Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 23-26 Part 1 •• Sis. Morgan Pearson • March 17-March 23 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: March 12, 2025How can we live up to our privileges? Sister Morgan Pearson explores the Lord’s words to Emma Smith. She instructs her to expound on scripture and how Joseph and Emma’s relationship is a blessing ...to them and an example to modern-day Saints.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC212ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC212FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC212DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC212PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC212ESALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIMpodcast.comFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterSOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE00:00 - Part 1 - Sister Morgan Pearson01:10 Section is about Emma, not only hymns02:14 Come, Follow Me Manual and President Freeman’s talk06:11 Redemption of Emma Smith09:30 Emma’s great loses12:25 Morgan Pearson’s bio16:03 Asking good questions19:04 A healthier approach to Emma24:11 Section 23 and 24 include Emma27:26 D&C 24:8: Be patient in afflictions29:56 Living Up to Your Privileges by President Emily Freeman33:06 The Lord addresses Emma by name37:11 Answered prayers and disappointments43:28 Emma’s witness of the plates44:22 An elect lady and Emma called to expound scripture48:39 Catching the spirit of Relief Society51:43 Called to be a comfort to Joseph54:52 Letters from Emma57:33 Joseph’s letter from Carthage to Emma01:01:47 President Freeman and living without regret01:04:22 End of Part 1 - Sister Morgan PearsonThanks 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 NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsAmelia Kabwika : Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up in this episode.
In preparing this, I felt a lot of pressure
to get Emma's story right,
and I think it's because she wants it to be right.
She wants that redemption.
I hope that we can give it to her.
Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith and I am your host,
and I'm here with my cohost John, by the way, who has laid aside the things of this world. John, that is you.
Yeah, I just put him in the safe.
Yeah. John, this is an interview I've been looking forward to for a long time. We are joined today
by Morgan Pearson. She's all the way out in Philadelphia.
Yeah.
Morgan, thank you for being here with us.
Thank you so much for having me.
I'm really excited for this conversation.
This is a special lesson for everyone
as we get to focus in on Emma Smith and her life
and what the Lord says to her.
So John, when you think of sections 23 through 26,
especially section 25, what comes to mind? Thanks for asking, Hank. I remember
somebody once saying, please don't make this a section just about the hymns. Make
a hymn book. And I thought, yeah, really good point. I love that it's about Emma. I
love that Emma is called by her name. I love that it's about Emma. I love that Emma is called by her name.
I love that it seems very directed to Emma,
but towards the end, it's like what I say to you,
I say to all.
There's a lot of great things to see in this one.
Yeah, and hearing this in context,
we talk about Joseph, he's going through such difficulty,
yet he's got a companion here
who is going through the same difficulties with him.
And it's nice to highlight that.
Morgan, what are you looking forward to today?
Where are we going to go?
My goal in our discussion is hopefully to lay the groundwork.
John already alluded to this, that at the end of section 25, it says, this is my voice
unto all. I want to look at why this matters to all of us,
but also why Emma should matter to all of us.
That is the goal.
We'll see if we get there.
That's fantastic.
I'm looking forward to this.
Let's read from the Come Follow Me manual.
The lesson is called,
Seek for the Things of a Better World.
Hey, that sounds like you, John.
All right, here's what it says.
It starts out this way.
For most people, being baptized
is a reverent, peaceful experience.
The baptism of Emma Smith and others, however,
was disrupted by a mob who mocked them,
threatened them, and forced them to flee.
Later, just as Joseph was about to confirm the new members,
he was arrested for upsetting the new members, he was
arrested for upsetting the community with his preaching. In all this opposition, how
could Emma find reassurance that she was doing the right thing? The same place we
all find it, the revelation from the Lord. He spoke to Emma about the things of a
better world, his kingdom and her place in it. He told her not to fear, to lift up her heart and rejoice
and to cleave under the covenants she had made.
And these words of encouragement and counsel
are his voice unto all.
Okay, with that Morgan, how do you wanna go about this?
I wanna talk a little bit about why Emma matters to us.
And I thought it might be fun, Hank, you mentioned when you've reached out to me that you had
just like a feeling that you should reach out.
It's interesting because you mentioned Emily Bell Freeman.
She just recently gave a general conference talk that talked a lot about Emma Smith.
I thought it might
be kind of fun to tell you all why I love Emma so much. I have a daughter named Emma. My husband
has been dead set since he was 10 years old on naming a daughter Emma. I was not sold on the name.
Emily Freeman, we have this long story genetic testing situation when we have babies where our babies have to be tested for a rare form of eye cancer that my husband was born with. So, Emily
texted me when I was pregnant with my first and said, how are you doing? And I told her that we
were going in for this testing.
And she said, can I pray for the baby? Do you have a name picked out? And I said, we
don't have a name picked out. You can just pray for baby girl Pearson. And then my husband
kiddingly said, tell her if she wants to be on my team, she should pray for Emma. Emily,
sister Freeman, I should say, texted me from the Western Wall.
She was in Jerusalem, in Israel.
She texted me a picture from the Western Wall of a slip of paper that said, baby girl Pearson,
in parentheses, Emma.
There's a lot more of the story of why we ended up naming our baby Emma
But I just want to tell you both it has been such a blessing to me to have this chance to dig into this section
section 25 Not only for my girl
But I have another daughter now too and I just think this section is so powerful
For women in particular. There's so few places in the scriptures where we know that the Lord is speaking directly to women,
that He gives us directives for the kind of women that we should be.
And so I think as He talks to Emma, He is talking to all of us about what our potential is as a woman.
Why does this matter, especially now? President Nelson in 2019 invited the women of the
church to study Doctrine and Covenant, section 25. And he said he wanted us to study it in order
to learn how to draw the Savior's power into our lives. He said that accessing the power of God in
your life requires the same things that the Lord instructed Emma and each of you to do.
