Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Voices of the Restoration • Joseph Smith's Family • Dr. Gerrit Dirkmatt • January 13-19 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: January 13, 2025Dr. Gerrit Dirkmaat explores Joseph Smith’s family and their influence on the Church, the Restoration, and Joseph Smith’s mission in their own words.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl....com/podcastDCVOR1French: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDCVOR1FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDCVOR1DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDCVOR1PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDCVOR1ESYOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/yPyVXjF1u3sALL 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 - Dr. Gerrit Dirkmaat01:37 What are Voices of the Restoration?02:38 Real people, real experiences06:30 Photos as examples of cultural differences09:57 Struggling with Three Degrees of Glory13:35 The Standard of Truth Podcast16:47 Why Joseph Smith is important19:06 The value of experts24:44 Armchair experts29:36 Lucy Mack and Joseph Sr’s religious backgrounds35:13 Lucy’s response to Joseph Jr’s religious experiences37:36 The Second Great Awakening42:09 Arminianism44:43 Smith family witnesses47:13 Why Palmyra, New York?48:51 Lucy as biographer and Joseph Smith Papers53:12 Check your sources56:07 Miracles and Historians59:19 Lucy and Joseph’s family1:03:32 William and Joseph’s relationship1:05:37 Joseph loses two brothers1:15:19 Death and hope1:18:00 Joseph’s vision of the day of Resurrection1:23:56 Samuel impact1:26:44 A personal failure?1:31:02 Joseph’s sisters1:33:35 Joseph’s entire family believes1:39:42 We must watch over one another1:41:22 End - Dr. Gerrit DirkmaatThanks 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)
Hello everyone and welcome to Follow Him Voices of the Restoration.
My name is John, by the way, I'm here with my co-host Hank Smith, who is of a native
cheery temperament, a phrase we hear in the Joseph Smith history about Joseph Smith.
We're excited this year, there's a new part in the Come Follow Me manual called Voices of the Restoration where we hear from
people who were there. We're excited this week to have with us Dr. Garrett Dirkmott.
So excited to have him. We've had him with us before. He's going to help us
talk about these voices of the Rest restoration. Hank, what are you looking forward to today?
John, I love history.
I think the listeners who want to know the history,
they want to know the lives of these people,
what life was like, we get the revelations,
but just to know what the Smith family was going through,
what their lives were like,
I think it brings the scriptures to life.
When you have a historian who can lay that out for you, it is so fun.
I'm very grateful for the come follow me team who puts these manuals together
that they've put in these 12 sections this year called voices of the restoration.
Yeah.
And Hank, I know that you and I both love a quotation. Some British novelist began a book
by saying, the past is a foreign country. They do things differently there.
I'm so thankful this morning. Hank, I know you are one of our favorite guests that we've had.
I don't know if I've ever laughed so hard on a Follow Him recording and learned so much at the same time. We have Dr. Garrett Dirkma with us today.
Garrett, what are you looking forward to in Voices of the Restoration?
Garrett Dirkma I'm looking forward to talking about the real people that are involved in the
history of the church, the revelations that Joseph Smith receives that
make up the Doctrine and Covenants, at least a healthy portion of it, they're not received
in a vacuum. They are very often real world problems being solved as Joseph goes to the
Lord. These people that are experiencing it, these people that are closest to Joseph, the
people that are around him in difficulties and in happiness, they are the ones who are
most certain that Joseph Smith is receiving revelations from God.
It feels like part of the idea behind the voices of the restoration is to say, these
aren't just documents in a book
and these aren't just some clever sayings and some Aesop's fables here. These are real
people who had real experiences. They saw the revelations unfold as they unfolded. They
took each step of the restoration in a way that it's easy for us to look back and say,
oh, of course they were going to end up in Missouri. Everyone knows that. I mean,
well, nobody knows that, not in 1829 or 1830. You get an insight, a personal insight from people
that experienced these miracles. And I think that that would allow the spirit to speak to us as we study, because it's easier
for us to apply it to ourselves.
We think about our own lives and our own struggles and how the Lord has helped us.
Garrett, I already am loving this.
Years ago, John, David McCollough, a historian, came to BYU in a talk called The Glorious
Cause of America.
President Inkley loved David McCollough.
This is what he said, nobody ever lived in the past.
Jefferson, Adams, George Washington, they didn't walk around saying, isn't this fascinating
living here in the past?
Aren't we picturesque in our funny clothes? They were
living in the present just as we do. The great difference is
that it was their present, not ours. And just as we don't know
how things are going to turn out, they didn't either. Right,
Garrett? If you think they know, well, this is where the part
where we moved to Ohio. Oh, this is the part where we go out into Salt Lake.
Of course, we're not going to die out here.
How would we have the conference center?
You miss it all.
You miss their stress.
You miss the difficulty of what do we do?
And I think that that actually is one of the great traps of learning
things about the past is if you want to make yourself feel
better, if you want to feel like you're smarter than everybody else, if you want to feel like
you're more moral than everybody else, if you want to feel incredibly intelligent, then
you study the past with that kind of a mindset where of course you're smarter than everyone
in the past.
They don't know what a germ is.
So yeah, you're coming across as like, you know, you're Einstein compared to them.
Of course they don't know what's actually going to happen with world events, but of
course you do.
And so sometimes people study the past so that they can break their arm patting themselves
on the back.
Oh, if I lived back then I wouldn't have thought that.
Well, well yeah.
I mean, if you got into a time
machine and got it up to 88 miles an hour and went back to the past, then you wouldn't have that
viewpoint. But if you were raised believing that all disease was caused by having too much blood
in your body, you would think the only way to cure someone is to bleed them. And that sounds idiotic and ridiculous to us today, but it didn't seem idiotic to them.
And there are things right now that we all do that future generations will look back
at us and say, wow, Garrett was stupid.
Now they might say that for other reasons, but let's just say for sake of argument
But let's just say for sake of argument that a hundred years from now, they determine that cell phones were one of the leading causes of cancer.
Now I'm not saying they are, I'm saying what if that happened a hundred years from now?
We're shoving the phone right by our face.
We're wearing it in our pocket.
Our great grandchildren, if that were the case, would be like, great grandpa was an idiot.
Didn't he know that that would go? That's something you have to think about. I mean,
a great example of this, students of history, when they first start seeing
photographs from the 19th century, how happy do those people look?
You know the 19th century was terrible because in every photo it's just straight.
There is no smile. It looks like everyone's posing for a passport photo, you know,
where they tell you that you can't smile at all.
My dad was so mad once because I was like, is that grandma or grandpa?
A photograph's a great example because I show a photograph of someone from the 1870s
and 1880s, 1860s.
I show that photograph to a student in 2025 and their cultural knowledge causes them to
immediately place their culture on this person from the past.
Because in their current culture, you smile in photographs.
And if you don't smile in photographs, then you're angry or
there's something wrong with you.
And so what do they do?
They immediately interpret the past through their own lens.
And unfortunately, that lens is horrifically erroneous, but
they've already made a conclusion.
The conclusion they've made is,
oh, people were miserable in the 1860s.
They hadn't really invented good deodorant yet,
so maybe they were kind of miserable.
But the other aspect of it is,
think about how we take pictures right now.
Everyone knows who's ever gone to do a family photo.
Everyone knows that seconds before that,
everybody beaming, smiling picture is people
yelling at each other, telling everybody move over.
I can't see you.
Everyone's mad.
Mom, aren't we done with this?
Those family photos are actually these very angry times.
And then what do we do next?
Everyone's just like, and they're, they're being, frankly, that's not how people walk
around normally.
I'm a pretty happy guy.
So I'm smiling a lot, but even I'm not walk around normally. I'm a pretty happy guy, so I'm smiling a lot.
But even I'm not walking around all day with that.
The giant grin, if you're watching the video, you can see it was cultural for people to
take photographs in the 19th century in a natural, unemotional state because that's
how you normally are. When you see people, they generally
aren't beaming with a toothy grin ear to ear when they're not talking to anyone
unless they're crazy. They would see our photographs and they'd be like, so I know
they do drugs in the future but apparently they do a lot of them. I mean
everybody's just, they all have this toothy grin. Even as photographic things
change over time though, culturally, it takes
well into moving pictures before you start seeing photographs change to
the smiley happy ones.
A photograph is a great example of how someone in an instant can misjudge the
past because they are treating the past like their present.
They're injecting into the past like they're present.
They're injecting into the past what they know.
And that's a totally normal and natural thing to do.
It's not like some kind of evil nefarious thing
for an 18 year old student to see a photograph from 1860
where the person looks pretty angry and to say,
wow, they must've been very depressed.
And it takes education to say, actually, no,
this is culturally how you posed for a photograph in a more natural state,
understanding what was culturally acceptable in the past, understanding
what stresses and ideas they had.
We see this religiously all the time.
