
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.
Line 661: | Line 661: | ||
*No source provided. | *No source provided. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|117-118||Orson Hyde "was reportedly 'furious'" with Joseph's plural marriage doctrine. | |117-118||Orson Hyde "was reportedly 'furious'" with Joseph's plural marriage doctrine. | ||
|| | |||
*SMITH FARMS | *SMITH FARMS | ||
*Cites Ann Eliza Young, but fails to tell the reader there are three other versions, each of which is different and hostile. | *Cites Ann Eliza Young, but fails to tell the reader there are three other versions, each of which is different and hostile. | ||
*Ann Eliza’s report of anger is also suspect. In the material cited by G. D. Smith, she describes Hyde “in a furious passion” because “he thought it no harm for him to win the affection of another man’s wife, . . . but he did not propose having his rights interfered with even by the holy Prophet whose teachings he so implicitly followed.” Yet Orson did not begin practicing plural marriage until after he knew of Marinda’s sealing to Joseph. | *Ann Eliza’s report of anger is also suspect. In the material cited by G. D. Smith, she describes Hyde “in a furious passion” because “he thought it no harm for him to win the affection of another man’s wife, . . . but he did not propose having his rights interfered with even by the holy Prophet whose teachings he so implicitly followed.” Yet Orson did not begin practicing plural marriage until after he knew of Marinda’s sealing to Joseph. | ||
*Despite the hostile reports of Orson Hyde’s anger, there are no contemporary accounts of problems between Orson and Joseph, who repeatedly dined with the Hydes following Orson’s return from Palestine. | *Despite the hostile reports of Orson Hyde’s anger, there are no contemporary accounts of problems between Orson and Joseph, who repeatedly dined with the Hydes following Orson’s return from Palestine. | ||
*While it is possible that his initial reaction was heated, this perspective derives entirely from authors writing scandalous exposés of the Mormons long after the fact. Ann Eliza Young, Wife Number Nineteen, 324–26. | *While it is possible that his initial reaction was heated, this perspective derives entirely from authors writing scandalous exposés of the Mormons long after the fact. | ||
|| | |||
*Ann Eliza Young, Wife Number Nineteen, 324–26. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|119||"[A]fter [John C. Bennett's] disagreement with Smith, the record of his celestial marriages was apparently expunged."||[[John C. Bennett]] | |119||"[A]fter [John C. Bennett's] disagreement with Smith, the record of his celestial marriages was apparently expunged." | ||
|| | |||
*[[John C. Bennett]] | |||
*GD Smith is arguing from negative evidence—he claims that the absence of any record of Bennett's "marriages" is proof that the Church or Joseph suppressed them! | *GD Smith is arguing from negative evidence—he claims that the absence of any record of Bennett's "marriages" is proof that the Church or Joseph suppressed them! | ||
*He is presuming that Bennett's "marriages" were at one time sanctioned by Joseph. All the evidence indicates that Joseph was upset whenever Bennett's behavior came to his attention. | *He is presuming that Bennett's "marriages" were at one time sanctioned by Joseph. All the evidence indicates that Joseph was upset whenever Bennett's behavior came to his attention. | ||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|119||"Smith told Bennett he could not withdraw from the church because he had been 'disfellowshipped' two weeks before on May 11. This apparent backdating was an attempt to discredit Bennett."|| | |119||"Smith told Bennett he could not withdraw from the church because he had been 'disfellowshipped' two weeks before on May 11. This apparent backdating was an attempt to discredit Bennett." | ||
|| | |||
*Smith has mentioned this before. He has now adopted Bennett's version completely, with no hint that there is more to the story. | *Smith has mentioned this before. He has now adopted Bennett's version completely, with no hint that there is more to the story. | ||
*[Already addressed above, see pp. 65, 70, 72-73.] | *[Already addressed above, see pp. 65, 70, 72-73.] | ||
*SMITH Bennett Material | *SMITH Bennett Material | ||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|122||"In Bennett's first letter…he reported that Smith 'attempted to seduce Miss Nany Rigdon,'…." | |122||"In Bennett's first letter…he reported that Smith 'attempted to seduce Miss Nany Rigdon,'…." | ||
|| | |||
*GLS Bennett Chapter #3 Bennett to Sangamo Journal, June 27, 1842. | *GLS Bennett Chapter #3 Bennett to Sangamo Journal, June 27, 1842. | ||
|| | |||
|- | |- | ||
|123-125||Bennett's version of the Sarah Pratt episode | |123-125||Bennett's version of the Sarah Pratt episode | ||
*Smith Bennett Chapter #2 | || | ||