And then he said, your personal spiritual endeavor will bring you joy as you gain,
understand and use the power with which you have been endowed. This does matter to each of us.
And even if you aren't like a history buff, I think it helps to get to know Emma Smith. I think as we come to know Emma in a way,
especially as women, we come to know ourselves a little bit better. In preparation for this
conversation, I talked to Jenny Reader, who is a church historian that I love, and she wrote,
I think, one of the best Deseret book publications to come out in the last little bit, which was the book first that was published a few years ago that tells Emma's story.
And so I picked Jenny's brain a little bit. And one of the things that she says is that she believes Emma's story is a story of redemption that I think in many ways as Emma is redeemed, so are we.
I think if we judge her or make her unworthy,
we also are making the atonement of Jesus Christ insufficient for our lives
and our shortcomings and our weaknesses.
And women are so hard on ourselves.
So I think that it's important for us to be able to, like Jenny says, like redeem
Emma in our church's history in order to be able to redeem ourselves. Does that make any sense?
Yeah. John, we had this great discussion with Dr. Tomlin Ford about redeeming the dead. It's not
just about ordinances. It's about honoring the dead and finding the
good in them. I just thought it was a fantastic thought.
And Sister Melissa Inouye that we had on the podcast, who passed away shortly after that,
I will never forget her ideas about redeeming the dead that was the redeem their reputation.
Of all the people I want to be on the right side of, one of them's Emma.
I know Joseph loves her and I think what a hard life. There was no, okay, now you've found your
husband, life will be happily ever after. That was not her story. And boy, I respect these people for
sticking with it. Yeah. Jenny Reader actually recently attended a symposium, I believe.
They spent days going through Section 25, sent me something that she wrote for this
conference.
And her article was all about comparing and connecting Eve and Emma along the same lines of what we were just talking about,
the redemption. So she said a Washington Post article affirmed that the story of Eve in
the book of Genesis has had a more profoundly negative impact on women throughout history
than any other. And then Jenny says this, which kind of blew my mind a little bit. She said, I love how Joseph salvaged Eve's reputation when he translated the Bible, namely Moses
and Genesis from June to December 1830 with scribes, including Emma. The books of Abraham
and Moses introduced new insight into the ironically salvific role of Eve as the instigator of God's work and
glory to bring to pass the exaltation and eternal life of man and woman. And then Jenny
shared that Joseph actually had a couple of visions that included Adam and Eve, which
I did not know. But then Jenny writes, Emma too multiplied sorrows with lost children and the
lost manuscript she had transcribed, which we probably will talk more about. She is a Miriam
to Joseph's Moses, assisting where he is slow of speech, a prophetess expounding and exhorting to
the modern day female descendants of Israel. She is also every one of us as we maneuver our own ways, laying
things down, lifting things up, keeping, coming, receiving both warnings and blessings. And she is
the church, the community, the band of believers. Emma is every one of us. And now that I have made
Emma a giant figure, I wonder how she would feel about this. She is, after all, a person, a very
mortal person with very tragic flaws of which I am sure she was completely aware. Things
didn't turn out well for her, as seen through certain eyes. She stayed, she remained, she
didn't come, she denied, she protected her children and her home and her possessions.
She questioned, she spoke up, and then she didn't. She gave in. She married a drunkard
and raised his illegitimate child from an adulterous relationship. She saw the committal
of her son to a mental hospital. Her eye drooped. She joined another church and collected new hymns.
She severed, but in so doing, she remained with Joseph's body. She continued to protect the word
she scribed for him. He came
for her when he died. And then she tells the story about how in 1892, there was a celebration in the
Tabernacle. There were these floral representations that turned to women in Nauvoo and life-size
portraits of Joseph, Emma, Eliza R. Snow, and the then Relief Society
general president, Zaina Young. There were some concern about including Emma in this
celebration, and Wilford Woodruff said, anyone who opposed it must be very narrow-minded
indeed, which I thought was really interesting. And then Jenny just closes and says,
today we can redeem Eve and Emma
by recognizing their work alongside their troubles.
Perhaps this is how God promises to preserve Emma's life.
We can remove them from their fallen places
and position them crowned in righteousness
and we can find ourselves in them.
Wow.
That's a lot.
So good though.
I know I was like, Jenny, can I quote you? She was like, quote away.
I was like, perfect.
Thank you.
Wow.
Jenny Reader.
That was absolutely beautiful.
Not only is she an incredible writer, but she's a brilliant historian.
Some people get all the talent.
Now, before we go any further,
speaking of talent, let's take a quick time out,
John, tell us about Morgan.
Someone might say, wow, Morgan knows Emily Belfryman,
but Morgan knows just about everyone.
Can you tell us a little bit about her?
Yeah, I'm sure a lot of our listeners are going, hey, isn't she the all in podcast host? Just about everyone. Can you tell us a little bit about her? Yeah.
I'm sure a lot of our listeners are going, Hey, isn't she the all in podcast host?
Yeah.
That's what she's been doing since October of 2018.
Has about 23 million downloads.
She's originally from North Carolina.
She worked for Deseret news for a long time, wrote about 400 articles for Deseret news.
She and her husband, Benjamin have two little girls, Emma and Jane, which she has explained a little bit. They live
in Philadelphia right now. Benjamin's at Horton getting his MBA. She is happiest when she's wearing
sweatpants and eating dark chocolate. And down the list somewhere is hanging out with Hank and John.
So we're down the list, but we're glad you took a minute for us.
I love any chance to talk the gospel with anybody.
I actually think this is so funny because, John, I don't know if I told you this when
you were on All In.
I grew up listening to audio tapes of your voice to go to sleep at night. I mean, I could quote you every tape you did growing up.
So big fan.
Oh, wow.
Morgan, where do we get all in?
Follow him, we love to promote our sister podcasts.
