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Difference between revisions of "Criticism of Mormonism/Books/Nauvoo Polygamy/Chapter 2"
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+ | *The author claims that when Henry Jacobs returned from his mission in June 1844 that "he found Zina accompanying Joseph to private meetings involving Masonic-like handshakes, oaths, and special clothing." | ||
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*[[../../Loaded and prejudicial language|Prejudicial language]], in which the author tries to make the endowment seem foreign, strange and alienating. | *[[../../Loaded and prejudicial language|Prejudicial language]], in which the author tries to make the endowment seem foreign, strange and alienating. | ||
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====77==== | ====77==== | ||
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+ | *{{"Even though Zina was pregnant with Henry's child when she married Joseph, the theology of 'sealing' meant that in the next life she and her children would be Joseph's 'eternal possessions,' unconnected to Henry.}} | ||
+ | || | ||
+ | *The author gives no evidence for this. It may be that some early sealings (especially polyandrous ones) were intended to bind families to each and Joseph in salvation in the next world. | ||
*The image which this gives of Joseph "taking away" Henry's children is inflammatory and probably misleading. | *The image which this gives of Joseph "taking away" Henry's children is inflammatory and probably misleading. | ||
*[[The_Law_of_Adoption]] | *[[The_Law_of_Adoption]] | ||
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====77==== | ====77==== | ||
− | ||" | + | || |
+ | *The author claims that "[s]ome sources say [Brigham] Young advised [Henry Jacobs] to find a wife who could be his eternal partner." | ||
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*This from a single source (not "sources") and comes from a virulently anti-Mormon work, William Hall, ''Abominations of Mormonism Exposed'' (Cincinnati: I. Hart & Co., 1852), 43–44. | *This from a single source (not "sources") and comes from a virulently anti-Mormon work, William Hall, ''Abominations of Mormonism Exposed'' (Cincinnati: I. Hart & Co., 1852), 43–44. | ||
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====77==== | ====77==== | ||
− | ||Henry's subsequent life is not discussed by | + | || |
+ | *Henry's subsequent life is not discussed by the author, perhaps because it would provide insight into why Zina chose to remain with Brigham. | ||
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*{{Wyatt-Zina}} | *{{Wyatt-Zina}} | ||
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====78==== | ====78==== | ||
− | || | + | || |
+ | *Brigham Young said that "if a woman can find a man holding the keys of the priesthood with higher power and authority than her husband, and he is disposed to take her, he can do so, otherwise she has got to remain where she is. In either of these ways of sep[a]ration, you can discover, there is no need for a bill of divorcement." | ||
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*The author omits key parts of Brigham's recorded discourse: "…if a man magnifies his priesthood, observing faithfully his covenants to the end of his life, all the wives and children sealed to him, all the blessings and honors promised to him in his ordinations and sealing blessings are immutably and eternally fixed; no power can wrench them from his possession. You may inquire, in case a wife becomes disaffected with her husband, her affections lost, she becomes alienated from him and wishes to be the wife of another, can she not leave him? I know of no law in heaven or on earth by which she can be made free while her husband remains faithful and magnifies his priesthood before God and he is not disposed to put her away, she having done nothing worthy of being put away." | *The author omits key parts of Brigham's recorded discourse: "…if a man magnifies his priesthood, observing faithfully his covenants to the end of his life, all the wives and children sealed to him, all the blessings and honors promised to him in his ordinations and sealing blessings are immutably and eternally fixed; no power can wrench them from his possession. You may inquire, in case a wife becomes disaffected with her husband, her affections lost, she becomes alienated from him and wishes to be the wife of another, can she not leave him? I know of no law in heaven or on earth by which she can be made free while her husband remains faithful and magnifies his priesthood before God and he is not disposed to put her away, she having done nothing worthy of being put away." | ||
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====79==== | ====79==== | ||
− | ||Presendia Buell "displayed an affinity for mystical religious experiences as one of the women who began speaking and singing in tongues…." | + | || |
+ | *Presendia Buell is claimed to have "displayed an affinity for mystical religious experiences as one of the women who began speaking and singing in tongues…." | ||
|| | || | ||
*Speaking in tongues is not a form of "mysticism." | *Speaking in tongues is not a form of "mysticism." | ||
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====79==== | ====79==== | ||
− | ||Presendia "did not take the prophet's advice [to leave for Illinois while he was in Liberty Jail] prior to his escape from jail on April 16. Nine months later, on January 31, 1841, she gave birth to a son Oliver. Later that year [she went to Illinois]….." | + | || |
+ | *It is claimed that Presendia Buell "did not take the prophet's advice [to leave for Illinois while he was in Liberty Jail] prior to his escape from jail on April 16. Nine months later, on January 31, 1841, she gave birth to a son Oliver. Later that year [she went to Illinois]….." | ||