There are aspects of Latter-day Saint theology that I would guess almost nobody in the church struggles with today,
but were incredibly difficult for early church members. For instance, what's something that
early church members struggle with? They struggle terribly with Doctrine and Covenants, Section 76.
with Doctrine and Covenants, Section 76.
They struggle with the idea that essentially everyone, or as President
Oakes said, with exceptions too few to mention, that essentially everyone
is going to heaven, different degrees of heaven, and that those kingdoms of glory are so great and so glorious that they can't even be described.
You don't find
very many Latter-day Saints today having a faith crisis, crying on the edge of their
bed saying, if God really provided a way for everyone to be saved, there's no way this
church is true. It would be weird in fact if someone came to you and said, Hank, John,
I just don't know if I can believe anymore. I mean, if God, God really provided a way for all of his children to go to heaven, there's
no way to us. That seems crazy that that would be a concern someone would have, but that's
because we're the product of 200 years of revelation for the people who first hear about the vision and doctrine of Kevin section 76
They have 1800 years of
Hell is a place that people are gonna go and it is awful and it is horrible and almost everyone's going there
Christianity is almost everyone's going to hell the whole world's going to hell a very small world's going to hell, a very small number
are going to be saved. And then Joseph and his revelations, he comes along and says,
actually, no one's going to hell. As Joseph says famously later, he says, I have no fear
of hellfire that don't exist. Because people are always condemning him to hell and he's
like, ah, joke jokes on you.
That's fine, yeah.
There isn't one. Not that people won't suffer for their sins. I mean, of course you're going
to suffer for your sins, but the entire point of hell to Christians in the early 1800s is that
it was forever. It wasn't hell if it was temporary. Hell is forever. People leave the church over.
There are people that they begged to maintain in the church and their ex communicated
because they refuse to accept that Joseph Smith's vision, Doctrine and Covenant, section
76 is true. Why? It conflicts with their culture. So I think it's important to note that whether
we're talking present or past, or whether we're talking about members of the church
in the United States or Canada or North America
or Western hemisphere,
they're going to have different questions about God
than members in Africa, members in Europe,
members in Asia, members in Micronesia.
We ask questions about the things
that relate to our current beliefs.
People from the past have a
different culture. They have a different questions. They have different ideas and
those are valid just like our questions are valid even if they might seem
ridiculous like staring blankly with a morose face and a 19th century photograph. Garrett, this is so good.
People are doing the best they knew with the time
they were in and what their culture was.
And it's so helpful.
I want our listeners to know about a podcast
that you have called standard of truth.
A phrase that comes from that Wentworth letter
that was a favorite of our founder, Steve Sorensen.
First of all, I personally love Standard of Truth.
Garrett, you do it with a friend.
Yes, my best friend, Richard LaDuke.
We've been friends since our first married days.
We moved into the same house, split up into tiny
apartments that should not have been livable.
Today, I'm sure it's been cadet, but we've been friends ever since. And we go over Joseph Smith
and early church history and we answer questions from listeners.
Pete Slauson And other historical questions. There's a lot in there, American history.
Pete Slauson Yes, we do American history. We do Latter-day
Saint history. We hope to help build faith in the restoration.
Pete Slauson I've recommended the Standard of Truth do Latter-day Saint history. We hope to help build faith in the restoration.
I've recommended the standard of truth podcast to quite a few people, but recently, a close friend of mine who I just adore and younger than us, a young
adult, and he came to me and he said, I need to talk to you, which is not like him.
Can we sit down for a second?
I'm like, sure, sure.
And so we sat down and he served a mission and he loves the church. He said, Hank, I'm like, sure, sure. And so we sat down and he served a mission and he loves the church.
He said, Hank, I'm struggling.
And I said, well, tell me what's going on.
You know, he's been online and he says,
I just don't know if I can trust the character of Joseph Smith.
And he started to go through some of the things he's read.
And I said, okay, okay.
And we talked for about an hour and he's the type of guy,
you know, he loves to laugh. And I said, I got okay. And we talked for about an hour and he's the type of guy, you know, he loves to laugh.
And I said, I got a show for you.
I want you to listen to the Standard of Truth podcast
and just enjoy Garrett.
I think you'll really like him.
He said he would.
He came back about three weeks later.
I saw him again.
And this was a beautiful moment.
I said, how are you doing?
And he said, Hank, I love Joseph Smith.
I love him.
And I said, why?
Garrett, you might be like, no, don't do this.
He listened to every single episode of Standard of Truth.
Every single one.
There's a lot.
He actually got a little Garrett in him.
He was starting to use your vocabulary,
had your demeanor.
And he said, people just don't understand,
hey, people just don't understand
what it's like to live in the past.
So Garrett, just someone I adore,
someone whose future is very important to me,
it changed him.
He was on a trajectory going one way
and now he's completely
opposite. So thank you.
Well, thank you for sharing that. I mean, that's the hope and the goal. I mean, I desperately,
desperately want people to understand the Prophet Joseph Smith and to have faith in
the revelations that he received. That was really the whole point of doing that.
You hope that that message reaches people and you know, you feel sometimes a little
bit like a fraud in the sense that people are like, wow, I really enjoyed that podcast.
Like, I know I was quoting Joseph Smith the whole time.
You could do a pretty good job if all you're doing is quoting the prophet.
You end up people like, wow, that was really profound.
It was, I was just quoting someone else. One of the things that I hope
people take away from that and obviously here as well is that it's essential that you come
to know that Joseph Smith saw Jesus on multiple occasions that he communed with your Savior. And people say, well, why
does it matter whether or not Joseph was a prophet? Well, it matters because I know who
Jesus is. I know what my purpose in this life is. I know who I am. I know that I had a pre-mortal
life. I know that this life is designed for me to become like my Heavenly Father and Heavenly Mother, the
things that I would never know. I wouldn't know, Dr. Incoming Section 93 declares, that
you might know what you worship.
Of course I don't worship Joseph Smith. I'm well aware that Joseph made many mistakes
in his life. So did all of the early leaders and members of the church,
just like the leaders and members of the church today are all mortals with mortal failings.
But Joseph Smith revealed the most important truths about our Heavenly Father and about our that change trajectories of lives. It brings solace to the suffering. It brings purpose in
this chaos of life and it brings that peace in knowing about the plan of salvation. I know that
Jesus Christ lives because I know Joseph Smith saw and talked to him.
And that is the bedrock of my testimony. And hopefully people will be willing to
place their doubts and their questions a little bit on hold and allow the Holy
Spirit to speak to them as they read these revelations in the Doctrine and
Covenants this year. As they study the revelations in the Doctrine and Covenants this year, as they
study the revelations of the Prophet Joseph, it's the best way to know, was he a prophet
of God?
John, Garrett and my office for years was just across the hall from each other.
Our offices were tidy, by the way.
Yeah, they were.
They left both of us in a broom closet, which was fitting of our station, let me tell you that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They put us up there, just forget about us.
We got to talking one day and Garrett taught me something
that I thought to myself, how did I not see that?
Here's kind of what it is, in my words.
He said, you make sure you get your dental work
by a dentist, it's very important to you.
You don't just find Bobby in the strip mall, who's like, well, I watched some YouTube videos You make sure you get your dental work by a dentist. It's very important to you.
You don't just find Bobby in the strip mall who's like,
well, I watched some YouTube videos.
You get your medical advice and your, you know,
if you're going to have surgery,
you get it from a trained surgeon.
Why?
Very important to you that this person knows
what they're doing because this is pretty vital stuff.
And then he said something that I should have known
the whole time.
He said, you should get the history that really matters to you. they're doing because this is pretty vital stuff. And then he said something that I should have known the whole time.
He said, you should get the history that really matters to you.
You can look at WebMD, right?
Or you can watch somebody teach you how to floss online.
But I mean, this is history that really matters to you and your family and your future and
your faith.
You need to get that from a historian.
And then he taught me what it's like to become a trained historian.
John, I didn't realize this is as difficult as medical school, to become a historian. There's
so much to it. Yet, we go online or we read a book, someone who wants to be a historian,
who has done some research, done some work. And then they say, well, yeah, I know the history.
And Garrett's not being arrogant about this.
He's just saying, look, you don't get your dentistry
from someone who hasn't gone to dental school.
You should get your history from someone who's a trained historian.
So briefly, Garrett, could you just give maybe that little spill for our listeners?
Well, I don't remember exactly what I said.
But the reason why it's important is
part of what a PhD trained historian, what they're taught is how to use sources properly.
They're trained in what types of sources are better and what types of sources are worse.
And sometimes what happens, especially when it comes to things like religion or
politics, because people feel very strongly about a thing that causes them to
elevate sources over other sources, not because they're better sources,
but simply because they say what they want them to say.
A great example of this you could find circulating on the internet today is
someone might say
something like, Martin Harris denied ever seeing the gold plates, right?
