When the Lord appeared to Joseph Smith and manifested unto him a
knowledge pertaining to the coming forth of the Book of Mormon and the
work of the last days, Satan came also with his power and tempted
Joseph. It is written in the book of Job, "Now there was a day when
the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan
came also among them." In the very commencement of this Work, the
Prophet Joseph Smith was called upon to contend face to face with the
powers of darkness by spiritual manifestations, and open visions, as
well as with men in the flesh, stirred up by the same spirit of the
adversary to edge up his way and destroy him from the earth, and
annihilate the work which he was about to commence. He thus describes
the incident:
"In the spring of 1820, after I had retired into the place where I had
previously designed to go, having looked around me, and finding myself
alone, I kneeled down and began to offer up the desires of my heart to
God. I had scarcely done so, when immediately I was seized upon by
some power which entirely overcame me, and had such astonishing
influence over me as to bind my tongue so that I could not speak.
Thick darkness gathered around me, and it seemed to me for a time as
if I were doomed to sudden destruction. But, exerting all my powers to
call upon God to deliver me out of the power of this enemy which had
seized upon me, and at the very moment when I was ready to sink into
despair and abandon myself to destruction—not to an imaginary ruin,
but to the power of some actual being from the unseen world, who has
such marvelous power as I had never before felt in any being—just
at this moment of great alarm, I saw a pillar of light exactly over my
head, above the brightness of the sun, which descended gradually until
it fell upon me. It no sooner appeared than I found myself delivered
from the enemy which held me bound. When the light rested upon me
I saw two Personages, whose brightness and glory defy all description,
standing above me in air. One of them spake unto me, calling me by
name and said, pointing to the other—This is My Beloved Son. Hear
Him!"
It was also peculiar in the history of the age, that just at the time
that God was revealing unto his servant Joseph to raise up men to bear
testimony of the principles of the Gospel in its fulness and
simplicity, Satan was at work stirring up the hearts of the children
of men to a species of religious excitement. There were in many parts
of the country strange manifestations, great camp and other protracted
meetings were assembled together to worship under the various orders
denominated Methodists, Campbellites, Presbyterians, Baptists,
Unitarians, etc., among whom were manifested the development of a
spirit which deprived men of their strength; they would faint away,
or, they would manifest a variety of contortions of countenance. There
was introduced into the Western States a phenomenon called the jerks;
persons under the influence of religious fanaticism would jerk
seemingly enough to tear them to pieces.
When the Church was organized, persons came into it bringing along
some of these enthusiastic notions, individuals who professed to have
revelations on every subject, and who were ready to banish every moral
principle under the guidance of false spirits. Joseph the Prophet had
also to learn by experience, and to teach the Elders and the early
members of the Church, how they should judge of the manifestation of
spirits. (Book of Doctrine and Covenants, Sec. 17, Par. 7.)
"Wherefore, it shall come to pass, that if you behold a spirit
manifested that you cannot understand, and you receive not that
spirit, ye shall ask of the Father in the name of Jesus; and if he
give not unto you that spirit, then you may know that it is not of
God. And it shall be given unto you, power over that spirit; and you
shall proclaim against that spirit with a loud voice that it is not
of God—Not with railing accusation, that ye be not overcome, neither
with boasting nor rejoicing, lest you be seized therewith," and
refers to Hiram Page who began to get revelations through the medium
of a black stone, certain characters appearing on that stone which he
wrote down.
Notes concerning false revelations, apostasies.
