The Mormon Church's official magazine, The Ensign, printed
the following in 1993:
"Imagine that you have just completed a tour of Temple Square
in the heart of Salt Lake City, Utah. The guide suggests that
you walk across the street and view Legacy, a new motion picture
shown exclusively at the Joseph Smith Memorial Building.
"You decide to visit the building and view the film. As you
walk into the 500-seat theater, sit down, and see the 31-foot
by 62-foot screen before you, you suspect that Legacy will be
no ordinary motion picture. And you are right.
"Lights dim, and Legacy, produced under the direction of
the First Presidency, begins. Original music... performed by the
Tabernacle Choir and the Utah Symphony, fills the theater on six-channel
surround sound. The images on the huge screen before you are sharper
and brighter than you have ever seen -- the result of being filmed
on 70- millimeter film at an accelerated frame rate. At the same
time you are viewing the film in English, foreign visitors wearing
headsets are listening to the film in any one of tour languages...
via an infrared transmitter system built into the theater.
"Soon you realize that the story and spirit of Legacy are
as powerful and different as its technical advances.... Through
Legacy we can be totally swept away in time and space as we meet
early members of the Church -- trek with them across the prairies,
cry with them as they bury their dead, and rejoice with them as
they marry and have children.... Most of the dialogue spoken by
the main characters came from pioneer journals or letters. Everything
the Prophet Joseph Smith says in the film is quoted from something
that he actually said or wrote.
"As the lights in the theater come back on, you realize that
Legacy is more than a review of historical facts -- it is a journey
of the human heart back through time, an oppotunity to figuratively
walk alongside the early Saints and, with them, discover our own
legacy of faith." (The Ensign, July, 1993, pages 32, 34)
It makes you cry!
The authors of this newsletter were told that Legacy is such a
powerful film that it brings many people to tears. Since we write
about Mormon history, we felt that we should take the time to see
this film. In addition, we thought it would be especially interesting
to us because it purports to tell the "legacy" of our
own ancestors -- Sandra is the great-great-granddaughter of the
Mormon prophet Brigham Young, who brought the Mormons to Utah, and
Jerald is a descendent of John Tanner, who helped the prophet Joseph
Smith in the early days of Mormonism.
To say that this is a "powerful" film seems to be an
understatement. The film vividly shows scene after scene of Mormons
being persecuted or murdered. We were, in fact, deeply moved by
Legacy and found it very difficult to hold the tears back. The acting
in the movie is excellent and the scenery is beautiful.
Unfortunately, however, there is a down side to this impressive
movie. The film does not accurately portray Mormon history because
it only shows one side of the story. It entirely omits the reasons
why the early Mormons were driven from place to place. For example,
the film shows the mob destroying the Mormon printing press in Independence,
Missouri, and the people being driven out. What the film fails to
show, however, is that before the trouble occurred Joseph Smith
gave revelations indicating that the Mormons would possess the land
owned by the old settlers.
In one of his revelations Joseph Smith revealed that Independence
was the "center place" of Zion: "Wherefore, this
is the land of promise, and the place for the city of Zion. And
thus saith the Lord your God... Behold, the place which is now called
Independence is the center place; and a spot for the temple is lying
westward, upon a lot which is not far from the courthouse."
(Doctrine and Covenants 57: 2-3)
In another revelation Joseph Smith quoted the Lord as saying: "And
thus, even as I have said, if ye are faithful ye shall assemble
yourselves together to rejoice upon the land of Missouri, which
is the land of your inheritance, which is now the land of your enemies."
(Doctrine and Covenants 52: 42)
In still another revelation we find that those who opposed Mormonism
would be "plucked out." "And the rebellious shall
be cut out of the land of Zion, and shall be sent away, and shall
not inherit the land. For, verily I say that the rebellious are
not of the blood of Ephraim, wherefore they shall be plucked out."
(Doctrine and Covenants 64: 35-36)
While we feel the mob's actions cannot be justified, it is certainly
understandable that the old settlers would be upset with the influx
of Mormons who claimed they were sent by God to take over the land.
For example, if a large flood of immigrants were to suddenly come
into a city like Logan, Utah, proclaiming that God had given them
the city because it was the land of their inheritance, it is likely
that the Mormons who lived there would be very concerned about the
matter. Although the Mormons are a peaceful people, it is likely
that under these circumstances serious problems might develop.
David Whitmer, who was one of the Three Witnesses to the Book of
Mormon, wrote the following:
"The main reason why the printing press was destroyed, was
because they published the Book of Commandments. It fell into the
hands of the world, and the people of Jackson county, Missouri,
saw from the revelations that they were considered by the church
as intruders upon the land of Zion, as enemies to the church, and
that they should be cut off out of the land of Zion and sent away.
The people seeing these things in the Book of Commandments became
the more enraged, tore down the printing press, and drove the church
out of Jackson county." (An Address to All Believers in Christ,
by David Whitmer, Richmond, Missouri, 1887, page 54)
Since Joseph Smith had put his prophetic reputation on the line
by claiming that the Lord had told him that Independence would be
the "center place" of Zion, he was unable to admit defeat.
Consequently, he decided to try to reinstate the Mormons in Jackson
County by making war on the wicked "Gentiles" (i.e., non-Mormons)
who had thwarted his plans. Smith even claimed that on December
16, 1833, he received a revelation from God to attack his enemies:
"And now, I will show unto you a parable, that you may know
my will concerning the redemption of Zion. A certain nobleman
had a spot of land, very choice...
"And the enemy came by night, and broke down the hedge; and
the servants were affrighted, and fled; and the enemy destroyed
their works...
"And the lord of the vineyard said unto one of his servants:
Go and gather together the residue of my servants, and take all
the strength of mine house, which are my warriors...
"And go ye straightway unto the land of my vineyard; for
it is mine; I have bought it with money.
"Therefore, get ye straightway unto my land; breakdown the
walls of mine enemies; throw down their tower, and scatter their
watchmen.
"And inasmuch as they gather together against you, avenge
me of mine enemies, that by and by I may come with the residue
of mine house and possess the land." (Doctrine and Covenants
101: 43-44, 51, 55-58)
Another revelation given by Joseph Smith stated that "the
redemption of Zion must needs come by power; Therefore I will raise
up unto my people a man [later identified as Joseph Smith], who
shall lead them like as Moses led the children of Israel.... Therefore
let my servant Joseph Smith, Jun., say... Gather yourselves together
unto tbe land of Zion... And inasmuch as mine enemies come against
you... ye shall curse them... And my presence will be with you even
in avenging me of mine enemies..." (Doctrine and Covenants
103:15-16, 22, 24, 26)
Joseph Smith was able to raise the army as he was commanded. It
was referred to as "Zion's Camp." Significantly, however,
his attempt to "break down the walls of mine enemies; throw
down their tower, and scatter their watchmen" completely failed.
Reed Peck commented as follows in a manuscript written in 1839:
"In accordance with the interpretation of this parable Joseph
Smith called for volunteers collected about 210 'Warriors' and marched
to Clay County under arms, but the cholera on the second day after
their arrival dispersed them and all hopes were destroyed of 'redeem[in]g
Zion' for the present, but to console the Mormons under this disappointment,
Joseph Smith, before he returned from the campaign prophesied publicly
to them, that 'within three years they should march to Jackson County
and there should not be a dog to open his mouth against them'..."
(The Reed Peck Manuscript, page 3)
Mormon writer Max Parkin observed: "The Camp, however, failed
to accomplish its objective of reinstating the distressed Saints
and it further aided in festering the sore of unpopular public opinion
the Mormons already had in Ohio." (Conflict at Kirtland, 1966,
page 129)
None of Joseph Smith's prophecies regarding the redemption of Zion
came to pass and there seems to be little hope that the Mormons
will ever possess the land.
Unfortunately, the Mormon prophet Joseph Smith never seemed to
learn how to get along with those he called "Gentiles."
Consequently, there was conflict everywhere he led the Saints. After
the affair at Independence, Smith tried very hard to make Kirtland,
Ohio, an important center for Mormonism. The church's publication,
Messenger and Advocate, April 1837, vol. 3, p. 488, stated that
Joseph Smith gave "a prophesy saying this place must be bullt
up, and would be built up, and that every brother that would take
hold and help secure and discharge those contracts that had been
made, should be rich."