|| | || | ||
*The main text clearly implies that Joseph was the father of Prescendia's son Norman. Else, why mention that "nine months later" she had a child, with no further comment? | *The main text clearly implies that Joseph was the father of Prescendia's son Norman. Else, why mention that "nine months later" she had a child, with no further comment? | ||
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| | | | ||
====80 n. 63==== | ====80 n. 63==== | ||
− | ||Fawn Brodie pointed out that Oliver was born at least a year after Presendia's husband left the church and that Oliver had the angular features and high forehead of the Smith line (''No Man Knows'', 2989ff, 301, 460).[Note continues below] | + | || |
+ | *Fawn Brodie pointed out that Oliver was born at least a year after Presendia's husband left the church and that Oliver had the angular features and high forehead of the Smith line (''No Man Knows'', 2989ff, 301, 460).[Note continues below] | ||
|| | || | ||
*[[Joseph Smith and polygamy/Children of polygamous marriages]] | *[[Joseph Smith and polygamy/Children of polygamous marriages]] | ||
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====80 n. 63==== | ====80 n. 63==== | ||
− | ||[Continued from above] Compton considered it improbable that Joseph and Presendia would have found time together during the brief window opportunity after his release from prison in Missouri (Sacred Loneliness, 670, 673)."[Note continues below] | + | || |
+ | *[Continued from above] Compton considered it improbable that Joseph and Presendia would have found time together during the brief window opportunity after his release from prison in Missouri (Sacred Loneliness, 670, 673)."[Note continues below] | ||
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* The problems are [[Joseph_Smith_and_polygamy/Children_of_polygamous_marriages/Presendia Buell|far greater]] than "finding time together." | * The problems are [[Joseph_Smith_and_polygamy/Children_of_polygamous_marriages/Presendia Buell|far greater]] than "finding time together." | ||
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====80 n. 63==== | ====80 n. 63==== | ||
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− | [Note continued from above]"….There is no DNA connection (Carrie A. Moore, “DNA tests rule out 2 as Smith descendants,” ''Deseret Morning News'', 10 November 2007). Compton does find it 'unlikely, though not impossible, that Joseph Smith was the actual father of' John Hiram, Presendia's seventh chld{{cs}} during her marriage to Buell and born in November 1843 (Sacred Loneliness, 124, 670–71)." | + | *[Note continued from above]"….There is no DNA connection (Carrie A. Moore, “DNA tests rule out 2 as Smith descendants,” ''Deseret Morning News'', 10 November 2007). Compton does find it 'unlikely, though not impossible, that Joseph Smith was the actual father of' John Hiram, Presendia's seventh chld{{cs}} during her marriage to Buell and born in November 1843 (Sacred Loneliness, 124, 670–71)." |
|| | || | ||
*The author makes no mention in the main text that Oliver’s paternity has been definitively ruled out by DNA testing. What is the point of the long discussion about the possibility of Oliver being Joseph's son, when we know that he ''can't'' be? | *The author makes no mention in the main text that Oliver’s paternity has been definitively ruled out by DNA testing. What is the point of the long discussion about the possibility of Oliver being Joseph's son, when we know that he ''can't'' be? | ||
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====81==== | ====81==== | ||
− | ||"Occasionally, as King David did with Uriah the Hittite, Smith sent the husband [of potential polyandrous marriage partners] away on a mission which provided the privacy needed for a plural relationship to flower." | + | || |
+ | *{{AuthorQuote|"Occasionally, as King David did with Uriah the Hittite, Smith sent the husband [of potential polyandrous marriage partners] away on a mission which provided the privacy needed for a plural relationship to flower."}} | ||
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*Unmentioned—but perhaps not unimplied—is the fact that David had already committed adultery with Bathsheba, and sought to have her husband killed so he could marry her (see 2 Samuel 11). This metaphor imputes motives to Joseph where no textual evidence exists. | *Unmentioned—but perhaps not unimplied—is the fact that David had already committed adultery with Bathsheba, and sought to have her husband killed so he could marry her (see 2 Samuel 11). This metaphor imputes motives to Joseph where no textual evidence exists. | ||
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====81==== | ====81==== | ||
− | ||"This [see above] applied to Zina…." | + | || |
+ | *"This [see above] applied to Zina…." | ||
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*Henry Jacobs was present at the sealing to Zina. Henry knew of Joseph's plural proposal to Joseph before their marriage. | *Henry Jacobs was present at the sealing to Zina. Henry knew of Joseph's plural proposal to Joseph before their marriage. | ||
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====82==== | ====82==== | ||
− | || | + | || |
+ | *The author notes that the History of the Church "makes no mention of the second Huntington nuptial…." | ||
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*[[Censorship_and_revision_of_LDS_history]] | *[[Censorship_and_revision_of_LDS_history]] | ||
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====82==== | ====82==== | ||