*Smith Bennett Chapter #2 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|129-134||Emma Smith pushing Eliza Snow down the stairs | |129-134||Emma Smith pushing Eliza Snow down the stairs | ||
*Eliza Snow pregnant GLS FARMS Paper | || | ||
*Eliza Snow pregnant | |||
*GLS FARMS Paper | |||
|| | |||
|- | |- | ||
|131-132||"…historian Fawn M. Brodie thought the documentation was strong enough to include it in her biography of Smith."|| | |131-132||"…historian Fawn M. Brodie thought the documentation was strong enough to include it in her biography of Smith." | ||
|| | |||
*Fawn Brodie's evidentiary standard was often depressingly low. She was certain that Oliver Buell was Joseph's son (based on photographic evidence) but DNA evidence has resoundingly refuted her. | *Fawn Brodie's evidentiary standard was often depressingly low. She was certain that Oliver Buell was Joseph's son (based on photographic evidence) but DNA evidence has resoundingly refuted her. | ||
|| | |||
*{{CriticalWork:Brodie:No Man Knows|pages=470–71}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
|131 n. 195||Smith cites the BYU Studies on Emma and Eliza, but does not disclose that those authors find that the story is not plausible. "“But where are we? Faced with a folk legend, with genuine documents that tell no tales, and dubious ones that contradict themselves and the contemporary accounts, perhaps it is best for us to respond as we must to many paradoxes of our history: consider thoughtfully and then place all the evidence carefully on the shelf, awaiting further documentation, or the Millennium, whichever should come first." – citation at right. Maureen Ursenbach Beecher et al., “Emma and Eliza and the Stairs,” BYU Studies 22/1 (Fall 1982): 86–96. | |131 n. 195||Smith cites the BYU Studies on Emma and Eliza, but does not disclose that those authors find that the story is not plausible. | ||
|| | |||
*"“But where are we? Faced with a folk legend, with genuine documents that tell no tales, and dubious ones that contradict themselves and the contemporary accounts, perhaps it is best for us to respond as we must to many paradoxes of our history: consider thoughtfully and then place all the evidence carefully on the shelf, awaiting further documentation, or the Millennium, whichever should come first." – citation at right. | |||
|| | |||
*Maureen Ursenbach Beecher et al., “Emma and Eliza and the Stairs,” BYU Studies 22/1 (Fall 1982): 86–96. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|132||Smith cites Newel and Avery, Mormon Enigma without acknowledging or engaging their arguments against the story of Emma and Eliza.|| | |132||Smith cites Newel and Avery, Mormon Enigma without acknowledging or engaging their arguments against the story of Emma and Eliza. | ||
|| | |||
*The statement that Eliza carried Joseph’s unborn child and lost it [due to an attack by Emma] is brought into question by Eliza’s own journal. While her Victorian reticence probably would have precluded mention of her own pregnancy, if she were indeed carrying Joseph’s child, other evidence in the journal indicates that she may not have been pregnant. Eliza’s brother Lorenzo indicated that by the time she married Joseph, she was “beyond the condition of raising a family.” Also if she was “heavy with child” as the Rich account states, she would not have been teaching school, for even legally married women usually went into seclusion when their pregnancies became obvious. Eliza continued to teach school for a month after her abrupt departure from the Smith household. Her own class attendance record shows that she did not miss a day during the months she taught the Smith children, which would not have been probable had she suffered a miscarriage. | *The statement that Eliza carried Joseph’s unborn child and lost it [due to an attack by Emma] is brought into question by Eliza’s own journal. While her Victorian reticence probably would have precluded mention of her own pregnancy, if she were indeed carrying Joseph’s child, other evidence in the journal indicates that she may not have been pregnant. Eliza’s brother Lorenzo indicated that by the time she married Joseph, she was “beyond the condition of raising a family.” Also if she was “heavy with child” as the Rich account states, she would not have been teaching school, for even legally married women usually went into seclusion when their pregnancies became obvious. Eliza continued to teach school for a month after her abrupt departure from the Smith household. Her own class attendance record shows that she did not miss a day during the months she taught the Smith children, which would not have been probable had she suffered a miscarriage. | ||
|| | |||
*Newell and Avery, Mormon Enigma, 134. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|133||"Most convincing of all is to think that these stories [about Emma] were circulating widely and Eliza never bothered to clarify or refute them."|| || | |133||"Most convincing of all is to think that these stories [about Emma] were circulating widely and Eliza never bothered to clarify or refute them." | ||