Now if you're a Latter-day Saint, you're, what?
I've been told my whole life he never denied it.
What do you mean?
No, no, look, here, I'll even share a letter with you.
And here in this letter is someone saying, I heard Martin Harris say that he never saw
the plates.
And that can rock your world.
I have been told my whole life and it's from a letter.
Look at this.
It's a letter from 1838.
That means it must be true.
People feel like they've had their legs knocked out from under them.
And this is where it's important to be able to look at sources
and know what they actually are. Yeah, there is a letter that exists from 1838 from someone
claiming that they heard Martin Harris say that he never really saw the place. Well,
who's writing that letter? Well, it's a recently excommunicated member of the church
who's writing to another person trying to convince them to leave the church. But he
doesn't just say that Martin Harris said that he didn't see the plates. He also claims that
Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer also said that they never saw the plates. And then he
says that actually all of the eight witnesses, which would also include Hiram Smith and Samuel Smith and Joseph Smith Sr., are also all saying that they never saw the
plates.
In other words, it is a hyperbolic, wildly overstated, and clearly inaccurate biased letter.
This person is making a claim with actually no evidence. But if I don't
know that and someone shares that with me online, I begin my tailspin before I actually
find out this is a terrible source. It's even a terrible source for historians. Why? Do
I know of that public meeting where Martin Harris said that? I have no other evidence
of that. He says it was a public meeting that Martin Harris said. I never saw the place.
Okay, well, why are there no other sources of that public meeting?
Why is it no one else says that that meeting occurred? For all I know, there wasn't even a
meeting. But here's what I do know. Martin Harris, on occasion after occasion after occasion after occasion
himself said I saw the angel I saw plates. As a historian you're taught to
prize firsthand accounts where people are speaking their own experience and
contemporary accounts,
people talking about events when they happen.
It doesn't mean that, you know, great grandma reminiscing about what happened during the
dust bowl is being dishonest.
I'm not saying that.
But there is a very big difference between reading great grandma's diary when the first dust bowl storm hits and
having her talk about it with 80 years of experience removed
Because the one reflects what she actually thought at the time the other while still credible and still important
Reflects how she understands it now
given 80 years of life
There are three areas of life where a wise man once said that people are so passionate
that they believe they're experts, even if they don't have any training.
The first of these is obvious. It's sports.
Look, you've never even coached a little league football team, but you know exactly
what play Kalani Satake should have called.
You know exactly, you've never even coached a little league football team, but you know exactly what play Kalani Satake should have called, you know, exactly.
You know, exactly.
You have no idea of the personnel.
You've never been in practice, but because you love sports, because
you've watched a lot of it, you start to believe that you're an expert in it.
And no doubt, you know more than other people do, but that's not the same thing as being trained in it. And no doubt you know more than other people do, but that's not the same thing
as being trained in it. Similar, another is politics because people feel so passionate
about political beliefs and political positions. Now you've never even run for an unelected PTA
position, but you know exactly what the congressman should have written in his bill. Because you're
passionate about it, you start to believe that you're an expert in it. And the other is religion.
That is because we're all passionate about it. We start to believe that religious history,
that passion is the same thing as having formal training. And no doubt, if you are passionate and you read whatever you can get your hands on, you are going to know
much more about a thing than other people. A great example of this is if you
go to the Gettysburg battlefield and you get one of their park rangers to take
you on their tour, you will come away often and people will saying that park
ranger knows more about the Battle of Gettysburg
than literally anyone alive. I mean, that guy, he's like, and they advanced 10 paces
to this fence, but then fell back five more paces. And you're like, wow. Oh, in the world,
you know how many paces they were. And the cannonball hit near this tree, but not the
tree. Usually not quite as excited, but they are, they are giving you information that you're thinking it's incredible. That person is the greatest
expert on Gettysburg that has ever existed. And yet the reality is that park ranger is
repeating things that he has read from a different source.
He's essentially memorized,
he's incorporated the histories that were written by historians who looked at
the thousands of letters and the hundreds of dispatches and the dozens upon
dozens of interviews of Gettysburg survivors who wrote the book on Gettysburg
that was then used by the tour
guide to make the argument.
The great experts are the ones who wrote that book containing that source because they gathered
all of the other sources and said, in a lot of ways like Mormon is with the Book of Mormon,
he's got records everywhere.
And as the first great historian, he compiles it down into something
that is beautiful and readable.
Not that I have any skills that Mormon had, but I do think
it's important for your listeners.
If you hear someone make an antagonistic claim against the
church that's based on some aspect of history, It's important to take a pause and stop.
First of all, find out from a credible, trained person what it is you're even talking about.
Yeah. And Garrett, you would say it doesn't mean you can't read a book by someone who's
pretty excited about something, but I'm talking history that really,
like you said, is going to determine whether I stay in my church. That's important history.
Unfortunately, we sometimes think that, well, getting information quickly is more important
than getting information deeply. The church has provided wonderful resources.
The Joseph Smith Papers Project
and all of its research is all online
at josephsmithpapers.org.
The church history library has wonderful resources
for members.
There are revelations in context.
There are answers to gospel questions online.
The gospel topics essays, which provide sound and historically
reasoned source-based arguments about these things in the past.
I hope that people who are struggling with aspects of church history will go to those
sources that church has provided.
I love that we get to have a historian here who has looked at these original sources,
who knows who those voices are, these voices of the Restoration in this first episode we're
talking about the Smith family.
Do you want to take us away on that, Garrett, right now?
Yeah, I think the first message that they have in the voice of the Restoration, it comes
from really one of the heroes of church history. If you study church history at all, especially if you study the early life of Joseph Smith,
most of the credible information we have about Joseph Smith's early life, it comes from Lucy
Mac Smith, Joseph Smith's mother.
She writes a book in which she details a lot of this early life.
You know, Joseph talks a little about it in his history. Mainly he's telling you that we were poor
and we had the ground rules in reading, writing, and arithmetic. He doesn't spend a ton of time on
there on his much younger days. And those gaps are really filled in by Lucy. She's writing this book in 1844 and 1845. What historians find, it's remarkable
how accurate she is looking back on some of these events. She provides this insight into
Joseph's character that frankly only a mother could know. Someone who knows him from the
time he's a child.
The voice of the restoration that the manual provides from her is a powerful thing because it's actually before Joseph has his first vision, it's before
there's any thought of gold plates or a church being restored.
This is earlier in Lucy's life where the family is taken just deathly ill and Lucy
really believes she's going to die.
In fact, the ministers and doctors think she's going to die.
She recovers and as she says, she begged the Lord that he would spare my life, that I might
bring up my children and comfort the heart of my husband. Thus I lay
all night. I covenanted with God that if he would let me live, I would endeavor to get
that religion that would enable me to serve him right, whether it was in the Bible or
wherever it may be found. If it was to be obtained from heaven by prayer and faith,
at last a voice spoke to me and said, seek and ye
shall find, knock and it shall be opened unto you. Let your heart be comforted. Ye believe in God,
believe also in me." And she considers this this great conversion experience for her own life.
Lucy does not come from an incredibly religious household. Her father, Solomon, is a soldier.
And he, in his own admission, you can read Solomon and Mack's history, he writes the history of his
life at the end of his life. And he will let you know, even though he's a soldier there in the
revolution, he essentially has no use for God. Said people trying to talk to me about it. I'm like, well, whatever.
And he'd just move on.
It's a little bit sad because when he finally does get religion as an older
man, he credits many of the physical ailments and struggles that he's had in
life with the fact that he didn't get converted earlier.
Why I tell that story is Lucy Mack is not someone who grows up in a household that's
going to church.
Her mother believes, her mother tries to share some Bible with her, but her father not only
doesn't believe, he's got a real problem with people who do believe for most of his
life.
Not until well after Lucy's married does her father finally
have this conversion. Here she has her own experience where she's begging God and she sees
this change. Now, what they don't have here, what happens after this is actually fun and a story
that tells you the religious world they were in
after she's miraculously healed.
I mean, again, doctors had already said, no, that's it.
That's the end.
She then wants to go to church.
So she's married.
She tries to convince Joseph Smith Sr. who's also, while a believer in God, not a church goer. He's become kind of cynical
of the established religions that they are not really leading people to Christ. So she
tries to convince Joseph Messina, we need to go to church. And she says, because he
loved me essentially, he agreed to go with me to a few Methodist meetings, but he didn't
want to go. He did not. I mean, this is a story no one's ever heard before about a spouse dragging another spouse to church.
But at least back in the 19th century, occasionally a wife was like, no, you're coming to church.
Like, I don't want to go to church. And then there I was sitting on a pew.
Once Joseph Smith seniors, when his father and his uncle find out that he's going to church, Jesse Smith
is so outraged that he comes to their house and at the door wings a copy of Age of Reason
by Thomas Paine at them and says, you read everything in that before you go back to that church.
