Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 135-136 Part 2 • Dr. Keith Erekson • November 24-30 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: November 19, 2025Dr. Keith Erekson shows how Doctrine and Covenants 136 rose from the turmoil to guide the Saints west, clarifying the succession crisis, correcting pioneer myths, and showing prophets not as superhero...es but God-led stewards in the ongoing Restoration.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTS English: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC248EN French: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC248FR German: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC248DE Portuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC248PT Spanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC248ESYOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/HN1LxUTJ6rIALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIM.co2021 Episode Doctrine & Covenants 136 Part 3https://youtu.be/68UhHPWFgaI2021 Episode Doctrine & Covenants 136 Part 4https://youtu.be/tUHHfcifSJgFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookBook of Mormon: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastBMBook WEEKLY NEWSLETTER https://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletter SOCIAL MEDIA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE:00:00 Part 2 - Dr. Keith Erekson01:10 Brigham Young’s background04:42 Brigham’s preparation for leadership08:39 Brigham as peacemaker12:49 The burden of struggling Saints14:25 Brigham commits to no one being left behind15:56 The Vanguard Company18:17 Crossing the plains as act of praise20:15 Overland Pioneer Travel Database22:25 400 pioneer companies25:25 Pranks, dances, and fun as pioneers26:04 How to teach Section 13627:27 God calls His people to journey29:25 President Hinckley thoughts about pioneers31:20 Questions of succession34:49 James Strang36:22 The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints41:03 Does Brigham have a majority?42:25 Antagonism to friendship44:38 The expectations of prophets48:20 Elevator shafts in the Salt Lake Temple myth52:58 Prophets are a great benefit to the world56:46 Dr. Erekson’s thoughts on “ongoing Restoration”1:01:59 End of Part 2 - Dr. Keith EreksonThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsAmelia Kabwika: Portuguese TranscriptsHeather Barlow: Communications DirectorSydney Smith: Social Media, Graphic Design "Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Part 2 with Dr. Keith Erickson, Doctrine and Covenants 135 to 136.
Keith, we now move to Section 136, which is three years, almost three years later, two and a half years later.
John, you might have to correct me here, but I think this is only one of two sections of the Doctrine Covenants that don't come through Joseph Smith.
it's interesting too how many that came as a result of the answer to a question going through
the JST for example there's one that's kind of a funny thing happened on the way to buy wine
from my enemies for the sacrament when an angel shows up and then now here we have John Taylor
and now Brigham Young so boy as we close up here I can't stop thinking about what Keith said
we're going to include this in the doctrine and covenants and there will be
be more. Yeah. This work is going to go on. Yeah. So tell us about Brigham Young. Keith,
I don't know if all of our listeners know a lot about Brigham Young. We've talked about
Joseph Smith all year. Brigham Young is one of the significant figures in our history. He is
an early convert. He's a couple years in. He's not one who's at the first meeting or right away,
but a couple years in, he joins the church and he develops.
One of the things he does as part of his conversion is he wants to meet Joseph.
He wants to meet this prophet and shake his hand and talk with him.
And so he does travel to Kirtland and meet Joseph there.
And that becomes part of a witness.
Brigham is kind of outside of the inner circle.
There's already a couple of years under the bridge.
There's Joseph and Oliver and Sidney Rigden and all of these leaders.
And Brigham is just a new guy on the side, but he's a talented person and a hardworking person.
So he slowly comes into other contact with Joseph.
The experience on Zion's camp is a significant part where he'll spend time and work closely.
then Brigham is called to be one of the first members of the Cormer the Twelve.
The Cormer of the Twelve is organized in 1835 after the Zion's camp or Camp of Israel March.
Brigham is in that group.
The first Cormer the 12, the first 12, does not have a very good pass rate.
Nine of them are excommunicated.
Many of them do return.
The three who never waver are Brigham and Heber C. Kimball and then David Patton, but he will be killed shortly with the troubles in Missouri.
Coming out of Navu, it's really Brigham and Heber. Heber will become Brigham's counselor in the first presidency, but Brigham is a member of the Quorum of the Twelve.
They will shift around how they do seniority and who comes out, but the long story is that in the
summer of 1844, Brigham is the senior member of the
Quarmer of the Twelve. He's now gained a lot of experience.
Joseph has increasingly relied on Brigham for difficult things.
Brigham is sent to England with the Apostles.
While Joseph is imprisoned in Liberty Jail, Brigham is the one and the Twelve
who coordinate the exodus from Missouri to Illinois.
Brigham has had practical experience leading the Saints and proclaiming the gospel.
He's had now as a member of the quorum of the 12, lots of counsel time with Joseph and seeing it in action.
And so he is positioned in the summer of 1844 to pick up the work and carry it forward.
One of the things I love about church history was the British missions.
I thought it was so brilliant of the Lord to inspire to send as many of the 12 as could go and to operate as a quorum without being able to text or email or call.