|| | |||
*Uncorrected rumor or gossip is more convincing than the absence of diary or behavioral evidence for a pregnancy as outlined by Newel and Avery (see previous)? If I do not rebut an unfounded rumor, does this mean I give it my consent? This seems a strange standard. Joseph and the members of the church tried to rebut the rumors spread by the Hurlburt-Howe affidavits, yet G. D. Smith treats them as valuable insights. The Saints, it seems, are damned if they do and damned if they don’t. | |||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | *No source provided. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|137||"The History of the Church reports the day's activities…without a hint of a wedding" to Sarah Ann Whitney.|| || | |137||"The History of the Church reports the day's activities…without a hint of a wedding" to Sarah Ann Whitney. | ||
|| | |||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | *No source provided. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|138||"Three weeks after the wedding, Joseph took steps to spend some time with his newest bride." | |138||"Three weeks after the wedding, Joseph took steps to spend some time with his newest bride." | ||
|| | |||
*Sarah Ann Whitney links | *Sarah Ann Whitney links | ||
*Again, GD Smith fails to acknowledge that Joseph wanted Sarah Ann and her parents with her. | *Again, GD Smith fails to acknowledge that Joseph wanted Sarah Ann and her parents with her. | ||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|139||"In an extraordinary move, the Nauvoo City Council issued an ordinance limiting the power of state courts and claiming the right to review and dismiss future writs."|| || | |139||"In an extraordinary move, the Nauvoo City Council issued an ordinance limiting the power of state courts and claiming the right to review and dismiss future writs." | ||
*Roberts, Comprehensive History 2:468-69 | || | ||
*Need info on this. | |||
|| | |||
*Roberts, Comprehensive History 2:468-69. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|142||"It was the ninth night of Joseph's concealment, and Emma had visited him three times, written him several letters, and penned at least one letter on his behalf…For his part, Joseph's private note about his love for Emma was so endearing it found its way into the official church history. In it, he vowed to be hers 'forevermore.' Yet within this context of reassurance and intimacy, a few hours later the same day, even while Joseph was still in grave danger and when secrecy was of the utmost urgency, he made complicated arrangements for a visit from his fifteenth plural wife, Sarah Ann Whitney." | |142||"It was the ninth night of Joseph's concealment, and Emma had visited him three times, written him several letters, and penned at least one letter on his behalf…For his part, Joseph's private note about his love for Emma was so endearing it found its way into the official church history. In it, he vowed to be hers 'forevermore.' Yet within this context of reassurance and intimacy, a few hours later the same day, even while Joseph was still in grave danger and when secrecy was of the utmost urgency, he made complicated arrangements for a visit from his fifteenth plural wife, Sarah Ann Whitney." | ||
|| | |||
*Joseph’s behavior is then pictured as callous toward Emma and also as evidence of an almost insatiable sexual hunger. | *Joseph’s behavior is then pictured as callous toward Emma and also as evidence of an almost insatiable sexual hunger. | ||
*Yet again, GD Smith does not acknowledge that Joseph wants all the Whitneys there. | *Yet again, GD Smith does not acknowledge that Joseph wants all the Whitneys there. | ||
|| | |||
|- | |- | ||
|142-143||"Smith urged his seventeen-year-old bride to 'come to night' and 'comfort' him—but only if Emma had not returned….Joseph judiciously addressed the latter to 'Brother, and Sister, Whitney, and &c." | |142-143||"Smith urged his seventeen-year-old bride to 'come to night' and 'comfort' him—but only if Emma had not returned….Joseph judiciously addressed the latter to 'Brother, and Sister, Whitney, and &c." | ||
|| | |||
*Despite acknowledging (finally!) that the letter is addressed to all three Whitneys, Smith continues to insist that Sarah Ann is the one who is to "come" and "comfort" him. | *Despite acknowledging (finally!) that the letter is addressed to all three Whitneys, Smith continues to insist that Sarah Ann is the one who is to "come" and "comfort" him. | ||
*He here (p. 143) reproduces the letter's full text (having used it at least four times to push his reading of Joseph needing Sarah to "comfort" him), but does not address the reason why Joseph sought a visit with his plural wife and her parents: to “tell you all my plans . . . [and] to git the fulness of my blessings sealed upon our heads, &c.” | *He here (p. 143) reproduces the letter's full text (having used it at least four times to push his reading of Joseph needing Sarah to "comfort" him), but does not address the reason why Joseph sought a visit with his plural wife and her parents: to “tell you all my plans . . . [and] to git the fulness of my blessings sealed upon our heads, &c.” | ||