John Whitmer, one of the eight Witnesses to the Book of Mormon,wrote
the following in his history of the church: "In the fall of
1836, Joseph Smith, Jun., S. Rigdon and others of the leaders of
the Church at Kirtland, Ohio, established a bank for the purpose
of speculation, and the whole church partook of the same spirit..."
(John Whitmer's History, chapter 20, pp. 21-22) Although Joseph
Smith encouraged his followers to support this bank, the Mormon
writer John J. Stewart had to admit that the Kirtland Safety Society,
"became bankrupt." (Joseph Smith the Mormon Prophet, 1966,
page 110) Mormon historian B.H. Roberts commented: "The 'Kirtland
Safety Society' enterprise ended disastrously." (Comprehensive
History of the Church, vol. 1, pp. 401-402)
Joseph Smith's prophecy that Kirtland would be built up by the
Mormons completely failed, and instead of the people becoming rich,
many of them became destitute. According to the History of the Church,
vol. 3, page 1, Joseph Smith was "obliged to flee... on horseback,
to escape mob violence..." Smith left Ohio owing thousands
of dollars to his creditors. Mormon writers Marvin S. Hill, C. Keith
Rooker, and Larry T. Wimmer acknowledge that Joseph Smith's big
financial mistake was setting up an "unchartered bank":
"In the past it has been suggested by most Mormon authors
that the reason for the lack of a charter was religious persecution.
Joseph Smith himself declared 'Because we were "Mormons,"
the legislature raised some frivolous excuses on which they refused
to grant us those banking privileges they so freely granted to others.'
There is little evidence that the Church in this instance was subject
to religious persecution.... In 1835, all requests for additional
charters were refused, while in 1836 only one of seventeen requests
was granted.... just over a month after the restructuring of the
Society and its commencement of business, law suits were commenced
against Joseph Smith, Sidney Rigdon, and others seeking a forfeiture
judgment in the sum of $1 ,000 against each defendant for alleged
violations of the 1816 Ohio statute prohibiting unauthorized banking....
The Smith and Rigdon cases were tried by a jury in October 1837,
resulting in a judgment of $1,000 plus small costs against each....
Examination of the court records establishes that Joseph Smith and
Sidney Rigdon were properly charged, tried by jury, and found to
have violated the statute. This finding, of course, implicitly held
the entire Society activity wholly unlawful, and made it impossible
for it to survive, even had survival been otherwise possible....
The inability of the bank to meet his expectations and its eventual
failure cost him [Joseph Smith] dearly in terms of credibility and
personal resources.... While he may have been encouraged in his
decision by various groups, and by bad professional advice from
lawyers, ultimately the responsibility for the decision to proceed
with the bank was his.... In the face of numerous lawsuits and threats
upon his life, Joseph Smith chose the alternative of fleeing Kirtland
-- a personal defeat since he fled not only creditors, but also
had to leave behind the temple and the community he had gathered."
(Brigham Young University Studies, Summer 1977, pages 437-38, 458)
The fact that Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon were both fined $1,000
for engaging in this "unlawful" activity may not seem
too serious until a person considers the fact that a thousand dollars
was a great deal of money in the 1830's.
Not surprisingly, Legacy totally ignores all evidence that Joseph
Smith and the early Mormons made serious mistakes and contributed
to some of the situations that culminated in violence. Those who
created this film seem to have been bent on giving a onesided depiction
proving that the early Mormons were always in the right and were
only persecuted because they believed the Book of Mormon and followed
righteous principles. While it is undoubtedly true that most of
the Mormons were a peaceful people who took their religion seriously,
some of the leaders of the church and also some in lower positions
were greedy for power and misused public trust.
Quinn's New Book
Recently an important new book by D. Michael Quinn was published
by Signature Books. It is entitled, The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins
of Power. Although the first printing of 3,000 copies sold out shortly
after it appeared, the second printing is now available from Utah
Lighthouse Ministry. This is a monumental work on the early history
of Mormonism that throws a great deal of light on why the early
Mormons seemed to draw persecution to themselves. Dr. Quinn obtained
a Ph.D. in history at Yale University and was formerly Professor
of American social history at the church's Brigham Young University.
He wrote at least six articles for the church's official publication,
The Ensign, and about the same number for Brigham Young University
Studies. In addition, he has published some important books. He
was considered one of the church's top scholars until he dug too
deeply into Mormon history.
Dr. Quinn knows a great deal about the true history of the church
because he had an inside track at the Historical Department under
Dr. Leonard Arrington, who was formerly Church Historian. In a speech
Quinn gave in 1981, he noted that he had "spent a decade probing
thousands of manuscript diaries and records of Church history"
that he "never dreamed" he would see.
On January 20, 1995, Associated Press writer Vern Anderson reported
the following regarding Quinn's work:
"SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Mormons today may not recognize the
contradictory, sometimes violent early church ot their ancestors
depicted in a new book based in part on documents the church now
keeps locked up.
"'Nineteenth century Mormonism was not polite,' unlike the
congenial 20th century faith, says author D. Michael Quinn.
"Indeed, the rough-and-ready frontier Mormonism described
in Quinn's 660-page 'The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power,'
bears about as much resemblance to the modern church as a prickly
pear to a hothouse orchid.
"The contrast helps explain the discomfiture of later generations
of Mormon leaders with aspects of the early church founded in
1830 by Joseph Smith. Quinn details how that unease led to official
doctoring of the historical record after Smith's death in 1844....
"Quinn's book... is based on 30 years of research in Mormon
history. And for 15 of those years, Quinn enjoyed free access
to the vast archives of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. Since 1986, however, church leaders, unhappy with the
secular bent of the so-called New Mormon History, have sharply
restricted access.
"'My experience in the early 1970s was like a kid in a candy
store. Every day was Christmas,' Quinn recalled in an interview.
'I had no idea at the time I would be the only outside researcher
who ever saw these documents. Years later, I saw that was the
case.'
"What he found there, and in many other archives, was the
ingredients for a 'warts and all' revisionist history that startlingly
supplements the sanitized official accounts -- designed to be
faith-promoting -- that are familiar to most Mormons.
"For example:... In attempting to establish his kingdom of
God, Smith embraced a set of what Quinn calls 'theocratic ethics'
that placed Mormon priesthood authority above civil law. At times,
primarily after Smith's death, those ethics sanctioned public
denials of actual events, counterfeiting and stealing from non-Mormons,
threats and physical attacks against dissenters, killing and castration
of sex offenders, murdering of anti-Mormons and bribery of government
officials." (Herald and News, Kiamath Falls, Oregon, January
20, 1995)
D. Michael Quinn's desire to tell the truth about Mormon history
eventually cost him his membership in the Mormon Church. Mormon
scholar Allen Roberts wrote:
"Leaders repeatedly make it clear that they alone are authoritative
in matters of church policy and belief. Even in the area of history,
leaders attempt to control depictions of the Mormon past, advocating
'faithful history ' and condemning historical findings, however
true, revealing information contrary to the sanitized, apologetic,
church-approved histories. Quinn, for one, was not excommunicated
because his history writing was inaccurate. He was cut off because
his findings did not reinforce pictures the church has painted
of its past." (Private Eye Weekly, October20, 1993, page
12)
A Fighting Prophet
In his book, The Mormon Hierarchy, Quinn points out that as time
went on Joseph Smith became progressively concerned about having
a large army and sought for military power:
"Zion's Camp did not redeem Zion, but it transformed Mormon
leadership and culture. In February 1834, the Kirtland high council
elected Joseph Smith as 'commander-in-chief of the armies of Israel.'
This was one of the first acts of the newly organized high council
which thus acknowledged Smith's religious right to give God's command
to 'go out unto battle against any nation, kindred, tongue, or people.'