− | ||a Buell child being sealed to a proxy for Joseph with “wording [that] hints that it might have been Smith’s child….It is not clear…which of her children it might have been." | + | || |
+ | *The author notes a Buell child being sealed to a proxy for Joseph with “wording [that] hints that it might have been Smith’s child….It is not clear…which of her children it might have been." | ||
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*There is no good evidence that this child was Joseph's. | *There is no good evidence that this child was Joseph's. | ||
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====84==== | ====84==== | ||
− | ||"From the inception of plural marriage, Smith demanded confidentiality from those whom he taught the principle." | + | || |
+ | *The author notes: "From the inception of plural marriage, Smith demanded confidentiality from those whom he taught the principle." | ||
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*[[Lying_for_the_Lord%3F]] | *[[Lying_for_the_Lord%3F]] | ||
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====85==== | ====85==== | ||
− | ||" | + | || |
+ | *The author assumes that Joseph "evidently adapted and redefined [elements] from the Masonic rituals and incorporated [them] as part of the unfolding Mormon temple ceremonies." | ||
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*[[Temple endowment and Freemasonry]] | *[[Temple endowment and Freemasonry]] | ||
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====85==== | ====85==== | ||
− | ||"The [temple] vows of secrecy and threats of blood penalties intensified the mysterious rites of celestial marriage…." | + | || |
+ | *{{AuthorQuote|"The [temple] vows of secrecy and threats of blood penalties intensified the mysterious rites of celestial marriage…."}} | ||
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*There are no "blood penalties" associated with plural marriage. | *There are no "blood penalties" associated with plural marriage. | ||
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− | || | + | || |
+ | *The author notes that there is no mention of Joseph's sealing to Agnes Smith in the History of the Church. | ||
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− | ||Sarah Pratt reported in 1886 that Lucinda had told her nearly forty-five years earlier in 1842: "Why[,] I am his [Smith's] mistress since four years." | + | || |
+ | *Sarah Pratt is claimed to have reported in 1886 that Lucinda had told her nearly forty-five years earlier in 1842: "Why[,] I am his [Smith's] mistress since four years." | ||
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*Compton notes that this statement is "antagonistic, third-hand, and late" (''In Sacred Loneliness'', 650). It seems implausible that Harris would admit to being a "mistress." | *Compton notes that this statement is "antagonistic, third-hand, and late" (''In Sacred Loneliness'', 650). It seems implausible that Harris would admit to being a "mistress." | ||
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====99==== | ====99==== | ||
− | ||" | + | || |
+ | *The author notes that "[a]s usual, the History of the Church made no mention of Sylvia [Sessions Lyon] on February 8, 1842…." | ||
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====100==== | ====100==== | ||
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− | * | + | *The author claims that "[d]uring these years as Windsor's wife, Sylvia reportedly bore Smith a child in 1844…." |
+ | || | ||
+ | *The author ignores Brian C. Hales, “The Joseph Smith–Sylvia Sessions Plural Sealing: Polyandry or Polygyny?” ''Mormon Historical Studies'' 9/1 (Spring 2008): 41–57, which argues that Sylvia considered herself divorced prior to marrying Joseph polygamously, contrary to evidence misread by Compton. | ||
*[[Joseph_Smith_and_polygamy/Children_of_polygamous_marriages]] | *[[Joseph_Smith_and_polygamy/Children_of_polygamous_marriages]] | ||
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====103==== | ====103==== | ||
− | ||"Typically, [Joseph] never mentioned his marriage to Patty [Sessions] on paper…." | + | || |
+ | *{{AuthorQuote|"Typically, [Joseph] never mentioned his marriage to Patty [Sessions] on paper…."}} | ||
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*[[Censorship_and_revision_of_LDS_history]] | *[[Censorship_and_revision_of_LDS_history]] | ||
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====105==== | ====105==== | ||
− | |||
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− | *These needs more argument than | + | *It is claimed that Sarah Cleveland's husband "was a Swedenborgian, embracing a world view compatible with that of Mormons." |
+ | || | ||
+ | *These needs more argument than the author gives it. It is not clear how being a Swedenborgian would predispose Cleveland to accept a modern prophet, new scripture, and restored priesthood authority (for example). | ||
*Surely any world-view was somewhat compatible with the Mormons', but what about Cleveland's views were more compatible than, say, other Christians? | *Surely any world-view was somewhat compatible with the Mormons', but what about Cleveland's views were more compatible than, say, other Christians? | ||
*[[Swedenborg_and_three_degrees_of_glory]] | *[[Swedenborg_and_three_degrees_of_glory]] | ||
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====106==== | ====106==== | ||
− | ||"John Cleveland's Swedenborgian faith might have helped prepare Sarah for some of Joseph's teachings. Like Smith, followers of Emanuel Swedenborg conceived of a pre-existent life, 'eternal marriage' for couples who had a true 'affinity' for each other, and a three-tiered heaven that required marriage for admission to the highest level." | + | || |