If someone wanted to listen,
maybe they haven't heard of it.
Maybe they've been living under a rock.
So where would I get it?
Literally anywhere that you listen to podcasts, you can find it.
Apple, Spotify.
But if you also are not great with the podcast app, you can just go online to ldsliving.com
slash all in.
We hope everyone will go check this out.
My favorite interview is, John, by the way,
finding joy this holiday season, November of 2020.
For this conversation, if you're interested
in what we've talked about today,
I do have an episode with Jenny Reader
when that first book came out, which is a great resource. And I didn't pull a ton from that because I figured
I've already talked to her about that.
If anybody's interested in listening,
that is a good one to start with.
Beautiful.
Well, let's keep going here.
So you're a journalist by nature.
You've been doing this for a long time.
Is that kind of the slant
you want to take as we jump in? I had this idea when Hank reached out, I will admit, I was like,
I am not a scholar. I'm not a historian. I am a journalist. I know how to ask questions.
I love asking questions. I love sitting with someone and being able to pick their brain.
As I thought about this in preparation, I had the thought, partially because I was thinking about how
complex of a human Emma is. And I think that makes for the best kind of interviews. Like very complex
people make interesting interviews. And I had the thought, if I could interview anyone
who has passed away,
Emma Smith might be at the top of the list.
One thing that I've always tried to do with All In
is I'll think, you know,
I have the chance to sit and talk with somebody
that in many ways, like I said,
I went to bed at night as a kid listening to John By The Way.
I never ever would have imagined that I would have the chance to talk to John, by the way. For that reason, because I
know that there are a lot of people that would love to have the opportunity to sit in the same
rooms as some of these people and to ask them questions. I like to think that I am like
representative of a normal member of the church and try to ask the question that people won't
answer.
One thing that I've tried to do sometimes when trying to get questions for a guest,
I'll put a question out on Instagram and say, if you could ask this person any question,
what would you ask?
So I did that on Instagram in preparation for this discussion and the questions flooded in.
As we go through, I'm not going to take them question by question.
I will call out like this is one question that came up a lot.
We'll try to answer some of those questions that people seem to have.
I think there are some questions that we would never be able to know unless we were able
to talk to Emma herself. But I think there are resources out there that give us a sense for Emma.
There's even some people may not be aware of this. You can read Emma Smith's Last Will and Testament
online. So this was an interview that her sons did with her prior to her passing,
which was so interesting to me to read because I think in the scriptures or even reading
Joseph and Emma's letters back and forth to each other, it's like very poetic. If you're
going to write something that was intended to be read. But this last will and testament is literally just her sons
asking her questions. She talks like you or I would talk. That gives us interesting insight into
Emma as a person. There's also, and we'll get to this later, but there's a blessing. So when Joseph
Smith was going to Carthage, Emma asked him for a blessing.
He didn't have time to give her that blessing before he left, but he asked her to write
down a blessing of what she desired.
He said he would sign it.
We know Joseph never came back from Carthage, but I think that also gives us a really interesting
insight into Emma and her
mind.
We'll try to give people a little bit of a better idea of who Emma is.
We'll see if we're successful or not, but that's my hope.
That's great.
And she certainly was all in.
I'm certain that you would both say that.
I think through the years, maybe the church has,
and both of you could comment on this,
we've come around to a more, like you said,
that this woman is very complex.
And instead of labeling her as, oh, she left the church,
we can't listen to her.
I think we've come to a much more positive place.
Yeah, I actually exchanged some messages with a lady that used to work for Church Public
Affairs and she said that she said, I'm hoping between Jenny Reader's research and President
Freeman's talk from General Conference, this generation will grow up with a healthier approach to Emma.
Which is sad that it felt unhealthy at some points,
but I think we just don't totally understand Emma.
I've been friends with Jenny through work for years,
and when she was writing the book about Emma,
she posted a picture on Instagram.
She said, working on the Emma Smith project.
And I messaged her and I was like, okay, I am so intrigued by this.
She messaged me back and said, I think she's speaking to me.
Emily Bell Freeman, when she was preparing her general conference talk, she talks about how she ended up going to
Two different church history sites one being Harmony, Pennsylvania
Where she went to Emma's home and sat in Emma's kitchen for like three hours
She says that she felt like she received so much revelation and I think that the reason
women feel drawn
to Emma is that we feel a responsibility to get it right.
In preparing this, I felt a lot of pressure to get Emma's story
right. And I think it's because she wants it to be right. She
wants that redemption. I hope that we can give it to her.
And before anyone even thinks, well, all those
people out in Utah, they were terrible people as well. No, they're also complex. They also are over
there trying to deal with their situation. What's happened being driven out of Nauvoo.
I had just a quick thought. I was teaching the New Testament today at BYU, and there's this moment in Luke chapter 7 where this
sinful woman comes in as Jesus is at a meal with a Pharisee and the Pharisee
quickly labels the woman. I would not let her touch me, she's a sinner. And then
Jesus asks a question that I just find interesting. He says, Simon, seeest thou
this woman? And of course he sees her.
They've already been talking about her.
She's been in the room for a long time.
Everybody's seen her.
So I asked my students, what does he mean?
See us now this woman?
They shared such wonderful thoughts of,
do we actually see people or do we label people
and as a way to not see them?
So as I came into this interview today and
as I've been listening to you Morgan I think it's a question about everyone from
history and today it's Emma and each other. Do you really see them or have
you gone with the label that you've put on them for a long time? So it just seemed
to fit. See us now this woman today. Do you actually see her?
I just think life is so much easier when we figure people were doing the best they could
with what they knew at the time. And sometimes with things they knew that weren't even right
at the time. And maybe the Utah Saints thought they knew things that weren't even right at
the time. And we're all just doing the best we can with what we know or what we think we
know that might not even be true.
So let's extend some grace to people.