Joseph to be able to run independently as a cormat. Oh, that was brilliant so that they would know
how to do that, how to act independently. And if Joseph were a cult leader, he would want to
control everything. But at a time in his life when he really probably would love to have help
and friendly fellowship around him, he sends him all over to the British Isles. I just think
that's a fascinating little part of church history. In your studies, Keith, how was Brigham prepared for
this? I don't think he thought this would ever happen because you had Joseph and Hiram in Sydney and
all these other leaders, Edward Partridge, and Newell K. Whitney. Like you said, he wasn't there in the
very beginning. What do you see in your studies of Brigham's life? Yeah, one of the things you said,
I think is really important. Brigham never saw this happen.
to him. Brigham wasn't aspiring for this. Brigham wasn't pulling the strings behind the
scenes to make this happen. Brigham literally revered Joseph Smith. If you said anything bad about
Joseph and Brigham's presence, you would have to deal with Brigham. He was 100% loyal. He was a
defender. And in that reverence for Joseph, Brigham also saw himself as so far below or
different. This continues to play out through Brigham's life. People will come to Brigham when he's
president of the church and say, how come you don't do translation like Joseph did? And he'll just say,
I don't have that gift. Joseph was Joseph. Nobody is Joseph. I'm not Joseph. He has Joseph. He has a
had a, we might today call it an inferiority complex or imposter syndrome.
Brigham is present in the church and he will think about Joseph and think, I'm not him, I'm not
as good as him, I can't do what he did.
And I think in many ways that is an important starting point for Brigham's preparation
is that he knew that he had to rely on the Lord because he just didn't see himself as doing
those kinds of things.
Then he does have those different experience that we mentioned,
as in the quorum and as a missionary.
But I think Brigham would be the first to tell you
when he realizes that the quorum of the 12 need to lead,
that he can't do it.
President Thomas S. Monson would talk about
whom the Lord calls, the Lord qualifies.
The inverse of that is,
when you are called you don't feel qualified.
Brigham would have told you that, I can't do this.
And in many ways, that's the most important criteria.
No, you can't do that, but God can do it.
You've been called to be humble and to do that work,
not because you can just do it.
I can't imagine being asked to fill that spot.
There's tough spots to fill and then, you know,
saying, please take over the reins here.
what happens between these two revelations i noticed that they're two and a half years apart and brigham is i think
at this point isn't he the president of the corps of the twelve still that's right that fact
also illustrates what we were saying the first reaction of brigham and the quorum of the twelve
is there isn't another joseph there can't be another joseph and so in fact the best way to do this is for
the quorum of the 12 to manage the work.
We mentioned earlier that there's not a whole plan.
There's not a succession handbook that they turn to.
They have to think about it, counsel together, and as they talk it through, that's their
initial assessment.
Joseph is Joseph, praise to his memory.
We're not Joseph, but as a quorum, we can work in unanimity, and we can, and so that works.
They keep things moving in Navu, they publish the doctrine and covenants, they advance the work on the temple, they're managing the relationship with their neighbors, but those will continue to deteriorate, tensions will escalate. The following year in the summer of 1845, those tensions are escalating, and there are some starting to be some conflict, even to the point of armed conflicts, and,
And Brigham Young is interesting because he is in many ways one of the great peacemakers of our history.
We've talked about how in Navu, one of the things they don't do is retaliate.
They also don't do that in Missouri.
Brigham leads an exodus, not a counter-attack.
And as tension escalates in Navu, for a third time, Brigham chooses the path of peace and peacemaking.
right in the winter of 45 to 46, they finish the Navu temple.
Hundreds of saints come into the temple to receive this ordinance.
Brigham is there day and night.
He's one of the select group of people who have learned the temple endowment and so they can administer it.
They do that in January and February, and then the first part of February, the first group begins to leave Navu.
That has even been exacerbated.
The original negotiation was, let us leave in the summer.
The Hancock County residents don't even allow that.
They cross the Mississippi River in February, the first group.
They will continue to leave over the coming months.
But throughout 1846, they try to move across Iowa.
And if we kind of imagine the geography, we've got Navu and the Mississippi River.
The immediate escape is across the river.
but Iowa, even though on a map, it looks like a tiny state, if you're walking across it, it's a very long walk.
And it's a time of rain.
This year, 46, is particularly rainy and muddy.
The saints were not prepared for a major overland journey.
One of Brigham's first inclinations was, let's just leave Navu and go, but he realizes they can't do that.
They're bogged down.
They're not ready.
they're too slow, they're poorly organized, they're not prepared.
By the fall of 1846, there are about 7,000 people who have made it across Iowa,
and they're right on the border of another river with modern-day Nebraska.
They've made it there.
They're in winter quarters.
There's still another 3,000 kind of spread across Iowa that haven't quite made it.
We've got 10,000 people in the fall, and by fall it's too cold.
You can't cross where this is an overland journey.
So they missed the summer of 1846.
So that's where they are.
Now it's regroup in the winter.
How do we get ourselves prepared for the coming summer?
This revelation that's now Section 136 comes in January of 1847.
That's where we find them expelled from Illinois,
straggling their way across Iowa, trying to figure out how to get 10,000 people at this moment,
and in the end, many thousands more, but the immediate concern is 10,000.
And these aren't a trained group of overland explorers.
These are families and widows and children and the elderly and sick.
Nobody else in American history is trying to move 10,000 people of all.
ages and health conditions.
If you're going to go to California for gold, you're going to be lean, mean, gold digging
machine and you're going to go.
But Brigham's problem is totally different.
Some of these people are now two-time refugees, pushed out of Missouri, pushed out of Illinois,
destitute, lost property, whatever investment they had in Illinois, they just left it there.
That's the problem that Brigham has.
and this revelation is the answer to that problem.
Kind of wrapping our head around the scope of the problem helps us realize what's at stake.
Can you imagine all these people looking to you?
What are you going to do?
