followHIM - Doctrine & Covenants 124 Part 2 : Dr. Susan Easton Black
Episode Date: October 24, 2021Dr. Susan Easton Black continues to share how the divinely developed temple ordinances are shared with the Lord’s people in Nauvoo, even how people sang as the temple stones were driven through town.... We can rejoice with the early Saints as they build Nauvoo, and establish temple worship that endures today.Shownotes: https://followhim.co/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannel"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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Welcome to Part 2 of this week's podcast.
So we know that the Lord is telling Joseph Smith that there's been baptisms done in the river, right?
But it's now time to have a house where the ordinances could be performed.
And the baptisms in the river, it was not, if you were
to look at Nauvoo from 1841, when they're really into the baptisms for the dead to Joseph's death,
if you were to say what was the most consistent, almost daily experience of the saints, and it's baptisms for the dead.
And what I've been, I found so fascinating putting together six volumes of these baptisms
for the dead is that people knew the names of their ancestors.
I found one man, he did the names for 32 generations out there in the Mississippi River.
Whereas we look today, and I'm not sure that my grandchildren
could give the full name of my mother.
Do you see that?
In other words, they've got other things going for them.
But they also did baptisms work for their friends as well as family.
So Hiram Smith goes into the Mississippi and does the work for Alvin Smith,
his brother that had died back there in Palmyra.
Don Carlos Smith did the work for his friend, quote, George Washington,
who obviously they aren't peers, but the women of his friend, quote, George Washington, who obviously they aren't peers.
But the women of Nauvoo, when they wrote of Don Carlos Smith, said he was the most handsome man
in Nauvoo, as long as he was wearing his Nauvoo Legion uniform. So obviously, Don Carlos Smith
liked George Washington. But by section 24, the Lord is saying, I need a house.
And I think that it's pretty interesting. There were four different architects in the town of
Nauvoo, including Truman O'Angel, who was the architect of the Salt Lake Temple.
But Joseph didn't call on him. He called on William Weeks.
And what I like about William Weeks, William Weeks would go down by the Mississippi River.
He would see these baptisms going on, and he didn't see a recorder. And he's one of the ones
that made note of that and started writing down who were out there doing baptisms for the dead.
And so I think when Joseph asked him to be the architect, he already has a spirit of the work.
It isn't just I'm constructing another building in town.
In fact, he was the architect of the Nauvoo house.
You know, it's not just another building where you're going to welcome people so they can contemplate great things, but a building for ordinances. And so, but this
building was going to be the most unusual building that William Weeks had ever built. And by the way,
I lived four months in his house. You know, he truly was an architect. I mean, he had
four fireplaces. You know, I'm not a decorator I mean, he had four fireplaces.
You know, I'm not a decorator.
I struggled decorating one, let alone four. But OK, so William Weeks, he is told by Joseph, I want you to design it.
But basically, according to my vision, and he wanted round windows.
You're like round windows.
Can we do that at that time? And
he wanted sunstones, starstones, moonstones. He wanted a gold weather vane on top. I mean,
Joseph had very, very definite ideas. But while Weeks is working, and men are being called to be temple workers. And it's not to help with ordinances inside, but to cut the limestone.
Then from one of four quarries, we now have one quarry we call the temple quarry,
but to cut the limestone and then bring it to Temple Square.
But what they did, the people were so anxious to continue baptisms for the dead
that they had a wooden font built and it was brought to the main center of where, which would
be the Nauvoo Temple, right? And they did, they built a house over it with a pitched roof.
And then you start getting stones coming to Temple Square.
But try and imagine, it's the most unusual building I've ever thought of because they're
building a building around a building. And so you've got land that was donated by Daniel H.
Wells, who is not a member of the church. He gave Joseph four acres. And Daniel H. Wells would
go on to be in our first presidency. But you've got in the middle of what's going to be your stone
building going around the outside, you've got a building with a pitched roof and people lining up
to get in to continue doing their baptisms for the dead and others working on
the walls to go up.