And I'm so glad we're talking this way about Emma right now.
I think it's interesting.
This is probably a comma out of left field, but I love the TV show, This Is Us. I don't know if either one of you
watched that show. The thing that I love about it is that you see the characters throughout time.
In the beginning of the show, I didn't like the essentially main character, but then once you see
everything that that person has gone through, you develop such a love for every character.
I think that that's kind of the way that life is.
If we could see everything, we would love everybody so much more.
My mother-in-law always says, we love best those that we know best.
I think that that's true of everybody.
And certainly, I think as you come to know Emma Moore,
the more you love her.
There's a quote from Lucy Smith in her history
that was written in 1845 talking about Emma.
And Lucy definitely would have been somebody
that knew Emma really well.
She said, I have never seen a woman in my life
who would endure every species of fatigue
and hardship from month to month and from year to year with that unflinching courage,
zeal and patience, which she has always done.
She has breasted the storm of persecution and buffeted the rage of men and devils until
she has been swallowed up in a sea of trouble, which would have borne down almost any other woman.
How can we be hard on somebody
that that is what she went through?
And that's coming from a woman
who went through incredibly difficult things.
When I contacted Morgan,
I really wanted to spend the vast majority of our time
in Section 25,
just because this is a great time to talk about Emma.
But John, if you look at section 23 and 24, it actually involves Emma, even though she's
not listed by name, like section 23 is given to Oliver Cowdery, Hiram Smith, Samuel Smith,
Joseph Smith Sr. and Joseph Knight Sr., all of whom know Emma personally. She is spending a lot
of time with them. And then section 24 comes in at Harmony, Pennsylvania, which is Emma's hometown.
That's where she's born. Even though we're not going to spend a lot of time in these sections,
John, do you see anything that we might stop and take a look at?
I don't pretend to know the entire backstory of section 23,
but one of the things that I just loved
was how often the Lord repeated this phrase.
Cause like you said, this is five different people
who kind of put all together in section 23.
Thou art under no condemnation.
It just made me think how many of us are thinking,
I just not good enough.
It's like the Lord saying, will you stop it?
You're not under condemnation. He works with people. He's a savior.
What does that mean? That means he forgives sins. I'm not condemning you.
That touched me, hopefully for all of us that are, oh, I just am not sure, you know, the Lord's
saying, stop it. You're not under any condemnation. I love the way you said that, John, because I think
the Lord would say that. Like, why do you think that? Why do you think that I'm up here looking
for ways to condemn you? I'm not. Elder Ciron, right? I'm in relentless pursuit of you. Yeah.
So that touched me when I read that because
I thought a lot of us act that way a lot like we're, oh, we're never enough. And the Lord's saying,
stop that. You're going to get some advice. You're going to get some exhortations,
but you're not under condemnation. Just listen up and let me help you. I like that.
Yeah. That's beautiful. I do think it's interesting that idea that John
just expressed kind of ties into what we've been talking about. We should tell listeners that I
literally have a child in my arms because if they hear her cooing, it's like, what in the world is
going on? But I think that that idea of not condemning ourselves is also applicable to what we've
been talking about with not condemning other people either.
I think there is that tie there as well.
That's wonderful.
Then the section 24 to Oliver, the church is just a baby.
Speaking of a baby, right?
It's a whole four months old and the Lord is moving
forward saying, verse 10, I've always loved it. Don't suppose that you can say enough
in my cause, right? I will let you know if you ever get to the point where it's too much.
Let's go, let's grow, which I love. John, anything in 24?
Yeah, I'm looking at verse 8. The first part's to Joseph and the second part to Oliver.
Be patient in afflictions for thou shalt have many. Okay, who would really like to hear that?
We, reading it now, knowing where this happened in history,
we're a little bit acquainted with what's going to happen down the road.
And it's like, wow, those are sobering words for Joseph.
But endure them.
I am with thee even until the end of thy days. Wow.
There's a little reference to the Book of Mormon in verse 19.
And you know how I love Jacob 5, John.
Thou art called to prune my vineyard with a mighty pruning this last time.
You go over to Jacob chapter five and there's this moment where the Lord is frustrated with the vineyard. It's all gone bad and he thinks, what could I have done more for my vineyard?
And then the servant, if you remember, John says, let's try one more time, one more time and everything turns around and by the end, the Lord has
everything that he was hoping for out of his vineyard. So I just like that little Book
of Mormon connection.
Absolutely.
When you are married to someone and we'll talk about how Emma was called to be a comfort
to her husband, but that was because he was going to go through
so many afflictions. So when it says, be patient and afflictions for thou shall have many,
I think it's not just Joseph that was in those afflictions. So as we talk throughout,
I think we'll get a better idea of what Joseph and Emma went through, which is just a lot.
Oh, it's relentless when you look at their life. It's give them a break almost. Give them a place
to settle down. And it even says in verse nine to Joseph, in temporal labors, thou shalt not have
strength, which also says to Emma, temporally, it's going to always be a struggle.
which also says to Emma, temporarily, it's gonna always be a struggle.
And when Section 25 was received,
Emma and Joseph had just lost their first child.
Pretty devastating.
All the hopes, everything that you're looking forward to
and the plans you're making,
it's ripped away from you.
Now we can spend our time where I asked Morgan to go,
which is section 25.
Morgan, I love the idea you had.
Let's ask questions of Emma
and probably get some of our answers from this section,
right?
Hopefully, that is the hope.
I wanted to start, if we can,
with a quote from Sister Freeman's general conference talk, because I think it
really sets the stage for the section. She says that M.N. Joseph, they had just lost their first
child, a little boy, they had been married for three and a half years at this point.
Obviously, the church has just been organized. And Sister Freeman says, surely she worried about their finances, about the increasing
persecution that threatened their safety, and about their future.
And yet, the work of God was everywhere around her.