Zion's Camp was the first organization established for the external
security of Mormonism. A year later, the military experience of
Zion's Camp (rather than any ecclesiastical service) was the basis
upon which Smith said he was selecting men for the newly organized
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and the Seventy. Unlike other American
denominations, 'the church millitant' was a literal fact in Mormonism,
not just a symbolic slogan." (The Mormon Hierarchy, page 85)
Unlike the gentle and soft spoken man shown in Legacy, Joseph Smith
was without question a fighting prophet. He not only liked to wrestle
and prove his strength, but he sometimes kicked people and struck
them very hard. D. Michael Quinn observed that Smith was a "church
president who physically assaulted both Mormons and non-Mormons
for insulting him..." (The Mormon Hierarchy, 261-262)
Under the date of March 11, 1843, we find this entry in Joseph
Smith's History: "In the evening, when pulling sticks, I pulled
up Justus A. Morse, the strongest man in Ramus, with one hand"
(History of the Church, vol. 5, page 302) Two days later the following
was recorded: "Monday, 13. -- I wrestled with William Wall,
the most expert wrestler in Ramus, and threw him." (Ibid.,
302) Under the date of June 30, 1843, we find this: "I feel
as strong as a giant. I pulled sticks with the men coming along,
and I pulled up with one hand the strongest man that could be found.
Then two men tried, but they could not pull me up..." (Ibid.,
page 466)
Mrs. Mary Ettie V. Smith claimed that "the Prophet Joseph
Smith had one day broken the leg of my brother Howard, while wrestling...,"
(Mormonism: Its Rise, Progress, And Present Condition, page 52)
John D. Lee related that one day Joseph Smith and some of his men
were wrestling. Because it was "the Sabbath day" Sidney
Pigdon tried to break it up. Joseph Smith, however, "dragged
him from the ring, bareheaded, and tore Rigdon's fine pulpit coat
from the collar to the waist; then he turned to the men and said:
'Go in, boys, and have your fun.'" (Confessions of John D.
Lee, pages 76-78)
Jedediah M. Grant, a member of the First Presidency under Brigham
Young, told of the Baptist priest who came to see Joseph Smith....
the Baptist stood before him, and folding his arms said, 'Is it
possible that I now flash my optics upon a man who has conversed
with my Savior?' 'Yes,' says the Prophet, 'I don't know but you
do; would not you like to wrestle with me?' That, you see, brought
the priest right on to the thrashing floor, and he turned a sumerset
right straight. After he had whirled round a few times, like a duck
shot in the head, he concluded that his piety had been awfully shocked..."
(Journal of Discourses, vol. 3, pp. 66-67)
While this may have seemed funny to President Grant, Joseph Smith
had a violent temper which could lead to physical violence. His
close friend Benjamin F. Johnson made this observation after Smith's
death:
"And yet, although so social and even convivial at times,
he would allow no arrogance or undue liberties. Criticisms, even
by his associates, were rarely acceptable. Contradictions would
arouse in him the lion at once. By no one of his fellows would he
be superseded.... one or another of his associates were more than
once, for their impudence, helped from the congregation by his foot....
He soundly thrashed his brother William... While with him in such
fraternal, social and sometimes convivial moods, we could not then
so fully realize the greatness and majesty of his calling."
(Letter by Benjamin F. Johnson to Elder George S. Gibbs, 1903, as
printed in The Testimony of Joseph Smith's Best Friend, pages 4-5)
Mormon writer Max Parkin refers to a court case against Joseph
Smith in which Calvin Stoddard, Joseph Smith's brother-in-law, testified
that, "Smith then came up and knocked him in the forehead with
his flat hand -- the blow knocked him down, when Smith repeated
the blow four or five times, very hard -- made him blind -- that
Smith afterwards came to him and asked his forgiveness..."
(Conflict at Kirtland, citing from the Painesville Telegraph, June
26,1835)
Parkin also quotes Luke S. Johnson, who served as an apostle in
the early Mormon Church, as saying that when a minister insulted
Joseph Smith at Kirtland, Ohio, Smith, "'boxed his ears with
both hands, and turning his face towards the door, kicked him into
the street,' for the man's lack of charity." (Ibid., page 268)
In the History of the Church for the year 1843, we read of two
fights Joseph Smith had in Nauvoo:
"Josiah Butterfield came to my house and insulted me so outrageously
that I kicked him out of the house, across the yard, and into the
street." (History of the Church, vol.5, page 316)
"Bagby called me a liar, and picked up a stone to throw at
me, which so enraged me that I followed him a few steps, and struck
him two or three times. Esquire Daniel H. Wells stepped between
us and succeeded in separating us.... I rode down to Alderman Whitney...
he imposed a fine which I paid, and then returned to the political
meeting." (Ibid., page 524)
On August 13,1843, Joseph Smith admitted that he had tried to choke
Walter Bag by: "I met him, and he gave me some abusive language,
taking up a stone to throw at me: I seized him by the throat to
choke him off." (Ibid., page 531)
After he became president of the Mormon Church, Brigham Young commented,
"if you had the Prophet Joseph to deal with, you would think
that I am quite mild.... He would not bear the usage I have borne,
and would appear as though he would tear down all the houses in
the city, and tear up trees by the roots, if men conducted to him
in the way they have to me." (Journal of Discourses, vol.8,
pp.317-318)
While Mormon writer John J. Stewart claimed that Joseph Smith was
"perhaps the most Christ like man to live upon the earth since
Jesus himself," this conclusion is not supported by Joseph
Smith's History: "I am not so much a 'Christian' as many suppose
I am. When a man undertakes to ride me for a horse, I feel disposed
to kick up and throw him off, and ride him." (History of the
Church, vol. 5, page 335)
In addition to choking, kicking people out of houses and churches,
knocking them in the head, boxing their ears, and tearing their
clothing, the evidence indicates that he threatened people's lives.
Dr. Quinn reported the following:
"In an incident about which Smith's personal diary and official
history are completely silent, he was acquitted in June 1837 of
conspiring to murder anti-Mormon Grandison Newell. The silence may
be due to the fact that two of Smith's supporting witnesses in the
case, both apostles, acknowledged that the prophet discussed with
them the possibllity of killing Newell. Apostle Orson Hyde testified
that 'Smith seemed much excited and declared that Newell should
be put out of the way, or where the crows could not find him; he
said destroying Newell would be justifiable In the sight of God,
that it was the will of God, &c.' Hyde tried to be helpful by
adding that he had 'never heard Smith use similar language before,'...
Apostle Luke S. Johnson acknowledged to the court that Smith had
said 'if Newell or any other man should head a mob against him,
they ought to be put out of the way, and it would be our duty to
do so.' However, Johnson also affirmed: 'I believe Smith to be a
tender-hearted, humane man.' Whether or not the court agreed with
that assessment, the judge acquitted Smith because there was insufficient
evidence to support the charge of conspiracy to commit murder."
(The Mormon Hierarchy, pages 91-92)
One of the biggest problems that confronted Joseph Smith was dissension
within the ranks of his own church. Mormon historical records demonstrate
that Smith not only felt that he was superior in physical strength
to most men, but he also believed he had the inside track with God.
He even went so far as to boast that he had been more successful
than Jesus Himself in setting up a church:
"If they want a beardless boy to whip all the world, I will
get on the top of a mountain and crow like a rooster: I shall always
beat them.... I have more to boast of than ever any man had. I am
the only man that has ever been able to keep a whole church together
since the days of Adam. A large majority of the whole have stood
by me. Neither Paul, John, Peter, nor Jesus ever did It. I boast
that no man ever did such a work as I. The followers of Jesus ran
away from Him, but the Latter-day Saints never ran away from me
yet." (History of the Church, vol. 6, pp. 408-409)
With an exalted attitude like that it is easy to believe that Joseph
Smith would have trouble with many people. As his friend Benjamin
F. Johnson pointed out, "Contradictions would arouse in him
the lion at once." Instead of handling things in a calm and
orderly way, he would often resort to violence, name calling, and
slander. This, of course, made many enemies within and without the
church.
This is far different than the way the Mormon leaders operate today.
For example, since October, 1993, the church has been purging prominent
scholars and feminists who have written things that embarrass the
church. The leaders, in fact, have taken an uncompromising stand
against those who wish to tell the unvarnished truth about church
history and other issues. Many scholars were questioned, and some
were either excommunicated or disfellowshiped from the church. The
purge has continued, and in December, 1994, Brent Metcalfe, editor
of New Approaches to the Book of Mormon, was excommunicated for
questioning the authenticity of Joseph Smith's Book of Mormon.
While it is true that some church scholars connected with Brigham
Young University and FARMS have belittled the scholars who have
been reprimanded or excommunicated, the top leaders of the church
have been rather careful not to further antagonize those who have
been disciplined.
