346; BofC, 40:22, 27-29, 18
Study of the Origins, 106, 119. that God "has now mad[e] a
voice and enter he says they shall be gathered together into a land of promise and he
himself will
Women's 59
come and
reign on earth with
them
a
thousand years." Johnson,
"Mormon
Letters," 87.
BofC, 40:30, 33, 15 (D&C, 38:37, 18, 35, 39). John Whitmer said some of the Saints doubted the revelation to move to Ohio, thinking that Joseph "invented it himself to deceive the people that in the end he might get gain." Porter, Study of the Origins, 124.
60
(D&C, 38:40); Knight, Autobiographical Sketch, 2; Porter, Study of the 16-17; Knight, "Joseph Knight's Recollection," 38. Lucy Smith says Ezra
BofC, 40:35 Origins,
1
Thayer and Newel Knight
Mormons
also
accompanied the
Ohio
first
group, but
Newel Knight
led
Joseph speaks loosely of traveling to Ohio with Sidney Rigdon and Edward Partridge, but the two groups the Colesville
to
arrived a few days apart, Sidney
ManH
A-i, in PJS,
later in the spring. BioS, 171.
on February
i,
1831, and Joseph a few days
1:346; Porter, Study of the Origins,
117; BofC,
37:23
later.
(D&C,
35:22).
61
BioS, 172-83; Porter, Study of the Origins, 123, 125-27; Porter
New York," 62
Porter, Study of the Origins, 127-28.
CHAPTER 6 1
Woman's Exponent, Sept.
2 3
Bennett, "Report," 355. MoU, 248-49, 261-62.
4
ManH A-i, in PJS,
5
6 7
and Shipps, "Colesville,
201-11.
i,
JOSEPH, MOSES,
AND ENOCH
1878, 51.
1:273-74; Isaac Hale, Affidavit (1834), History [1832], in PJS, 1:3. T&S, Feb. 15, 1843, 108.
mMoU,
263-65.
The closest parallel I have found are the second-generation Shaker visionaries after Ann Lee who recorded revelations and read them like scripture. Philemon Stewart's A Holy, Sacred
and Divine
Roll
and Book, published by the United Society of Believers
in
NOTES TO PAGES
59°
came
1843,
distribute
it
in
two
parts with
more than 400
to the rulers of the world
and
20-1
I
pages.
lay
it
3
The book
directed the Shakers to
beside the Bible in their pulpits. Yet,
A
and Divine Roll and Book was discredited after a couple of years. The ShakMillennial Laws, though in part informed by the visionaries' revelations, were
Holy, Saa-ed ers'
more 8
Ann
a
handbook of instructions than
scripture. Stein, Shaker Experience, 177-98.
from writing them down. She and her successor Lucy Wright did not want the believers fixed on certain rules or doctrines when new revelations were always coming to displace the old. Stein, Shaker Lee's belief in continuing revelations prevented her
Experience, 95.
9 10 1
BofC,
1:1
BofC, 2:2
(D&C, {D&C,
The voice
is
1:1).
3:3-4).
own
made in his essay on the no other evidence than his
reminiscent of the distinction Soren Kierkegaard
difference between an apostle and a genius.
"An
apostle has
statement, and at most his willingness to suffer everything joyfully for the sake of
that statement." Kierkegaard, "Difference," 105. 12
Whitmer, Book ofJohn Whitmer,
13
5o/C, 50:1 (DeirC, 47:1).
14
William Phelps to Sally Phelps,
15
JS to
16
Pratt, Autobiography, 6^-66.
Hyrum
Smith, Mar.
3,
183
55.
ca. Jan. 1,
in
1836, in
PWJS,
Van Orden, "Kirtland
Letters," 578.
257.
17
Hancock, Diary, 45.
18
19
Phelps, July 31, 1832, in PWJS, 273. JS to William When he was about to return to Kirdand from New York, Sidney Rigdon sent copies of Joseph's revelations ahead of him. Van Wagoner, Sidney Rigdon, 76.
20
BofC, 22:1
2
Finney, Memoirs, 9-20; E. Smith, Elias Smith, 134-75.
22
Irwin, American Hieroglyphics, 4-6, 8; Wilson, American Egyptology, 17-19; "Zodiac of
W
(D&C,
21:1);
Bushman, "Visionary World," 183-204.
