FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Difference between revisions of "Emily Partridge"
m (GregSmith moved page Joseph Smith/Polygamy/Plural wives/Emily Partridge to Emily Partridge) |
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|subject=Availability for testimony in 1892 Temple Lot case | |subject=Availability for testimony in 1892 Temple Lot case | ||
|summary=Nine plural wives were living in 1892. Whether they were called as witnesses seems to have depended upon whether they could testify to conjugality in the plural marriages. | |summary=Nine plural wives were living in 1892. Whether they were called as witnesses seems to have depended upon whether they could testify to conjugality in the plural marriages. | ||
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+ | |link=Joseph_Smith's_marriages_to_young_women | ||
+ | |subject=The age of Joseph Smith's wives. | ||
+ | |summary=How old were Joseph Smith's plural wives? | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 20:24, 18 May 2024
Emily Partridge
Summary: When Joseph Smith mentioned plural marriage to Emily Partridge, her response was immediate: "He asked me if I wished the matter ended. I said I did…[I] shut him up so quick that he did not bring up the subject again for months." Critics are fond of portraying Joseph Smith as being driven by sexual lusts. In this case, he simply left Emily alone for months. She received her own witness in the interim, without any influence or pressure from Joseph