Joseph Smith in his history wrote thus:
"To our great grief, however, we soon found that Satan had been lying
in wait to deceive, and seeking whom he might devour. Brother Hiram
Page had got in his possession a certain stone, by which he had
obtained revelations concerning the upbuilding of Zion, the order of
the Church, &c., &c., all of which were entirely at variance with the
order of God's house, as laid down in the New Testament, as well as
our late revelations. As a Conference had been appointed for the first
day of September, I thought it wisdom not to do much more than to
converse with the brethren on the subject, until the Conference should
meet. Finding, however, that many, especially the Whitmer family and
Oliver Cowdery, were believing much in the things set forth by this
stone, we thought best to inquire of the Lord concerning so important
a matter; and before Conference convened, we received the revelation
to Oliver Cowdery given at Fayette, New York, September, 1830, in the
4th paragraph of which the Lord says: "And again, thou shalt
take thy brother, Hyrum Page, between him and thee alone, and tell him
that those things which he hath written from that stone are not of me
and that Satan deceived him; For, behold, these things have not been
appointed unto him, neither shall anything be appointed unto any of
this church contrary to the church covenants. For all things must be
done in order, and by common consent in the church, by the prayer of
faith."
Joseph's history continues:
"At length our Conference assembled. The subject of the stone
previously mentioned, was discussed, and after considerable
investigation, brother Page, as well as the whole Church who were
present, renounced the said stone, and all things connected therewith,
much to our mutual satisfaction and happiness."
Some of the Elders journeyed to the westward from the state of New
York, and built up Branches in the State of Ohio. Elders Oliver
Cowdery and P. P. Pratt visited Sidney Rigdon who resided in Mentor,
Geauga County, and was famous in that country as a reformed Baptist
minister, more familiarly known as Campbellites. He had preached the
doctrine of baptism for the remission of sins, the regular Baptist
church having a different view of the subject, for they considered
"baptism as an outward sign of an inward grace," and that in order to
be a candidate for baptism he must have received a change of heart,
changed from a heart of stone to one of flesh; he was required to go
into the congregation and formally renounce the world, the flesh and
the devil, having given evidence that he was a new creature and was
prepared for baptism. But the Reformed Baptists held the doctrine
which I believe was first preached in Ohio, by Sidney Rigdon, that a
man must reform, that repentance was simply a reformation, and the
moment that repentance was resolved upon, the candidate was ready for
baptism; and so far their notion appeared to be an improvement upon
the general idea entertained, and consonant with the Bible view of it,
as it was laid down by the Savior and his Apostles. But here they
stopped, and did not administer the laying on of hands for the gift of
the Holy Ghost, and what was further, they contended there was no need
of it, that it was all done away, and that the written word was all
the spirit there was.
When the Elders waited on Sidney Rigdon and presented to him the Book
of Mormon, teaching him the principle of laying on of hands for the
reception of the Holy Ghost, he received it, as did several hundred
members of his church, and members of other churches in that vicinity,
who were baptized in a few weeks. In a few days Elders Oliver Cowdery,
P. P. Pratt, and Ziba Patterson, passed on westward, as their mission
directed them to the western boundaries of the State of Missouri.
Sidney Rigdon took a journey to the east, as did Edward Partridge for
the purpose of visiting the Prophet, and these strange spirits of
which we have already spoken, began to manifest themselves in the
churches and Branches which had been built up.
There was at this time in Kirtland, a society that had undertaken to
have a community of property; it has sometimes been denominated the
Morley family, as there was a number of them located on a farm owned
by Captain Isaac Morley. These persons had been baptized, but had not
yet been instructed in relation to their duties. A false spirit
entered into them, developing their singular, extravagant, and wild ideas. They had a meeting at the farm, and among them was a negro
known generally as Black Pete, who became a revelator. Others also
manifested wonderful developments; they could see angels, and letters
would come down from heaven, they said, and they would be put through
wonderful unnatural distortions. Finally on one occasion, Black Pete
got sight of one of those revelations carried by a black angel, he
started after it, and ran off a steep wash bank twenty-five feet high,
passed through a tree top into the Chagrin River beneath. He came out
with a few scratches, and his ardor somewhat cooled.