Denderah," 242; "Egyptian Antiquities," 361-89; Everett, "Hieroglyphics," 95-127, "Egyptian History," 27-53, ^'^'^ "Hieroglyphic System," 339-51. 23
24
—
Knight, "Joseph Knight's Recollection," 33. How Joseph found his stones brown and is explained in Ashurst-McGee, "Pathway to Prophethood," 198-283.
white
—
There
is
Urim and 'The Gift of
evidence that the translation stone was given him after he lost the
Thummim when the Seeing,' " 54.
Much
116 pages disappeared. Van later
William Hine
hieroglyphs while treasure-scrying.
Wagoner and Walker,
said that
The 1826
"
Joseph Smith translated American
court record has
a
witness
who
said
Joseph pretended to read from a book using his white stone. Bainbridge (N.Y.) Court Record, March 20, 1886, in EMD, 4:253. For a longer analysis of Joseph Smith's identity as translator, see Bushman, "Joseph Smith as Translator," 69-85. 25
26 27 28
For the skeptical view see Anderson, Inside the Mind, and Morain, Sword ofLahan. BofM, 172-73 (Mosiah 8:13, 16). Bushman, "Joseph Smith as Translator," 69-85. JS, New Translation, 591 (Moses 1:1); BofM, 5 (i Nephi 1:1); T&S, March i, 1842, 704 (Abraham i:i). For the story of the revision, see Matthews, Jo.rep^ Smith's Translation. For the manuscripts, see JS, New Translation. A second temple was meant for "the work of the printing of the translation of my scriptures."
29 30
Thomas Campbell, quoted
in Barlow,
D&C [1835], 83:3
Mormons and the
Packer, "Transcendentalists," 2:366; Brown, Biblical
of the complex impact on literature, see Buell, 3
Campbell, Saa-ed Writings^ Webster, Holy
{D&C,
Bible,
94:10).
7-8.
Criticis?n,
10-26. For a discussion
New England Literary
Culture, 166-68.
Bible.
32
Church, "Thomas Jefferson's Bible," 145-61.
33
JS, Journal, Oct. 15, 1843,
mAPR, 420; Barlow, Mormons and the Bible, 54. A 1936 book about American translations of the Bible said Joseph Smith's work contained "the most
NOTES TO PAGES I33-I39
591
made in connection with the Bible, and the most peculiar alterEnghsh ever published." Simms, Bible m America, 235.
astonishing claims ever ations of any Bible in
34
History [1838
draft], in
35
T&S, ]2in.
1843,71.
36
JS,
New
16,
PJS, 1:250-59.
Translation, 591
(Moses
1:1-2).
The
parenthetical references are to the 1981
edition of The Pearl of Great Price.
37 38
New
JS,
Translation, 591,
593-94 (Moses
1:4, 6, 33, 24).
Genesis 3:15; Edwards, Wor-k of Redemption, in Works, 2:7, 17-18, 28-29. ^^ typology, see Miner, Uses of Typology; Bercovitch, Purita?! Origins, 35-40, 46-48, 59-73; Brumm,
Lowance, Language of Canaan. [73] (Moses 6:51); Charles, "Mormon Christianizing," 35-39. JS, New Translation, 591-92 (Moses 1:6, 8, 10). JS, New Translation, 592-93 (Moses 1:12-15, 18-22). Paragraphing added. JS, New Translation, 593-94 (Moses 1:25, 27-28). Paragraphing added. JS, New Translation, 594 (Moses 1:30-3 1). Paragraphing added. JS, New Translation, 594 (Moses 1:33, 36-38). Paragraphing added. BofM, 66-6 J (2 Nephi 3:1-11, 15-17). Religious Typology;
39
40 41
42
43
44 45 46
47
E&MS,]2in. 1833,
Bloom, American
Religion, 99, loi.
A translation and commentary are in Metzger, "Fourth Book of Ezra,"
1:517-59.
1
am
Anthony Grafton of Princeton University for this reference. 4 Ezra (or 2 Esdras) was included in the Apocrypha of the Church of England and other Protestant
grateful to
churches. Stone, "Esdras," 2:612.
48
Hugh
Nibley
is
the great
Mormon
expositor of the apocryphal connections. See his
Enoch the Prophet.
49 50
New Translation, 3-25; Matthews, Joseph Smith's Translation, 26-27, 64-65. The page count was derived by comparing the LDS edition of the Bible, published
JS,
1979, with The Pearl of Great Price, published in to
Moses were
circulating
among
the
1
Mormons
981.
