Difference between revisions of "Quote mining/Journal of Discourses/JoD 4:178:Analysis"

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==Quote mining analysis==
 
==Quote mining analysis==
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* The term "great sorrow" is not found in Kimball's discourse.  He speaks only of "quarrelling...for power and authority," but not among those "where they have common sense."
 
* The term "great sorrow" is not found in Kimball's discourse.  He speaks only of "quarrelling...for power and authority," but not among those "where they have common sense."
 
* {{SeeAlso|Did_early_Church_leaders_speak_of_plural_marriage_difficulties%3F|l1=Heber on plural marriage difficulties?}}
 
* {{SeeAlso|Did_early_Church_leaders_speak_of_plural_marriage_difficulties%3F|l1=Heber on plural marriage difficulties?}}
 
[[fr:Quote mining/Journal of Discourses/JoD 4:178:Analysis]]
 

Latest revision as of 14:41, 13 April 2024


Quote mining analysis

The quote and its use by the critic(s):

List Actual quote Critical use

*

Brother James Brown, has it not been good for you to be here to-day? [Yes.] God bless you, if you will only live your religion, and let brother Brigham, brother Heber, and brother Daniel live theirs; for he is our brother now and always was. If you will rise up and let us rise a little higher, you will see no particular difference in us, but the difference will be in you. Rise up, and do not hold us down.

As we are members of one body, except we cut you off from us we never can rise, unless you rise. If you will cleanse the platter, and throw out the dead men's bones that corrupt it, and all wicked things, you will rise; you will not feel so much difference, only you will be calm and composed, and you will not find any wild fire in the people. They swell when they have got wild fire, until their corporations are larger, figuratively speaking, than a dozen of mine. The Holy Ghost does not make a man act in any such way.

Why do I keep talking these things over? Because I want you to understand them and get the Spirit of God and let its peaceable influence be upon you; then you will know the spirit of men and things. Read the Bible, the Book of Mormon, and every other good book, and keep busy at some good thing or other, and stop your quarrelling. There is a great deal of quarrelling in the houses, and contending for power and authority; and the second wife is against the first wife, perhaps, in some instances. But that is done away in my family, and there is none of it in brother Brigham's, nor in brother Wells', nor in any family where they have common sense.

If every member of my body performs its office and does its duty, according to the order and government of God, then I want to know of one member is any better than another? Is any one of my fingers any better than another, if each one fulfils its calling? If one of these fingers sticks itself where it should not be, it brings dishonour on the whole body; and there are certain men and women who have dishonoured themselves and this whole community. John Hyde, probably, was living in adultery before he went from here, or if not, he was after he went from here, and he lost the Spirit of the Lord God. Any man that will do such wickedness, cannot keep the Spirit of God.

Do right, and let the Bishops and Missionaries understand their duty, and they may be the means of palliating your sins and making you comfortable for life. There are women in this congregation who have, probably, been seduced by Elders, by High Priests and men in authority. What do those women think? They believe that I am guilty of the same sin, and that brother Brigham and brother Wells, and every other good man, is alike guilty. Read the words of Alma over and over, and learn how he talked to his son. The people in that age would not hear the words of Alma, nor the words of his brethren, because of the wickedness of his son Corianton. I am showing you the cause of such iniquity, and the desolation it brings on the human family.

Heber C. Kimball remarked on the "great sorrow" of plural marriage.

Analysis

  • The term "great sorrow" is not found in Kimball's discourse. He speaks only of "quarrelling...for power and authority," but not among those "where they have common sense."