
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.
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|227||"Mary Elizabeth Lightner spoke of 'three children' whom she said she 'knew he had.'"||[[Joseph Smith and polygamy/Children of polygamous marriages]]|| | |227||"Mary Elizabeth Lightner spoke of 'three children' whom she said she 'knew he had.'"||[[Joseph Smith and polygamy/Children of polygamous marriages]]|| | ||
*No source provided. | *No source provided. | ||
*The Life & Testimony of Mary Lightner (Salt Lake City: Kraut's Pioneer Press, n.d.); "Mary E. Lightner's Testimony, As Delivered at Brigham Young | *The Life & Testimony of Mary Lightner (Salt Lake City: Kraut's Pioneer Press, n.d.); "Mary E. Lightner's Testimony, As Delivered at Brigham Young University)," [punctuation is like that in Smith] Apr. 14, 1905, 41-42, complied by N.B. Lundwall, LDS Archives, at Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. ref is long so at the left | ||
228-229 "Until decisive DNA testing of possible Smith descendants—daughters as well as sons—from plural wives can be accomplished, ascertaining whether Smith fathered children with any of his plural wives remains hypothetical." This is true, but G. D. Smith fails to tell us that all those who have been definitively tested so far—Oliver Buell, Mosiah Hancock, Zebulon Jacobs, Moroni Pratt, and Orrison Smith—have been excluded. Would he have neglected, I wonder, to mention a positive DNA test? | 228-229 "Until decisive DNA testing of possible Smith descendants—daughters as well as sons—from plural wives can be accomplished, ascertaining whether Smith fathered children with any of his plural wives remains hypothetical." This is true, but G. D. Smith fails to tell us that all those who have been definitively tested so far—Oliver Buell, Mosiah Hancock, Zebulon Jacobs, Moroni Pratt, and Orrison Smith—have been excluded. Would he have neglected, I wonder, to mention a positive DNA test? | ||
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Page | Claim | Response | Author's sources |
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159 | "several days after Orson Pratt, Sidney Rigdon, and Ebenezer Robinson declined to affirm Smith's good character…." | The three were Pratt, Rigdon, and George W. Robinson, not Ebenezer. (See Manuscript History, 29 August 1842; History of the Church 5:139; Faulring, American Prophet's Record, 254). |
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160 | Governor Carlin described that Nauvoo statute on writs as an "extraordinary assumption of power….most absurd and ridiculous…[a] gross usurpation of power that cannot be tolerated." | Nauvoo_city_charter Nauvoo_city_charter/Usurpation of power |
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161 | "The Nauvoo charter, which was the basis for this presumption of independence from state jurisdiction…." | Nauvoo_city_charter Nauvoo_city_charter/Usurpation of power |
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162 | It is interesting that [The Peace Maker, a non-member's defence of polygamy] appeared during the hiatus in the erstwhile marriage frenzy of 1842 and while Smith's apostles were traveling the countryside to counter Bennett's words and deny polygamy." | Polygamy Book/The Peace Maker |
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163 | "…the entire Mormon community would be expelled from Illinois, primarily because of the dominant sense they betrayed public trust." |
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185 | Joseph's "summer 1842 call for an intimate visit from Sarah Ann Whitney…substantiate[s] the intimate relationships he was involved in during those two years." |
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185 | "However, the History of the Church predictably gives no notice of these weddings." |
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190 | "The pretended marriage [of Joseph Kingsbury to the polygamously-married Sarah Ann Whitney] could have been a precaution against possible pregnancy." | Speculation. |
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193 | Lucy Walker "told Joseph she required a revelation before she would submit [to plural marriage]. He promised that if she prayed, she would receive her own personal manifestation from God, which she reported she received 'near dawn after—a sleepless night"—when a "heavenly influence" and feeling of "supreme happiness…took possession" of her." | Plural_marriage_spiritual_manifestations#Lucy_Walker |
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196 | Financial and marital issues, especially concerning the Lawrence sisters, would inflame public opinion prior to Smith's arrest. G.D. Smith does not tell us that Madsen's work demonstrates that Joseph properly discharged all his financial duties as guardians of the Lawrence estate. |
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198 | There was a "conflict of interests between building a church community and [Joseph's] continuing affection for young women." | Loaded, prejudicial, Ages of wives wiki |
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198 | "Joseph was pursuing Helen" Mar Kimball. | Loaded, prejudicial |