*Small wonder that Joseph didn’t want a hostile Emma present while trying to administer what he and the Whitneys regarded as sacred ordinances. And, it is unsurprising that he considered a single private room sufficient for the purposes for which he summoned his plural wife and her parents. | *Small wonder that Joseph didn’t want a hostile Emma present while trying to administer what he and the Whitneys regarded as sacred ordinances. And, it is unsurprising that he considered a single private room sufficient for the purposes for which he summoned his plural wife and her parents. | ||
*Age of wife again… | *Age of wife again… | ||
|| | |||
|- | |- | ||
|147||"Invites Whitneys to visit, Sarah Ann to 'comfort me' if Emma not there. Invitation accepted."|| | |147||"Invites Whitneys to visit, Sarah Ann to 'comfort me' if Emma not there. Invitation accepted." | ||
|| | |||
*Having just reproduced the letter, Smith again insists that Sarah Ann is the one to "comfort" Joseph, even though the letter says nothing of the sort. | *Having just reproduced the letter, Smith again insists that Sarah Ann is the one to "comfort" Joseph, even though the letter says nothing of the sort. | ||
*Smith does not indicate how he knows the invitation was accepted. | *Smith does not indicate how he knows the invitation was accepted. | ||
*We do know that the Whitneys were sealed in eternal marriage three days later. But, GD Smith does not tell us that either. | *We do know that the Whitneys were sealed in eternal marriage three days later. But, GD Smith does not tell us that either. | ||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|147–154||Nancy Rigdon episode | |147–154||Nancy Rigdon episode | ||
*Smith Chapter #3 on Bennett | || | ||
*Smith Chapter #3 on Bennett | |||
|| | |||
|- | |- | ||
|149||[Sidney Rigdon] "was in many ways a mentor to Joseph."|| | |149||[Sidney Rigdon] "was in many ways a mentor to Joseph." | ||
|| | |||
*What evidence is there of this? Joseph was always in charge and always the senior partner, though he was happy to make use of Rigdon's skills as an orator. | *What evidence is there of this? Joseph was always in charge and always the senior partner, though he was happy to make use of Rigdon's skills as an orator. | ||
*Joseph had published the Book of Mormon and had the Church well established before Rigdon appeared. He did not need Sidney to "mentor" him at all. | *Joseph had published the Book of Mormon and had the Church well established before Rigdon appeared. He did not need Sidney to "mentor" him at all. | ||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|149||Sidney Rigdon "was not someone Joseph felt comfortable approaching to ask for his daughter's hand in polygamy. So Joseph appealed to the young woman directly."||Mind reading|| | |149||Sidney Rigdon "was not someone Joseph felt comfortable approaching to ask for his daughter's hand in polygamy. So Joseph appealed to the young woman directly." | ||
|| | |||
*Mind reading | |||
*See Chapter #3 on Bennett | |||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | *No source provided. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|149||"For some reason, Marinda [Johnson Hyde] stayed [in the same house as] Apostle Willard Richards, whose wife, Jennetta, was in Massachusetts….Although the two may have lived in separate parts of the building…their living arrangements seemed to be an open scandal."||Maybe wiki this?|| | |149||"For some reason, Marinda [Johnson Hyde] stayed [in the same house as] Apostle Willard Richards, whose wife, Jennetta, was in Massachusetts….Although the two may have lived in separate parts of the building…their living arrangements seemed to be an open scandal." | ||
|| | |||
*Maybe wiki this? | |||
|| | |||
*HoC 4:467 | *HoC 4:467 | ||
*Bennett, History of the Saints, 241; [error! The correct page is 243 for the claim of scandal.] | *Bennett, History of the Saints, 241; [error! The correct page is 243 for the claim of scandal.] | ||
Line 747: | Line 794: | ||
*(Did he copy these from Van Wagoner, Sidney Rigdon, who uses the same page numbers?) | *(Did he copy these from Van Wagoner, Sidney Rigdon, who uses the same page numbers?) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|154||"…both Nancy [Rigdon] and Martha [Brotherton] were…isolated in a locked room during the persuasive effort." | |154||"…both Nancy [Rigdon] and Martha [Brotherton] were…isolated in a locked room during the persuasive effort." | ||
|| | |||