Joseph Smith, on the other hand, did everything he could to blacken
the character of those he perceived as enemies. Even the publications
of the church were often used to make slanderous and insulting accusations
against those who objected to the way Smith handled things. Joseph
Smith even went so far as to attack the three witnesses to the Book
of Mormon in a letter he wrote "to the Church" on December
16, 1838: "Such characters as McLellin, John Whitmer, David
Whitmer, Oliver Cowdery, and Martin Harris are too mean to mention;
and we had liked to have forgotten them." (History of the Church,
vol. 3, page 232) David Whitmer, Oliver Cowdery, and Martin Harris,
of course, were the three special witnesses to the Book of Mormon,
and John Whitmer was one of the set of eight additional witnesses
who bore witness to the existence of the gold plates from which
the Book of Mormon was "translated."
In the same letter Joseph Smith called David Whitmer a "dumb
ass": "I would remember William E. McLelIin, who... professes
to be much of a prophet, has no other dumb ass to ride but David
Whitmer... he brays out cursings instead of blessings. Poor ass!
Whoever lives to see it, will see him and his rider perish like
those who perished in the gainsaying of Korah, or after the same
condemnation." (Ibid., page 228)
While the early Mormon people bitterly complained when the "Gentiles"
drove them out, they did exactly the same thing to some of their
own people when they opposed Joseph Smith's plans. In June, 1838,
three of the Book of Mormon witnesses, former apostle Lyman E. Johnson,
and William W. Phelps were sent a very threatening letter which
accused them of serious crimes and ordered them to leave Far West,
Missouri, at once. D. Michael Quinn shows that this letter was authorized
by some of the highest leaders in the Mormon Church:
"On 17 June 1838, first counselor Sidney Rigdon preached his
'Salt Sermon' as a warning that Mormon dissenters would 'be cast
out and trodden under foot of men.'... Rigdon was restating what
a revelation of February 1834 had authorized the First Presidency
to do to Mormons who 'hearken not to observe all my words' (D&C
103:8-10). The next day second counselor Hyrum Smith and his Uncle
John Smith (assistant counselor in First Presidency) joined with
Danite leader Sampson Avard (as first signer) and eighty other Danites
in a threatening letter to Oliver Cowdery, David Whitmer, John Whitmer,
Lyman E. Johnson, and William W. Phelps....
"Regarding this Danite expulsion of prominent Mormon dissenters,
Counselor Rigdon told Apostle Orson Hyde at Far West that 'it was
the imperative duty of the Church to obey the word of Joseph Smith,
or the presidency, without question or inquiry, and that if there
were any that would not, they should have their throats cut from
ear [to] ear.'" (The Mormon Hierarchy, page 94)
The reader will notice the Quinn claims over eighty "Danites"
signed the letter. The noted Mormon writer William E. Berrett explained
that, "Such a band as the 'Danites' did exist, as historians
affirm; but that Joseph Smith had nothing to do with it and exposed
the participants when he became aware of it, is equally well-confirmed.
History further affirms that Dr. Avard himself was the author of
the organization... The organization had been for the purpose of
plundering and murdering the enemies of the Saints." (The Restored
Church, 1958, pages 197-98)
Although there has always been a great deal of evidence that the
Danite Band existed and that Joseph Smith was involved in it, many
Mormon scholars were unable to tace the serious implications of
admitting the prophet was involved in this nefarious organization.
The Joseph Smith diaries, which contained important information
regarding the Danites, were suppressed by the church leaders for
about 140 years. Fortunately, however, we obtained access to a microfilmed
copy of these diaries in 1976, and H. Michael Marquardt began to
transcribe them. Eventually, with Marquardt's careful work of transcription,
we were able to print the extant diaries from 1832 to 1839.
When Mr. Marquardt was transcribing the 1838 diary, he made a very
significant discovery concerning Joseph Smith's involvement with
the Danites. He found a portion of the diary which had been crossed
out in a deliberate attempt to hide the fact that the Danites were
a church organization which Joseph Smith supported. Although it
was difficult work, Marquardt was able to transcribe a good portion
of the material which someone had tried to obliterate. Since Mr.
Marquardt did not have access to the original Joseph Smith diary,
he was unable to transcribe all of the words.
Fortunately, in 1988 Mormon scholars Dean C. Jessee and David J.
Whittaker published the important entry in Joseph Smith's journal.
Since Jessee and Whittaker were able to transcribe portions of the
entry which Marquardt could not read, it seems obvious that they
worked from the original journal. We do know, in fact, that for
many years Jessee has been allowed access to the original Joseph
Smith diaries. In any case, the two Mormon scholars quote Joseph
Smith's journal as saying:
"Some time past the bretheren or Saints have come up day after
day to consecrate, and to bring their offerings into the store house
of the lord, to prove him now herewith and se[e] if he will not
pour us out a blessing that there will not be room enough to contain
it. They have come up hither Thus far, according to the order of
the Danites, we have a company of Danites in these times, to put
right physically that which is not right, and to cleanse the Church
of verry great evils which hitherto existed among us inasmuch as
they cannot be put to right by teachings & persuasyons, This
company or a part of them exibited on the fourth day of July [illegible
word] They come up to consecrate by companies of tens, commanded
by their captain over ten." (Brigham Young University Studies,
Winter 1988, page 14)
The threatening letter the Danites sent to the dissenters contained
the following:
"'To Oliver Cowdery, David Whitmer, John Whitmer, William
W. Phelps, and Lyman E. Johnson, greeting:
"'Whereas the citizens of CaLdwell county have borne with
the abuse received from you at different times... until it is
no longer to be endured... out of the county you shall go, and
no power shall save you.... there is but one decree for you, which
is depart, depart, or a more fatal calamity shall befall you....
we will put you from the county of CaLdwell: so help us God.'"
(Letter quoted in Senate Document 189, Feb. 15, 1841, pages 6-9)
Book of Mormon witness John Whitmer, who was threatened by the
Danites in the letter cited above, wrote the following in his history
of the church:
"Joseph Smith, Jr., S. Rigdon, and Hyrum Smith moved their
families to this place, Far West, in the spring of 1838. As soon
as they came here, they began to enforce their new organized plan,
which caused dissensions and difficulties, threatenings and even
murders. Smith called a council of the leaders together, in which
council he stated that any person who said a word against the heads
of the Church, should be driven over these prairies as a chased
deer by a pack of hounds, having an illusion to the Gideonites,
as they were termed, to justify themselves in their wicked designs.
Thus on the 19th of June, 1838, they preached a sermon called the
salt sermon, in which these Gideonites understood that they should
drive the dissenters, as they termed those who believed not in their
secret bands, in fornication, adultery or midnight machinations....
They had threatened us, to kill us, if we did not make restitutions
to them, by upholding them in their wicked purposes and designs....
to our great astonishment, when we were on the way home from Liberty,
Clay County, we met the families of Oliver Cowdery and L.E. Johnson,
whom they had driven from their homes, and robbed them of all their
goods, save clothing, bedding, etc.
"While we were gone Jo. and Rigdon and their band of Gadiatons
kept up a guard, and watched our houses, and abused our families,
and threatened them, if they were not gone by morning, they would
be drove out, and threatened our lives, if they ever saw us in Far
West." (John Whitmer's History, page 22)
Book of Mormon witness David Whitmer, who was also threatened in
the letter from the Danites, gave this information about the troubles
in Far West:
"If you believe my testimony to the Book of Mormon; if you
believe that God spake to us three witnesses by his own voice, then
I tell you that in June, 1838, God spake to me again by his own
voice from the heavens, and told me to 'separate myself from among
the Latter Day Saints, for as they sought to do unto me, so should
it be done unto them.' In the spring of 1838, the heads of the church
and many of the members had gone deep into error and blindness.