And Thomas Paine, while he is an American founding father, he wrote Common Sense, he
is a well known to be, I mean, if I'm very kind, I'll call him an agnostic, but he's
essentially an atheist. In Age of Reason, he basically argues that all organized religion
is just garbage and that it's made up and that it's used to oppress people.
Jesse Smith wings a copy of it in the doorway and yells at them, how dare you go to church?
Lucy is experiencing a great deal of familial pushback in her conversion experience. I often think that that must have been terrible for Lucy,
that she has a husband who doesn't want to be a part of organized religion. She's had this
incredible spiritual experience and she wants to pay it back to God. She wants to be a part of it,
but her family members are thinking that that's ridiculous.
And it makes me wonder if that's part of the reason why when her son comes to her, having
had a religious experience very different from her own, I mean, Joseph is telling her,
I've learned for myself that Presbyterianism is not true.
That her reaction isn't, she doesn't just wing a copy of age of reason at Joseph, but
her reaction is one of almost this patient understanding of, I know what you're going
through. I experienced this where I had a religious conversion and no one wanted to listen to me. Lucy Mackett,
she is such an incredible woman. It is clear that she leaves an indelible imprint on all
of her children, but especially on Joseph in his religiosity.
Beautiful. I love that background. They were actually in a different place when all of this happened.
But I especially love winging books at people and telling them to read it.
I actually had a missionary email by podcast and he said, you know, he's serving in a very
difficult state side mission.
And he said, I'm trying to figure out just how many
copies of the book of Mormon I have to throw at people before they start listening to me.
Before it sticks. And I saw another book flying in the midst of heaven.
And it had the everlasting gospel.
Yeah.
I've heard it said, I think Stephen Harper,
that not only is Joseph Smith facing religious tension
in where he lives, it's also in his own home.
Yeah.
There's religious tension there.
If we fast forward a little bit
to when Joseph is going to have the first vision,
the second great awakening that they're all living through,
there's a reason why they call that portion of New York, the
burned over district.
It's important for listeners to understand that the way that you
conceive of American religious identity today is essentially exactly
the opposite of what it was then.
If you talk to someone today and you say, oh, they're from the
South, you might immediately in your head think, oh, they're probably religious. Because in today's
world, the American South is the most religious part of the United States. And the least religious
part of the United States is the American Northeast. It's literally the exact opposite in Joseph Smith's day.
The most religious state in the entire union in 1830 is Vermont. The least religious state
in the United States today, based on the number of atheists and people who attend church, is Vermont
today. You kind of have to keep that in mind. Consider the most Bible-banging part of the Bible
belt that there is constant, constant discussion of religion. And in the Second Great Awakening,
people are very passionate about it. There are two schools of religious thought in American
Protestantism that are desperately competing with one another at
the time. One is Calvinism and the other is on the other side, Arminianism. So not like
Armenia, the country, Arminianism named after a Dutch theologian. The name rolls off the
tongue, Jacobus Arminius. John Calvin was the primary religious theologian for American Protestants. Calvin believed
that salvation had nothing to do of yourself. It's not what certain American Protestants
today believe. So again, if you're thinking, well, that's not what my friend thinks, I
know it's not what your friend thinks. Let me tell you what John Calvin taught and what
Americans at the time thought. It is very different than what most evangelical
Protestants think today. But John Calvin taught that salvation was by grace and faith alone,
and that itself was a gift from God. Calvinism rests on this idea of the absolute sovereignty of
God. There is no free will. There is only God and you in your sinfulness thinking that
you have free will. Most American Protestant denominations, most of them, were Calvinist
in nature. Presbyterianism, for instance, was hardcore
Calvinist. It's a little different today in America, but very much believed that almost
no one was going to be saved. A preacher then might say something like, if you're sitting
in these pews and you feel as if you have faith in Jesus, praise God, you might be one of
the few people that he decided to save. Now none of us deserve to be saved. We
are all horrible sinners. We all deserve to burn in hell. So God isn't terrible if
he sends us where we deserve to go. But praise God if you happen to be one of
the few that he gave the gift of faith to. And during this time of the second great awakening, that's the church that Lucy Mack and Sophronia feel called to, that they join.
They join the local Presbyterian church in Palmyra. Joseph likely goes to that church
more often than others because it's where his mother goes.
In fact, she's actually donated enough money, as poor as they are, she's donated enough
money that their family has a pew in the Presbyterian church.
And in order to have access to that pew, you have to donate enough money to the church.
That's how fervent Lucy feels about her Presbyterianism and it makes sense. She
was completely outside of anything but God's help and in her miraculous
recovery from her disease she feels this total devotion to God. God is
everything and I am nothing. And she would have heard that message at that
church and it would have spoken to her. Now, on the other side of the ledger, I know I've
spent too much time on this, Arminianism was the other Protestant wing of belief that believed,
yes, mankind is fallen, mankind is evil, but there's one good thing mankind can do, and that is they can choose to accept God's grace.
That in this viewpoint, which was primarily espoused by the Methodist church, salvation
is a lifelong process.
If you ask a Methodist, are you saved?
They're going to hem and haw the same way a Latter-day Saint does.
They're going to be like, well, I mean, I'm trying to follow Jesus. And they believe the way of viewing salvation is that Jesus has extended his hand to
you. He desperately wants to save you, but you have to agree to grab that hand and hold on to
it for the rest of your life. Those are pretty diametrically opposite viewpoints. Either God has already decided whether or
not you are saved and there is legitimately nothing you can do about it. Or you have to
embrace the truth about God and if you don't you're going to go to hell. Both of those
can't be true. Either I have to choose salvation and make the right choice, or I have no choice in salvation.
So, Joseph's going to these local Methodist churches, he's hearing the exact opposite
message. And when he talks about they believe the same passages of the Bible so differently,
you couldn't find a starker contrast than Presbyterianism of the 19th century and
Methodism of the 19th century.
As I said back to our voices of the Restoration, it's because of Lucy's character that when
Joseph has his questions, she isn't reactionary about it.
I mean, what would have happened if Joseph came to her and she was like, well, then that's
it.
You're going off to boarding school because you're not going to have any more of this
nonsense.
Instead, she embraces it.
Something that is understated about the Smith family in general, his sisters, his brothers,
this is a large family.
They have many different interests
and many different ages. All of them believe Joseph Smith. All of them suffer some form
of persecution for the rest of their lives because they believe Joseph Smith. Some get
more of a witness. Samuel and Hiram are going to be
hefting plates around. Some of them are going to really know. I don't know that Don Carlos isn't
going to get to lift the plates, but he is adamant that Joseph is a prophet and that he's received these revelations. The people in Joseph's family are certain he's talking to God.
They're never wavering from that.
Even when they waver from other parts of their faith, you know, William Smith
late in life, isn't exactly a poster child of what you want to believe.
But even in those time periods, he's certain Joseph was a prophet.
He's certain Joseph translated the Book of Mormon.
He's certain that Joseph received these revelations we're studying.
That alone speaks to Joseph's character.
Why is it the people who know him best are certain he's speaking to God?
Now, Garrett, you said that there's Arminianism and Presbyterianism, which Joseph Smith Sr.
doesn't seem to buy into organized religion at all.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Joseph Smith Sr., it's interesting because his family comes from a long line of congregationalists,
which is a very Calvinist viewpoint, very similar to
Presbyterianism. And his family in the church has a relatively new monument that is in the
Smith family homestead for years there in Massachusetts. They seem to be quite religious religious, right up until Joseph Smith Sr.'s father, who seems to become disillusioned
with organized religion.
It's not the same thing as saying, oh, someone's an atheist.
I mean, clearly Joseph Smith Sr. believes in God, but he doesn't seem to believe that
the people who claim they have all the answers actually have all of the answers.
He is a spiritual man in his own right. Josemus Senior has had a lot of bad luck.
It seems like every time Josemus Senior makes a financial decision, it's the wrong decision.
He could be great at picking stocks if you just pick the opposite. You know, if he was like,
I don't know, I'm thinking about Enron, you'd be like, okay, go the other way, go the other way.
Said we got a short sell that in a hurry. He seems to work hard. He does seem to have this idea that
he wants to try to raise his family out of poverty, but often because of other bad actors. I mean, he invests in like ginseng,
and yet the person who invests with him steals all of the money. And they are just met with
financial reverse after financial reverse after financial reverse until as Lucy Smith explains,
after crop failure, after crop failure, after crop failure in Vermont, he goes to New York
and sees that the land seems to be producing wheat in abundance, is what he says, and decides
he's going to move his family there to Palmyra, all with the goal of trying to take his family
from this horribly desperate poverty that they are now in, the bottom rung of society
and providing a better life. And
that's what's going to bring the Smith family to Palmyra in the first place. Those poverty
experiences, those reversals in a way that the Lord seems to know what needs to happen,
they bring the family to the place where the Lord needs them to be for the restoration
to take place where the Lord needs them to be for the restoration to take place. A place that's near a hill where a record is hidden. I love what you've done here. I love
just the context of the war of words that Joseph Smith mentioned. Is there free will or is there
just the illusion of free will? He's hearing that. That really sets that up nicely for what was about to happen. And that
Lucy Mac Smith was part of that. I was wondering if our listeners might have wondered,
the book that Lucy Mac Smith wrote, A History of Joseph Smith by His Mother,
that is a good source from what I'm hearing from you.