*While Nancy and Martha may well have been approached about plural marriage, it is unlikely that they were locked in rooms or confined against their will. One RLDS author argues: | *While Nancy and Martha may well have been approached about plural marriage, it is unlikely that they were locked in rooms or confined against their will. One RLDS author argues: | ||
*"The records show that Martha changed her story. As Hyrum reported to the Conference, at first she had told that she was locked in a room for days. But since that was such a ridiculous, unbelievable story, she changed it in her St. Louis affidavit to read that Brigham locked her in Joseph's office for only "about ten minutes." | *"The records show that Martha changed her story. As Hyrum reported to the Conference, at first she had told that she was locked in a room for days. But since that was such a ridiculous, unbelievable story, she changed it in her St. Louis affidavit to read that Brigham locked her in Joseph's office for only "about ten minutes." | ||
Line 753: | Line 801: | ||
*"If Martha's story had been true, there would have been many witnesses, because Joseph' s store was the hub of activity in Nauvoo. People came to the store to buy everything from food to footwear. The store building also housed the headquarters for the Church and the city. There, the people paid their tithing and taxes, and conducted banking and real estate business. The store was alive with people by day and by night, for it was also in constant use as a civic and religious center…." | *"If Martha's story had been true, there would have been many witnesses, because Joseph' s store was the hub of activity in Nauvoo. People came to the store to buy everything from food to footwear. The store building also housed the headquarters for the Church and the city. There, the people paid their tithing and taxes, and conducted banking and real estate business. The store was alive with people by day and by night, for it was also in constant use as a civic and religious center…." | ||
*One suspects Bennett's influence in this part of the story, since Bennett would likewise claim Joseph locked him in a room. In Bennett's case, the story is absurd and contradicted by a non-LDS eyewitnesses. | *One suspects Bennett's influence in this part of the story, since Bennett would likewise claim Joseph locked him in a room. In Bennett's case, the story is absurd and contradicted by a non-LDS eyewitnesses. | ||
*SMITH Bennett Chapter #2. | *SMITH Bennett Chapter #2. | ||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|155||"As if Sarah Ann Whitney's liaison were not enough…another marriage took place…."||Sarah Ann Whitney | |155||"As if Sarah Ann Whitney's liaison were not enough…another marriage took place…." | ||
*GD Smith persists with Sarah Ann Whitney and "liason." | || | ||
*Sarah Ann Whitney | |||
*GD Smith persists with Sarah Ann Whitney and "liason." | |||
|| | |||
*No source provided. | |||
{{EndClaimsTable}} | {{EndClaimsTable}} |
Page | Claim | Response | Author's sources | |
---|---|---|---|---|
53 | [Joseph] "recommended his friend, whose seventeen-year-old daughter he had just married, should 'come a little a head, and nock…at the window.'" |
|
| |
53 | The prophet then poured out his heart, writing to his newest wife: "My feelings are so strong for you…now is the time to afford me succour….I know it is the will of God that you should comfort me now." |
|
| |
53 | "Emma Hale, Joseph's wife of fifteen years, had left his side just twenty-four hours earlier. Now Joseph declared that he was "lonesome," and he pleaded with Sarah Ann to visit him under cover of darkness. After all, they had been married just three weeks earlier. |
|
| |
54 | “Did Sarah Ann keep this rendezvous on that humid summer night? Unfortunately, the documentary record is silent.” But “the letter survives to illuminate the complexity of Smith’s life in Nauvoo” (p. 54). |
|
| |
54 | "What interested me most was how Smith went about courting…these women." |
|
| |
55 | "When [polygamy] was officially abandoned in 1890, what previously had been called 'celestial marriage' was subtly redefined to specify something new: marriage performed in LDS temples for this life and for an expected eternal afterlife." |
|
| |
55 | Plural marriage had been a key principle of Mormon exaltation; but by adaption, celestial marriage was still said to be required, only now it meant monogamy rather than polygamy. | |||
55 | "Despite his crowded daily schedule, the prophet interrupted other activities for secret liaisons with women and girls…." |
|
| |
55 | "He assured the women and their families that such unions were not only sanctionied but were demanded by heaven and fulfilled the ethereal principle of 'restoration.'" |
|
| |
56 | "There may have been even more wives and plural children." |
|
| |
57 | History of the Church says nothing about Nauvoo on the day of Louisa Beaman's marriage to Joseph. |
|
| |
63 | "As will be seen, conjugal visits appear furtive and constantly shadowed by the threat of disclosure." |
|
| |
