Difference between revisions of "Word of Wisdom/Joseph Smith used tea"

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#REDIRECT[[Joseph Smith and the Word of Wisdom#Did Joseph Smith violate the Word of Wisdom by drinking tea?]]
==Criticism==
 
Critics charge that Joseph Smith drank tea, violating the Word of Wisdom, and proving he is not a prophet.
 
 
 
===Source(s) of the criticism===
 
*{{CriticalWork:Tanner:Changing World|pages=471}}
 
 
 
==Response==
 
 
 
Critics count on "presentism"—they hope readers will judge historical figures by the standards of ''our'' day, instead of ''their'' day.
 
 
 
The Word of Wisdom was enforced differently in the 19th century than today.  It was not the strict test of fellowships that it is for the modern member.
 
 
 
{{main|Word of Wisdom}}
 
 
 
Critics also fail to point out that the fact that Joseph noted the use of tea shows that it was probably a unique event, worthy of note.
 
 
 
In consulting the journal entry, we read: "Saturday, March 11th Too cold last night as to freeze [p.332] water in the warmest rooms in the city. River filled with anchor ice. 8 1/2 o'clock in the office, Joseph said he had tea with his breakfast."{{ref|faulring.1}}
 
 
 
In Joseph's day, some medical thinking held that "hot drinks" (such as tea and coffee) could heat the body and vital fluids.  While this was usually regarded as a bad idea that would be dangerous to health:
 
 
 
:I found, after maturely considering the subject, that all animal bodies are formed of the four elements, earth, air, fire, and water. Earth and water constitute the solids, and air and fire, or heat, are the cause of life and motion. ''That cold, or lessening the power of heat, is the cause of all
 
disease; that to restore heat to its natural state, was the only way by which health could be produced'';....a state of perfect health arises from a due balance or temperature of the four elements; but if it is by any means destroyed, the body is more or less disordered. And when this is the case, there is always an actual diminution or absence of the element of fire, or heat; and in proportion to this diminution or absence, the body is affected by its opposite, which is cold. And I found that all disorders which the human family were afflicted with, however various the symptoms, and different the names by which they are called, arise directly from obstructed perspiration, which ''is always caused by cold, or want of heat'' {{ia}} ....{{ref|thomson.1}}
 
 
 
This entry is from the works of Samuel Thomson, a founder of what became known as "Thomsonian herbalism."  There were several Latter-day Saint physicians who were Thomsonians, including (significantly) Willard Richards, who wrote the diary entry we are here considering.
 
 
 
Thomson described a local woman who acted as a healer, and his admiration for her skill and methods is clear:
 
 
 
:There was an old lady by the name of Benton lived near us, who used to attend our family when there was any sickness. At that time there was no such thing as a Doctor known among us, there not being any within ten miles. The whole of her practice was with roots and herbs, applied to the patient, or given in hot drinks, to produce sweating; which always answered the purpose.{{ref|thomson.2}}
 
 
 
Thus, in a time of extreme cold, a "hot drink" like tea could be seen as a medicinal or preventative treatment which would help maintain health, since it would prevent the loss of the vital heat upon which the body depended.  As a Thomsonian physician, Willard Richards (who wrote Joseph's journal for him) would have known and preached this. 
 
 
 
By analogy, a modern member would be in violation of the Word of Wisdom if he or she injected morphine as a "recreational" drug.  But, if the same drug was administered for a medical reason, the member would not be at fault.  (Indeed, we might find fault with someone for refusing a medical treatment to maintain their health or cure an illness.) 
 
 
 
That Richards was not surprised or offended by Joseph's consumption of tea on a bitterly cold winter morning demonstrates that Joseph's action was not the scandal that the critics wish us to believe that it was.
 
 
 
==Endnotes==
 
 
 
#{{note|thomson.1}} J.U. and C.G. Lloyd, "Life and Medical Discoveries of Samule Thomson, and a history of the Thomsonian Materia Medica, as shown in "The New Guide to Health," (1835) and the literature of that day, &c." in ''Bulletin of the Lloyd Library of Botany, Pharmacy and Materia Medica No. 11, Reproduction Series No. 7 (1909): 26. {{link|url=http://www.swsbm.com/ManualsOther/Samuel_Thomson-Lloyd.pdf}}
 
#{{note|thomson.2}} Lloyd, 12.
 
==Further reading==
 
{{WoWWiki}}
 

Latest revision as of 23:42, 19 May 2024