By mid-January,
in
the revelations
in Kirtland. Painesville Telegraph, Jan.
18,1831. 51
Genesis 5:21-24; Luke 3:37; Hebrews 11:5; Jude 1:14; VanderKam, Enoch, preface, 175, 183, 185. Jed Woodworth put me in touch with the literature on Enoch and provided an assessment of Richard Laurence's translation in his "Enoch in Early American History."
52
is a link to Laurence's 182 1 translation of Enoch and cites Enoch in a book advertised in a Palmyra newspaper. He does not find Book of Enoch in Palmyra or vicinity, only this reference in a scholarly com-
Michael Quinn claims there a reference to
the actual
mentary. Quinn, Early Mofynonism, 190-92. 53
Laurence, Book of Enoch, chaps. 7, 9-10, 12, 25-26. Laurence thought there was even evidence of three distinct persons in Enoch's Godhead. Laurence, Book of Enoch,
54
As
xlviii-lvi.
Hugh Nibley
century, has
more
has shown, the Slavonic version of Enoch's story, found later in the in
common with Joseph's Enoch.
Latter-day Saint attention to the various
Enoch
Nihley, Enoch the Prophet, 138-281.
stories has
prompted one
specialist to
note that "among twentieth-century Christians, only the Ethiopian Church and the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints consider the Enochic writings to be
authoritative." Nickelsburg, I Enoch, 82.
56
New Translation, 610 (Moses 6:27-28). Woodford, "Historical Development," 2:993-94; Whittaker, "Substituted Names,"
57
JS,
55
JS,
103-12.
58
59
New Translation, 610 (Moses ManHA-i,inP75, 1:274. JS, New Translation, 611 (Moses
6:3
1).
6:35-36, 38-39).
NOTES TO PAGES I4O-I47
592
60 61 62 63
64 65 66
E&MS, E&MS, E&MS, E&MS,
Aug. 1832, Aug. 1832,
[18] [18]
(Moses 7:2-4, 24-26). (Moses 7:28-30).
Aug. 1832, Aug. 1832,
[18]
(Moses
7:33, 34, 36, 37).
[18]
(Moses
7:41).
BofM, 530, 583-85 (Mormon 6:17, 19; Moroni 9). E&MS, Aug. 1832, [18] (Moses 7:58). For the case that "restorationist" denominations did yearn see Hughes and Allen, Protestant Primitivism.
for a return to a favored era,
67 68
QuotedinManHA-i,inP75,
69
Joseph seems also to have identified personally with Enoch. When outside pressures led to the adoption of borrowed names for Church leaders, Joseph took the name of
70
E&MS,
On Joseph
"Sin, Suffering,
Enoch 71
1:276, n. 2; 5o/C, 16:18; 48:14 (DiirC, 19:18; 45:12).
Smith's theodicy, see Paulsen, "Problem of Evil," and Paulsen and Ostler,
and Soul-Making."
in the revelations. Whittaker, "Substituted
Names," 103-12.
Aug. 1832, [18-19] (Moses 7:18, 62-64). Bloom, American Religion, 100; Shipps, Mormonism, 51-56. For the blending of the present with the Book of Mormon past, see Bushman, "Early Mormon History," 3-18.
The
New
seventeenth-century
with similar
New
facility.
Bozeman,
Translation, 851;
England Puritans blended present and
historical past
Primitivist Dimension.
Matthews, Joi-ep^ Smith's
Translation, 37, 40-49, 207.
11
JS,
73
BofC, 48:54-55
74
Matthews, Joj-fp/; Smith's
75
Jackson and Jasinski, "Inspired Translation," 35-64. As Robert Matthews notes in his study of the Joseph Smith translation, "a passage that had been revised and recorded
once was
(D&C, 45:60-61); Matthews, Joseph
Smith's Translation, 73.
Translation, 40.
later further revised
and recorded. Some passages were revised even
a third
time." Joseph Smith's Translation, 61.
76
JS, Journal, Jan. 29, 1836, in PJS, 2:162; Pratt quoted in Matthews, "Joseph Smith Translator," 84.
77
^yS, 355
(Apr.
7,
1844).