65 | “when Joseph requested that Sarah Ann Whitney visit him and ‘nock at the window,’ he reassured his new young wife that Emma would not be there, telegraphing his fear of discovery if Emma happened upon his trysts” |
|
| |
65 | "One of the instrumental people in the inauguration of plural marriage was John [C.] Bennett…." |
|
| |
65 | "…in 1841 [Bennett] functioned as perhaps Joseph Smith's closest confident." |
|
||
65 | Joseph was "sharing power" with Bennett |
|
| |
65 | "In the spring of 1842, Bennett spoke out against Smith and was soon stripped of his offices and titles." |
|
| |
65 | "Each accused the other of immoral behavior." |
|
| |
65 | "While some of his claims may have been exaggerations, much of what he reported can be confirmed by other eyewitness accounts." |
|
| |
65 | "Even though his statements must be weighed critically, he cannot be merely dismissed as an unfriendly source who fabricated scandal." |
|
| |
65 | "Bennett had an ambitious but colorful background." |
|
| |
66-67 | "Writing on March 23, 1846, Bennett claimed to have known 'Joseph better than any other man living for at least fourteen months!'….Bennett was well positioned to know all about any behind-the-scenes transactions. |
|
| |
68 | “Joseph” is merely “feigning impartiality” before going on to practice “undemocratic block voting” |
|
| |
69 | "Undeterred" by reports of a negative assessment of Bennett, Joseph "named Bennett Assistant President of the Church." |
|
||
69 | Bennett was Assistant President of the Church |
|
| |
69 | Bennett had religious influence by being Assistant President of the Church. |
|
| |
70 | Smith and Bennett remained confidants until about March the next year (1842) |
|
| |
70 | There seemed to be no office or honor within reach that Smith did not hasten to grant to Bennett. |
|
| |
70 | "Zina Huntington, who married Henry Jacobs instead but then reconsidered seven months later in response to Joseph's restated interest." |
|
| |
70-71 | "Seemingly impatient, Joseph soon after married Zina's sister, Presendia, who was also already married." |
| ||
71 | "Bennett alleged that during the summer and fall of 1841, Smith made unsuccessful advances toward Apostle Orson Pratt's wife, Sarah." |
|
||
71 | "Whatever the accuracy of the quotes [i.e., Bennett's claims] the two men [Orson and Joseph] quarrelled…." |
|
| |
71 | "…the important aspect of this incident is that it tells us less about Bennett's motive in recalling this dispute and more about Orson's willingness to support his wife over his religious leader…." |
|
||
71 | "However, Joseph concluded that she had been wrong to reject him—and that she had failed the test. The defiance she exhibited ultimately led to alienation with her husband…." |
|
||
72 | "Eventually Orson accepted Joseph's explanation that he merely wanted to test Sarah's obedience, and was not seriously courting this married woman." |
|
| |
72 | "Meanwhile, Bennett seems to have followed his leader in courting several women himself." |
| ||
72 | "Bennett resigned from the church on May 17, 1842." |
|
| |
72 | "In retaliation, church leaders apparently excommunicated him on May 25…." |
|
| |
72 | "…Bennett claimed [his excommunication] was postdated to May 11 to appear that it had occurred before his resignation." |
|
| |
73 | "Up until early 1842, Smith and Bennett seemed to be on good terms." |
|
| |
73 | "It is entirely plausible that Bennett was then privy to Smith's domestic matters." |
|
| |
73 | "In the spring of 1842, the two men quarrelled and Smith had Bennett excommunicated…." |
|
||
75 | Zina and Henry Jacobs "were apparently willing to let the prophet insuinuate himself into their marriage." |
|
| |
75 | "In the context of having just married a pregnant wife, [Joseph's] words acquire added meaning: 'If you will not acuse me, I will not accuse you….'" |
|
||
75 | The Smith diary or History of the Church do not "give any hint of conjugal contacts Smith might have had with this wife." |
|
| |
75 | When [Henry] Jacobs returned in June [1844] "he found Zina accompanying Joseph to private meetings involving Masonic-like handshakes, oaths, and special clothing." |
|
||
77 | "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. GD Smith 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. |
|
| |
77 | "Some sources say [Brigham] Young advised [Henry Jacobs] to find a wife who could be his eternal partner." |
|
| |
77 | Henry's subsequent life is not discussed by Smith, perhaps because it would provide insight into why Zina chose to remain with Brigham. |
|
| |
78 | "Brigham explained 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." |
|
| |
79 | Presendia Buell "displayed an affinity for mystical religious experiences as one of the women who began speaking and singing in tongues…." |
|
| |
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]….." |
| ||
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. |