Joseph Smith came to Kirtland, and taught that people in relation to
their error. He showed them that the Spirit of God did not bind men
nor make them insane, and that the power of the adversary which had
been manifested in many instances was visible even from that cause,
for persons under its influence became helpless, and were bound hand
and foot as in chains, being as immovable as a stick of timber. When
Joseph came to instruct these Saints in relation to the true Spirit,
and the manner of determining the one from the other, in a short time
a number of those who had been influenced by those foul
manifestations, apostatized. Among the number was Wycom Clark; he got
a revelation that he was to be the prophet—that he was the true
revelator; and himself, Northrop Sweet and four other individuals
retired from the Church, and organized the "Pure Church of Christ," as
they called it, composed of six members, and commenced having
meetings, and preaching, but that was the extent of the growth of this
early schism. John Noah, another of this class, assumed to be a
prophet, and in consequence thereof was expelled from the church.
Among the early baptisms in Northern Ohio, was a Methodist minister by
the name of Ezra Booth. He was present when the Elders first received
the ordination of the High Priesthood. They met together in June,
1831, in a log schoolhouse in Kirtland, a room about eighteen feet by
twenty. While they were there, the manifestation of the power of God
being on Joseph, he set apart some of the Elders to the High
Priesthood. Ezra Booth was bound, and his countenance was distorted,
and numbers of the brethren looked at him, and thought it was a
wonderful manifestation of the power of God, but to their
astonishment, Joseph came forward and rebuked the foul spirit, and
commanded it to depart, in consequence of which Booth was relieved,
and many of the brethren were greatly tried at such a singular
treatment by the prophet of these wonderful manifestations of power.
Others had visions. Lyman Wight bore testimony that he saw the face of
the Savior.
The Priesthood was conferred on a number of Elders, and thirty were
selected to take a mission to the western boundaries of Missouri, and
travel and preach two and two by the way, traveling without purse or
scrip. They did so, building up churches. Joseph was required to
travel by water, or at a more rapid rate to reach there, to meet the
brethren and hold a Conference in the land of Zion. It was only a
short time after the return from this mission, that Ezra Booth
apostatized as did Jacob Scott, Symons Rider, Eli Johnson, and a number
of others. The spirit of apostasy was little known, but when these men
apostatized they became more violent, more cruel, and manifested
a greater spirit of persecution than any other enemies. What seemed
singular, Ezra Booth had been brought into the Church through the
manifestation of a miracle. The wife of Father John Johnson had been
afflicted with the rheumatism, so as to be unable to raise her arm and
hand for two years. Her husband had believed the work, and she also
was believing. She went to Joseph Smith the Prophet to have him
administer to her, Booth accompanied them, for he was well acquainted
with the family, and the condition of Mrs. Johnson. When the Elders
laid their hands upon her, she was instantly healed, so that she could
use her arm and hand as well as ever she could previously. Booth knew
this to be an instantaneous cure, and soon after witnessing this
miracle, he was baptized, and ordained an Elder. He having formerly
been a Methodist minister, commenced preaching the Gospel without
purse or scrip, and he did so until he found (using a common
expression), it did not pay. Under these circumstances he apostatized.
While he was in apostasy he searched his cranium for some means to
justify himself and published a series of lying letters in the Ohio
Star, a paper printed in Revenna. These nine letters had been
republished several times as evidence against "Mormonism;" and his
apostasy culminated in collecting a mob who tarred and feathered
Joseph Smith, and inflicted upon his family the loss of one of its
number at Hyrum, Portage County, Ohio. Joseph Smith was occupying the
room of a house brother Johnson was living in, at the same time; it
was a two story building, had steps in front. The mob surrounded the
house, the twins being afflicted with measles, Joseph was lying upon a
trundle bed with one of them. The mob rushed in, gathered up Joseph
while in his bed, took him out in his night clothes, and carried him
out on to the top of the steps. Joseph got a foot at liberty and
kicked one of the men, and knocked him down off the steps, and the
print of his head and shoulders were visible on the ground in the
morning. Warren Waste, who was the strongest man in the western
reserve considered himself perfectly able to handle Joseph alone, but
when they got hold of him, Waste cried out, "do not let him touch the
ground, or he will run over the whole of us." Waste suggested in
carrying him to cross his legs, for they said that would make it
easier for the Prophet, but that was done in consequence of the severe
pain it would give to the small of the back. He was daubed with tar,
feathered, and choked, and aquafortis poured into his mouth. Dr.
