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Difference between revisions of "Joseph Smith/Polygamy/William Marks claimed Joseph intended to abandon plural marriage"
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Revision as of 22:46, 20 June 2014
- REDIRECTTemplate:Test3
Contents
William Marks claimed Joseph intended to abandon plural marriage
Important introductory material on plural marriage available here
Answers portal |
Plural marriage |
RESOURCES |
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Joseph Smith era:
Post-Joseph Smith:
Post-Manifesto–present |
PERSPECTIVES |
MEDIA |
OTHER PORTALS |
Questions
William Marks, who was president of the Nauvoo stake at Joseph's martyrdom, would later claim that Joseph told him just prior to his death that plural marriage had been a mistake, and that Joseph was going to stamp it out. What can you tell me about this?
To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, click here
Answer
The evidence for this claim is scant. Marks' report was late, and Joseph continued to propose plural sealings, and approve and teach plural marriage for others until at least May 1844. (He was killed June 1844.) Furthermore, the mechanism that Marks claimed Joseph wanted to use--a high council investigation of all those practicing plural marriage--would not have been wise or necessary. Publicity toward plural marriage could only bring more persecution, and Joseph had privately taught and approved all those engaged in plural marriage: he thus would have had no need for a public investigation to determine who Nauvoo's practicing polygamists were. Joseph would also have been unlikely to instruct Marks to excommunicate practicing polygamists, since they had all entered into plural marriage solely because Joseph had instructed them to do so.