I don't think those of us who live in 2025 can even comprehend the gravity of that situation.
You can't run down to the store.
We can't go find hotel rooms.
We're out in the weather, in the mud, and we can't go back.
You don't just endure trek for three days and then you can go home to your warm bed.
It's an incredible thing.
And I imagine the stress was high and it would be a relief to hear from the Lord like you used to with Joseph.
I mentioned the British mission before and I've been thinking of this wonderful expectation
of Zion and now what they're dealing with. This is not what I cross the ocean for. And now we've
got to cross the plains as well. The hardship of all of it. Hank, I know you love to talk about
unmet expectations and how, what a trial that can be. Also, here's Brigham. As you have said,
not expecting to be the one to take and to lead this group of elderly, of babies, destitute people.
How many did you say? 10,000? About 10.000.
thousand in 1846.
And one of the questions that I had was, were there people hounding them to get out of Navu?
Yes, they were threats.
And escalating tensions and violence, definitely a push to get out and get out sooner rather than later.
Brigham, to my knowledge, Keith, is committed to nobody gets left behind.
We have to work together.
It is not going to be in every family for themselves.
Yeah. As Brigham leads people across, he's very often compared to Moses, leading this Exodus.
But I think another important parallel to remember is Enoch.
We learn about Enoch much more in the Joseph Smith translation of the Old Testament that come out in the Pearl of Great Price in the Book of Moses.
What a great prophet Enoch was, how he prepared his people to live in unity, that there are no poor.
and that he prepares an entire city that is taken up to God.
That is Brigham's model.
It isn't, I'm going to find 20 great people, and we're going to do, it is the entire city.
It's the entire community.
How do we prepare an entire people, or in this case, rescue them?
Not just keep them fed, but it's those big ideas in Zion, that they are united, that they are one heart.
that they are one mind, that they care for each other, that there are no poor.
Those are really hard things that we still work on in the 21st century world.
But those were his aspirations as a leader, avoiding the conflict and trying to build a community of peace.
Keith, I know we can't go through the entire Vanguard company and talk about every day.
There's a wonderful book called We'll Find the Place by Richard Bennett,
which really was an eye-opening book to all that they went through.
In your study of the Trek West, do you have any highlights or anything you want to point out or talk about?
Yeah.
I might start in the text of 136.
That does become the foundation, but then I think we can see some threads.
We can see through the Vanguard company and other companies that follow.
Three important things come out.
this revelation. The first 15 or 16 verses, we get instructions on organization. They are
organized into companies. We get a structure. There's a group of 150 and 10 and that this structure
is how we will make sure the poor and the widows will make it. Their first view is that the
companies will be led by apostles. So they start setting out these companies and assigning
different apostles to lead them.
That's one of the things we've perpetuated in modern trek, the idea of companies and structure.
I think there's an important insight right there in verse one that we miss in our modern
cosplay reenactments that we do.
And it says in verse one that they're organized into companies with a covenant.
Today we often reserve covenant for something attached to an ordinance that I've done.
I think there's a really significant thing here, that these are companies with a covenant to each other, that we will make sure all a hundred of us or 50 of us or 10 in whatever our structure it is that we'll make it.
Also, covenants not to leave.
One of the things that happened in the first year is people were just wandering across Iowa at their own pace.
And if the group you were with was kind of slow, you wanted to hurry, you would hurry.
part of the covenant was to say I'm not leaving to a different company I'm assigned to this one and I will stay we'll make it through
a second thing I think that's really interesting is after the organization the revelation gives a whole list of commandments
I think this is part of that companies with a covenant but there's don't covet don't take the name of God in vain
no contention no drunkenness you've got to edify each other you have to return what you
borrowed. That's an interesting
commandment. You have to
be a good steward, but it gives all the
kind of the rules of how we're going to be
this covenant group, what we need
to do together.
And then the third thing I'd love about
this revelation versus
this is around 28 to 32,
33, it says
one of the things you need to do
is praise God.
Singing, music,
dance, prayer, prayers of praise,
learning by the spirit learning is praise but that this isn't just walk and walk and walk and walk
this is praising God for his deliverance praising God for his protection praising God for
arriving in the place of safety and refuge but the act of crossing the plains is an act of
praise I think that's beautiful sometimes I wish we praised a little more in some of
our experiences. I think our music could be a little more praiseful and a little less dreary
sometimes. A little more merry. Yeah. The pioneers, we will see in their journals, they do walk
a lot. But putting that in context, if you stayed home, you would walk a lot. It's not like you were
going to stay home and drive your car, you're going to stay home and walk. Walking wasn't so much
the issue and what would happen is at the end of the day they would dance they would pull out their
instruments they would dance they would sing they would play one of the things we did a few years ago
in the church history department by a few i mean like 40 40 years ago our librarians we would get
so many questions about pioneers was this person a pioneer was that person a pioneer what did
they do do you know anything and so we started to build uh in-house a documented list of all
the pioneers that we knew. Over time, that grew, and as computer technology came along,
it turned into a database. Then in the early decade of the 21st century, we released this
as the Overland Pioneer Travel Database. So that was available online, and it has now been so
successful. We've added other datasets to it. We just now have a biographical database, but all
the pioneers are there, and we've identified now more than 60,000 people who cross the planes
between 1847, this vanguard company, and 1869 when the transcontinental railroad comes
through, then you don't have to walk anymore. You just get a train ticket. In those years,
the journey decreased. As the train moved west, you would ride a train to the end of the track,
and then you would walk the rest of the way. But that's
the pioneer window. And so we have this data set of pioneers and now we can analyze it. We can say
accurate things about pioneers and not just imaginary things. But one of the things that we can
say from their records is they do praise God. They sing, they dance, they're merry. Half of the people
who cross the plains are under the age of 21. We sometimes lose that from photographs of old
pioneers. But this is like a giant YSA conference. People are falling in love. They're having fun.