Dennison had been employed to perform a surgical operation, but he
declined when the time came to operate. The liquid they poured into
his mouth was so powerful, that it killed the grass where some of it
had been scattered on the ground. Joseph is reported by the mob to
have said, be merciful, when they told him to call upon his God for
mercy. They immediately, as he began to pray, heard an alarm which
made them think they were about to be surprised, and left suddenly.
Sidney Rigdon, who resided nearby, had been dragged by the heels out
of his bed at the same time, and his body stripped and a coat of tar
and feathers applied. The next morning he was crazy, his head greatly
inflamed and lacerated. Joseph found his way in from the light of the
house, the mob having abandoned him. While he was engaged in getting
off the tar by the application of grease, soap, and other materials,
Philemon Duzette, the father of our celebrated drummer, came there, and seeing the Prophet in this condition, took it as an
evidence of the truth of "Mormonism," and was baptized. These
circumstances exposed the life of the child, the measles struck in and
caused its death, and the whole of this persecution was got up through
the influence of those apostates; and it made it necessary to keep up
a constant watch lest some violence should be repeated. Luke Johnson
informed us that Warren Waste was afterwards a cripple, rendered so by
weakness in the small of the back, and Dr. Dennison died in the Ohio
Penitentiary where he was incarcerated for procuring an abortion,
which caused death; Joseph soon after located in Kirtland. In Kirtland
there were manifestations of evil spirits in high places, which might
have been considered more dangerous than the manifestations in the
early establishment of the Church. Sidney Rigdon, on one occasion got
up to preach, and commenced by saying that the Church and kingdom was
rent from them and given to another people. Joseph was absent, when he
came home he found Sidney almost like a mad man. He labored with him
and with the Church, and finally succeeded in convincing him that he
was under the influence of a false spirit. A man from the State of New
York by the name of Hawley, stated that while he was working in his
field, barefoot, the word of the Lord came to him, saying that he
should start on the instant, and not stop to put on his shoes. He came
six hundred miles to Kirtland, and went to Joseph with the message
that he had suffered John Noah, a prophet of God, to be cut off from
the Church, and that consequently he had lost his office; and he had
also suffered the women to wear caps, and the men he allowed to wear
cushions on their shoulders, and for these heinous sins he was cut
off, and this man had come six hundred miles barefooted to bear the
terrible message. You might suppose such an adventurer coming among us
would be regarded as a madman by all, but at that time several men
were ready to listen to him; a Bishop's Council was assembled and an
investigation had. During the investigation, the subject of women
wearing caps and veils and having their heads covered was canvassed,
and the Bible ransacked by Oliver Cowdery and others. When the man was
expelled from the Church for giving way to the power of false spirits,
he rose up in a most solemn manner, and proclaimed to the Council that
they had chosen darkness instead of light. This man went through the
streets of Kirtland in the night crying in a most doleful voice, woe,
woe to this people. I understand that brother Brigham, hearing this
nonsense and noise in the street, jumped up out of his bed in the
night, took with him a cow hide whip into the street, and told that
noisy person if he did not stop his noise he would certainly cowhide
him, which caused him to cease to annoy the inhabitants with his
folly.
Another prophet arose by the name of Hoton, he had his headquarters
at the forge in Kirtland. He was the president, and a man named
Montague was appointed Bishop. They resolved to live precisely in
accordance with the principles, as they understood them, spoken of
soon after the day of Pentecost, for they had all things common. Their
number increased to ten, and they called themselves "the Independent
Church." Persons who had apostatized from the Latter-day Saints could
be admitted into their party upon the terms of entering the room,
shaking hands with every member and consecrating their pro perty. This church lasted some two or three months, when a difficulty
occurred between the President and the Bishop. The Bishop accused the
President of being too familiar with his meat barrel; the President,
in turn, accused the Bishop of being too intimate with his sheets. The
result was, a split took place between the two chief authorities, and
the organization ceased to exist.