And what I think is so interesting, they would take the stones from the quarries, they would
wrap rope around them, and then bring these huge, huge boulder-like stones towards Temple
Square.
And as they would do so, each stone became, it was like a parade.
There was nothing more exciting in Nauvoo than parades, you know. And as the stone would come up,
the farmer would come to the side of his field, put his plow down and sing the Spirit of God like
as fire is burning. The young kids, they'd come out of their schoolhouses, they'd come, they'd sing, and you'd get to the business district.
And suddenly they're still singing, you know, people coming out of their shops.
And then the stones would be given to stonecutters, and many of them from the British Isles.
And a stonecutter is different than a stonemason.
I mean, a stonemason can take stones and then, you know,
here's some kind of cement, another stone, but a stone cutter has to carve. And they were the ones
that carved the tombstones you see in the old cemeteries in Nauvoo. So as they would carve
these stones, each stone was like an artistic experience. And if we had been kids back then, wouldn't that have been fun?
But we'd be able to go to the walls of the Nauvoo Temple and we'd be able to say,
if our father had been a stone cutter, my dad did that stone and then look way up. He did that stone
and he did that stone. And you look at the temple today and all the stones look the same. We've got such
great tools, right? But back then it was huge personality and the sacrifice was amazing. At
one point, oh, you get Brother Mace writing, looking at Temple Square, he says it was like,
you know, like a, it was like blackbirds were everywhere. People were
everywhere. They came from every state in the union because they wanted to build. It was the
biggest building since New Orleans up and down the Mississippi River. And people without tools
were never turned away. You just needed a willing heart and go for it. And as they began to build, they got it up a story and a half high,
almost the same size as the Nauvoo house,
with the building in the middle still the pitched roof, right?
And so it's after the death of Joseph,
the question was, would the church survive?
And people out in Philadelphia, they're wearing black armbands.
In England, they're putting black cloths on their sacrament tables in memory of Joseph.
I mean, there's a question as, will we survive?
And the continuing to build that Nauvoo Temple was a symbol, yes, we are surviving and the work goes forward and when Brigham Young's now
now home and leading the church you know he knows as he looks over the town he can see that Joseph
wanted to have a city built on a hill but he looks and a lot of people still living in log cabins and
clapboard houses and he can see the temple is not done. So he calls the men off public
works, and it's build, build, build. He takes out the wooden font, and the people literally run back
to the river and keep going. They've got deceased. They want to be with their families forever. And finally, you don't get till May of
1845, the last stone goes on, but now you got to do the inside. And they only had the third floor
finished when Brigham says, we're opening it up for endowments because he wants to go west,
but he's not going to take a people west unless they've been endowed.
So literally from December to February, less than 10 weeks,
you get about 5,500 Latter-day Saints receive their endowments.
And suddenly it's flee Babylon.
At that time, United States, 26 states, and it's time to head west
and fulfill the prophecy of Joseph Smith,
the saints are moving out.
Wow, that's so interesting to hear.
I love that idea that a stone would go by and the farmers would stop and sing.
I've never heard that before.
Hey, you can even see that John carrying on with the Salt Lake Temple as they're
coming from Little Cottonwood, a lot longer distance as they're coming down into the Salt
Lake Valley. But that Spirit of God, I mean, from the Kirtland Temple dedication all the way through
to dedications now of literally hundreds of temples around the world, Spirit of God,
like a fire is burning. And truly in Nauvoo it was such the case.
I like what you've added, too, about Brigham Young.
So tell us again, the temple is about how far along when Brigham Young takes over, and
okay, we got to finish.
All right, so the temple is about what they call the story and a half high.
It's kind of up to the window line that you see.
And for Brigham, he wanted that temple built.
He wanted the saints to, in essence, build their memories of Joseph Smith.
I mean, you can look at, well, my favorite story goes, well, two stories to Wilford Woodruff.
At one point, he's riding in a carriage, and he's a little bit outside of Nauvoo,
and he sees the John Bembo farm, obviously a more famous farm in England.