Despite Brodie’s enthusiasm, few other authors have included Oliver on their list of possible children. With so many authors ranged against him, G. D. Smith ought not to act as if Compton’s analysis is merely about dates. Within note. 80 n. 63 [Note continued from above]….There is no DNA connection (). Compton does find it 'unlikely, though not impossible, that Joseph Smith was the actual father of' John Hiram, Presendia's seventh chld during her marriage to Buell and born in November 1843 (Sacred Loneliness, 124, 670–71). New wiki article? Joseph as father of Prescenda Buell's children? SMITH FARMS He makes no mention in the main text that Oliver’s paternity has been definitively ruled out by DNA testing. This admission is confined to a footnote, and its impact is minimized by its placement. After noting Compton’s disagreement with the main text’s suggestion that Oliver might be Joseph’s son, G. D. Smith writes, “There is no DNA connection,” and cites a Deseret News article. He immediately follows this obtuse phrasing with a return to Compton, who finds it “‘unlikely, though not impossible, that Joseph Smith was the actual father of another Buell child,’ John Hiram, Presendia’s seventh child during her marriage to Buell and born in November 1843” (p. 80 n. 63). Thus the most salient fact—that Joseph is certainly not Oliver's father—is sandwiched between a vicarious discussion with Compton about whether Oliver or John could be Joseph’s sons. Since G. D. Smith knows there is definitive evidence against Joseph’s paternity in Oliver’s case, why mention the debate at all only to hide the answer in the midst of a long endnote? Within note. |
||
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." |
|
| |
81 | "This [see above] applied to Zina…." |
|
| |
82 | "The History of the Church makes no mention of the second Huntington nuptial…." |
|
| |
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." |
| ||
84 | "From the inception of plural marriage, Smith demanded confidentiality from those whom he taught the principle." |
|
| |
85 | "…Smith evidently adapted and redefined [elements] from the Masonic rituals and incorporated [them] as part of the unfolding Mormon temple ceremonies." |
| ||
85 | "The [temple] vows of secrecy and threats of blood penalties intensified the mysterious rites of celestial marriage…." |
|
| |
88 | "There is no mention of [Joseph's sealing to Agnes Smith] in the History of the Church." |
|
| |
92 | 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." |
|
| |
99 | "As usual, the History of the Church made no mention of Sylvia [Sessions Lyon] on February 8, 1842…." |
|
| |
100 | "During these years as Windsor's wife, Sylvia reportedly bore Smith a child in 1844…." |
|
| |
103 | "Typically, [Joseph] never mentioned his marriage to Patty [Sessions] on paper…." |
|
| |
105 | Sarah Cleveland's husband "was a Swedenborgian, embracing a world view compatible with that of Mormons." |
|
| |
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." |
|
|
|
106 | "John [Cleveland]'s continued willingness to host LDS events indicated a likely compatibility of beliefs." |
|
||
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.'" |
|
| |
106 | Besides Cleveland (see above) other polyandrous husbands became more bitter against the Church. |
| ||
108 | "Sarah Pratt told…Wyl…'There was an old Woman called Durfee…to keep her quiet, he admitted her to the secret blessings of celestial bliss—she boasted here in Salt Lake of having been one of Joseph Smith's wives." He follows Compton in misreading the Wyl data. Richard Anderson and Scott Faulring argue that In Sacred Loneliness misleads the reader by claiming that “Sarah Pratt mentions that she heard a Mrs. Durfee in Salt Lake City profess to have been one of Smith’s wives.” But this changes the actual report of Sarah’s comments on Mrs. Durfee: “I don’t think she was ever sealed to him, though it may have been the case after Joseph’s death. . . . At all events, she boasted here in Salt Lake of having been one of Joseph’s wives.” |
|
| |
110-111 | "When Napoleon invaded Egypt in 1798 and exposed the world to then-indecipherable ancient writings, Europe and the United States became fascinated with Egyptian artifacts. Egyptian hieroglyphics, ike the origin of Native American tribes, were mysteries of the times, sometimes regarded as clues to Indian Origins." |
|
||
111 | "This is not to suggest that Smith necessarily visited the library…." |
|
||
111 | "…but from the age of ten…to about age twenty-two (December 1827) when he began dictating the Book of Mormon, published accounts of Napoleon and his foray into Egypt would have been available in books, periodicals, and possibly tracts." |
|
| |
110 – 111 n. 150 | [Of the Chandler papyri] Joseph "translated some of the hieroglyphics by means of his white seer stone to produce 'an alphabet…[and] grammar of the Egyptian language' through July 1835." |
|
| |
112 | A scholar in 1823 "rightly concluded that these American [Indian] symbols 'appear to have had little or nothing in common with those of the Egyptians.'" |