CHAPTER
7
THE KIRTLAND VISIONARIES summary of
demography and economy
1
Milton Backman gives
2
Heavens Resound, 33-37, 139. Foote, Autobiography, 8-9. For a survey of the Kirtland topography and economy, see
a useful
Kirtland's
in
On the economy of the region at the time, see Hurt, Ohio "Economic Landscape," 116-75; ^^^ Stewart, No?theastem Ohio,
Layton, "Kirtland," 423-38. Frontier, 20; Lewis,
1:179-284. 3
Knepper, Ohio and Its People, 144-49.
4
Rose, Cleveland, 113, 169.
5
For
6
MofU; Howe, Autobiography.
7
Newell and Avery, Mormon Enigma, 37-38;
8
9
10 11
Painesville, see Stewart, Northeastern Ohio, 1:295-98.
5o/C, 43:9 (DeirC, 41:7). Cox, " Tather Isaac Morley,'
Rollins, Reminiscences,
3.
" [i]. For a map showing the Morley farm's Backman, Heavens Resound, 78. The best edition of Whitmer's history is Whitmer, Book ofJohn Whitmer. ManH A-i, in PJS, 1:352; Matthews, Jo^^P^ Smith's Translation, 31-32;
location, see
FWR,
v, vii,
xi, xii.
12
Marini, Radical
Sects,
63, 66, 73-74, 76, 80; Hatch, American Christianity, 40. The among the Shakers after Ann Lee's death. Stein,
visionary impulse remained strong
Shaker Experience, 166-6"].
NOTES TO PAGES I47-I52 13
593
Wigger, Taking Heaven, 53, 54, 107, 1 10. John Brooke finds traces of hermetic doctrine in the visionary culture but only by exaggerating the evidence and making many speculative leaps. Brooke, Refiner's Fire, 30-58.
mingling with Christian
There
is
more evidence of magical
practice
See Obelkevich, South Lindsey, 259-312, and Quinn,
belief.
Early Mormonism.
14
MoU,
1
Tullidge,
261-62; Woman's Exponent, Sept.
1878, 51; Crosby, "Biographical Sketch,"
.
that early converts
came from
New England orthodoxy." of
i,
Women ofMormondom, 44-45 John Brooke presents
Mormon
tentative figures to
[3].
show
"had long stood outside the mainstream of
families that
Brooke, Refiner's
306-309. For a statistical analysis and Backman, "Kirtland Mormons,"
Fire, 65,
cultural origins, see Grandstaff
47-66. 1
Wigger, Taking Heaven,
1
24,
1
81-89. Later this supernaturalist impulse was channeled
into spiritualism. Cross, Btimed-Over District, 341-52. Cross's concept of "ultraism"
17
comes close to Wigger's "supernaturalism." Backman, Heavens Resound, ^S-'^g.
18
Woman's Exponent, Sept.
19
Van Wagoner,
20
MoU,
i,
1878, 51.
Sidney Rigdon, 44-45; Backman, Heavens Resound, 13-14.
When Joseph met Walter Scott in Cincinnati in June 183 1, their was over New Testament gifts. ManH A-i, in PJS, 1:356. Quoted in Van Wagoner, Sidney Rigdon, 44, 62; Backman, Heavens Resound, 15-16. Campbell ascribed Rigdon 's conversion to "a peculiar mental and corporeal malady to which he has been subject for some years. Fits of melancholy succeeded by fits of 13-14, 118.
1
basic disagreement
21
enthusiasm accompanied by some kind of nervous spasms and swoonings." Millennial Harbinger, Feb.
22
7,
1831, 100.
Acts 2:43-45; 4-3^-
Thomas Campbell,
communal MoU, 121. For a comparison of movements, see Hughes, "Mormons and Churches of Alexander's father, attacked the
organization in a letter to Sidney Rigdon, Feb. 4, i^t,i. the early
Mormon and
Disciples
Christ," 348-63.
23
Morley, "Isaac Morley"; Whitmer, Book of John Whitmet; 27. Levi Hancock, visiting the "Family," felt sorry for the load taken on by Morley, "one of the most honest patient
24 25
men
ever saw."
I
"The company he maintained looked
on a famine." Hancock, Diary, 42. Quoted in Anderson, "Preaching in Ohio," 488. Shaker visionaries also received visits from "native and messages. Stein, Shaker Experience, 176.
spirits"
Corrill, Brief History, 8-10, 17.
27
MoU, 104-105; Hancock, Diary, 41. Some of the most recounted in Backman, "Non -Mormon View," 309-10. CorriW, Brief Histojy, 16.