Alan Ross It's a source you take with a grain of salt in the sense that it is her looking
back over the course of time.
And so she's not going to be perfectly accurate on everything.
She'll be off on some dates and she'll be off on some things, especially as it
relates to, you know, some of her other children, surprisingly, a mother very
much wants to paint them in a positive light.
Shocking, yeah.
Sometimes William are not exactly doing the most positive things. In that regard,
I think it was a book that Brigham Young felt wasn't that great of a book because it made
William Smith seem greater than he was. But as a tool for this early period of Joseph's life,
it's one of the best tools that historians have. And many of the things that we can corroborate with other sources, we find they line up very well with other sources.
A good example of this, in Joseph Smith's history, in the history of the church,
when they first write it in 1838 and 39, they are using the 1835 Doctrine
and Covenants as their guidepost. They're using the 1835 Doctrine and Covenants. They
aren't professional historians. They've just been run right out of Missouri. I mean, I
don't even know what papers they even have anymore. And why does Joseph say we need to
write this? Owing to the many false reports. I mean, there is nothing but lies in circulation about
the Latter-day Saints and Missouri just ratchets those up even more. Yeah, we like had to murder
them because of stuff. They're trying to defend their own actions by defaming the saints.
Owing to the many false reports, we need to tell our own story. They use what resources they have on hand.
And it's very clear that what they are using as their primary source to start with is the 1835
Doctrine and Covenants. And so they're going from revelation to revelation to revelation.
And it works out great right up until the summer of 1829 when there aren't any more revelations
or at least no revelations that they think are in that time period until March of 1830.
And so you actually have this real gap in the history of the church where it's, we've
got the Book of Mormon is at the printers and we're getting ready to get the printers
and we've got talking to people and now we've got the Book of Mormon and like, well, what happened between July and March?
We know things happened. Joseph receives a revelation even during that time period
that's in the Revelation book, that's acted on as a revelation. But because it wasn't one of the
revelations included in the Doctrine and Covenants. The history just doesn't even mention that. It just passes right over it. Well, one thing we know happened is that Abner Cole
tried to steal and print the Book of Mormon on his own to try to make his own money while
they're trying to get the Book of Mormon printed. And it's Lucy who tells us that whole story.
Lucy who tells us that whole story. Now we know that what she's saying happened because
thankfully we have some copies of Abner Cole's garbage newspaper that he used to steal the Book of Mormon and it cooperates exactly with what she's saying. Imagine if we didn't have any copies of his newspaper and Joseph never mentions Abner
Cole.
No one else ever mentions Abner Cole.
We might say, I don't know, is Lucy just like, I mean, who's trying to steal copies of the
Book of Mormon?
But because we have the newspaper, we can say she tells this whole story about them
catching him trying to print the Book of Mormon on his own in his paper.
And here's his actual paper. He really was doing it. And at the exact same time,
she said that he was doing it. So it is a good source. It's available on josephsmittpapers.org.
If you go under histories and go under other histories onto that tab, you can see both versions,
both her earlier version and her edited version, 1844 and then the 1845 version.
And its transcript is there so you can read it.
It's an outstanding source to get to know early Latter-day Saint history.
I love what you said about all this stuff was being written in Missouri because those
were original sources.
But there's another question a historian would ask.
Now, wait, who's saying this?
And what's their background and what's their motive? Cause yeah, you can find things that were written, but who was talking and why were
they saying it?
This is an excommunicated person writing to try to persuade other people to leave.
What do you do with that kind of original source?
Yeah.
And I think you just have to place them in context.
I mean, it's an original source, but that doesn't mean that it carries the day,
especially when you're talking about religious experiences.
When someone says, I saw an angel, that is outside of the realm of historical inquiry.
Why? Well, because I don't have the ability to replicate it.
This isn't a science experiment where I can go, well, one plus two angel. of historical inquiry. Why? Well, because I don't have the ability to replicate it.
This isn't a science experiment where I can go, well, one plus two angel. I can't do that.
So a historian doesn't try to do that. In fact, one way that you can know that you're dealing
with someone who's not a real historian is they will try to refute religious experiences of other people. A real historian knows that
they can't because those are phenomenology in the lingo of the, we use big words to make
ourselves feel better about the fact that we became doctors that no one cares about.
We're the kind of doctors that don't make money and can't help anyone. And so we use bigger words to try to like, look, no, I'm important.
You take something like Jesus walking on water.
Jesus's followers really believe that he walked on water.
How would I prove that he did as a historian?
Well, I can't, even if I wanted to try to replicate it,
right, I could go march everyone off to the nearest body of water and not one
person would walk on water. Would that prove that Jesus didn't walk on water?
No, because if Jesus walked on water, he did it because he was the Son of God.
When it comes to miracles, a judicious historian isn't going to spend time trying to prove that they couldn't have happened
because they know there's no way to prove that it did or did not, because if it happened, it's the inner position of God.
In many ways, a historian's job is to talk about what most likely happened in the
past. You have all different sources. Well, what most likely happened at the Battle of Gettysburg?
Based upon sources. One person says that they advanced 100 yards, the other person says they
advanced 50 yards. Well, there's 30 people that say 100 yards, there's one person who says 50 yards,
and most likely it was 100 yards, I guess. That's what a historian does.
Miracles, by their definition, are the least likely thing to occur.
Because people can't walk on water, people can't call down fire from heaven, people can't
be resurrected, except when they do, except when they are.
And it's when they are that is the pinnacle, it is the main point of religion.
We don't believe that Jesus walked on water because everyone else walks on water. We believe in Jesus because he
performed miracles that couldn't possibly be done. For a
historian, the best you can do is say this is what this person
said happened to them. So Oliver Cowdery says an angel
appeared to him. A historian, a non-Latter-day Saint historian.
If they're being judicious, they would say,
Oliver Cowdery said an angel came and appeared to him and showed him the gold plates.
He would not say, obviously Oliver Cowdery is a liar because angels don't exist and there's
no possible way that he had plates.
That's my antagonistic voice.
They wouldn't say that. And you find this with people claiming
that other people didn't have their spiritual experiences. People saying, oh yeah, Joseph
told me that he just made up the whole Book of Mormon. Okay, well, Joseph Smith doesn't
say that. You're claiming a conversation dozens of years after
the fact in a conversation that I don't even know if it took place and that I know that you're very
antagonistic to begin with. And also you're wrong about X, Y, and Z and the things that you're
claiming. I can demonstrate that those aren't accurate. There are lots of ways to look at
things that can help you have a better perspective. When it comes to someone declaring God spoke to me, there is only one way that
you can know whether or not that happened.
And that's the same way that Peter knew that Jesus was the Christ.
Flesh and blood have not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven.
The only way that you can actually know religious things,
that you can actually know, is from the Spirit.
I love history and I love to talk about it
and I love how it bolsters my faith and testimony,
but fundamentally, I believe Joseph Smith saw and talked to God,
because God has told me through the Holy Spirit that Joseph Smith saw and talked to God. And
that's where we all have to get. We don't have to have a PhD in history to know that. You don't even have to have the ability to read,
to hear the Joseph Smith story, to hear him say, I saw that pillar of light and to know that it's
true. Garrett, this has been fantastic so far. I love history and to hear it from a historian
also has a sense of humor.
I don't know if that's rare for historians.
I think our listeners would be interested, especially those
who haven't had the time to go through and understand this
family and the dynamics.
Maybe walk through Joseph, Lucy, Mack, we've talked
about quite a bit, but Gilles Smith Sr.
down to the siblings.
They have a very large family, which is absolutely common in the 19th century,
especially for New England families.
It is not uncommon for a family to have eight to 12 children in it.
The average woman in America at the time is going to have
somewhere around 10 live births.
Child mortality
is pretty terrible. It's very rare that all of them would make it to adulthood, but they have a
very large family. There is an infant that dies in the Josemus Sr. Lucy Mac Smith family, even
before Alvin's born, an unnamed infant. That would have been Joseph's oldest brother. But then you have Alvin and
after Alvin you have Hiram. So he has these two oldest brothers and then Sophronia, which
is his older sister and then Joseph Smith. He's not quite a middle child. He's up on
the upper echelons of what will be a much greater extended family because after him
you have Samuel Smith is his next youngest brother.