They're hoarding. They're teasing. They're enjoying. We get accounts of people. Sometimes the young men
would take the axle grease and they would rub it on the beards of men who were sleeping.
And so the men would wake up and have a greasy beard. We find pranks and fun. So I think this is an
important part. They were disciples of Christ. They were cast out, and they were praising God
and having a good time. We've identified about 400 pioneer companies that crossed the plane
from this structure. The organization that comes in this revelation is replicated 400 times
over the next two decades. For about a third of those, there's not a single death. One of the
modern perceptions we have is that the pioneers were all suffering in death. But for a third of the
pioneers, if you get the chance to meet them in heaven and say, we're sorry everyone died in your
company, they'll say, what are you even talking about? Nobody died. We got there. That was the
goal. That was why we organized. Related to that, we found the mortality rate for the pioneers
as a whole, the whole 60,000 of them, was basically the same as the United States mortality rate.
You were just as likely to die staying home in Illinois as you were to cross the plains.
It is risky.
You are working with large animals and the dangers are sort of the same.
Now, that changes when we go down to company level.
The Martin and Willie Handcart Company level, they have about a four times more.
mortality rate. So, yes, specific groups suffer in different ways. But by and large, what's
laid out in this revelation to be organized and keep the commandments and praise God
becomes a very effective way to move thousands of people across a continent.
It seems that those who come later benefit from those who come before. The early groups
probably suffered more. I mean, the hand cart companies, those two are a little bit of an outlier.
But Brigham, then he set up almost way stations along the way.
Yeah, it becomes a path, a ride of passage almost. Here's one of the ways I compare it.
A lot of times people will tell a story from their mission. They served at different times,
but they'll have a same experience. The day I was dropped off at the MTC, this happened. And
The first day I arrived in the field, this happened.
Even though we have a whole variety of experience, there's a kind of general path.
And we see that in the records of the saints.
When we got to chimney rock, we did this.
The first time we crossed the Platte River at the lower crossing, we did this.
Because they had structured it that way with a trail and a path and way stations,
and they could then talk about it in a shared way.
Oh, yeah, this is what happened when we were in immigration canyon or whatever.
Well, when we were on Rocky Ridge, this is how it played out for us.
Yeah.
I like what you said there, Keith.
I don't want to say we over-emphasize the death and the suffering.
That needs to be talked about.
But they had fun.
They had dances.
They had bands.
Yeah.
I think for me, it just helps remember they're young.
You're not going to have a dower group of 16-year-olds.
They're going to find some way to pull.
a prank and have some fun and get their wiggles out. That's who we have. We have people that are
happy and healthy and they want to enjoy what they're doing. And yeah, you have chores and yeah,
you have to walk. But you still have fun when you go to work or when you do your chores. You can find
ways. Yeah. Keith, if I'm a seminary teacher and I'm taking this on, this one's got to be treated
differently than Joseph's. They're not the same. It isn't like the Lord inhabits these
people and speaks through them.
Brigham's a different person.
How would you describe this revelation?
How is it different?
Yeah, Brigham's a different person.
The moment is different.
This revelation is shared orally.
People hear it.
They listen to it.
It's not one that they read.
We had just published an edition of the Doctrine and Convenants.
They don't publish a third edition until the late 1870s.
This isn't at their fingertips for a very long.
time. But it is in their ears and it is in their memories. They don't sit around the campfire and
ponder these words, but it does come to them as a blueprint, as a charge. Get organized, keep
these commandments, praise God, move across the plains, make sure everyone gets there. That's the
way that it's taken as their overview, as their direction. That's the experience that the pioneers
have with this revelation.
And there can be things that I can find in here.
Even though I'm not crossing the plane,
I'm still a member of this church.
I want to help everybody along.
Keep your pledges to one another.
Don't covet each other's things.
Don't be drunk.
Edify one another with your speech.
Don't contend with one another.
Don't speak evil of one another.
This really is like a Latter-day Saint survival guide
to being a team.
So many times throughout the history of the world,
there are incredible journeys,
the Jaredites, Lehii and his family,
the children of Israel delivered from Egyptian bondage,
and it's such a great metaphor for life.
So Hank, what you're saying,
this is our journey now.
We're staying in the same geography,
but those same rules apply on our journey through the plans.
I like the way you said that there.
You know, I like a word that you use there, John, delivered.
This isn't a word we use often enough in modern Latter-day Saint speech.
That is definitely the way that the pioneers experienced it.
And we even see it in verse 40 of this revelation.
It talks about you are being delivered as a witness.
So I think that word connects us with the deliverance of the children of Israel that you mentioned.
I also think scripturally, this connects us with the deliverance that Jesus brings, the deliverance from death, the deliverance from captivity.
And I think this deliverance metaphor is a very powerful one.
And I think there's a lot of deep meaning in there that would help us more often as we face the challenges of today.
I want to be delivered from some of the things that are bombarding me every time I open my phone or whatever.
this peace and deliverance is a way to see the pioneers differently,
but it also reminds us as a way to see our relationship with the Savior.