+ | *{{AuthorQuote|"John Cleveland's Swedenborgian faith might have helped prepare Sarah for some of Joseph's teachings. Like Smith, followers of Emanuel Swedenborg conceived of a pre-existent life, 'eternal marriage' for couples who had a true 'affinity' for each other, and a three-tiered heaven that required marriage for admission to the highest level."}} | ||
|| | || | ||
*Three degrees in heaven is a Biblical notion, it did not originate with Swedenborg or Joseph Smith. | *Three degrees in heaven is a Biblical notion, it did not originate with Swedenborg or Joseph Smith. | ||
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====106==== | ====106==== | ||
− | || | + | || |
+ | *The author notes that John Cleveland's continued willingness to host LDS events "indicated a likely compatibility of beliefs." | ||
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*There are other options: | *There are other options: | ||
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====106==== | ====106==== | ||
− | ||"Like some of the other husbands of women who agreed to marry the prophet, John Cleveland nevertheless became 'more and more bitter towards the Mormons.'" | + | || |
+ | *{{AuthorQuote|"Like some of the other husbands of women who agreed to marry the prophet, John Cleveland nevertheless became 'more and more bitter towards the Mormons.'"}} | ||
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====106==== | ====106==== | ||
− | ||Besides Cleveland (see above) other polyandrous husbands | + | || |
+ | *Besides Cleveland (see above) other polyandrous husbands are claimed to have become more bitter against the Church. | ||
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*As shown above, Cleveland was not bitter about the Church or Joseph during Joseph's lifetime. | *As shown above, Cleveland was not bitter about the Church or Joseph during Joseph's lifetime. |
Revision as of 07:32, 19 March 2009
Chapter 1 | A FAIR Analysis of: Criticism of Mormonism/Books A work by author: George D. Smith
|
Chapter 2 (pp. 108-255) |
Claims made in "Chapter 2"
Page | Claim | Response | Author's sources |
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53 |
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Whitney "love letter" (edit) Ages of wives (edit) |
53 |
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Whitney "love letter" (edit) |
53 |
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Whitney "love letter" (edit) |
54 |
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Whitney "love letter" (edit) |
54 |
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Womanizing & romance (edit) |
55 |
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Necessary for salvation? (edit) |
55 |
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Necessary for salvation? (edit) | |
55 |
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Womanizing & romance (edit) |
55 |
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56 |
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Fallacy of probability (edit) |
57 |
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Censorship of Church History (edit) |
63 |
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Whitney "love letter" (edit) |
65 |
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Whitney "love letter" (edit) |
65 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
65 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
65 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
65 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
65 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
65 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
65 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
65 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
66-67 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
68 |
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Bloc voting (edit) See NOTE on bloc voting |
69 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
69 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
69 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
70 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
70 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
70 |
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70-71 |
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71 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
71 |
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71 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
71 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
72 |
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72 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
72 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
72 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
72 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
73 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
73 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
73 |
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John C. Bennett (edit) |
75 |
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75 |
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75 |
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Censorship of Church History (edit) |
75 |
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77 |
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Sealing takes away families? (edit) | |
77 |
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77 |
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78 |
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Brigham Young's 8 October 1861 talk (edit) |
79 |
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Presendia Buell (edit) |
79 |
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Presendia Buell (edit) |
80 n. 63 |
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80 n. 63 |