Then you have Ephraim Smith, which is another brother that is born and
dies just the same day.
You have William Smith, who's part of this Voices of the Restoration, where
he gives this account of their, their religious upbringing.
Then you have Catherine Smith.
So Catherine's his younger sister.
After Catherine, you have Don Carlos Smith.
It's funny, one of the questions I get from students fairly commonly is like,
what were the Smiths doing?
What did I call him?
Don Carlos?
What are they?
Or were they, were they from Spanish Fork?
Why were they?
For those of you who don't know in Spanish Fork, Utah, the high school mascot of Spanish
Fork is the Don's because it's Spanish Fork.
So the Spanish Don's.
What are the Smiths even doing?
It's actually a fairly common name.
It's not like Jack, okay.
But one of the Union Civil War generals who would have been contemporary to Don Carlos,
who would have been born roughly around the same time, is Don Carlos Buell, who ends up
being a terrible Civil War general and anyone who's an enthusiast listening will be like,
oh yeah, he was terrible.
It demonstrates this is not just a name they're pulling out of a hat.
It's not a ridiculously common name is a name that is being used by people as a name.
It's kind of like Charles, right?
Yeah, it is. But with this kind of Spanish flair to it, I could name my son Enrique.
Maybe that gets him a little more gravitas. I don't know.
Yeah. And then their youngest is Lucy
named after Lucy Mack. She's actually not even born until after the first vision. So it kind of
gives you an idea of the family dynamics that are going on. That means in Joseph's household,
growing up, there is someone at essentially every single station of life.
There is adult brother Alvin who's going to be engaged to be married, and there's baby
little sister Lucy who can't walk, all going on at the same time. All of our indications are that their family dynamics are incredibly close.
Now, later in life, just as a caveat, William Smith and Joseph, they will have words with
one another. There are multiple occasions in which William and Joseph will fight with one
another. I know that no one today has a sibling that they've ever argued with, but back then it was occasional that siblings would argue with
one another.
Pete Slauson Even as adults.
Pete Slauson Well, what I'm talking about is when they
were adults actually. In the Kirtland, Ohio period, William and Joseph get in an argument,
they actually come to blows. And in fact, Joseph goes to take his jacket off so that they can fight.
And William Smith, because it's the kind of person he is, sucker punches him while he's trying to
take his jacket off. Which if you're a younger brother, this is what you have to do.
Yeah.
This is your moment.
Now's your chance.
Now's the time.
And boom, younger brothers everywhere are saying, yeah, that's how I won my fights too.
Which is funny because he and Joseph exchange letters with one another like, hey, I'm sorry.
And one of the letters, Joe's like, well, it doesn't say sucker punch, but if you wouldn't
have punched me while I was trying to get my coat off, it would have ended differently
kind of thing.
Trying to reassert.
I mean, obviously they have sibling
fights and difficulties, but again, when it comes to following Joseph as a prophet and believing he
receives revelation, they are all there. Alvin is someone who clearly impacts Joseph's life
in ways that are almost immeasurable. If you think about the
dynamics, Alvin is an adult several years older than Joseph. He is actually one of
the people that is co-signing on the debt with Father Smith when they are
borrowing money because Alvin as an adult male his labor is worth something, you know
So the idea that he could pay back a debt because of that labor
He's the one who leads out in saying, you know what?
Mom and dad need a house. That's not a log cabin. That's two rooms
So he leads out and trying to build the frame house that you can go to Palmyra
today and still see the frame house, which is mostly original, that is mostly
built by Alvin, at least started by Alvin.
When Joseph has his visitation from Moroni, Alvin is going to be a part of that whole discussion.
And he says, go and do what the angel says.
Right.
And, and it's right after that, that Alvin is going to tragically die.
It's where we get our firsthand experience at just how terrible 19th
century medicine is where Alvin has a sickness in his stomach.
They don't know what it is to treat him.
They administer to him essentially powdered mercury, which those of you who know the
properties of mercury know that it's a poison and not something that helps in
healing, but that was what medical doctors of the day.
Joseph's at later in life is very actually bitter about it. One of the few things that Joseph seems to be bitter about is the death of his
older brother, because he blames the physicians for it, that they just kept
giving him more and more and more mercury until it killed him.
It is something that clearly
affects Joseph for the rest of his life. Alvin is on his mind always and it leads
to some of our revelations. The fact that Joseph experiences these heart-rending
losses of his family means the question about life and death is not a theoretical
one for him.
I mean, the fact that he's buried his first infant son, that his two twins that are born
next also die immediately, that the two adopted twins, he gets one of them dies. The fact that there's
been five infants in Joseph's household by 1833 and four of them have died means that
Joseph is very attuned to the horrors of the thought of death and the seeming permanency of the hole that it leaves in our
lives.
And Alvin really seems to be that first entree point to this horrible grief.
He clearly loves Alvin.
He spends the rest of his life talking about how great Alvin was. You of course get
the best example of this in Doctrine and Covenants section 137, where in Doctrine and Covenants
section 76, now this is a spoiler alert for the remainder of the Doctrine and Covenants.
You're like, what? There's a Doctrine and Covenants 137? I mean, yeah, there is. You'll
get to it eventually. But in Doctrine and Coven, section 76, Joseph is told by God
in the vision, there's three different degrees of glory and the only way you can enter into
the celestial kingdom is if you're baptized into the church of the firstborn. Unless you are properly baptized, you can't go to the celestial kingdom.
And what that means is Joseph, who's learned this incredible truth that eternal hellfire doesn't
exist, that no one's cooking forever in hell, and that there's all these other kingdoms of
glory and happiness, it clearly weighs on him that he thinks his beloved older
brother is not going to be able to go because he wasn't baptized.
It's not like he's just making that requirement up.
He received a revelation from God that said, if you aren't baptized into the church, you
can't go to the celestial kingdom. So Joseph is following that when he has his vision in 1836, which is now doctrine and
covenant section 137, and he sees Alvin in celestial kingdom, his response, I marveled
that he could have obtained to such a kingdom. The sad part about that is it
means there must have been a weight that Joseph was carrying around. It means if
you would have asked Joseph Smith in 1835, can Alvin go to the celestial kingdom,
it probably would have cut his heart out and he would have been quoting
Revelation as he said. Well, he wasn't baptized so... and it took further light
and knowledge, further Revelation for Joseph to know all those who would have
embraced the gospel are also heirs of the Celestial Kingdom. And that actually doesn't even resolve
the contradiction. The amazing part is in 1836, Joseph Smith and all other church members
now have to believe a contradiction. You absolutely have to be baptized to go to the Celestial
Kingdom except when you don't, which is apparently most of the time.
Yeah.
But you have to.
If you would have received it, then yes.
But you have to, but you don't have to. So everyone has to be baptized? Yes. What about
people who haven't heard about it? Well, not them. So that looked like a contradiction.
It looks like a contradiction only because further
revelation hadn't come yet. Once the Lord reveals four years later the doctrine of baptism
for the dead, then everything becomes clear. And it's an interesting thing that God doesn't
reveal all of it at once. Why doesn't he in the temple, when he shows Joseph the
celestial kingdom, why doesn't Jesus say, by the way, there's a thing called baptisms
for the dead. That's why this works. Instead, it's here a little and there a little, a little
bit of a time even for Joseph. When Joseph is going to have these experiences with losing family members, even after Alvin,
the one that hits him very hard is in 1841. And it's when his brother Don Carlos dies.
We have some records of him. We have some letters he wrote to Joseph Smith. There's a very
interesting letter he writes to Joseph in 1841. He basically says, Joseph, I need to talk to you
about some things, but you're super ridiculous busy. So I'm just going to write you a letter. I know it seems weird
that I'm your brother and I'm writing you a letter about that. I should just go to your
house, but I know you're super busy and I want to get this out. I think it was Don Carlos's
version of texting essentially. When he dies, he's young, he's 24, 25 when he dies, it hits Joseph really
hard.
It doesn't help that only a few weeks separated from that Joseph's own son named after Don
Carlos in August also dies. His brother dies August 7th, 1841, and Joseph's own son dies very shortly thereafter.
And it's this painful thing. In one of Joseph's great sermons that he gives, he draws from that
wellspring of that grief. Ephraim Marx, who is the adult son of William Marx, the stake president in Nauvoo.
He's I think 24 years old when he dies suddenly.
As horrible as these deaths of children are, because infant mortality is so bad, it somehow
seems even more tragic when someone finally makes it to adulthood and dies suddenly
and instantly because they've beat the odds, it seems, and then they haven't.
And Joseph spoke at that funeral and he referenced both of his brothers that had died, both of his
adult brothers that died. And you kind of get a sense of this. He says, this is someone recording
this, so it's going to be in third person.
President Joseph said that he spoke on the occasion with much feeling and interest.
And among his remarks, he said, it is a very solemn and an awful time.