Did she also wonder about her place in the plan, her purpose in his kingdom, and her
potential in the eyes of God?
And then she says, but Emma did not just stand at that
window and wonder. If we read section 25 carefully, we discover an important progression taking place.
Emma would go from being a daughter in the kingdom to elect lady to queen. I found as I was
trying to prep for this, a talk that was given in 1984 by President Gordon B. Hinckley,
where he essentially walked through this section verse by verse.
Then Jenny Reader also says that she likes to look at Emma through Section 25.
She thinks that if we really dig into Section 25, we understand Emma.
we really dig into section 25, we understand Emma. But President Hinckley said,
"'This, as you know, is a revelation given through Joseph
the prophet to his wife, Emma.
It was given at Harmony, Pennsylvania in July, 1830,
only a short time after the church was organized.
In so far as I know, this is the only revelation given
specifically to a woman.
And in concluding it, the Lord said,
this is my voice unto all.
Therefore the counsel given by the Lord on this occasion
is applicable to each of you.
I thought if we go through verse by verse
and pull out the interesting things,
and as we go, we'll answer some of those questions.
Yeah, I love it.
One thing that I think is helpful
that I've been shown through our time together
on Follow Him is that sometimes we make the mistake
of thinking, okay, here's a male figure in the scriptures.
Both men and women can learn from this figure.
And then we'll get to a female in the scriptures
and go, all women can learn from this woman. It's just been a couple of
times, Shonza, we've gone through and I've said, wait, wait, wait, why do we all of a sudden think,
oh, here's a woman, men can't learn from this section. So if there's anybody listening who
thinks, oh, I guess this is for the women. No, no, no, no, no. This is, do the same thing we do with
any male figure in the scripture. Say, I can draw out principles for me. And the principles are applicable. Yeah. So in verse one, I think one of the most
significant things for anyone is that the Lord calls Emma by name, just like he
called Joseph by name in the first vision. That was the biggest thing that
stood out to me in that verse.
Do you know what else about that verse? Originally, it said,
I speak unto you, Emma, my daughter. And Smith was added in 1835 for clarity,
for our day for a growing church. So, it's even more close. Joseph, this is my beloved, Emma,
my daughter. You're my daughter Emma.
I don't need your last name. We maybe need it in future generations, but originally it
was Emma, my daughter. I like that.
I love that too.
We talked about the first vision that Joseph's, the first thing he learns, the very first
word of the restoration is his name. And here, same thing, Emma, I know you. You are known
to me. I know more about you than you do.
Absolutely. So then in verse two, it talks about walking in the paths of virtue. As I
was preparing, I looked in the BYU Citation Index, which I'm sure
you all use. I think it's a underutilized tool. Sister Elaine Dalton, who we know
as the Young Women General President, that introduced the value of virtue into
the Personal Progress Program, which is no longer. She has talked about this verse multiple times
in general conference.
She said, virtue is a pattern of thought and behavior
based on high moral standards.
It includes chastity and moral purity.
And my mom, when that value of virtue was brought in
to the Young Women's Program, my
mom pointed out something that I've thought about over and over again in the years since,
which is that they didn't introduce it as here's the new young women value, live it.
They introduced it as a return to virtue.
My mom said, you know, to me, that says, we recognize that you may have made mistakes.
We recognize that we can be better in this regard. So we're calling for a return to virtue.
It's okay if you have not been perfect in this in the past, but it's something to work at.
That was what came to mind for me with that verse.
I've heard Sister Freeman also talk about when the Savior's garment was touched and he said,
who touched me? And the apostles were like, there's a thousand people here and you say,
who touched me? And virtue has gone out of me and the footnote says power. I love putting those
together. Virtue is power. One thing that caught my eye this time around was, I will preserve thy
life. I wonder if that's a worry for her. I mean, just at her baptism, there's people yelling and
taunting and Joseph is getting hauled away as he's going to end up. It's going to happen many times.
So, I wonder if that's been a concern on her mind and the Lord lets her know,
I'm overseeing this. Help me out with the backstory here. Didn't they make a little
dam in the creek so that they could have a baptism and people kept destroying it?
And that's why Emma hasn't been confirmed yet. That's why verse 8 says,
future tense, he will lay hands on the to get the Holy Ghost.
And the crazy ironic thing, there's people that are disrupting them, breaking the dam
they've made in the river, and then Joseph is arrested as a disorderly person.
Oh, he's the disorderly one.
You built this baptismal font for people to tear down.
How dare you? How disorderly of you.
Yeah, I mean, ever since,
we could talk about this Morgan,
ever since she's really met Joseph Smith,
her life has been, it's almost like, who did I marry?
I'm constantly having to move
because people are threatening my life.
I think we heard that Martin Harris's wife, Lucy,
ransacks Emma's house at one point. I will preserve thy life. I think we heard that Martin Harris's wife, Lucy, ransacks Emma's house at one point.
I will preserve thy life. No wonder she might feel that way.
I think that that's an interesting thing to dig into with. We already this year in Doctrine and
Covenant studied that story of Martin Harris and Lost Manuscript. One thing that was interesting that I learned is that Martin Harris, in many
ways to Emma, was an answer to prayer. She knew that they needed somebody to help them.
He had come along at just the right time. Then he asks if he can take those pages. We
know the story. Joseph asked three times.
Finally, the Lord says, you can do as you please, and Joseph gives him the manuscript.
Martin leaves with that manuscript, and while he's gone,
we learn that Emma loses their baby.
She is incredibly sick.
When she is coherent from what she's gone through, and Joseph has been caring for her the entire time,
she's like, where is the manuscript? And says, Joseph, you need to go find what Martin has done with this.
This is in Saints. This is what it says about that situation with Martin Harris. After two weeks Emma's health began to improve and her thoughts turned to Martin in the manuscript.