I had been striving with them for a long time to show them the errors
into which they were drifting, and for my labors I received only
persecutions. In June, 1838, at Far West, Mo., a secret organization
was formed, Doctor Avard being put in as the leader of the band;
a certain oath was to be administered to all the brethren to bind
them to support the heads of the church in everything they should
teach. All who refused to take this oath were considered dissenters
from the church, and certain things were to be done concerning these
dissenters, by Dr. Avard's secret band. I make no farther statements
now; but suffice it to say that my persecutions, for trying to show
them their errors, became of such a nature that I had to leave the
Latter Day Saints; and, as I rode on horseback out of Far West,
in June, 1838, the voice of God from heaven spake to me as I have
stated above[.]" (An Address to All Believers in Christ, by
David Whitmer, pages 27-28)
This statement by one of the Three Witnesses to the Book of Mormon
poses a real problem for Mormon apologists. Those who reject Whitmer's
statement that, "God spake to me again by his own voice from
the heavens, and told me to 'separate myself from among the Latter
Day Saints,'" are forced to conclude that one of the most important
witnesses to the divine authenticity of the Book of Mormon printed
a false account of God telling him to "separate" himself
from the Mormons. Significantly, although Whitmer still believed
in the Book of Mormon, he was convinced that Joseph Smith was a
false prophet and never returned to the Mormon Church.
However this may be, the fact that the Mormon leaders violated
the civil rights of their own people by driving out dissenters from
their midst caused many non-Mormons to conclude that they were dealing
with a very dangerous group. As they heard reports by those who
were driven out, they became increasingly fearful of the Mormons.
Legacy completely skirted around this important issue which contributed
to the conflict. Furthermore, absolutely nothing was said about
the secret band of Danites and the fear they created among those
who lived near the Mormons.
In addition, the film has a scene showing Lilburn W. Boggs, who
was governor of Missouri, issuing an "extermination order"
on October 27,1838. Governor Boggs wrote: "The Mormons must
be treated as enemies, and must be exterminated or driven from the
State if necessary, for the public peace." (The Mormon Experience:
A History of the Latter-day Saints, by Leonard J. Arrington and
Davis Bitton, 1979, page 44)
While it is true that Governor Boggs did issue such a deplorable
order, there is much more to the story. Actually, President Sidney
Rigdon, who was "set apart March 18, 1833, as first counselor
in the First Presidency by Joseph Smith" (see Essentials in
Church History, 1942, page 660) suggested that there could be "a
war of extermination" three months prior to the time Boggs
issued his order. On July 4, 1838, President Rigdon delivered a
very inflammatory speech. Mormon historian B. H. Roberts commented:
"This oration by Sidney Rigdon has always been severely criticized
as containing passages that were ill advised and vehemently bitter.
Especially those passages which threatened a war of extermination
upon mobs should they again arise to plague the saints." (History
of the Church, vol. 3, page 42, footnote)
An extract from Rigdon's speech is published in Roberts' Comprehensive
History of the Church, vol. 1, page 441. After speaking of the persecution
that church members had suffered, President Rigdon went on to say:
"'But from this day and this hour we will suffer it no more.
We take God and all the holy angels to witness, this day, that we
warn all men, in the name of Jesus Christ to come on us no more
for ever, from this hour we will bear it no more; our rights shall
no more be trampled on with impunity; the man, or the set of men
who attempt it, do it at the expense of there lives. And that mob
that comes on us to disturb us, it shall be between us and them
a war of extermination; for we will follow them until the last drop
of their blood is spilled; or else they will have to exterminate
us, for we will carry the seat of war to their own houses and their
own families, and one party or the other shall be uttedy destroyed....
We this day, then, proclaim ourselves free with a purpose and determination
that never can be broken, No, never! No, Never! No, never!'"
One page 443, of the same volume, B. H. Roberts acknowledged that
Joseph Smith himself approved of the speech:
"The unwisdom of the utterance has been quite generally recognized
by our writers, and by them responsibility for it has been placed
upon the rather fervid imagination of Sidney Rigdon, who delivered
the speech, and who quite generally is supposed to have been mainly
or wholly responsible for it. This is not true. The speech was carefully
prepared... and read by other presiding elders of the church before
its delivery. It immedately appeared in The Far West, a weekly newspaper...
and was also published... on the press of the Elders' Journal. Joseph
Smith in his journal speaks of it approvingly; and in the Elders'
Journal, of which he was the editor, and in the editorial columns
under his name, the speech is approvingly recommended to the saints.
In view of these facts, if the 'declaration' was of doubtful propriety,
and unwise and impolitic, responsibility for it rests not alone
on Sidney Rigdon, but upon the authorities of the church who approved
it, and the people who accepted it by their acclamation."
When Sidney Rigdon later fell into a state of apostasy, the other
Mormon leaders tried to blame him for their troubles in Missouri.
President Brigham Young went so far as to state: "Elder Rigdon
was the prime cause of our troubles in Missouri, by his fourth of
July oration." (Times and Seasons, vol. 5, page 667)
There can be no doubt that Joseph Smith and other Mormon leaders
made a serious mistake when they approved Rigdon's speech. This
speech undoubtedly helped trigger the violence that erupted in Missouri.
During the conflict that ensued Joseph Smith's Danites were engaged
in plundering and burning houses. Smith, however, denied the plundering
and asserted that the anti-Mormons "fired" their own houses
"and then reported to the authorities of the state that the
'Mormons' were burning and destroying all before them." (History
of the Church, vol. 3, pages 163-164) His brother Hyrum also charged
that the anti-Mormons, "not being able to incense the 'Mormons'
to commit crimes, they had recourse to this stratagem to set their
houses on fire... the 'Mormons' did not set them on fire..."
(Ibid., pages 408-409)
Unfortunately, neither Joseph nor Hyrum were telling the truth
about this matter. The evidence concerning the burning of houses
and plundering by the Mormons is irrefutable. Statements made by
faithful members of the church provide devastating evidence against
the statements made by Joseph and Hyrum Smith. For example, Benjamin
F. Johnson, a Danite, who later served on Joseph Smith's highly
secret Council of Fifty, commented:
"...I started... and fell into rank with a company of near
twenty mounted men... I soon learned our destination was to Taylor's
on Grand River, about nine miles above, where it was said arms and
ammunition were held for the use of the mob.... There were two men
with a number of women and children, and all affirmed that there
was nothing of the kind there.... our captain ordered a search in
the cornfields... which soon resulted in the discovery of arms and
ammunition and of their falsehoods. The females hastily took from
the houses what they could carry, and here I might say there was
almost a trial of my faith in my pity for our enemies... Among the
women was one, young married and apparently near her confinement,
and another with small children and not a wagon, and many miles
away from any of their friends, and snow had begun already... to
fall. My sympathies were drawn toward the women and children, but
I would in no degree let them deter me from duty. So while others
were pillaging for something to carry away, I was doing my best
to protect... the lives and comfort of the families who were dependent
on getting away upon horseback.... While others were doing the burning
and plunder, my mission was of mercy... Before noon we had set all
on fire and left upon a circuitous route towards home." (My
Life's Review, 1947, pp. 38-39)
Oliver Boardman Huntington, another faithful church member, who
was only fourteen years old at the time he was initiated into the
Danite order, wrote the following:
"Open hostilities had previously commenced on both sides,
by the mobs burning one or two houses.... it was my natural turn
to glory in excitement... I wished and desired to be in the midst
of the scene; and often in vain spent tears, implored my father
to let me go with the scouting parties.... At the time that Galeton
was to be burned, I pleaded with father to let me go; but to no
effect. On the appointed day I went to the top of the hill... and
cast my eyes in the direction of Galeton... and saw the smoke rising
towards Heaven, which filled me with ambition, the love of excitement,
tumult and something new.... The next day I went to Bishop Knights
and saw the plunder, and O what lots, I...heard them tell, in what
order they took the place... The store they burned, but the goods
were preserved." ("Oliver Boardman Huntington Journal,"
pages 31-32, typed copy, Utah State Historical Society)
Speaking of the Danites, D. Michael Quinn noted that, "As
of 4 September 1838, Danite John N. Sapp estimated their number
at 800-1,000." (The Mormon Hierarchy, page 479) Through his
meticulous research Quinn has identified about 230 of these Danites
by name (Ibid., pages 479-485). Quinn's book has some important
new information about the Danite band.
In our book, Mormonism: Shadow or Reality? pages 428- 450, we have
a great deal of material regarding the Danites and their nefarious
activities.