|
| |
112 | "As we consider Joseph Smith's new religious texts in early 1842, we should review what was known of the language of ancient Egyptian, not only in 1823 when Smith began to anticipate the Book of Mormon's 'reformed Egyptian records,' but later in the 1830s and 1840s when he prepared his second Egyptian scripture, the Book of Abraham." |
|
||
112 | "Joseph Smith… [made] the association of Native American pictographs with 'reformed Egyptian.'" |
|
| |
112 | "Smith's association of these unrelated cultures [Egypt and the New World] simply reflected the prevailing misperceptions of the pre- to mid-nineteenth century." |
|
| |
113 | "The first ancient scripture Smith presented since the Book of Mormon was the Book of Abraham." |
|
| |
113 n. 157 | The JST "altered over 3,400 verses but left the deities singular and in a Trinitarian format." |
1830_statement_about_seeing_"God" [[Only_one_Personage_appears_in_ the_1832_account]] [[Lack_of_contemporary_Father_and_ Son_vision_until_1838%3F]
|
| |
114 | "The prophet coalesced astronomy, biblical mystery, ancient Egyptian writing, and Masonic ritual into portentous ceremony for his followers." |
|
| |
114 | "The spring of 1842 was also the time when John C. Bennett began to separate himself from Smith…." |
|
| |
116 | Marinda Johnson "met Joseph while he was retranslating the Bible with Sidney Rigdon in her parents' home in 1831." |
|
| |
117-118 | Orson Hyde "was reportedly 'furious'" with Joseph's plural marriage doctrine. |
|
| |
119 | "[A]fter [John C. Bennett's] disagreement with Smith, the record of his celestial marriages was apparently expunged." |
|
| |
119 | "Smith told Bennett he could not withdraw from the church because he had been 'disfellowshipped' two weeks before on May 11. This apparent backdating was an attempt to discredit Bennett." |
|
| |
122 | "In Bennett's first letter…he reported that Smith 'attempted to seduce Miss Nany Rigdon,'…." |
|
||
123-125 | Bennett's version of the Sarah Pratt episode |
| ||
129-134 | Emma Smith pushing Eliza Snow down the stairs |
|
||
131-132 | "…historian Fawn M. Brodie thought the documentation was strong enough to include it in her biography of Smith." |
|
| |
131 n. 195 | Smith cites the BYU Studies on Emma and Eliza, but does not disclose that those authors find that the story is not plausible. |
|
| |
132 | Smith cites Newel and Avery, Mormon Enigma without acknowledging or engaging their arguments against the story of Emma and Eliza. |
|
| |
133 | "Most convincing of all is to think that these stories [about Emma] were circulating widely and Eliza never bothered to clarify or refute them." |
|
| |
137 | "The History of the Church reports the day's activities…without a hint of a wedding" to Sarah Ann Whitney. |
| ||
138 | "Three weeks after the wedding, Joseph took steps to spend some time with his newest bride." |
|
| |
139 | "In an extraordinary move, the Nauvoo City Council issued an ordinance limiting the power of state courts and claiming the right to review and dismiss future writs." |
|
| |
142 | "It was the ninth night of Joseph's concealment, and Emma had visited him three times, written him several letters, and penned at least one letter on his behalf…For his part, Joseph's private note about his love for Emma was so endearing it found its way into the official church history. In it, he vowed to be hers 'forevermore.' Yet within this context of reassurance and intimacy, a few hours later the same day, even while Joseph was still in grave danger and when secrecy was of the utmost urgency, he made complicated arrangements for a visit from his fifteenth plural wife, Sarah Ann Whitney." |
|
||
142-143 | "Smith urged his seventeen-year-old bride to 'come to night' and 'comfort' him—but only if Emma had not returned….Joseph judiciously addressed the latter to 'Brother, and Sister, Whitney, and &c." |
|
||
147 | "Invites Whitneys to visit, Sarah Ann to 'comfort me' if Emma not there. Invitation accepted." |
|
| |
147–154 | Nancy Rigdon episode |
|
||
149 | [Sidney Rigdon] "was in many ways a mentor to Joseph." |
|
| |
149 | Sidney Rigdon "was not someone Joseph felt comfortable approaching to ask for his daughter's hand in polygamy. So Joseph appealed to the young woman directly." |
|
| |
149 | "For some reason, Marinda [Johnson Hyde] stayed [in the same house as] Apostle Willard Richards, whose wife, Jennetta, was in Massachusetts….Although the two may have lived in separate parts of the building…their living arrangements seemed to be an open scandal." |
|
Ebenezer Robinson, The Return (Oct 1890): 347 [actually most is on p. 346].
| |
154 | "…both Nancy [Rigdon] and Martha [Brotherton] were…isolated in a locked room during the persuasive effort." |
|
| |
155 | "As if Sarah Ann Whitney's liaison were not enough…another marriage took place…." |
|
|
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.
We are a volunteer organization. We invite you to give back.
Donate Now