He's a deliverer who's delivering us from our afflictions.
That's really well said.
I want to read something to you both.
I'm sure you've both heard it.
President Hinkley, we know love to talk about the pioneers.
He loved to talk about that track.
I think he talked about his wife's ancestors coming across the plains.
He said this.
He said, today facing west on the high bluff overlooking the city of Navu and across the
Mississippi over the plains of Iowa, there stands Joseph's Temple, a magnificent house of God.
Here in the Salt Lake Valley, facing east, to that beautiful temple in Navu stands Brigham's
temple.
The Salt Lake, they look toward one another as both.
bookends, between which there are volumes that speak of the suffering, the sorrow, the sacrifice,
even the deaths of thousands who made the long journey from the Mississippi River to the Valley
of the Great Salt Lake. That's a beautiful picture, bookends, and thousands of stories in between
of these incredible, incredible people. I have a chair here in my house that cross the plains.
160 year old chair
It's just a chair
But it stands for something
For the faith of my pioneer ancestors
That's one of the ways you and your family
Can synchronize with the past
You've got an artifact that brings you together
Across the time and space
I just love the next verse
After that deliverance verse
Verse 41
Now therefore harken O ye people
of my church and ye elders listen together which reminds me of another section you have received my kingdom
it's huge the lord to say that the keys are with you stay with the 12 you've received my kingdom
love it keith my students frequently asked me about i didn't know there were breakoff groups from the church
how many saints actually come west some don't some stay behind
Yeah, that's true.
The first part of your question, how many?
We don't have an exact number.
Beginning around the 1920s, somebody published a figure of 70,000 over that whole two-decade span.
I mentioned we've been trying to document everyone.
We've got to about 60,000, so we can definitely say 60,000 crossed.
We continue to find new ones all the time.
That's what makes research fun.
But somewhere in there is the how many who crossed, and your students are right to ask.
There are others who stayed behind, who chose not to go.
We tell this in our curriculum, usually in a very oversimplified way.
We'll talk about Brigham Young and the 12, and we'll talk about Sidney Rigdon
and his proposal to be a guardian for the church.
and he was serving in the first presidency at the time.
He was also Joseph Smith's running mate.
Joseph was running for you as president.
One of the rules was you and your partner couldn't live in the same state.
So they moved Sydney to Pennsylvania.
So Sydney comes back from Pennsylvania.
His pitch is, Joseph did everything.
It's just perfect.
And my job would just be to guard it.
That's the way we tell the story.
If the story is only July and August of 1844, that is kind of the story, but the story is more than July and August.
Over time, there are three other ideas that emerge that become persuasive.
There are people persuaded by Sidney, and he does have a following to just keep the church the way that it was.
The next one that emerges is from Joseph Smith's brother William Smith.
William is an apostle, and we've talked about William already a little bit of disagreements
and some tough moments with Joseph and Hiram along the way.
But William makes a two-part claim.
The first part of his claim is that if Hiram hadn't died,
Hiram would be the successor.
And he bases this off a revelation.
that did sustainings.
This is now Section 124 of the Doctrine and Covenants,
but they lay out some sustainings,
and in there they sustain Joseph as President
and Hiram as Patriarch,
and then they do the first presidency
in the Quorum of the Twelve and all the other offices.
William points to that, and he says,
look, that was the sequence in the sustaining,
the prophet, the patriarch, and then the other things.
So it should be the patriarch.
Then the second part of his claim is the oh-so-humble part
in which he says, well, Hiram died.
The patriarch is inherited in the Smith family.
It was first my father, Joseph Sr., then it was Hiram.
I, William, am the oldest surviving Smith member,
so it should be me and I should be the successor.
The Smith family is actually persuaded by this right away in 44,
in the summer of 44 into the fall.
That makes the most sense.
The patriarch's next.
Smith family is the next one.
and so it should be William.
Second one emerges in those months into a little bit in the summer,
but especially into the fall of 1844.
There's a man named James Strang.
He is a convert brand new.
He was baptized in March of 1844.
Joseph was murdered in June.
So he's just around for a couple of months of overlap.
Hiram performs the baptism.
James, he's living away.
He comes to Navu.
He gets baptized.
baptized, goes back home. But then after Joseph's death, James reappears with two things. One is a letter
that he says is from Joseph Smith, written in the Carthage jail, saying that James is his successor.
And the second thing, James says, he's been visited by Maroni. And Maroni has called him to be a prophet
and given him a book to translate and he's going to have some witnesses. Then he will go forward.
For the next two or three or four years, this idea is the one that is most captivating for many
Latter-day Saints, and it's the one that keeps Brigham Young up at night.
If you think about this situation, everyone who's a member of the church is a first-generation
member, and they have all been converted by the story that God picked a random guy out of this
farmer in New York.
Sent him an angel and gave him work to do.
James Strang is telling this same story, but now he's the random guy.
The story is the same story, and the logic is, yeah, this isn't all about structure and everything.
Whoever God calls, that's who it's going to be.
We talk about the Vanguard Company.
They cross the plains of Salt Lake.
Brigham only stays for a couple of days, and then he goes back to Winter Quarters.
He's back in Winter Quarters by December of 1847.
From there, he starts sending letters to the thousands of saints who haven't crossed Iowa because Iowa was a muddy mess.
He starts sending letters out and saying, come and gather with us.