The film Legacy shows an attack on the Mormons by the Missourians
at Haun's Mill. According to Joseph Fielding Smith, who later became
president of the church, seventeen people were killed. (Essentials
in Church History, page 235) Two of the victims were boys under
ten years of age. Joseph Fielding Smith cited the History of Caldwell
County which said that an old man was wounded in the attack and
then "frightfully mangled." It was reported that he was
mutilated with "a rude sword, or corn knife." (Essentials
in Church History, page 235) On the same page, Smith spoke of "the
diabolical deeds" of the members of the militia. He did, however,
acknowledge on page 234 that "the executioners were principally
seeking for the men, and let most of the women escape."
There is, of course, no way that a person can justify this bloody
deed. Dr. Quinn was very disturbed by the "brutality of the
anti-Mormon" militia that "attacked the LDS settlement
at Haun's Mill," but he put the matter into perspective by
showing that the action of the Danites at the Battle of Crooked
River led to the slaughter at Haun's Mill:
"In the skirmishes that both sides called 'battles,' Mormons
used deadly force without reluctance. Benjamin F. Johnson wrote
that Danite leader (and future apostle) Lyman Wight told his men
to pray concerning their Missouri enemies: 'That God would Damn
them & give us pow[e]r to Kill them.' Likewise, at the beginning
of the Battle of Crooked River... Apostle David W. Patten (a Danite
captain with the code-name 'Fear Not') told his men: 'Go ahead,
boys; rake them down.' The highest ranking Mormon charged with murder
for obeying this order was Apostle Parley P. Pratt who allegedly
took the careful aim of a sniper in killing one Missourian and then
severely wounding militiaman Samuel Tarwater. This was after Apostle
Patten received a fatal stomach wound. In their fury at the sight
of their fallen leader, some of the Danites mutilated the unconscious
Tarwater 'with their swords striking him lengthwise in the mouth,
cutting off his under teeth, and breaking his lowerjaw; cutting
off his cheeks... and leaving him [for] dead.' He survived to press
charges against Pratt for attempted murder....
"A generally unacknowledged dimension of both the extermination
order and the Haun's Mill massacre, however, is that they resulted
from Mormon actions in the Battle of Crooked River. Knowingly or
not, Mormons had attacked state troops, and this had a cascade effect.
Local residents feared annihilation: 'We know not the hour or minute
we will be laid in ashes,' a local minister and county clerk wrote
the day after the battle. 'For God's sake give us assistance as
quick as possible.' Correspondingly, the attack on state troops
weakened the position of Mormon friends in Missouri's militia and
government. Finally, upon receiving news of the injuries and death
of state troops at Crooked River, Governor Boggs immediately drafted
his extermination order on 27 October 1838 because the Mormons 'have
made war upon the people of this state.' Worse, the killing of one
Missourian and mutllation of another while he was defenseless at
Crooked River led to the mad-dog revenge by Missourians in the slaughter
at Haun's Mill." (The Mormon Hierarchy, pages 99-100)
From the above it seems obvious that the Mormon prophet Joseph
Smith made a very serious mistake when he approved Sidney Rigdon's
speech which threatened that if the Mormons were attacked, there
would be "a war of extermination; for we will follow them until
the last drop of their blood is spilled; or else they will have
to exterminate us..." Although Bogg's order to the troops was
similar to the Rigdon speech in that he incorporated the word "exterminated,"
when it came right down to it, the Mormons were offered a flag of
truce.
John Taylor, the third president of the Mormon Church, said that
when Joseph Smith was finally pinned down by the militia (he used
the word "mob"), Smith acted like he did not want the
conflict to end:
"Some 25 years ago, in Far West... there were not more than
about 200 of us in the place.... Joseph... then led us out to the
prairie facing the mob and placed us in position; and the first
thing we knew a flag of truce was seen coming towards us.... Joseph
Smith, our leader, then sent word back... said he, 'Tell your General
to withdraw his troops or I will send them to hell.' I thought that
was a pretty bold stand to take, as we only numbered about 200 to
their 3,500..." (Journal of Discourses, vol. 23, page 37)
Joseph Smith's bold attitude was undoubtedly just for show, for
John Corrill related that, "Smith appeared to be much alarmed,
and told me to beg like a dog for peace..." (A Brief History
of the Church of Christ of Latter Day Saints, by John Corrill, 1839,
page 41) Reed Peck confirmed Corrill's statement (see our book,
The Mormon Kingdom, vol. 1 page 75). This book contains a great
deal of information regarding the war in Missouri and other confrontations
the early Mormons had with their neighbors.
Although some Mormons were massacred at Haun's Mill in Missouri,
members of the church got their revenge in 1857 when some people
from Missouri passed through Utah. In the book, The Mormon Experience,
written by former Mormon Church Historian Leonard J. Arrington and
Davis Bitton, we read the following about the Mountain Meadows Massacre:
"The one exception was the Francher train, a company of overland
immigrants from Arkansas and Missouri that passed through Utah in
August 1857 just when Mormon tempers and fears were at a fever pitch.
In a remote, grassy valley in the south of Utah this company was
virtually annihilated by a combined force of Mormon militia and
Indians." (The Mormon Experience, page 167)
The authors go on to point out that the Francher train had "a
few hangers-on known as Missouri wildcats, who... made profane,
provocative boasts that they had participated in the Haun's Mill
Massacre... Some 120 persons were killed by Mormon militiamen and
Indians working together." (Ibid., pp. 167-68)
Like the early Mormons in Missouri, the people in the Francher
train were offered a flag of truce. Unfortunately, however, these
early Mormons were far more treacherous than the Missourians who
allowed the Mormons to leave the state. In this case the flag was
only used as a means to get the people to surrender their arms so
they could be slaughtered. Joseph Fielding Smith admitted that,
"It was determined by those making the attack that no emigrant
should live who could tell the tale.... [John D.] Lee induced the
emigrants to surrender under the promise of protection and conveyance
to a place of safety. They were led to a place where the Indians
were in ambush, and at a given signal a volley of shots rang out,
both Indians and white men participating in the outrage." (Essentials
in Church History, page 516)
In her book, The Mountain Meadows Massacre, the noted Mormon scholar
Juanita Brooks stated that although the Mormon prophet Brigham Young
did not order the massacre, he "was accessory after the fact,
in that he knew what had happened, and how and why it happened.
Evidence of this is abundant and unmistakable, and from the most
impeccable Mormon sources." (The Mountain Meadows Massacre,
1970, page 219) Brooks also reveals that Brigham Young protected
the perpetrators from the law.
The journal of Wilford Woodruff, who later became the 4th president
of the Mormon Church, makes it clear that while President Brigham
Young publicly condemned the massacre, he actually believed that
God approved of the diabolical deed:
"We visited the Mountain Meadow Monumentput up at the burial
place of 120 persons... The pile of stone was about 12 feet high...
A wooden Cross was placed on top with the following words: Vengence
is mine and I will repay saith the Lord. President Young said it
should be Vengence is mine and I have taken a little." (Wilford
Woodruff's Journal, 1833- 1898, vol. 5, page 577)
Trouble In Nauvoo
After the Mormons left Missouri they founded a city in Illinois
which Joseph Smith called Nauvoo. Unfortunately, the people that
moved to Nauvoo began to have serious trouble with their neighbors.
One of the practices that really offended outsiders was the practice
of polygamy. On July 12, 1843, Joseph Smith set forth a revelation
which made it clear that he and other church members should enter
into plural marriage and that the doctrine was very important for
their salvation. Although Mormons no longer practice plural marriage,
the current edition of the Doctrine and Covenants still has the
revelation on polygamy. Section 132, verses 61-62, contains the
following:
"And again, as pertaining to the law of the priesthood --
if any man espouse a virgin, and desire to espouse another, and
the first give her consent, and if he espouses the second... he
cannot commit adultery... And if he have ten virgins given unto
him by this law, he cannot commit adultery, for they belong to him,
and they are given unto him; therefore is he justified."
Mormon scholar Allen Roberts pointed out that in Legacy there has
been an attempt to sanitize the history of the church:
"The recent church movie, Legacy, shown in the Joseph Smith
Memorial Building... is an example of the church approach. It portrays
the life of a real historical figure, Mary Elizabeth Rawlins Lightner,
and uses quotes from her actual journal. She befriends the prophet,
converts to Mormonism and eventually marries a young Mormon man.