But he sees Brother Bembo, and he walks out into his field, and he goes,
Brother Bembo, he goes, I don't even think the Garden of Eden could be as beautiful as I now see your farm.
And Brother Bembo says, oh, thank you, Wilfred.
He says, I've just dedicated it to my memory of Joseph Smith.
So shop, barn, and for Wilfred Woodruff, people have said, oh, he only lived in his house, you know, less than a month.
And what was he thinking? He must have known they were going west. As he was walking down
the stairs, he was carrying a table. There was a den in the floor. He pulled it back. He said to
his wife, you have to wait. He fixed it, put the small rag rug right back over it, gets in his wagon. And she goes,
what are you doing? And he goes, we're going. And she goes, but it's been so long. In other words,
everybody else is lining up to go. And he goes, someday as he left the front door open, he goes,
someone may know that Wilford Woodruff lived in this house. And he said, it's my memory of Joseph. He goes,
I have to leave it perfect. And so what you've got, you not only get the building of the Nauvoo
Temple, but when not building, well, Heber C. Kimball is in his home 40 some odd days. And I go,
did he ever plan to really live in it? And I go, oh, no, it's his memory of Joseph. Much like,
you know, I've had people, well, you know, testimony meeting. I go, if we were told to do
that, I mean, I'd have to buy my entire block. There would be Hertz Castle and then there would
be Black's Memory over here, right? Because, you know, they just wanted to show the Lord their devotion, their soul appreciation to live at a time with the prophet of God.
And imagine, we live at the same time with the prophet of God today.
I mean, how lucky couldn't we be?
Yeah.
And someday someone might know, someone might want to know that Wilfred Woodruff lived here.
That's amazing.
When do you think that Brigham sensed that we're not going to be staying here?
We're going west.
Well, we know that Joseph Smith, when he's over at Montrose in August of 1842,
will be leaning against a building, say to Anson Call,
that the saints will be driven from here to the Rocky Mountains. And in the Rockies,
we will become a mighty people. So we know that Brigham Young, he serves Mission Mission and then
England. And then when he's back, you see him kind of coming back and you see him side by side with
Joseph really once he's back and told, you know, as you get into later sections that he doesn't have to leave his family anymore.
And I would assume then at their various meetings that they're talking at great length about what's coming up.
Don't you have an upcoming book about Joseph and Brigham and their friendship?
I do.
In fact, it's already out by a company called Aspen Book.
So it's Joseph and Brigham, an eternal bond.
And their relationship from day one is pretty interesting. I guess what I like about it is Joseph chastised brigham on on not just one occasion but um brigham never
overstepped his bounds i mean joseph was always joseph was always his prophet and and how much
older was brigham than joseph well brigham's born on june j 1801, and Joseph then in 1805 in December.
A few years older.
I've noticed here, Susan, that they might think, well, we can just use the river, and the Lord's saying, we need a house.
Right.
Well, some people would come and they would watch the saints.
And they found it very curious.
And at one point, down in St. Louis, we can find a newspaper article saying that there are seven wonders of the world, but we've now seen the eighth.
And it's the baptismal font.
They were allowed to go in the clapboard house. And I think sometimes, well, it seems to me the Lord, when you're doing something sacred,
you don't want people that can heckle, mock, and find it just a mere curiosity.
Because I know when I've done the work in the temples for my loved ones. Wow, it's so sacred to me.
Yeah.
He says in verse 37,
how can these things be acceptable unto me except you perform them in the house
which you have built in my name?
He says, this is the same reason I had Moses
build a tabernacle in verse 38.
I want to give you these things.
John, you've brought this up over and over.
I want to reveal to my church,
he says in verse 41, the things which have been kept hid before the foundation of the world.
He says, I will show Joseph how to build this house. Let's labor with your might,
he says in verse 44. And it sounds like they did. From everything you've told us,
it sounds like they did labor with all their might to get this done. I think they did.
I think they started out one day in 10,
where you could choose which public work you worked on.
But by 1845, and there had been,
we always think of Joseph and Hiram as the martyrs, right?