I feel so uneasy, she told Joseph, that I cannot rest and shall not be at ease until I know something about what Mr.
Harris is doing with it. She urged Joseph to find Martin, but Joseph did not want to leave her. Send for my mother, she said, and she shall stay with me while you are gone.
She knew that they needed to go find out what was going on with the manuscript.
She says, send for my mother and she'll stay with me while you're gone.
Joseph took a stagecoach north.
He ate and slept little during the journey.
Tells what happened.
Martin Harris says, I've lost my soul. But then Joseph says, must I
return to my wife with such a tale? Joseph feared the news would kill her and how shall
I appear before the Lord? And I think that tells you how important the Book of Mormon
was to Emma. We sometimes maybe underestimate her contribution in terms of being Joseph's first scribe.
We'll talk a bit more about that later.
I think that that is one more example of the adversity that Joseph and Emma went through
together.
Yeah.
We don't talk about it because we don't have those pages.
So we don't see her handwriting.
Her contribution is really lost. We talk about Oliver Cowdery. Oh, he's the one that was the
scribe. If we lost Oliver Cowdery's portion, we wouldn't talk about him. All that work, all that work.
We get Emma talking about how Joseph could dictate for hour after hour and come back without having the previous lines read back to him.
I'm so glad we have that. Emma's testimony of how that happened.
And how excited they must have been. All this information, all this beautiful scripture.
Morgan, I like that you pointed it out that he thinks there's two people he's worried about. How am I going to appear before the Lord? And what is my wife going to say? I
shouldn't joke around, but those are my two questions often.
What is my wife going to say?
Oh man, the Lord's going to be mad to me and what's Sarah going to say?
Isn't that true?
For the purposes of this conversation, maybe we jump to verse four, because there
it's alluding to, and some scholars say that it's not necessarily talking about Emma murmuring that
she hasn't seen the plates, but multiple prophets have said that that's what the verse is about.
I went back to that last will and testament of Emma and they asked her questions about the manuscript.
Specifically, I thought it was so interesting.
Her son said, I should suppose that you would have uncovered the plates and examined them.
Emma replied, I did not attempt to handle the plates other than I have told you, nor uncover them to look at them.
I was satisfied that it was the work of the Lord and therefore did not feel it to be necessary to do so.
And then it says, Major Bidaman here suggested, did Mr. Smith forbid your examining the plates?
And Emma said, I do not think he did. I knew that he had them and was not specially curious about them.
I moved them from place to the table
as it was necessary in doing my work.
How disciplined and how faithful
did she have to be to just,
oh, I'm cooking dinner, let me move these plates
and I'm not gonna uncover them.
I'm just gonna trust that it's not meant for me to see.
And she wasn't murmuring. She followed that counsel about the murmuring not for the things
that she hadn't seen. I think it's also interesting to note she's not the only person
that it says something about murmuring. I believe it's Oliver Cowdery also is told not to murmur, but in reference to that particular verse,
Joseph Fielding Smith said, She felt, as most women would have felt under like circumstances, that she was entitled to some special favors.
It was difficult for her to understand why she could not view the plates, the Urim and
Thummim, and other sacred things which view had been given to special witnesses.
At times this human thought caused her to murmur and ask the question of the prophet
why she was denied the privilege.
And then Gordon B. Hinckley said, she said
he was speaking of the plates and then he said evidently she complained because Joseph
would not show them to her. The Lord is saying to her, murmur not, complain not, accept what
must be in my eternal wisdom and do not find fault. My takeaway from that was Emma had
to be pretty remarkable that that was her answer at the end of her life.
I've heard it said that integrity is what you do when no one is watching.
I like that you use the word discipline, a disciple of Christ.
Same word. It's kind of a witness, though. He had plates. She moved him.
I mean, that would be pretty cool just to know he's got something. I feel it
Yeah, she says in that same will and testament
I once felt of the plates as they thus lay on the table tracing their outline shape
They seem to be pliable like thick paper and would rustle with a metallic sound and the edges were moved by the thumb
It's really remarkable that she never said, oh, accidentally, I'm going to move this cloth
over. But she knows, she knows the commandments and she keeps them, which is just beautiful.
I hope to be more like that. Let's back up for a second to verse three.
So this is where Emma is called an elect lady.
It's interesting because you have to understand
that it was a call that was made 12 years prior
to an official call to serve as Relief Society general president.
So this is 1830. The Relief Society would president. So this is 1830,
the Relief Society would not be organized until 1842.
Joseph though, when he organized the Relief Society,
he said, I gave much instruction read in the New Testament
and the Book of Doctrine and Covenants
concerning the elect lady
and showed that the elect means to be elected
to a certain work and that the revelation was then fulfilled by Sister Emma's election to the presidency of the society,
she having previously been ordained to expound scripture.
Sister Freeman has said that the elect lady, and I'm not sure if she was quoting someone when she said this,
or if this was just her thought, but she said,
an elect lady has heavenly privileges with personal responsibilities. I think that
Emma took that call so seriously to be an elect lady and waited for that call to officially come
to her. A lot of the things that we'll read throughout the rest of the section are things that would be done quietly and kind of in the
background, but when that call came to be the Relief Society general president,
she took it very seriously and was ready for it.
I just love the wording there. It's not, I've chosen you to marry Joseph. It's no, you are an elect lady and I called you.
Wow.
What does that mean exactly?
Well, I think that comes about later on,
as you just said with the Relief Society,
but those last four words whom I have called,
I like to slow down when I read it.
That had to mean something powerful to her.
When I read this, for the first time I thought of,
look, Emma is not elect because she married Joseph.
She is elect long before this.
I read a little bit of her history
in preparation for this.
I didn't know her father, Isaac,
fought in the Revolutionary War.
And that Methodism, just like Joseph,
had come through their town in harmony, that Emma's uncle became
an itinerant preacher for Methodism.