One of the things they do is they reconstitute the first presidency at that time.
Brigham's message is, we have the first presidency, we have a gathering place, we've found a spot for a temple, come and gather with us.
He specifically sends missionaries and messages to Latter-day Saints who are trying to decide what to do.
Some are persuaded and they go.
Those become more of the numbers.
Some are still dissatisfied and they stay.
The third idea, or fifth in all, if we're keeping track of all of these, will emerge a little bit later.
That's the idea that it needs to be a direct descendant of Joseph Smith.
that emerges almost 15 years later, early 1860s.
The word they use, the concept they use, is that at Joseph's death, the church got scattered, it got disorganized.
So they need to reorganize.
There are some significant players here.
One of them is the stake president in Navu, William Marks.
But several of these early members and leaders say, we need to create the reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
They pull that together, and then they approach Joseph Smith III, who now, these years later, is
now in his mid-20s, they say, you know, this is how it worked in the Bible, a prophet, and
then it was inherited, and so you should do that.
Joseph Smith III's first reaction is, no, he didn't want to do that.
He was newly married.
He was studying the law.
He had trouble with all this religious stuff in his life and wanted to move on.
yeah well look what happens look at what happened to my father look what happens to his dad to his uncle to his family to this friend
he does go away from that invitation and he has a personal experience with the divine and he comes back and says no
i accept this is what god is calling me to do that becomes the largest group after the saints who go
with brigham young and the reorganized church that's the name they're not
known by until 2002, they rename themselves the community of Christ. That's the name by which we know
them today. But those are kind of the five main ideas that get contested. Maybe one more
postscript will add, not known to the saints in the 1840s and 50s, but James Strang, I mentioned,
had a letter that he said came from Joseph Smith that ended up in the library at Yale University.
It was analyzed in the early 20th century and found to be a forgery.
That was part of the story and the presentations.
Of the members of the church that are in that area in 1844, is there a percentage?
Would you say 50%, 60?
Yeah, the hardest part is we don't know the denominator.
We don't know how many saints there were.
There wasn't a census or an index.
They don't all live in Navu either.
That's one of our misconceptions.
They are scattered throughout Illinois.
By the 1850s, there are more Latter-day Saints in England than there are in the U.S.
Because of the rapid growth that we have there.
The estimates for the population around Navu range, a low end is 12,000, a high end is
20, 22,000. We do have about the 10,000 that are crossing Iowa in that first year. It's
somewhere in there. We don't have a really solid sense. It does seem clearly that Brigham
does get a majority. Yeah. The largest group go west with Brigham, and especially over time.
Like I said, there are some people who will hang around with James Strang for a couple of years, but immigrants keep coming in 1853 and 57 and 64.
There are people who will switch.
And it goes the other way.
There's people who come to Utah and they don't like it and they'll go back and affiliate with the RLDS Church.
We at least know one case.
He goes all the way back to England and goes back to the Methodist Church.
There's definitely movement.
But, yeah, the largest segment follows Brigham to the West, and then the second largest group is that reorganized group that forms a decade and a half later.
And those become the two biggest pole.
Then they do become polarized over time.
They do, especially in the late 1800s, when Joseph Smith, the third, is the head of the reorganized church and his cousin, Hiram's son, Joseph F. Smith, is.
and the first presidency and then president of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latterty Saints, there is a lot of antagonism between those two cousins
and their respective organizations into the early 20th century.
Where does that stand today, us in the community of Christ, in your experience?
Yeah, today, though that relationship is totally changed.
The antagonism, especially the bitter rivalry in competition,
is definitely passed, and interestingly, it has been over-historical questions that we have
found some ways to work together. We share interest in historic sites, in historic documents,
and in our shared histories. There are gatherings of scholars that convene adherence of both
faiths into
those conferences
we will work
together. So like on the Joseph Smith
Papers project, many
of the documents were in the possession of the
community of Christ and they opened up
their archive. We went in, they let us
digitize the documents and
post those online.
And there have been in the
last, oh, 15
years, some significant
transactions in
2010.
or 12 or so, Community of Christ sold to the Church of Jesus Christ, the Hans Mill site,
and the site of the Joseph and Emma Smith home in Curtland.
That's one that we have renovated and just opened a few years ago.
That one's right up next to the temple.
Then in 2017, they sold to us the printer's manuscript of the Book of Mormon.
And then, of course, in 2024, we had the transaction that transferred stewardship of the Kirtland Temple and the properties, the Smith family properties in Navu and some other historic documents.
We have been in conversations, church to church, and, you know, different layers of leadership.
Their presiding bishopric and our presiding bishopric worked closely in particular on the Kirtland Temple transfer.
But I think there's definitely an opportunity for more understanding.
I think a lot of Latter-day Saints don't know much about these other religious cousins,
and we would do well to know more and understand better.
Yeah, be peacemakers.
I love it.
Keith, talk to us, if you would, about prophets.
You're a historian.
People come in thinking of a prophet, I think, with all sorts of expectations.
of this is what a prophet can do and can't do,
this is what makes someone a profit or not.
I'm sure you've had a lot of conversations like this.
Speak to our listeners.
Here we've discussed Joseph Smith and Brigham Young.
These are different people, both receiving revelation,
but you can see the difference, you can feel the difference.
How do you speak to that when you speak to groups
and to individuals about prophets?