There was a prevalent spirit all through the early history of this
Church, which prompted the Elders to suppose that they knew more than
the Prophet. Elders would tell you that the prophet was going wrong,
men who thought they knew all about this work thirty or forty years
some of them before the Lord revealed it, tried "to steady the ark."
The Church was constantly afflicted with such a class of men.
I remember well in Zion's Camp, Levi W. Hancock made a fife, from a
joint of sweet elder, Sylvester Smith marched his company to the music
of that fife. That fife may be considered almost the introduction of
martial music among the "Mormons." A dog came out and barked, when
Sylvester Smith was going to kill the dog. Joseph said he was a good
watch dog, Sylvester became wrathy and threatened; finally Joseph
reproved him sharply, showing him that such a spirit would not conquer
or control the human family, that he must get rid of it, and predicted
that if he did not get rid of it, the day would come when a dog would
gnaw his flesh, and he not have the power to resist it. Some months
after the return to Kirtland, Sylvester Smith preferred a charge
against Joseph the Prophet, for having prophesied lies in the name of
the Lord, and undertook to substantiate that charge on the ground that
the Prophet had said a dog should bite him, if he did not get rid of
that spirit, when he had not power to resist. They were three days and
parts of nights, with the High Council in Kirtland, in investigating
this charge; one person spoke three hours in behalf of the Prophet.
Sylvester published a confession which can be seen in the Church
History, acknowledging his fault.
The Church in Kirtland were few in number compared with the
inhabitants of the city of Ogden. We had High Council upon High
Council, Bishop's trial upon Bishop's trial; and labor and toil
constantly to settle difficulties and get our minds instructed in
principle and doctrine, and in the power that we had to contend with.
I remember very well the organization of the High Council at Kirtland
as a permanent institution, there had been several Councils of twelve
High Priests called for special cases, but they organized it
permanently on 17th Feb. 1834. On the 19th, the first case that was
brought up was that of Elder Curtis Hedge, sen., who while speaking in
meeting had gone into a Methodist spasm, shouting and screaming in
such a manner as caused one of the Elders to rebuke him. Brother Hedge
was brought before the Council for so doing. A great deal of
instruction was imparted to the people, who were assembled in a room
sixteen feet by eighteen. The decision was, that the charges in the
declaration had been fairly sustained by good witnesses, that Elder
Hedge ought to have confessed when rebuked by Elder Ezra Thayer; also
if he had the spirit of the Lord at the meetings where he halloed, he
must have abused it and grieved it away, and all the Council agreed
with the decision. The report of this case is in Millennial Star, Vol.
15, page 18, and well worthy of perusal.
In relation to the manifestation of the spirit and a man exercising it, he may be guilty of error of manner as well as error in
matter, and these principles in this way were gradually introduced
into the minds of the brethren, the Elders being instructed all the
while now and then, when falling out by the wayside. The first
Council I ever attended where the Prophet was present was at the trial
of Doctor P. Hurlburt. This occurred in June, 1833. He had been cut off
from the Church by the Bishop's Council, and a Council of twelve High
Priests, was organized to try the case on appeal. Hurlburt did not
deny the charge, but begged to be forgiven, made every promise that a
man could make that he would from that day live a virtuous life.
Finally the Council accepted of his confession, and agreed that he
might on public confession be restored to the Church again.
It was at the same Council that Daniel Copley, a timid young man, who
had been ordained a Priest, and required to go and preach the Gospel,
was called to an account for not going on his mission. The young man
said he was too weak to attempt to preach, and the Council cut him off
the Church. I wonder what our missionaries now would think of so rigid
a discipline as was given at that time thirty one years ago, under the
immediate supervision of the Prophet.