But then you get another man being killed out.
And remember, we talked about these little communities.
And when Edmund Durfee was shot, Brigham said, everybody come in.
And so you have these 23 communities in Nauvoo, like spokes of a wagon wheel. They collapse.
And they all come into Nauvoo.
And then the same on the
Iowa side, they all come in. And that's where you get a real big population in Nauvoo. And that's
when Brigham says, work on the temple, we're going west, get it done. And you actually, because of
the enemies, you know, you have the great quote where Brigham's saying, you know, he's going to
build a temple even as the Jews of old, with a sword in one hand and a trowel in the other. And they're pretty much 24 hours with
little fires, you know, kind of buckets going on all four corners of the temple so people can see
as they continue to build. I think people probably know Kirtland Temple restored certain things.
Nauvoo Temple, we're going to get more things.
So in the Kirtland Temple, we know that there was washings and anointings for men.
And this was on the night of dedication.
And then you look at Nauvoo.
Nauvoo is what you'd say, you know, the fullness begins to be revealed.
As you get Joseph Smith and the little red brick store there on Water Street with giving endowment, sealing to couples. And then that obviously carried over into the Nauvoo Temple.
Yeah, that's mentioned in verse 39.
Anointings and washings and baptisms.
Am I correct in thinking this is the first section that mentions baptism for the dead?
Right.
You'll eventually get other sections talking about there's a need of recorder.
Somebody write all this down.
Make sure we've got it.
And then you see our great organized system.
I think one thing I liked, maybe it might be worth saying,
is that when the temple is finally open December 10th and it's for endowments,
you'd say, who's in charge of the temple?
In other words, Brigham passes it on, and he passes it on to the 70s.
So as they went to the temple, they've got these 35 quorums of the 70s,
and you'd say, you know, quorum one had this day,
and they would take themselves and family members
old enough to receive the endowment.
And then once temple one had finished the next day,
here's quorum two, and once you get out to 35,
you're in February,
and then that's when Brigham says it's time to go.
The first temple recorder was John D. Lee, our man of Mountain Meadows' infamous fame.
And it's interesting, he actually built the largest house in Nauvoo in memory of Joseph.
It had 23 rooms. So there he was. So different phases of our lives, right? Susan, what's the rest of the section? So it seems like
the first half is about the Nauvoo temple and the Nauvoo house. Then we're kind of going person by person here.
Are we talking about mission calls? What you get the person by person
is you start with, you are to buy stock in the Nauvoo House, right? And you begin to name it,
but then you get this kind of person by person. And the one you'd probably find the most interesting is Alma W. Babbitt.
And Alma W. Babbitt, the Lord is not pleased with him. And the crazy thing is Alma W. Babbitt
asked Joseph, take that part about me out of the section. And Joseph said, no. But the part I think is so fascinating, Alma W. Babbitt, he's an attorney in five different states.
So you'd say, wow, he's got a lot going for him, right?
And he was a stake president in Kirtland.
And so he's told in that section to beware of the golden calf.
Do you see it?
Yeah.
Verse 84.
84.
But the part I think is so fascinating is on June 26, 1844, Joseph and Hiram are in Carthage jail.
And Uncle John Smith, their uncle that's been a stake president in Adam on Diamond and in Zarahimla,
he now goes to visit his nephews in the jail.
And he asks, what can I do to help?
And Joseph says, go tell Alma W. Babbitt,
who at the time was a branch president of a little community close to Carthage called
Ramus, and to go tell Babbitt that we want to hire him to defend us when we go to the court.
And so here goes Uncle John Smith, you know, riding like crazy over to this little town of Ramus.
He finds Babbitt and he says to Babbitt, I've just come from Carthage.
Did you know Joseph and Hiram are in jail?
And Babbitt says, I do.
And Uncle John goes, oh, good.
Joseph needs you to defend him when his case will come up.
And Babbitt's comment was, Uncle John, you're too late.
I've already been hired by the other side.
And you're like, oh, good thing it still appears in the Doctrine and Covenants.