29
MoU,
116;
tory, 14;
ManH A-i, in PJS,
Mark
1:347;
Whitmer, Book ofJohn Whitmer, iP&C, 43:2-3).
31
The
Shakers,
rifts
The
extravagant visions are
Hancock, Diary, 39-40, 46-47;
Corrill, Brief His-
16:15, ^^•
30
quences.
to bring
and translated native songs
26
28
enough
large
who
37;
MoU,
2 16;
ManH A-i, in PJS,
1:349; BofC, 45:2-3
did not curtail their visionaries as decisively, suffered the conse-
visionaries' contradictory
in the organization
and sometimes extreme revelations opened up
and eventually resulted
in a
burnout of the visionary impulse.
Stein, Shaker Experience, 183-87.
32
Corrill, Brief History, 17; Pratt, Autobiography, 65; JS to
PWJS, 33
Hyrum
Smith, Mar.
3,
183
1,
in
257.
17-21 (D&C, 50:1-4, 17-22); John 16:13;
Corrill, Brief History, 17-18; BofC, 53:1-4,
D&C [1835],
7:36; 82:5
and the Church, Mar.
(D&C,
88:118; 93:29-30); JS and others to
20, 1839, in
PWJS,
121:33, 42; 130:18-19); BofC, 44:46
Edward Partridge 2, 1843 (D&C,
440; Clayton, Journal, Apr.
{D&C,
42:61).
Lucy Smith, who
arrived in Kirt-
NOTES TO PAGES
594
I
5
2-1 56
land in time to observe the contortions of the possessed, said Joseph emphasized that
"when a man speaks by the Spirit of God, he speaks from the abundance of his heart mind is filled with intelhgence." BioS, 171-72. BofC, 53:25, 27 (D&C, 50:29, 31). Joseph later said tongues were provided to teach the gospel to people in foreign lands. Kirtland High Council, Minutes, Sept. 8, 1834. George A. Smith was still preaching against the visionaries in Nauvoo in 1842. T&S, his
34
Apr.
35
36
I,
1842, j^^-i^j.
BofC, 29:9; 41:12; 40:18, 28; 43:4 (D&C, 29:8; 39:13; 38:22, 32; 41:3). BofC, 44:5 (D&C, 42:4); Corrill, Brief History, 17. Levi Hancock was ordained an elder the
morning after his baptism in 1830. Almost immediately, he
started preaching
"from
place to place where the folks were well acquainted with me." Hancock, Diary, 34.
(D&C,
42:12); Mo{7, 115.
37
BofC, 44:13
38
Wigger, "Early American Methodism," 180.
42
Hatch analyzes the Mormon democratic impulses in his American Christianity, 1 1 3-2 2 {D&C, 42:11). BofC, 41 :4 {D&C, 39:6). Cf. BofC, 44:8 {D&C, 42 :7). Whitmer, Book of John Whitmer, 42, 47. For a description of missionary work out of
43
Van Wagoner,
39
40 41
BofC, 44:12
Kirtiand, see Bitton, "Missionary Activity," 497-516.
Sidney Rigdon, 93-94. Parley Pratt's abbreviated version
biography, 65. Oliver
Cowdery had been
Anderson, Book ofMoiynon
44
is
in Pratt, Atito-
well received by Kitchel in the
fall
of 1830.
Witnesses, 55.
Whitmer, Book ofJohn Whitmer, 56-57.
Six
hundred
is
Milton Backman's population
estimate in Heavens Resound, 51. Parley Pratt exuberantly claimed over a thousand
members 45 46
in
Ohio and
several
Marquardt, Joyep/? Smith
hundred
in
Revelations, 108,
New York. Autobiography, 1 1 1;
BofC, ^-.iS-k)
64.
{D&C, 42:30-35).
{D&C, 49:20). For a recent study of communal societies as a group, see Communal Utopias, which contains a thorough bibliography and listing of communities. The classic work is Bestor, Backwoods Utopias. For the mmibers of
BofC, 52:19-20
Pitzer, Americans
Utopian communities, see Clark, Communitarian Moment,
47
1
2
Richard Van Wagoner, following Fawn Brodie, credits Sidney Rigdon's interest in
Robert Owen's ideas with inspiring the consecration of properties. Besides the lack of evidence for Rigdon's interest, Owenite plans bore
48
littie
resemblance to the
Mormon
program. Van Wagoner, Sidney Rigdon, 49-50, 54, 85-86; Brodie, No Man Knows, 105. The revelation makes no reference to the New Testament practice of common property,
the inspiration for Isaac Morley's Kirtland "Family."
phrases like
"all
things in
common"
No
telltale
New Testament
appear in the revelation. Instead the revelation
invoked Enoch's City of Zion where "they were of one heart and of one mind, and dwelt in righteousness; and there was no poor
(Moses
49
7:18).