As soon as this Council had made this decision upon Hurlburt, Joseph
arose, and said to the Council, he is not honest, and what he has
promised he will not fulfil; what he has confessed are not the
thoughts and intents of his heart, and time will prove it. Hurlburt
stated to the Branch in Thompson, Ohio, that he had deceived Joseph
Smith's God or the spirit by which he is actuated, I have proved that
Council has no wisdom, I told them I was sorry I confessed and they
believed it to be an honest confession, I deceived the whole of them
and made them restore me to the Church. Hurlburt was the author of
that work known by the name of "Mormonism Unveiled." Booth's letters
were reprinted by Hurlburt, who is the author of "The Spaulding
Story," a book which he intended to publish; and in delivering
lectures he had said he would wash his hands in Joseph Smith's blood.
He was taken before the court and required to give bonds to keep the
peace towards all men, and especially towards Joseph Smith. These
circumstances had some influence, and his friends arranged that he
should not publish the book, but put it into the hands of E. D. Howe,
who resided in Painesville, Ohio. He agreed that he would give Hurlburt
four hundred copies of the first printed and bound, for the
manuscript. Hurlburt went round and got subscribers, to pay him when
the book should be delivered, one dollar each for the four hundred.
Howe got the books printed and refused to furnish Hurlburt with his
share, until by a piece of legerdemain he got hold of his subscription
list and got the four hundred dollars, and then he let him have the
books. When Hurlburt went to supply his subscribers he found they had
already been served. "The Spaulding Story" in that country was
considered so ridiculous, that the books could with difficulty be sold
at any price; but it has now found its way into the scientific
journals of the great world as a true history of the origin of the
Book of Mormon, when it is very well known that no statement on this
earth could be more incorrect or more untrue. Let "Mormonism" be true
or false, "The Spaulding Story" from beginning to end is an unmitigated
falsehood. Solomon Spaulding was a Presbyterian minister; he entered
into the iron trade in Conneaut, Ohio, but failing in business
he took a notion to write a novel; he wrote a book called "The
Manuscript Found," he took his work to Pittsburgh, to a man by the name
of Patterson to get it printed, but he failed and never printed it. It
was pretended that it fell into the hands of Sidney Rigdon, and that
he converted it into the Book of Mormon, and induced Joseph Smith to
publish it; whereas it is very well known that there had no connection
ever existed between these parties. In the first place, Spaulding
never wrote any such work; in the next place, Spaulding never had
anything to do with Patterson, and Sidney Rigdon and him were perfect
strangers to each other. The first knowledge that Sidney Rigdon had of
Joseph Smith was when Parley P. Pratt met him in Ohio, and presented
him a printed copy of the Book of Mormon; yet all this has found its
way into scientific literature, and you will find it even in the North
British Review. Hurlburt's failure to destroy "Mormonism" was so
complete, understanding that he was backed by influential men in
Mentor and vicinity, that it ended in their disgrace and discomfiture,
and this was so complete, that the story in that country was hardly
ever spoken of afterwards. Yet the Spaulding story lives among those
who make lies their refuge, and under falsehood hide themselves.
The word of the Lord given in September 1831—see Book of Covenants,
Sec. 21, Par. 4—to make Kirtland a strong hold for the space of five
years, gave rise to a new development in the feelings and sentiments
of the Saints. The Prophet said, purchase lands in the vicinity of
Kirtland; men were induced to buy farms, and to go to work and build
houses, to quarry rock, and haul them on the ground, to build a
Temple. We were not then supplied with reporters and clerks as we are
now, and many of the books that were kept have been wrested from the
hands of the Church by apostates. The foundation of the Kirtland
Temple was laid in 1833, and there is scarcely a scrap of history
relating to it to be found, not even the names of the twenty-four
Elders in their order who laid the foundation of it. When the Temple
was completed there was a great manifestation of power. The brethren
gathered together to its dedication. We considered it a very large
building. Some nine hundred and sixty could be seated, and there would
be room for a few to stand, the congregation was swelled to a little
over a thousand persons at the time of the dedication. It was a trial
of faith. The Elders from every part of the country had come together.