Then there's this great family tradition.
This is an article by Mark Staker.
It says, a family tradition suggests that Isaac Hale overheard his young daughter, Emma,
praying for him in the woods near their home and this contributed to his spiritual
conversion. It doesn't seem like this whole process started when she meets Joseph Smith.
And then there's also the story where Joseph is told that he'll know the right person to bring
with him to get the plates. He thinks it's going to be Alvin, but then Alvin passes away unexpectedly. He realizes
that it's Emma, and at that point they were not even married. I think that's significant
as well.
Yeah. The restoration is not going to be brought about by one person. It's two. It's a couple.
A couple of the questions that came in were related to Emma and Relief Society.
One came in from a Relief Society president asking, how can I inspire others to minister
with true compassion?
One thing that we see with Emma, I went back and read some of the Relief Society minutes
from Nauvoo.
I was struck by a couple of things. One was when the Relief
Society was organized, she said, we are going to do something extraordinary, which we hear, we've
heard that quote before, but I had never heard this second sentence. It says, when a boat is stuck on
the rapids with a multitude of Mormons on board, we shall consider that a loud call for relief.
Mormons on board, we shall consider that a loud call for relief." I think she had this ability to inspire people, to help them see what relief society meant. When you catch the vision of relief
society, it's such a beautiful thing that you want to be a part of it. It's not something that is a
burden to do. It's something that you want to be there.
I just had a baby, exhibit A. When I had her, I was blown away by our little ward.
We live here in Philadelphia.
It's an inner city ward, mostly supported by students.
There were seven of us pregnant in the same building, which is the majority of our ward. And I was
so well taken care of by the Relief Society. I just think, do you want to inspire others
to be a part of Relief Society? You help them catch the vision. Emma went on in that quote
to say, we expect extraordinary occasions and pressing calls, which means you're going to do something that matters and you may feel like it doesn't matter, but it matters quite a lot.
And I think that Emma, she understood that. And another thing that I noticed in those minutes was she talks frequently about unity and how important unity is, which I think means we don't want to talk about each other behind our backs.
We don't want to be petty. The interesting thing is, I think this got really complicated for Emma when polygamy started to become a practice.
Jenny Reader said that Emma actually did not attend Relief Society. I believe it was 1843. She didn't attend for an entire year.
Jenny thinks that's because it was too hard for her to go to Relief Society. I think just
as there are things that make it difficult for us sometimes, Emma was human. There was
a big thing that made it hard for her.
I've heard multiple stories as I've studied church history of Emma basically having a
hospital in her front yard. One is when they cross out of Missouri, we'll talk about this later this
year, but I mean it's the middle of the winter and they've got to leave the state. They get into
Illinois. Emma's one of these refugees pouring into Illinois, yet She's the one out in the yards taking care of the sick and then again
John isn't in Nauvoo where the mosquitoes bring malaria and
She's again out in her front yard
Where it's become a hospital
If remember that movie they show you a Nauvoo of Emma just at a quick pace going from tent to tent
Administering relief. I love that
the phrase relief society. I used to wonder where did that come from? And if you go back to Jacob
chapter two, you know how he's talking about, I'm worried that you're seeking riches and pride.
He says, now if you seek riches for the intent to do good, what does he say Hank? To
clothe the naked, liberate the captive, administer to their relief. And then King Benjamin picks up the
same exact phrases. And I love to say to my classes, administer relief. If only we had
some sort of, I don't know, relief society or something. Because that's what they do,
administer relief. And that's what Emma did, relieve suffering. We'll move on to verse five.
There were a lot of questions related to Joseph and Emma's relationship,
which probably doesn't come as a shock.
But in verse five, Emma receives a calling to be a comfort to her husband.
Jenny Reader actually was nice enough to share with me a document
that she put together, the letters
that Joseph and Emma wrote back and forth to one another.
She said that in many ways, that is how Emma provided support even at a distance to her
husband.
Obviously, she provided support in many ways.
When they were not able to be together in person, you see Joseph and Emma communicating throughout
and the love that they clearly shared for one another.
And I think that that call to be a support is significant because
Joseph would clearly need that support.
But going to that last will and testament of Emma's, she was asked by her sons,
what was the condition of feeling between you and father? And she said it was good.
And then they said, were you in the habit of quarreling? And she said, no, there was no
necessity for any quarreling. He knew that I wished for nothing but what was right. And as he wished for nothing else, we did not disagree. He usually gave some heed to what I had to say. And then this part, this
one line breaks my heart. She says, it was quite a grievous thing to many that I had
any influence with him. I think that that speaks to the time that Emma was in, which
was a time when women didn't have much
of a voice.
And I think that she did.
I think that she was a sharp woman with things to say.
But for some reason, people didn't like that she had an influence on Joseph.
That would be incredibly hard.
I don't know if you two have thoughts on that.
I don't know about those people who had that difficulty. To me, I can't see why you would
have that, but maybe we live in a different time because the great people I've worked with,
their spouse has often had that type of ennobling influence on them, a synergistic influence of they can do more together
than they could apart. Yeah, the word that leaps off the page to me, Hank, is thou shall be a
comfort. We talked about this on a previous podcast. I love etymologies. Entomology is the
study of bugs. So don't get that mixed up with etymology because that really bugs me.
But no, so comfort means together strong.
But look at that, Joseph and Emma together strong.
Be a comfort, be together strong.
Morgan, I brought another letter from Emma to Joseph.
They're just beautiful to read.
They are.
This is back when people wrote beautiful letters.
I write emails, right?
You text and code.
Yeah.
This is 1837.
She says, I cannot tell you my feelings when I found I could not see you before
you left, yet I expect you can realize them.
The children feel very anxious
about you because they don't know where you have gone. I verily feel that if I had no more confidence
in God than some I could name, I should be in a sad case indeed. But I still believe that if we humble
ourselves and are as faithful as we can be, we shall be delivered from every snare that may be laid at our feet, and our lives and property will be saved and we redeemed from all unreasonable encumbrance."