What the movie doesn't tell is that in 1842, after repeated propositions,
she became one of Joseph Smith's polygamist wives." (Private
Eye Weekly, October 20, 1993, page 12)
Richard S. Van Wagoner, a Mormon who is an authority on polygamy,
gives this information:
"Mary Elizabeth Rollins, married to non-Mormon Adam Lightner
since 11 August 1835, was one of the first women to accept the 'celestial
marriage' teachings of the prophet. 'He was commanded to take me
for a wife,' she declared... 'I was his, before I came here,' she
added... Brigham Young secretly sealed the two in February 1842
when Mary was eight months pregnant with her son, George Algernon
Lightner. She lived with Adam Lightner until his death in Utah many
years later. In her 1880 letter to Emmeline B. Wells, Mary explained:
'I could tell you why I stayed with Mr. Lightner.... I did just
as Joseph told me to do, as he knew what troubles I would have to
contend with.'" (Mormon Polygamy:A History, 1989, page 43)
It seems clear that there was more than just polygamy involved
here; Joseph Smith had obviously taken another man's wife. D. Michael
Quinn made it clear that Mary was not the only married woman Joseph
Smith took: "These entries refer to Zinda D. Huntington (Jacobs)
and Mary Elizabeth Rollins (Lightner). Both were plural wives of
Joseph Smith despite their continued marriages to other men."
(The Mormon Hierarchy, page 401)
Later in Utah, Jedediah M. Grant, second counselor to President
Brigham Young, gave a sermon in the Tabernacle in which he confirmed
that Joseph Smith asked for other men's wives:
"When the family organization was revealed from heaven --
the patriarchal order of God, and Joseph began, on the right and
on the left, to add to his family, what a quaking there was in
Israel. Says one brother to another, 'Joseph says all covenants
are done away, and none are binding but the new covenants; now
suppose Joseph should come and say he wanted your wife, what would
you say to that?' 'I would tell him to go to hell.' This was the
spirit of many in the early days of this Church....
"What would a man of God say, who felt aright, when Joseph
asked him for his money? He would say, 'Yes, and I wish I had
more to help to build up the kingdom of God.' Or if he came and
said, 'I want your wife?' '0 yes,' he would say, 'here she is,
there are plenty more.'.... Did the Prophet Joseph want every
man's wife he asked for? He did not... If such a man of God should
come to me and say, 'I want your gold and silver, or your wives,'
I should say, 'Here they are, I wish I had more to give you, take
all I have got.'" (Journal of Discourses, vol. 2, pages 13-14)
Since most people who lived in Illinois in the 1840's were very
opposed to polygamy and adultery, Joseph Smith's new teaching regarding
"the patriarchal order of God" was bound to cause a great
deal of conflict. Despite the fact that Smith attempted to hide
these strange practices and even publicly denied them, leaks occurred
and the secret became known. Just about a month before his death
Joseph Smith was charged with adultery. The following appears in
Smith's History:
"A. A. Lathrop came to my clerk, Dr. Richards, and told him
an officer was on his way with an attachment for him, and that the
grand jury had found a bill against me for adultery, on the testimony
of William Law; he had come from Carthage in two hours and thirty
minutes to bring the news." (History of the Church, vol. 6,
page 403)
Not surprisingly, the film Legacy completely glossed over the reason
Joseph Smith was murdered and the Mormons were forced to leave Illinois.
As noted above, the film did show the wicked anti-Mormon mob destroying
the Mormon printing press in Independence, Missouri. What the film
failed to show was the fact that Joseph Smith ordered the destruction
of a printing press in Nauvoo in a futile attempt to cover up his
own questionable behavior.
In addition to the problems regarding polygamy and adultery, Joseph
Smith built up a large militia which terrified the non-Mormons in
Illinois. D. Michael Quinn stated that, "the Nauvoo Legion
was no ordinary militia. By 1842 the legion had 2,000 troops, by
far the largest single militia in Illinois. Within two years, the
Nauvoo Legion had nearly 3,000 soldiers. By comparison the U.S.
army had less than 8,500 soldiers that year." (The Mormon Hierarchy,
page 106)
A careful look at Joseph Smith's actions in Nauvoo certainly raises
a question of whether he was becoming more concerned about gaining
political and military power than he was about spiritual matters.
For example, in 1844 the secret Council of Fifty decided to run
Joseph Smith for the presidency of the United States. Just a short
time before this, Joseph Smith had stated that he did not want to
participate in politics: "...but as my feelings revolt at the
idea of having anything to do with politics, I have declined, in
every instance, having anything to do on the subject.... I wish
to be let alone, that I may attend strictly to the spiritual welfare
of the Church." (History of the Church, vol. 5, page 259)
Even though Joseph Smith made this statement in 1843, in 1844 he
announced that he was a candidate for the presidency of the United
States. The elders of the church were actually called to electioneer
for Smith. Brigham Young stated: "It is now time to have a
President of the United States. Elders will be sent to preach the
Gospel and electioneer." (History of the Church, vol. 6, page
322)
Joseph Smith seems to have desired to lead a large army, for he
prepared a "Petition to the Senate and House of Representatives
of the United States, dated 26th March, asking the privilege of
raising 100,000 men to extend protection to persons wishing to settle
Oregon and other portions of the territory of the United States..."
(History of the Church, vol. 6, page 282) In this document we find
the following:
"Section 1. Be it ordained... that Joseph Smith... is hereby
authorized and empowered to raise a company of one hundred thousand
armed volunteers...
"Sec. 2. And be it further ordained that if any person or
persons shall hinder or attempt to hinder or molest the said Joseph
Smith from executing his designs in raising said volunteers...
[he] shall be punished by a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars...
or by hard labor on some public work not exceeding two years,
or both..." (History of the Church, vol. 6, page 277)
D. Michael Quinn pointed out that the "Council of Fifty"
sanctioned this "extraordinary proposal." Obviously, this
bizarre petition was rejected by Congress. In any case, this request
would lead one to wonder just why Joseph Smith would want such a
large army. The fact that his secret Council of Fifty was involved
in the matter certainly raises some interesting questions. Why would
he want an army almost twelve times larger than the U.S. Army?
A non-Mormon newspaper, The Warsaw Signal, printed the following:
"How military these people are becoming! Every thing they say
or do seems to breathe the spirit of military tactics. Their prophet
appears, on all great occasions, in his sp[l]endid regimental dress[,]
signs his name Lieut. General, and more titles are to be found in
the Nauvoo Legion, than any one book on military tactics can produce...
Truly fighting must, be a part of the creed of these Saints!"
(Warsaw Signal, July 21, 1841)
To make the situation even worse, Joseph Smith went so far as to
have himself ordained "King." The noted Mormon scholar
Kenneth W. Godfrey stated:
"Antagonism toward the Mormon Prophet was further incited
when it was correctly rumored, that he had been ordained 'King over
the Immediate House of Israel' by the Council of Fifty. This action
was wrongly interpreted by non- Mormons to mean that he was going
to attempt to overthrow the United States government by force....
his kingly ordination only incensed the populace, and his untimely
death became even more inevitable." (Brigham Young University
Studies, Winter 1968, pp. 212-213)
Dr. Quinn's book contains some revealing information concerning
this matter:
"Two days after this general conference Smith became Mormonism's
theocratic king. The kingdom's clerk William Clayton wrote that
during the 11 April 1844 meeting 'was prest. Joseph chosen as
our Prophet, Priest and King by Hosannas.' Clayton did not describe
what happened immediately after this secret sustaining vote by
the Council of Fifty.... a later revelation to the Council of
Fifty affirmed that God called Smith 'to be a Prophet, Seer and
Revelator to my Church and Kingdom; and to be a King and Ruler
over Israel.'...
"As one researcher notes, admitting only three gentiles to
the Council of Fifty was certainly 'a poor representation' on
Smith's part 'if he expected the Council soon to be in control
of the world.'... However, in functional terms this non-Mormon
participation was an unparalleled development, because they became
privy to Mormonism's greatest secret.... the three non-Mormons
voted for and witnessed Smith's ordination as 'King, Priest and
Ruler over Israel on the Earth.' Smith believed that no one, not
even non-Mormons, would disclose this event because he had administered
a secrecy oath to each.
"The oath of secrecy began at the preliminary meeting on
10 March when Smith's diary stated: 'Joseph required perfect secrecy
of them.' By June disaffected members disclosed that: 'For the
time being, this was to remain a perfect secret until Cod should
reveal to the contrary,' and they claimed that Smith 'swore them
all to present secrecy, under the penalty of death!'...