The finishing of the Temple had involved a debt of many thousands, and
we all came together to the dedication. The congregation was so large
that we could not all get in; and when the house was full, then, of
course, the doors were closed, and no more admitted. This caused Elder
Frazier Eaton, who had paid seven hundred dollars towards building the
house, to apostatize, because he did not get there early enough to the
meeting. When the dedication prayer was read by Joseph, it was read
from a printed copy. This was a great trial of faith to many. "How can
it be that the prophet should read a prayer?" What an awful trial it
was, for the Prophet to read a prayer! The service of the dedication
being over, it was repeated again on the next day, to accommodate
these who had not been able to get in on the first day, and all those
who had been there on the first day, excepting the authorities, being
required to remain outside, till these who could not get in the day
before were seated; the result of this arrangement was two days dedication.
The question has often arisen among us, why it is that we do not see
more angels, have more visions, that we do not see greater and more
manifestations of power. Any of the brethren that were there could
have heard testimonies of manifestations in abundance.
On the first day of the dedication, President Frederick G. Williams,
one of the Council of the Prophet, and who occupied the upper pulpit,
bore testimony that the Savior, dressed in his vesture without seam,
came into the stand and accepted of the dedication of the house, that
he saw him, and gave a description of his clothing and all things
pertaining to it. That evening there was a collection of Elders,
Priests, Teachers, and Deacons, etc., amounting to four hundred and
sixteen, gathered in the house; there were great manifestations of
power, such as speaking in tongues, seeing visions, administration of
angels. Many individuals bore testimony that they saw angels, and
David Whitmer bore testimony that, he saw three angels passing up the
south aisle, and there came a shock on the house like the sound of a
mighty rushing wind, and almost every man in the house arose, and
hundreds of them were speaking in tongues, prophesying or declaring
visions, almost with one voice.
The question arises, where are those men? A number of them who
manifested the greatest gifts, and had the greatest manifestations
have fallen out by the way side, you look around among us and they are
not here. Many who received the knowledge of the things of God by the
power of his spirit, and sought not after signs and wonders, and when
the spirit rested upon them seemed to produce no visible
demonstration, you look around among the Saints in the valleys of the
mountains, and you find they are here with us bearing on high the
standard of Zion, or have descended into honorable graves. But where
you find men who have turned away, and have got terribly afflicted
with self conceit, you will find those, who, on that occasion and
similar occasions, received great and powerful manifestations, and
when the spirit came on them it seemed to distort the countenance, and
caused them to make tremendous efforts in some instances. Sylvester
Smith bore testimony of seeing the hosts of heaven and the horsemen.
In his exertion and excitement it seemed as though he would jump
through the ceiling.
Brother Cannon in speaking on the subject this morning referred to the
old adage, soon ripe, soon rotten. God has laid the foundation of his
kingdom never to be destroyed, and it appears wisdom in him to develop
gradually power and glory and strength. I have always heard it
suggested that as the spirit of "Mormonism" gathered together the seed
of Abraham—mostly the sons of Abraham that are mixed among the
nations; that the Holy Spirit falling upon men, who are not of the
pure blood, who had the predominance of other blood in their veins,
that the manifestation is greater, and when great manifestations fall
on men, great trials immediately follow.
I have been conversant with early Elders, and I am satisfied that a
large number of them fell from their positions in the kingdom of God
because they yielded to the spirit of adultery; this was the cause of
their destruction. There was an Elder named John Smith who lived in
Indiana, who was quite popular in that part of the country as a
preacher. He apostatized, but he did not know it. In talking about his
faith and how firm it was, he said, I have proven the revelation given to Joseph Smith untrue, which says if a man shall
commit adultery he shall lose the spirit of God, and deny the faith. I
have proven that not to be true, for I have violated that commandment
and have not denied the faith. He was so blind that he could not see
through the darkness that the spirit of adultery had placed upon his
head, the great apostasy which seemed to shake the Church, and tried
men's souls.