Yeah, I think you used probably the most important word,
expectation. So much of the challenge I find that people have with profits is because of their
expectation. It isn't about the prophets. It's about what's in my own head. And if I have wrong
expectations, many times impossible expectations. And if I think the prophet is supposed to do that
and he doesn't, then I'm all upset. Well, he's not a prophet or he's a fallen prophet or he didn't
do that. And this problem goes all the way back to Joseph Smith. We have stories of converts coming to
Navu and expecting it to be a big flourishing city and perfect and wealth and streets paved in gold
and they show up there. And Joseph will openly say to them, it's not that. You've expected the
wrong thing. We could go and talk about a whole bunch of harmful expectations. I was a university
professor. My job was to talk. I know all about that. There was a guy in my ward in Texas. He came
out to me and said, oh, you're a history professor. Will you tell me this thing? And I said to him,
I actually teach a whole course on that question. Would you like the 45-hour answer? And he said,
no, no, no, I do not want the 45-hour answer. I have more than 45 hours on profits.
That's for sure.
These expectations that we have become really crucial.
Maybe one way to illustrate this and tease it out a little bit is with probably the most common story I hear about profits.
And when I say most common, let me give you some example.
On this past Sunday, there was a lesson about temples.
I saw people online and people wrote to me.
directly saying, in my class we were talking about temples and people told this story.
This very morning of our recording, I was meeting with the young sister missionaries at Temple
Square and answering their questions and helping them with the things that they present.
They told me, we hear this story all of the time. Can you help us?
The story is that when the Salt Lake Temple was completed, the whole interior was done
except for these random empty spaces that wind up every floor.
Brigham Young told people to leave those open,
and then later in the future, elevators were invented,
and the elevators were plugged right into those spaces,
and see, here is the proof that Brigham Young is a great and mighty prophet
because he prophesied that they should leave space for this thing that would come in the future.
people will tell this story with tears, they'll tell it with conviction, they'll tell it with
all of this witness that they're so thankful for a living prophet.
Well, maybe it's appropriate to quote another religious leader.
This is an elderly figure.
I think his name was Elder G. Lucas Skywalker of the 7th.
No, I'm just kidding here.
But I will quote Luke Skywalker, the old angry one.
When people tell him a story and he'll say, that's interesting that everything you just told me is wrong.
This story about Brigham Young and elevator shafts, every single part of the story is wrong.
First of all, elevators were invented 100 years before the Salt Lake Temple was even under construction.
There's no waiting for elevators to be invented.
Second, Brigham doesn't do anything with the inside of the temple.
It takes 40 years to build the temple.
Brigham dies 16 years before it's done.
Because of the way building works, they're just building the outer shell.
They're stacking the stones on top of each other.
It's going to be in the 1880s, six or seven years after Brigham's death, that the architects sit down and say, oh, what do we do on the inside of the temple?
and we get our first rudimentary blueprints in the early 1880s,
and we get polished blueprints in the late 1880s.
Those blueprints include elevators.
They're written right into the blueprints.
We have the receipts in the church history library for the purchase of elevators.
On the day the temple is dedicated,
there are three functioning elevators in the Salt Lake Temple in 1893.
We continue to tell it, and people will share it,
which has made me,
think about it and analyze, why do we keep telling this story? If we're a people who love
truth, this isn't, oh, kind of a story that's exaggerated. This is wholly totally made up. And
not only that, what's made up is so inconsistent with truth and reality, but we tell this
story. Why? I think one reason is we don't understand history. We think old people in black and
white photographs had no technology.
So if they're dedicating the temple in 1893, it must have just been like the stone age.
They barely could do this.
Well, in 1893, the temple has electricity.
It has a telephone.
It has the three elevators.
It's a modern building.
They build it to fire resistant standards for the time.
Those, of course, have changed.
They build it sturdy.
We're in the middle now of working on some of the earthquake.
resistance. But anyway, to the best of the modern construction abilities, they build it. It's a
modern building. I think there's that general ignorance. But I think the other thing that's going on
here brings us back to this expectations question. And it's that it's hard to bear an abstract
testimony. We want a concrete testimony. Do you think I don't have a profit? Here's proof. The elevator.
is the proof of my prophet.
And that lines exactly with what God teaches.
This is my work and my glory to save remanufacturing costs in a temple reconstruction.
No, that is not at all why God calls a prophet.
But it's harder to say, well, I know he's a prophet because the heavens were opened.
But why don't we say that?
And I think they had it right, the hymn praise to the man.
The opening line, praise to the man, not because he foresaw elevators or praise to the man who communed with Jehovah.
And as our current church historian and recorder, Elder Kyle S. McKay said a few years ago at General Conference, praise to Jehovah for communing with that man.
That's what I'm seeking for a testimony of. There's another line in that hymn that says,
and ever the keys he will hold.
That's what prophets are for.
They commune with God.
They receive authority.
They speak for God.
They speak against evil.
In the case of the revelation to Brigham Young, it's going to be, don't covet.
Don't be drunk to return what you borrow.
That's what prophets do for us.
They don't help us with elevators.
So we have to, I think, think about it,
differently. Yeah, I love that. One of my favorite moments in the Book of Mormon is in Mosaic 8, John, you know this story, where Limhai is asking Ammon, do you know someone who can translate? And Ammon says, yes, we have a seer. He doesn't say anything about elevators. But he does say, God has provided a means that man, through faith, might work mighty miracles. He becomes a great benefit to his fellow beings.