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201 | Helen's biographer concludes that she 'expected her marriage to Joseph Smith' to be a ceremony 'for eternity only,' not an actual marriage involving physical relations. |
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201 | "How surprised she was to discover 'that it included [marriage for] time also": a physical union at age fourteen with a thirty-seven year-old man." |
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201 | "As she put her ambivalent feelings into verse in her "Reminiscences," Helen had "thought through this life my time will be my own," but "the step I am now taking's for eternity alone." She saw her "youthful friends grow shy and cold" as "poisonous darts from sland'rous tongues were hurled." She was "bar'd out from social scenes by this destiny," and faced "sad'nd mem'ries of sweet departed joys" | Polygamy/Helen Mar Kimball |
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205 | "That [Rhoda Richards] was her husband Brigham's cousin was apparently secondary to the grander scheme of interlocking the hierarchy in marriage." |
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214 | "Even though Smith and Clayton spent three hours preparing the eloquent language" of D&C 132…. | Prejudicial, loaded language |
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217 | "Smith found it useful to reference the conditional restriction on marriage found in the Book of Mormon." | Prejudicial, loaded language |
225-226 G.D. Smith intends Joseph to be seen as arrogant. He quotes a letter from Joseph to James Arlington Bennet: “I combat the errors of ages; I meet the violence of mobs; I cope with illegal proceedings from executive authority; I cut the Gordian knot of powers, and I solve mathematical problems of universities, with truth . . . diamond truth; and God is my ‘right hand man.’” G. D. Smith then editorializes: “With such a self-image, it is not surprising that he also aspired to the highest office in the land: the presidency of the United States.” G.D. Smith fails to tell us that Joseph's remarks are a tongue-in-cheek reply to Bennet's previous letter.
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226 | G.D. Smith again quotes Joseph: "‘I am learned, and know more than all the world put together." |
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227 | "There is no reason to doubt that Smith's marriages involved sexual relations in most instances." | We have evidence of sexual relations for only nine wives. |
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227 | "Mary Elizabeth Lightner spoke of 'three children' whom she said she 'knew he had.'" | Joseph Smith and polygamy/Children of polygamous marriages |
228-229 "Until decisive DNA testing of possible Smith descendants—daughters as well as sons—from plural wives can be accomplished, ascertaining whether Smith fathered children with any of his plural wives remains hypothetical." This is true, but G. D. Smith fails to tell us that all those who have been definitively tested so far—Oliver Buell, Mosiah Hancock, Zebulon Jacobs, Moroni Pratt, and Orrison Smith—have been excluded. Would he have neglected, I wonder, to mention a positive DNA test? |
230 | "In 1841, Sarah Pratt firmly rebuffed Smith and remained monogamously committed to her missionary husband." | John C. Bennett |
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231 | "Cordelia C. Morley Cox….had rejected [Joseph's] amorous proposal." | Mind reading |
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232 | Eliza Winters “perhaps did not” resist Joseph’s advances “but apparently talked about it all the same.” | Eliza Winters wiki? |
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234 | "According to LDS theology, the posthumous sealing meant that Heber would be Smith's son in the eternities, not the son of his biological father." | Needs work…. |
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235 | [In 1831 Joseph] "directed missionaries to marry native American women." | Native Americans to become "white and delightsome" through polygamous marriage? Polygamy_book/Initiation_of_the_practice |
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236 | G.D. Smith hints that Emma would have to sneak up on Joseph to check up on him, as evidenced by “his warning to Sarah Ann to proceed carefully in order to make sure Emma would not find them in their hiding place.” |
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236 | G. D. Smith asks us to “assume . . . that LeRoi Snow’s account [about Emma and Eliza and the stairs] was accurate.” |
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236 | "Just as Joseph sought comfort from Sarah Ann the day Emma departed from his hideout…." | G.D. Smith's version of Sarah Ann is again trotted out. |
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237 | Joseph's "insatiable addition of one woman after another to an invisible family…." | Mind reading, Prejudicial language |
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237 | Joseph had a "prolonged dalliance with Fanny Alger." | Loaded, prejudicial |
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