That's just beautiful language. I cannot tell you my feelings when I found I could not see you. Yet, I think you know it's an insight into their relationship.
Another letter that I love while we're on the topic of their letters.
In 1839, when Joseph was in Liberty Jail, Emma wrote from Quincy, she had visited Joseph
three times in the jail.
And she says, the walls, bars and bolts, rolling rivers, running streams, rising hills,
sinking valleys and spreading prairies that separate us and the cruel injustice that first
cast you into prison and still holds you there with many other considerations, places my feelings far
beyond description. No one but God knows the reflections of my mind
and the feelings of my heart when I left our house and home
and almost all of everything that we possessed
except our little children and took my journey
out of the state of Missouri, leaving you shut up
in that lonesome prison.
But the reflection is more than human nature ought to bear.
And if God does not record our sufferings
and avenge our wrongs on them that are guilty,
I shall be sadly mistaken. And then she says, I shall live and am yet willing to suffer more
if it is the will of kind heaven that I should for your sake. That is beautiful.
So this is Joseph to her in Liberty Jail. It says, if you want to know how much I want to see you, examine
your feelings, how much you want to see me, I would gladly walk from here to you barefoot
and bareheaded to see you and think it great pleasure and never count it toil. And Jenny
said, when he left the jail, his boots didn't fit well and his feet were bleeding inside
the boots. He did walk almost barefoot with old
tattered clothes to see his wife. So how much did they love each other? I would say quite a lot.
I had the privilege a couple of years ago to go to Independence, Missouri with Dr. Alex Baugh.
Because the community of Christ just adores Alex so much, we were able to get into the archives.
Now, this letter is now actually owned by our church, but at the time it was owned by the community of Christ.
It was just a privilege. They let us hold it. Then on June 27, 1844, from Joseph in Carthage jail to Emma, Willard Richards was the scribe
for the letter, but then at the bottom in different handwriting, this from Joseph.
This is the last thing she reads from him.
Dear Emma, I am very much resigned to my lot.
Knowing that I am justified and having done the best that could be done. Give my love to the children.
Morgan, thank you for bringing up the letters. That takes it to a different level, doesn't it?
While we're on the topic of the last thing that Joseph would have read from Emma. One thing I want to make sure that
we talk about today is that Sister Freeman has talked about how the thing that struck
her as she prepared her conference talk was the progression of the woman that we read
about in Section 25, which was addressed to Emma when she was just 26, which I loved in general conference
that Sister Freeman pointed that out, that she said she was 26 years old because I'm
35, almost 36. And when she said that, it was like, whoa, I did not appreciate how young
Emma was. She said, we see this progression between section 25 and then this blessing
that Emma desired of Joseph before he went to Carthage. There we have this 40-year-old
version of Emma. In section 25, the Lord shared with Emma his will for her. And in the blessing that Emma wrote, I think we see her hopes
for herself. I read that blessing this week and I texted Jenny Reader and I said, do you
think that the Lord honored that blessing? Because there are some things that stood out
to me. For example, she says that she wants to have a cheerful countenance is one of the blessings that she says she would like to have.
But toward the end of her life, the editor of the Boston Courier, Joseph Buckingham, commented that Emma had a countenance of sadness.
And her granddaughter commented that she had sad eyes and deep sorrow in her heart.
I was like, do you think that the Lord honored
the blessing? Jenny said, that's a tough one. She's like, I'm not really sure how that works.
But I think Emma tried hard. We always say with All In that our hope is not with the
question, what does it mean to you to be all in the gospel of Jesus Christ? Our hope is not with the question, what does it mean to you to be all in the gospel of Jesus Christ?
Our hope is not a bunch of self-righteous answers about why somebody is all in, but
instead this is how I would like to be.
This is what I think being all in would look like.
I think in that blessing we get a taste of what Emma wanted to be. I love this that Joseph wanted her to write that blessing
because it reminds me of the scripture in Helaman 10.5
where the Lord says to Nephi,
and now because thou hast done this
with such unwearingness,
behold, I will bless thee forever
and I will make thee mighty in word and in deed,
in faith and in works. Yet even that all things shall be done unto thee according to thy
word." And this is the thing that reminded me of Emma, for thou shalt not ask that which
is contrary to my will. It seems to me that Joseph wouldn't ask her to write a blessing
if he thought that she would ask anything that did not align
with God's will.
Sister Freeman talked about it. She said, I don't know what I would have asked for, but
listen to some of the things that Emma asked for in that blessing. She wanted wisdom and
the ability to live without regret. She wanted the Spirit of God and the gift of discernment.
She wanted to raise children who could contribute to the kingdom of God and the gift of discernment. She wanted to raise
children who could contribute to the Kingdom of God and who would call her blessed. She wanted
prudence and caring for an aging body, a cheerful countenance, and she wanted to perform all the
work she had covenanted to perform. She wanted to respect her husband and act in unison with him,
and she wanted her loved ones to embrace
the gospel so she could rejoice with them. If you Google Emma Smith's Last Blessing,
there's a website for the Joseph Smith and Emma Hill Smith Historical Society. And that
last blessing is there. It's also printed in Jenny Reader's book. The final thing that she asks for is she says that whatever her lot in life,
she might be enabled to acknowledge the hand of God in all things.
And it feels almost as if she knows what's coming, that something hard,
she had already been through so many hard things, she probably knew more hard was inevitable.
When we see what Emma asked
for, we get a sense for her heart. Maybe she fell short in some regards with those things,
but that is the person that she wanted to be. I love that glimpse into Emma.
That's fantastic.
Coming up in part two of this episode.
The principle of plural marriage is right, but I am like other women. I am naturally jealous hearted.