D&C [1835],
among them." E&MS, Aug.
1832, [18]
Later the system was referred to as "the Order of Enoch." 13:8, II
{D&C,
42:30, 38); BofC, 40:30
{D&C,
38:35). See also Mattiiew
25:40.
50
{D&C, 56:16-17); 5o/M, 81-82, 165,231,237,416, 535(2 Nephi 9:30, Mosiah 4:26; Alma 4:12; 5:55; Helaman 4:12; Mormon 8:37-39). Newell and Avery, Mormon Enigtna, 38-39; Woman's Exponent, Sept. i, 1878, 51; Rollins, Reminiscences, 3; Murdock, Diary, 2; Morton, "Julia Murdock Smith," 37-39. BofC, 58:19,21 42;
51
52
The
living
arrangements of the Smiths in the spring of 183 1 are not clearly explained For two attempts, see Morley, "Isaac Morley," 17-19, and
in the existing sources.
53
Newell and Avery, Mormon Etiigma, 39. William McLellin admired the "peace, order, harmony" of Mormon meetings in Missouri in August 1831 compared to the "shouting, screaming, jumping" in other c\mvc\\ts.'bAcLe\\in, Journals, 34 (Aug. 21, 183
54
BofC, 40:28; 45:16; 46:2
{D&C,
1).
38:32; 43:16; 44:2).
NOTES TO PAGES I56-I58 55
595
Hancock, Diary, 48; MoU, 188-89. Participants differ on the date, but June 3 seems to be the best guess. Levi Hancock gave June 4 as the date. Diary, 47. Parley Pratt said June 6. Autobiography, 72. John Whitmer, the Church historian, recorded June 3. Book ofJohn Whitmer, 69; FJVR, 6-7 (June 3, 183 1). John Smith agreed with Whitmer. J. Smith, Diary, 3-4.
56
Hancock, Diary, 48-49. Ezra Booth, an elder who shortiy apostatized, reported a failed attempt at healing at the conference. MoU, 190-91. Hancock, a solid reporter, said
57
Whitmer, Book ofJohn Whitmer,
nothing about
it.
85.
John
Corrill,
who was
meeting, said "some
at the
doubting took place among the elders, and considerable conversation was held on the subject.
58
59
The
endowments,
it
took
,
for example),
60
elders not fairly understanding the nature of the
some time to reconcile all their feelings." Brief History, 18. ManH A- 1 in P75, i:353;Hancock, Diary, 49; Whitmer, 5oo^o/7o^w Whitmer, 71. John Corrill was not thrown by what he saw at the meeting. "The same visionary and marvellous spirits, spoken of before, got hold of some of the elders; it threw one from his seat to the floor; it bound another, so that for some time he could not use his limbs nor speak; and some other curious effects were experienced, but, by a mighty exertion, in the name of the Lord, it was exposed and shown to be from an evil source." Corrill, BriefHistory, 18. "High priest" appears in Old and New Testaments (Leviticus 21:10 and Hebrews 3:1, and was the chief administrative
officer in lodges of
Royal Arch Masons.
Mackey, Lexicon of Freemasonry, 195-96. The account of John the Baptist and the Aaronic Priesthood {D&C, 13) did not appear in the Doctrine and Covenants until 1876, though John's bestowal of priesthood was
mentioned in the 1835 edition. D&C [1835], 50:2 {D&C, 27:7-8). John's prayer, differendy worded, was included in Oliver Cowdery's 1834 account of John's appearance. M&A I (Oct. 1834): 16. It was published in the current form in T&S in 1842. Cook,
The history of section 27 is detailed in Woodford, "Historical Development," 1:393-98. The truncated version of section 27 appears as section 28 in the 1833 Book of Commandments. For the background, see Quinn, Origins of Power, 1-38; Prince,
Revelations, 23.