I never felt more solemn.
It calls to mind the death of my oldest brother who died in New York.
That's Alvin.
And my youngest brother, Don Carlos, who died in New York, that's Alvin, and my youngest brother Don Carlos, who died
in Nauvoo.
It has been hard for me to live on earth and to see these young men upon whom we have leaned
upon as a support and a comfort to be taken from us in the midst of their youth.
Yes, it has been hard to be reconciled to these things. I have
sometimes felt that I should have been more reconciled to have been called to death myself
if it had been the will of God. Yet I know that we ought to be still and know that it
is of God and be reconciled. All is right. It will be but a short time before we all in like manner shall be called."
He goes on to say that in this same sermon that we should let death prove as a warning to all men
to deal justly before God with all men and then we shall be clear in the day of judgment.
When we lose a near and a
dear friend upon whom we've set our hearts we can never feel the same afterwards. Knowing that if
we set our hearts upon other things they may in like manner be taken from us. As someone who has
experienced some grief I can tell you that he is speaking to my soul. When you lose someone
that you love desperately. Only a few years ago, my youngest brother suddenly and tragically
died. Man, yeah, I guess time makes it so I'm not crying every day. I am never the same. There's a hole there that I can only hope that at some
point in the eternities, through the atonement of Christ, that somehow the suffering will
be made up. Joseph understands the poignancy of grief and death in a way that maybe he wouldn't otherwise
without having lost his children and his siblings. So touching to get in their
hearts like that. It seems that he and Hiram are close. We get that impression.
It seems. They have such a strong bond with one another that Lucy, you know, accords in her book to
the fact that when Joseph was at his sickbed and press pressure on the sore in his leg
so that there was some modicum of pain relief.
Hour after hour, day after day,
hour, day after day, desperately trying to provide some kind of pain relief to his younger brother Joseph. They had a heart cemented to one another. Of all of
the horrific things that take place in the events of the martyrdom, all of the things that are horrible in the
ungodly murders of those two prophets of God,
I think perhaps the worst is that Joseph sees Hiram die first.
All of our accounts that we have of the martyrdom is the absolute
destruction of soul that Joseph feels in that instant when he sees Hiram die. As
John Taylor says he rushes to his side and says, oh my poor dear brother Hiram, I
think they have a bond with one another. It can't be overstated,
it can't be replicated. They clearly don't agree on everything.
Brigham Young will talk about the fact that Hiram feels much more strenuously about the
word of wisdom than Joseph does. Joseph believes the word of wisdom is something that is a guideline and Hiram
Smith believes it's, he's kind of like Hebra J. Grant about it, he needs to be 100% all
the way even before that revelation becomes a codified thing that it's an absolute abstinence
from alcohol, but they love each other. The fact that they are together is, it's a poignant thing. Joseph has many visions
and revelations that we may not get to directly talk about in this year of the Doctrine and
Covenants because they aren't part of a revelation or a section in the Doctrine and Covenants. So
they might be a footnote, they might be a part of the story that we get. But one of his greatest revelations that he has is he has a vision of the day of
resurrection and he seems to have multiple of these visions.
He is very clear about what he saw.
It involves him thinking back on these people that he's lost. He says, I would say that
God has shown me a vision of the resurrection of the dead. I saw the graves open and the
saints as they arose and took each other by the hand, even before they got up while getting up, and great joy and glory rested upon them." He says again in
another sermon, would it be strange if I were to relate to you that I've seen a vision in
relation to the resurrection.
Those who have died in Jesus Christ may expect to enter into all the fruition of joy when
they come forth, which they possessed or anticipated here.
That part speaks to my soul with my lost brother. Apparently, what I get back in the resurrection
is the joy I should have had, what I anticipated having. I'm going to get back through the
atonement of Christ,
through the resurrection. It goes on, which they had possessed or anticipated here.
So plain was the vision that I actually saw men before they ascended from the tomb, as though they
were getting up slowly, they took each other by the hand and they said to each other, My father, My son, My mother, My daughter, My brother,
My sister. And when the voice calls for the dead to arise, suppose I am laid by the side
of My father, My mother, My brother, My sister, and when they are by My side, I embrace them
and they embrace Me." It is something that clearly he feels very strongly.
The resurrection is a doctrine that Joseph loves and constantly talks about.
He's come to understand that this world is terrible.
It doesn't mean that you have to have a long face and not ever laugh.
Joseph is as much trials as he faces, is jovial
and joking and lover of a world, a lover of the people. But things have been really hard and he
knows it. It's in this resurrection, in that blessed day that everything's going to be made
right. In another sermon he says, can you be shaken from your faith by
all these various things that can happen?
He says you need to lay hold of these things and let not your knees or joints tremble or your hearts faint.
What can earthquakes, wars and tornadoes do? Nothing.
All your losses will be made up to you in the resurrection. I have seen it.
All of your losses will be made up to you provided you continue faithful by the vision
of the Almighty, I have seen it. More painful to me than the thoughts of annihilation, than
death. If I had no expectation of seeing my father and my mother, my brothers and sisters,
and my friends again, my heart would burst in a moment and I would go down to my grave.
The expectation of seeing my friends in the morning of the resurrection cheers my soul
and it makes me bear up against the evils of life.
It is like they are taking a long journey and on their return we will meet them with
increased joy."
Man, I don't know how anyone can read the words of the vision of the resurrection of
Joseph Smith and not have the Spirit tell them, this man is a prophet of God.
That was beautiful. Yeah. That idea,
all your losses will be made up to you. Boy, hang on to that.
What a wonderful thing to hang on to.
Sometimes that's all we have to hang on to.
There are people listening who have lost all of their family members
in horrible accidents. There are people who've had all of their family apostatized. There
are people who've never been able to have a family that are separate and single and
say, what does this church or world even have to offer me? The Lord has promised in the next life, everything will be made right.
And I don't know what that constitutes for everybody, but I believe it.
I believe it because Joseph Smith saw it.
Me too. It's beautiful.
Garrett, we haven't really looked at Samuel yet or Joseph Smith has sisters.
I don't think many people know much about Sophronia,
Catherine, and Lucy.
What about Samuel and Joseph's sisters?
For Samuel, he is in the early, uh, workings of the
restoration very early on.
I mean, it's Samuel that is leading, uh, Oliver
Cowdery down to Harmony.
The other thing that Samuel is, is one of the
earliest and most effective Latter-day Saint missionaries. He is the type of person that
we would like to put in the MTC right now to train people up on how to do it because
he is incredibly energetic in doing it. I mean, he seems to be almost boundless in his energy
to share the gospel. He's one of the earliest converts to the church. I can't even say he's
a convert to the church because he's actually baptized before there's a church. He's one
of the people who's baptized prior to the church being organized. He's one of the few that's baptized after they receive the authority from John the Baptist.
His offices of missionary work in those early days in 1829 and then especially in 1830 with
the Book of Mormon is going to lead to dozens and dozens of people joining the church.
He is not passively believing that Joseph Smith is in fact a prophet of God.
He is telling the other people of that in his missionary efforts.
An early convert to the church who has a lot of zeal, but not a lot of depth
is Joseph Wakefield, who gains a testimony, becomes an incredible missionary.
He converts George A. Smith's family.
So part of the extended
Joseph Smith family. And yet, as Joseph reveals doctrines that are beyond what his sensibilities
can handle, he will turn against the prophet and become one of the leaders of the opposition
in Kirtland. Speed at conversion is not always the best indicator of whether or not someone is going to
be a lifelong member of the church. The real question is, have they fully consecrated their
soul to God to where they know these things to be true And I know them even if all of life's events turn
against me. And I know them even if the church teaches a doctrine that I didn't already know,
or I don't agree with. And I know them even if my family apostatizes. It's getting to that place
in our faith where it's not a question of whether or not I believe. I believe because the Holy Spirit has told me.
For Samuel Smith, he doesn't know immediately that the Book of Mormon that he's dropped
off will eventually be the one that will end up in the hands of Brigham Young and that
will lead to his conversion.
R. Who has some impact?
I don't know if you guys know he has a pretty significant impact
It's a good reminder to people today. You just don't know when you share the gospel. You have no idea what your impact is
There was a family that I had been meeting with it was a young couple
Been hit pretty hard with antagonism people saying antagonistic things about the church and its history. They were a wonderful, good couple. I met with them multiple times,
trying to resolve their concerns. After one of the last times we met, they were very kind,
but they basically were like, look, we just don't believe anymore. And I've had a lot of people say,
hey, can we talk about church history? I know it's not the case, but I remember driving home from that church
building because it wasn't mine.
And it started crying because I was just like, I'm so bad at this.
Their whole lives were dependent on me doing a better job.
I failed them.