"Official minutes described the Council of Fifty's initiation
ceremony as 'the Charge, the name, & Key word, and the Constitution,
and Penalty.' George Q. Cannon, the council's later recorder,
'read the minutes of the 1st organization which did sanction the
"penalty."'... Mention of a "Penalty" in the
Council's official minutes corroborates the 1844 claim of dissenters
that the Fifty had an obligation of 'secrecy, under the penalty
of death!'...
"The Daughters of Zion (Danites) of Missouri also had passwords
and a penal oath of secrecy, and former Danites accounted for
one-third of the men Smith admitted into the Council of fifty."
(The Mormon Hierarchy, pages 124,128- 129)
Unfortunately for Joseph Smith, William Law, who had served in
the First Presidency of the church, turned against him. D. Michael
Quinn reported:
"On 10 May 1844 Smith's former counselor William Law and
his fellow religious dissenters distributed a prospectus for their
newspaper, the Nauvoo Expositor. It advocated repeal of Nauvoo's
charter and proposed to reveal 'gross moral imperfections' in
Nauvoo. This was nothing new....
"However, there was a disturbing reference in the prospectus
about Nauvoo's 'SELF-CONSTITUTED MONARCH.' If Smith doubted that
this vague statement hinted at betrayal by one of the Fifty, he
did not want to risk even the possibility of disclosure.... he
took no action to forcibly suppress the pre-announced publication
of the Expositor's first issue the next month. Smith no longer
seemed greatly concerned that the dissident publication would
reveal secrets about his polygamy and would advocate repeal of
Nauvoo's charter. Such publicity did not justify his taking the
risk of attacking freedom of the press.
"However, he got a shock when the first issue of Nauvoo Expositor
appeared on 7 June. Law and associates proclaimed: 'We will not
acknowledge any man as king or lawgiver.' The first issue promised
that details of all its allegations would appear in the next edition....
"Smith realized that Council of Fifty members had betrayed
him. He could not allow the Expositor to publish the secret international
negotiations masterminded by Mormonism's earthly king.... The
Nauvoo Expositor demonstrated that one or more members had violated
their 'charge' and oath of secrecy, and Smith no longer trusted
the Council of Fifty as an institution. Without that trust his
grand designs for the Kingdom of God collapsed.
"On 22 June 1844 Smith told the Clerk of the Kingdom that
he could burn all the records of the Council of Fifty. The council's
King, Priest, and Ruler over Israel on Earth did not care what
William Clayton did with the Fifty's minutes, as long as they
did not fall into the hands of the church's enemies." (The
Mormon Hierarchy, pages 138-140)
Joseph Smith finally concluded that the Nauvoo Expositor must be
destroyed. While Smith was very worried that the Expositor would
disclose the secrets of the Council of Fifty, he was also concerned
about the newspaper revealing more information regarding his secret
practice of polygamy. Although Joseph Smith and other Mormon leaders
emphatically proclaimed that the charges concerning plural marriage
were a lie, eight years after Smith's death the church published
the revelation on polygamy. The publication of this revelation proved
beyond all doubt that the statements in the Expositor were true.
Thus it is clear that the Expositor was condemned on the basis of
false testimony given by Joseph and Hyrum Smith. A photographic
reprint of the Nauvoo Expositor is available from Utah Lighthouse
Ministry.
In a synopsis of the proceedings of the Nauvoo City Council we
find the following:
"Mayor [Joseph Smith] said, if he had a City Council who
felt as he did, the establishment (referring to the Nauvoo Expositor)
would be declared a nuisance before night...
"Councilor Hyrum Smith [Joseph's brother] believed the best
way was to smash the press and pi the type." (History of
the Church, vol. 6, pp. 441-445)
The Nauvoo City Council blindly followed Joseph Smith's wishes
and ordered the press destroyed. The following is recorded in Joseph
Smith's History under the date of June10, 1844:
"The Council passed an ordinance declaring the Nauvoo Expositor
a nuisance, and also issued an order to me to abate the said nuisance.
I immediately ordered the Marshal to destroy it without delay...
"About 8 p.m., the Marshal returned and reported that he
had removed the press, type, printed paper, and fixtures into
the street, and destroyed them." (History of the Church,
vol. 6, page 432)
Charles A. Foster, one of the publishers of the Expositor, wrote
the following in a letter dated June 11,1844:
"Mr. Sharp: -- I hasten to inform you of the unparalleled
outrage, perpetrated upon our rights... a company consisting of
some 200 men, armed and equipped, with muskets, swords, pistols,
bowie knives, sledge hammers, &c, assisted by a crowd of several
hundred minions... marched to the building, and breaking open
the doors with a sledge hammer, commenced the work of destruction
and desperation.
"They tumbled the press and materials into the street, and
set fire to them, and demolished the machinery with sledge hammer,
and injured the building very materially. We made no resistance;
but looked on and felt revenge, but leave it for the public to
avenge this climax of insult and injury." (Warsaw Signal,
June 12,1844)
Mormon writer William E. Berrett declared:
"The destruction of the Nauvoo Expositor... proved to be the
spark which ignited all the smoldering fires of opposition into
one great flame.... It offered... a legal excuse to get the Prophet
and other leaders into their hands. The cry that the 'freedom of
the press' was being violated, united the factions seeking the overthrow
of the Saints as perhaps nothing else would have done." (The
Restored Church, page 255)
The Mormon historian B. H. Roberts seemed willing to concede that
Joseph Smith was acting outside the law when he ordered the Expositor
destroyed: "The legality of the action of the Mayor and City
Council was, of course, questionable, though some sought to defend
it on legal grounds; but it must be conceded that neither proof
nor argument of legality are convincing. On the grounds of expediency
or necessity the action is more defensible." (History of the
Church, Introduction to vol. 6, page XXXVIII)
D. Michael Quinn told what happened in the days which followed:
"At midnight on 22 June, Smith, his brother Hyrum, Willard
Richards, and bodyguard Porter Rockwell slipped quietly out of
Nauvoo and crossed the river... The prophet's departure appalled
the faithful Mormons he left behind.... Even the secret elite
of Mormonism felt deserted. Reynolds Cahoon and Lorenzo D. Wasson,
both members of the Council of Fifty, accused Smith of cowardice
for leaving Nauvoo. He responded, 'If my life is of no value to
my friends it is of none to myself,' and he returned to Nauvoo
to stand trial in Carthage, Illinois.
"Smith was broken in spirit when he entered Carthage Jail
charged with treason....
"To Smith, the kingdom was dead... a trusted Mormon gave
him final verification of treachery in the Council of Fifty. The
man reported that dissident Wilson Law was saying that 'the kingdom
referred to [in Daniel] was already set up and that he [Joseph
Smith] was the king over it.'
"The morning of 27 July [sic], Smith sent an order... to
Major-General Jonathan Dunham to lead the Nauvoo Legion in a military
attack on Carthage... Dunham realized that such an assault by
the Nauvoo Legion would result in two blood baths -- one in Carthage
and another when anti-Mormons (and probably the Illinois militia)
retaliated by laying siege to Nauvoo for insurrection. To avoid
civil war and the destruction of Nauvoo's population, Dunham refused
to obey the order and did not notify Smith of his decision....
"About 5 p.m. on Thursday, 27 June 1844, more than 250 men
approached the Carthage Jail.... Within moments three prisoners
were desperately trying to secure the upper room's door with bare
hands and wooden canes against a cursing mob shooting randomly
inside. Joseph Smith fired back with a six-shooter pistol at the
attackers in the doorway, wounding three of them.... The man the
murderous vigilantes knew as a church president, mayor, militia
commander, U.S. presidential candidate, and Master Mason leaped
out the second-floor window shouting, 'O Lord my God!'
"Mormonism's king was dead." (The Mormon Hierarchy,
pages 140-141)
As noted above, Legacy fails to deal with any of the problems that
led to the conflict in Nauvoo. While Legacy is a very exciting film,
it is a distortion of the true history of early Mormonism. It is,
in fact, nothing but a propaganda film created specifically to bring
the uninformed into the Mormon Church and to strengthen the testimonies
of those who are already in the church.
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