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Presendia Buell (edit) |
80 n. 63 |
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Presendia Buell (edit) |
81 |
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81 |
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82 |
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Censorship of Church History (edit) |
82 |
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84 |
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Hiding polygamy (edit) | |
85 |
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85 |
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Temple (edit) |
88 |
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Censorship of Church History (edit) |
92 |
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Lucinda Harris (edit) |
99 |
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Censorship of Church History (edit) |
100 |
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103 |
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Censorship of Church History (edit) |
105 |
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106 |
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106 |
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106 |
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106 |
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Endnotes
- [note] T. B. H. Stenhouse, The Rocky Mountain Saints : A Full and Complete History of the Mormons.... (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1878 [1873]), 184 note.
- [note] Andrew F. Ehat, "Joseph Smith's Introduction of Temple Ordinances and the 1844 Mormon Succession Question," (Master's Thesis, Brigham Young University, 1981), 40.
- [note] George L. Mitton and Rhett S. James, "A Response to D. Michael Quinn's Homosexual Distortion of Latter-Day Saint History," FARMS Review of Books 10/1 (1998): footnote 70, citing T. Edgar Lyon, "Orson Pratt—Early Mormon Leader," (M.A. diss., University of Chicago, 1932), 31. See also Millennial Star 40 (16 December 1878): 788.
- [note] Richard L. Bushman, Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling (New York: Knopf, 2005), 411.
- [note] Bennett, History of the Saints, 40–41.
- [note] Joseph Smith, History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 7 volumes, edited by Brigham H. Roberts, (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1957). Volume 5 link
- [note] Smith, History of the Church, 5:18 (26 May 1842).
- [note] Richard L. Bushman, Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling (New York: Knopf, 2005), 461.; see Times and Seasons 3/15 (15 June 1842): 830; Smith, History of the Church, 5:32.
Further reading
Template code | Inserts this reference | Click to edit |
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{{To learn more box:responses to: 8: The Mormon Proposition}} | To learn more box:responses to: 8: The Mormon Proposition | edit |
{{To learn more box:''Under the Banner of Heaven''}} | To learn more about responses to: Under the Banner of Heaven | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Robert Price}} | To learn more about responses to: Robert Price | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Ankerberg and Weldon}} | To learn more about responses to: Ankerberg and Weldon | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Ashamed of Joseph}} | To learn more about responses to: Ashamed of Joseph | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Beckwith and Moser}} | To learn more about responses to: Beckwith and Moser | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Beckwith and Parrish}} | To learn more about responses to: Beckwith and Parrish | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Benjamin Park}} | To learn more about responses to: Benjamin Park | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Bible versus Joseph Smith}} | To learn more about responses to: Bible versus Joseph Smith | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Bible versus Book of Mormon}} | To learn more about responses to: Bible versus Book of Mormon | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: ''Big Love''}} | To learn more about responses to: Big Love | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Brett Metcalfe}} | To learn more about responses to: Brett Metcalfe | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Bill Maher}} | To learn more about responses to: Bill Maher | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Bruce H. Porter}} | To learn more about responses to: Bruce H. Porter | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Carol Wang Shutter}} | To learn more about responses to: Carol Wang Shutter | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: CES Letter}} | To learn more about responses to: CES Letter | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Charles Larson}} | To learn more about responses to: Charles Larson | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Christopher Nemelka}} | To learn more about responses to: Christopher Nemelka | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Colby Townshed}} | To learn more about responses to: Colby Townshed | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Contender Ministries}} | To learn more about responses to: Contender Ministries | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Crane and Crane}} | To learn more about responses to: Crane and Crane | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: D. Michael Quinn}} | To learn more about responses to: D. Michael Quinn | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Dan Vogel}} | To learn more about responses to: Dan Vogel | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: David John Buerger}} | To learn more about responses to: David John Buerger | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: David Persuitte}} | To learn more about responses to: David Persuitte | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Denver Snuffer}} | To learn more about responses to: Denver Snuffer | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Dick Bauer}} | To learn more about responses to: Dick Bauer | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Duwayne R Anderson}} | To learn more about responses to: Duwayne R Anderson | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Earl Wunderli}} | To learn more about responses to: Earl Wunderli | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Ed Decker}} | To learn more about responses to: Ed Decker | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Erikson and Giesler}} | To learn more about responses to: Erikson and Giesler | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Ernest Taves}} | To learn more about responses to: Ernest Taves | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Fawn Brodie}} | To learn more about responses to: Fawn Brodie | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: George D Smith}} | To learn more about responses to: George D Smith | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Grant Palmer}} | To learn more about responses to: Grant Palmer | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Hank Hanegraaff}} | To learn more about responses to: Hank Hanegraaff | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Hurlbut-Howe}} | To learn more about responses to: Hurlbut-Howe | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: James Brooke}} | To learn more about responses to: James Brooke | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: James Spencer}} | To learn more about responses to: James Spencer | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: James White}} | To learn more about responses to: James White | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Jerald and Sandra Tanner}} | To learn more about responses to: Jerald and Sandra Tanner | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Jesus Christ-Joseph Smith or Search for the Truth DVD}} | To learn more about responses to: Jesus Christ-Joseph Smith or Search for the Truth DVD | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: John Dehlin}} | To learn more about responses to: John Dehlin | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Jonathan Neville}} | To learn more about responses to: Jonathan Neville | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Kurt Van Gorden}} | To learn more about responses to: Kurt Van Gorden | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Laura King Newell and Valeen Tippetts Avery}} | To learn more about responses to: Laura King Newell and Valeen Tippetts Avery | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Loftes Tryk aka Lofte Payne}} | To learn more about responses to: Loftes Tryk aka Lofte Payne | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Luke WIlson}} | To learn more about responses to: Luke WIlson | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Marquardt and Walters}} | To learn more about responses to: Marquardt and Walters | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Martha Beck}} | To learn more about responses to: Martha Beck | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Mcgregor Ministries}} | To learn more about responses to: Mcgregor Ministries | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: McKeever and Johnson}} | To learn more about responses to: McKeever and Johnson | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: New Approaches}} | To learn more about responses to: New Approaches to the Book of Mormon | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Richard Abanes}} | To learn more about responses to: Richard Abanes | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Richard Van Wagoner}} | To learn more about responses to: Richard Van Wagoner | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Richard and Joan Ostling}} | To learn more about responses to: Richard and Joan Ostling | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Rick Grunger}} | To learn more about responses to: Rick Grunger | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Robert Ritner}} | To learn more about responses to: Robert Ritner | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Rod Meldrum}} | To learn more about responses to: Rod Meldrum | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Roger I Anderson}} | To learn more about responses to: Roger I Anderson | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Ronald V. Huggins}} | To learn more about responses to: Ronald V. Huggins | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Sally Denton}} | To learn more about responses to: Sally Denton | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Simon Southerton}} | To learn more about responses to: Simon Southerton | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Thomas Murphy}} | To learn more about responses to: Thomas Murphy | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Todd Compton}} | To learn more about responses to: Todd Compton | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Vernal Holley}} | To learn more about responses to: Vernal Holley | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Walter Martin}} | To learn more about responses to: Walter Martin | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Wesley Walters}} | To learn more about responses to: Wesley Walters | edit |
{{To learn more box:responses to: Will Bagley}} | To learn more about responses to: Will Bagley | edit |