And now I've failed their children and I failed their children's
children. I just failed. I cried driving home because they were such good people and I couldn't
help. I obviously moved on with life and a few years ago I had another colleague contact me and tell
me that this couple would rejoin the church, that they were in their ward and
they told them that part of their conversion experience, reconversion, was
they couldn't get out of their head some of the things that I'd said when we had talked
before.
I think a lot of us have those experiences and we don't know it.
We share the gospel with people and we sure see a lot of failures.
Failures are easy to see.
The failures are the ones that are right up there front and center and they make you feel
like is anyone even listening?
Does it even matter?
But I don't think we ever fully get to see all of the successes.
I think about my own family.
My grandfather and my grandmother converted to the church in the Netherlands in the 1920s.
My grandfather was not a religious man.
So I don't know how quickly thereafter he went inactive. He was
not somebody that was going to be going to church a lot. The Dutch mission was a pretty
rough mission. You could have some missionaries on today that would let you know, yeah, there's
a grand total of nobody who listens to you there. And so I always think about that missionary.
I don't know who it is, but he probably left home from his mission thinking he was a failure.
He probably thought, I only baptized two people my whole mission.
One of them went immediately inactive.
I'm a failure.
I did nothing.
And yet there are literally tens of thousands of people, because my brothers were much more effective missionaries than I was, that are members of the church now as a result of that one conversion.
I get the opportunity to share the gospel with people as a religious educator and to bear my testimony to groups of people all on the basis of that one missionary sacrifice
who probably spent the rest of his life thinking
anytime someone brought up a mission, he probably
yeah, servant, you don't, you have a lot of
baptisms.
I had like 400 in the Philippines.
No, I baptized two people.
I do think it's important.
The old adage, you know, how many seeds are in an apple,
but you don't know how many apples are in every seed. You don't know where the end is going to be.
That's beautiful, Garrett. That's Samuel Smith. Let's talk about Joseph's sisters. These aren't
people that we get to talk about very much as we move forward through church history.
Yeah, there's less known about them in their experiences. I mean, it's not an
uncommon thing that in the 19th century, women are not as prominent and so many documents don't
reference them as close. And of course, Joseph is often referring to his sisters in letters that he
writes. They go through the trials and tribulations that the saints go through.
As they get married, they will move with the church to Ohio.
They'll move with the church to Missouri.
Once I say the words Missouri, you know that things aren't good.
They go through a significant amount of trial and they all remain steadfast in their belief that Joseph
Smith was a prophet.
After Joseph's murder, they're in various places in their life, in part because their
husbands in some ways dictate their religious life as is pretty common in 19th century America. So they all maintain their faith that Joseph was a prophet,
but none of them actually come to Salt Lake. One of them actually is very much contemplating it,
at least from letters that we have, but then doesn't and then eventually will join the
reorganized church. They all maintain their belief that Joseph
saw God and that Joseph was a prophet of God. The Book of Mormon was true. They maintain
that belief in Joseph, even though after Joseph's murder, their lives take them in various directions.
Just that you've told us between what 1840 and 1844, they're going to lose their father
and four brothers.
And they're not just losing them because of disease.
Two of them are murdered.
And at least they believe that Samuel, that his death is also caused by the mob chasing him when he's trying to get help for Joseph and
Hiram when they're in Carthage.
They at least believe that three of those brothers are murdered directly or indirectly
by the mob.
I think that's one of the more difficult aspects of this time period of Latter-day Saint history
is think of how difficult that would be to go through,
not only the scenes the church is already going through,
but then also to go through the tragic personal loss
that's going on.
Garrett, we're going to wrap up here.
And I know everyone, if you love history like I do,
I can listen to Garrett teach all day, every day.
But Garrett, why don't we ask you one last question
and then we'll pick up.
The next time we have you is about a month.
And we're gonna look at the translation
of the Book of Mormon,
which you may have written a couple of books about.
So I may have.
So Garrett, let's ask you one last question.
How significant is it that all of Joseph Smith's family
believes he is a prophet?
Knows he is a prophet.
That seems to me to be pretty significant.
Who would know him better?
Yeah, I don't know about you guys, but I really have a hard time fooling my family.
When my sisters talk to me or my wife, Sarah talks to me, they just know me differently.
And that's okay.
They know me, but it's really difficult to put on a religious face around your family
all the time.
Right.
Sibling love only goes so far.
I mean, I'm willing to help you out if you're in a hard time, but I'm not willing to have
my house burned down for you.
I think there's a couple, there's a few lines you draw on the sand. And I really think that those family members who
grew up with him clearly did not feel that there was any disposition in him to do evil. Obviously he sinned, but he clearly wasn't doing evil things to them.
He clearly wasn't lying consistently to them.
He clearly wasn't a negative influence in their life because they had every
opportunity to separate themselves from him.
They didn't have to follow him where he went, especially
his sisters when they got married. They could have stayed in Ohio and not moved on or stayed
in New York. In a lot of ways, they're voting with their feet. The fact that they follow
his prophetic utterances means that they see him as who he claims to be. And a lot of antagonists
will say things like, well, if you only really
knew Joseph Smith, then you wouldn't believe. But what you mean is I watched a TikTok that
someone made in their basement where they misquoted something that was written 50 years
after the fact by someone who wasn't there who claimed that they knew something that they didn't even know. And you think
that carries more weight than his brother saying he's a prophet. And again, antagonists
will say, well, that's why the conspiracy goes. I mean, they're all in on it. They're
all in on it. They're all profiting from this.
Pete Slauson They're all liars. Every one of them. Yeah, they're profiting from it so much. They
keep having their houses taken from them. It's amazing. If they profit anymore, they'll
have nothing left. It speaks to the fact that especially his older siblings with younger
siblings, you know, maybe they don't really know exactly what's all going on in the
household. Lucy's too, when Joseph has moroni visits.
So I don't know how well versed she is on that,
but Alvin and Hiram and Sophronia,
well they've known Joseph since Joseph was a baby.
They've seen Joseph before his sickness and after his sickness. They see
Joseph as he becomes studious, inquiring about which religion he should join. They know Joseph
after the first vision. They see his response to persecution. They hear him speak. why don't his siblings just simply declare to others, look, my brother wrote a book that
he thinks came from God, but he obviously didn't. That's actually a much more natural
thing when you're being hated and persecuted for the fact that your brother claims something.
All of us have an extended family member who says things that you're like, you can't listen to and so and so, cause she's crazy. All of
us have had that experience of distancing ourselves from someone who's saying something
that puts us at odds with society. And his family just leans right into it. If Joseph
says it, then it's true. Well, this is contrary to all religious
doctrine that exists for a historian. It very much speaks to the fact that whether you believe
Joseph Smith saw God or not, you have to believe that the people who were closest to him believed that he did. That they saw him as honest, that they saw this as real.
And they reordered their entire lives because of it.
Yeah. That is beautiful.
It's been fun to get to know this first family, John.
Yeah. I'll begin my teaching a Book of Mormon class by saying,
we have a special guest today.
Lucy MacSmith is here with us today. I try to ask the class to imagine what she might say,
something like, do you know what it cost my family to bring you this book? And she doesn't
say this book has ruined us or ruined my family. She says, oh no, believe it to the end.
She says, Oh no, believe it to the end.
So in the organization of the Relief Society, one of the people who speaks
is Joseph Smith's mother, Lucy Mack Smith. Now, at this point, she has suffered incredible loss.
This was 1842.
She has not only lost Alvin as well as several infant children.
She has lost Don Carlos as well, and lost her husband.
She has experienced some very difficult times on top of all the difficulties of
being driven out of your home over and over again, as you follow the teachings
of Christ laid out by your son.
These are from the Relief Society minutes.
of Christ laid out by your son. These are from the Relief Society minutes.
It's Eliza R. Snow recording her as she's speaking.
And so it'll be in third person because she's recording.
This is what Mother Smith said.
Mother Smith said, this institution is a good one.
We must watch over ourselves.
That she came into the church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints to do good, to get good,
and to get into the celestial kingdom.
She said we must watch over and cherish one another, watch over one another and comfort
one another and gain instruction that we may all sit down in heaven together. That is a very succinct and powerful
testimony. I came into this church to get good and to do good, and we've got to help everybody
get to the celestial kingdom. How grateful every member of the church could should be for this first family every member. What a beginning
What a beginning
With that we'd like to thank dr. Garrett Dirkmont
founder of the Dirk Moss Academy
So thankful for him and his knowledge and testimony of this's pretty exciting as we begin this voices of the
restoration. He'll be back. Thank you so much for joining us today on Follow Him. We'd like to thank
our executive producer, Shannon Sorensen, our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen, and we always
remember our founder, Steve Sorensen. Please join us next time. We're going to have Dr. Scott Woodward with us talking about Moroni's visit and section
two of the Doctrine and Covenants and a good chunk of Joseph Smith history.
We're excited to see you next time on another episode of Follow Him.
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