Some time after the finishing of the Temple, the brethren under the
direction of the Prophet had established a bank in Kirtland, the paper
to be redeemed by specie, and secured by real estate. The directors of
that bank were members of the Church, and they were determined to
sustain the credit of that money. The question has some times been
asked, how much has that bank failed for; it did not fail for a single
dollar, and yet when it failed there was perhaps a hundred thousand
dollars of the bank paper out in circulation. Warren Parrish was the
teller of the bank, and a number of other men who apostatized were
officers. They took out of its vault, unknown to the President or
cashier, a hundred thousand dollars, and sent their agents around
among the brethren to purchase their farms, wagons, cattle, horses, and
everything they could get hold of. The brethren would gather up this
money and put it into the bank, and those traitors would steal it and
send it out to buy again, and they continued to do so until the plot
was discovered and payment stopped. It was the cursed apostates—their
stealing and robberies, and their infernal villainies that prevented
that bank being conducted as the Prophet designed. If they had
followed the counsel of Joseph, there is not a doubt but that it would
have been the leading bank in Ohio, probably of the nation. It was
founded upon safe principles, and would have been a safe and lasting
institution. Parrish and his coadjutors professed to have discovered
that Joseph was not a Prophet, and commenced making a noise about it,
and went so far as to organize about thirty of the Elders, into a new
church called the Parrish party, many of them had been a long time in
the church. That may be considered the time that tried men's souls;
for a man that would stand up in the streets and say he was Joseph's
friend, could not get a greater compliment than being called a lick
skillet. Joseph had few friends; but among the leading Elders of the
Church, in Kirtland the High Council, one of the members of the first
Presidency, some of the seven Presidents of the Seventies, and a great
many others were so darkened that they went astray in every direction.
They boasted of the talent at their command, and what they would do.
Their plan was to take the doctrines of the Church, such as
repentance, baptism for the remission of sins, throw aside the Book of
Mormon, the Prophet, and Priesthood, and go and unite the whole
Christian world under these doctrines. Where are they today? Like a
rope of sand that has vanished to the four winds of heaven. Many of
them have already in dust and ashes lamented their fate, they have
never been able to prosper in any business, or take a leading part in
any capacity. This is the result of that apostasy; and yet it was so
great that Joseph himself and his friends had to flee from Kirtland.
There was a council there when President Young, Brother Brigham as we
called him, spoke in favor of Joseph, and Jacob Bump who had been a
long time a Pugilist before he came into the Church, said "how on earth can I keep my hands off this man?" Brigham said, lay them
on if it will do you any good. The voice seemingly of an individual,
was absolutely necessary to say that Joseph had a single friend. You
look at times of danger, moral and physical, and you will find that
the spirit of determination and strong will in the breast of a single
man may save a most terrible panic and disaster. By management it was
proved that Joseph had friends, and when he had gone to the state of
Missouri, having fled from Kirtland, he was met with coldness by men
who were in authority there. All this was the result of apostasy. The
public funds were held in their own name, and another battle had there
to be fought, not perhaps as severe, but at the same time there was a
constant pressure seemed to be necessary to give strength to the
growing kingdom; yet the revelations were that the kingdom should
continue to prevail. The very fact of the promise of its continuing to
prevail, signifies that it should have something more or less severe
to prevail against. God has been with this people and has guided them,
and dictated them, and is continuing to do so up to the present
moment, and will continue so to do until the kingdoms of this world
become the kingdoms of our Lord and his Christ. May we be prepared to
fulfil our share in this great work, is my prayer in the name of Jesus
Christ. Amen.
- George A. Smith