Power from On High, i-io. 61
A Universalist magazine made Satan the founder of priesthood: hood commenced cate,
his
"The father of priestwhen coiled around the tree of knowledge." Gospel AdvoMiriam Murdock has explored this theme in "Patterns of the
work,
Mar. 21, 1829, 105.
Priesthood."
62
David Whitmer blamed the introduction of the priesthood on Sidney Rigdon. 0?naha Whitmer, Interviews, 202-203.
Herald, Oct. 17, 1886, in
63
Holland, "Priest, Pastor, and Power," 9-10; Cannon, "Licensing," 96-105.
One
early
form of discipline in the Church was to be "silenced from holding the office of Elders" without excommunication, implying that offices could be given and taken away. FWR, 64
11-12 (Sept. I, 6, 183 1). Genesis 14:18-20; Hebrews
FWR,
5:6; 7:1-3;
7
(June
3,
1831);
Whitmer, Book ofJohn
Whitmer, 69.
65
ManH A-i, in PJS
1:353.
The
passage appeared in the T&S, Feb.
i,
1844, publication
ofJoseph's history, but then was crossed out by Willard Richards in the manuscript and
new wording supplied: of the Elders."
66 67 68
"I conferred the
high priesthood for the
first
time,
upon
several
When the change was made cannot be determined, nor whether Joseph
Smith authorized it. Whitmer, Book ofJohn Whitmer, 70-7 1 Ohver Cowdery likewise was ordained high priesthood after returning from Missouri. FWR, 10 (Aug. 28, 183 1). .
HC,
to the
1:176, n.
For the bestowal of the Melchizedek Priesthood Corrill, Brief History, 18.
in 1831, see Hill, Quest for Refuge, 25;
NOTES TO PAGES I58-164
596 69
Brigham Young
mean
to
Priesthood until 183 courses,
70
Quinn, Origins of Power, 26, interprets a later statement by Peter, James, and John did not restore the Melchizedek and in Kirtland. Young's statement is zmhiguous. Jou?-nal of Dis-
Pratt, Autobiography, 72.
1
9:89-90 (May
7,
1861).
Joseph's 1838 history had already given an account of praying for the Melchizedek
Priesthood in June 1829,
another elders.
when he and
ManH A-i,
Oliver
Cowdery were
in PJS, 1:299-300.
This entry
instructed to ordain one
in Joseph's history vests the
of elder with the Melchizedek Priesthood in 1 829, making the first bestowal of that same priesthood on the elders in 1 8 3 1 redundant. A Campbellite in Kirtland in the fall of 1830 heard the Mormon missionaries say that "no legal administrator" was on the earth to administer baptism "until God had called them to the office." Quoted in Backman, "Non-Mormon View," 308. For an effort to work out the gradually unfolding of priesthood, see Prince, Power from On High. Prince accepts the reality of the revelations but believes Joseph Smith did not have the vocabulary to understand the experiences at first. For a discussion of ordination to the ministry in seventeenth-century New England, office
71
see Davies, American Puritans, 2
72 73
74
1
5-25.
D(r^C [1835], 4:3 (D^yC, 84:20-21). Brodie, No Man Knows, iii; Kimball, "Melchizedek," 17-28. Melchizedek also had overtones of the king-priest who combined religion and state power, a theme Joseph would return to toward the end of his life. Kenny, Elias Smith, 184. BofM, 259-60 (Alma 13:6, 18); JS, New Translation, 641 (JST Genesis 14:27-29). Alma said "an exceedingly great many" were ordained high priests and entered the rest of the
Lord. Alma 13:12. 75
JS,
New
Translation,
641 (JST Genesis 14:26-33).
CHAPTER 1
8
ZION
Whitmer, Book ofJohn Whitmer, 69, 81; BofC, 54 {D&C, 52); Oliver Cowdery to JS, 8, 1 83 1, JSC. For Cowdery's mission, see Walker, "Native American,"5-9; Romig, "Lamanite Mission," 24-33. BofC, 30:8-9 (D&C, 28:9). The phrase "on the borders by the Lamanites" may be an anachronism. The version published in the Ohio Star in Dec. 1831 had the words
April
2
"among
the Lamanites." Marqu-irdt, Joseph S?nith Revelations, 85.
3
ManH A-i,inP7S',
4
BofC, 44:29; 54:44 {D&C, 42:35; 52:43). ManH A-i, in PJS, 1:356-57.
1:354, strikeout omitted. 5o/C, 44:9, 47, 51 (£)