To me, the prophets I have listened to, President Inqually was the first time I remember really sitting up straight and listening, President Monson and President Nelson have been a great benefit to me, a great benefit to me.
Thank you for that, Keith.
We have to watch out for our expectations, don't we?
Well, and I like what you said about the benefits because we could see Section 135 as that kind of testimony.
When they say, he has revealed these two books of Scripture, he sent the gospel to the four quarters of the earth, we're gathering to a city.
That's that kind of testimony.
That's why we have a prophet to do those kinds of things.
Be careful on your expectations.
John, it was you who said, don't put these people under microscopes.
It was in my stake.
A member of the 70 came and set apart our new stake president.
He said to the congregation, now don't put him under a microscope.
He can't take it, neither can you.
He said, and he said, if his children do something that makes you raise your eyebrows, put them back down.
I like what you said there, Keith.
We have unrealistic expectations.
We're just folks.
You know, in many ways, I think this is an influence of our modern culture.
We often engage with people as celebrities or superheroes.
That's what we expect for profits.
We imagine that they have a bat phone that goes straight to heaven.
And any time they need something, they just pick it up and God tells them what to do.
But that is not how it works.
They do have a gift, which is the same one we have.
Jesus taught Joseph Smith, you're going to translate the book Mormon by me telling you in your mind and in your heart through the Holy Spirit.
And Jesus gave away the secret.
This is in Section 8 of the Doctrine of Convents.
This is the spirit by which Moses led the children of Israel across the Red Sea.
That's it. That's what prophets have, the gift of the Holy Ghost. And Moses had to learn how to use it. Joseph had to learn how to use it. Oliver failed. He couldn't translate. We get that in the following revelation. But that's what they have. That is the gift, the channel. They don't have this special kind of thing, or we imagine that they're infallible or all these kinds of things. They're not superheroes. They're messengers called of God. That's who they are.
I've heard a lot of young people pray
and bless that we'll learn something new
now they don't say it that way but a lot of times
can you just give us something new
and I love that Brigham Young
is saying hey be honest with each other
and pay your debts
there's nothing new
it's keep the commandments
that's what we should expect
now President Nelson is amazing
in how he can make these messages
think celestial so concise
stay in the covenant path
and be a peacemaker
These are concepts we've heard before.
It's not something new.
They reiterate what God has told us.
And to add to that, President Nelson will say,
I hope you're not missing the majesty of what's happening.
Beautiful.
You imagine the saints hearing just one temple was a joyous miracle,
and now 16th, 17 in one session of General Conference,
and it happens over and over and over.
Keith, we're so grateful that you had.
spend your time with us. Do you have any closing thoughts for our listeners as they study these
sections this week, the martyrdom of Joseph and Hiram and the Trek West through the Prophet
Brigham Young? Any closing thoughts? I really love a phrase that our current leaders have been
using more frequently, and it's the idea of an ongoing restoration. Often we look back at the past
and say, Joseph and Brigham did things, and they did.
And we've talked about those kinds of things.
But it's important to remember that this is ongoing.
One of the things we make little kids memorize in order to escape primary
is the idea that God will yet reveal many great and important things
pretending to his prophets.
But we never stop and think about what that means.
Here's what it means.
It means President Nelson doesn't know.
all of the stuff right now. If God will yet reveal many great and important things, it means
he doesn't know all of those things. It also means that President Nelson knows more than Gordon B. Hinkley
did. And he knew more than David O. McKay did. And he knew more than Wilford Woodruff did.
Wilford Woodruff even said this. At the pulpit in General Conference, they had ended the practice
of plural marriage. They had also changed the way that we do ceilings in the temples. There
was some pushback, and Wilford Woodruff said, hey, I know more than Joseph and Brigham
knew. I am the Lord's mouthpiece, and I'm telling you that this is what the Lord wants
us to do. That's exciting as we go forward. It also opens up to change and ongoingness and
line upon line, but it is many great and important things pertaining to the kingdom of God.
Those are coming in the future, including the most exciting thing, which is when the Savior returns.
He will bring us all of those glad tidings.
These messengers, they don't teach us to follow them.
President Nelson has put it in the pithy phrase, hear him.
Joseph and Brigham and President Nelson, they all know that they are following Jesus,
and they're calling us to hear him and to follow him.
We get in these sections, glimpses in Joseph of Brigham, but I hope that's where we end up that we'll say, I can trust that God is calling messengers.
Yeah.
I think that's beautiful.
The focus isn't on what I have seen as the prophet, but what you can see.
Not that I've heard him, but you also can go hear him.
I just love it.
The Savior works through mortals.
He has revealed himself.
has restored the gospel. It is a continuing restoration. I love that idea, too, Keith. We keep seeing it. The
majesty of it, thank you for saying that we get front row seats to all of this. It's amazing.
My parents passed away. I'm just wondering what they're watching because I wish I could talk to my dad about,
can you believe what's going on? You know, he's got front row seats too, I bet. So it's amazing.
We can finish where we started that Keith's words have tended to edify, us and our listeners.
I feel built.
I know when I'm feeling the Holy Ghost because I'm excited.
Excited to have our listeners hear this, for I can share it with my family and with my children.
Keith, thank you.
Thank you for taking your time with us.
Thank you so much.
It's been so fun.
With that, we want to thank Dr. Keith Erickson for joining us.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorensen, our sponsors, David and Verla, Sorensen, and every episode.
We remember our founder, Steve Sorensen.
We hope you'll join us next week.
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