It's a beware of the golden calf.
So good message to all of us.
Make sure we're turned to Christ.
We're facing the Lord.
We're in the center of the church, and don't let
that golden calf knock you out.
Oh, wow.
Can you believe that?
I'm already employed by the other side.
Tell them sorry about that.
Yeah, there's a nice little comment in the Come Follow Me manual about the different
golden calves that we might be tempted to go after.
Good thing to talk with your kids about.
What's that golden calf and how can certain things or loyalties become a golden calf for us?
Yeah.
Right.
Anything that gets in the way, right?
It gets in the way. And then the rest of the section, it's like the reading off of the names of the
leadership from the church all the way down to the leadership of the deacons. And it's interesting,
at that time you had four quorums of high priests, but we've only found one quorum of deacons.
So by this, and there was not an age kind of thing
where we think deacons now 11 year old and so forth.
They were grown men.
Yeah, you have a lot of names in this section.
I think of reading this with my kids,
they're gonna say, who are all these people?
Well, they all have fascinating stories, right?
Yeah, we'll get Susan's's book who's who in the
doctrine covenants and see if we can see if we can go through and find out who all these people
are learn a little bit about them do you know that that might be a good question to ask um
is is what what is the um membership of the church at about right now are we at about 15,000, 16,000? Okay. Well, I actually came up with a pretty solid number, but we're about 20,000.
But what you're looking at when you look at Nauvoo, Nauvoo is a young adult church.
And there's a reason they call Lucy Mack Smith Mother Smith.
You know, she's atypical.
And Father Smith, he's atypical.
So you're looking at a fairly young church.
And you're about 20,000.
But there are some accounts.
There could be many more because those are the ones we can name.
But those we can't name that are far-flung, that never made it to Nauvoo, are difficult to find.
Such an interesting, I love hearing that.
I remember as we talked about forming the first quorum of the 12, that it might have looked like a young adult activity, except for a couple of them.
And just that they're doing this for their young.
I love that and and what we've you know what i've found and you know
if you were to say statistics uh there were more men in the church than women where you couldn't
see that in a typical ward today but you gotta yeah not today but but remember joseph and his
followers are always pushing against the west and the man goes West first. And so you'd see in that Joseph's church basically coming from the British Isles ancestry,
as you look at the group, pretty homogenous, actually.
Not a lot of ethnic in that original church.
Yeah. Can you tell us what's going on in Kirtland? I see something about, in verse 83,
about William Law. Weren't there some that were trying to go back to Kirtland for
business reasons or whatever, trying to get others to go back to Kirtland? Right. Well, the same Alma W. Babbitt we talked about that, you know, very excited, the golden calf,
he will be one that will head back to Kirtland and try and stop some of these saints that were heading up to Nauvoo
so they could build up another stake again in Kirtland, Ohio.
And for Kirtland, many of the people loved Kirtland.
And there was an advantage.
And a lot of the old saints were still there, like Martin Harris.
And the temple was finished.
But the Lord and Joseph wants them to keep moving on, come to Nauvoo. I think sometimes we talk about the, uh,
the Kirtland period and the Nauvoo period of, of church history.
Is that a designation we use? And I've always thought,
where do we fit Jackson County into there?
Is it kind of in between or is it, is it simultaneous? Yeah.
So simultaneous, I think at one point we know everyone's called to Kirtland.
And then those that were called and elected to go went to Jackson County.
And then by 37 and going 38, Kirtland clears out of the always faithful right.
And then they join them in Far West.
That's where you go. And then
finally, you've got a real substantial group in Far West that moves to Quincy and then up to Nauvoo.
Yeah. I was looking at this section, Susan, and I see the name William Law,
and there's such great blessings that could be coming to William Law. Verse 97, it says,
if he may ask and receive blessings, let him be humble
before me and be without guile. He'll receive the spirit. And that's verse 97. It goes on to say all
these wonderful things to William. And there's something to be said of, you know, these blessings
are available, but William Law is one of those who turns on Joseph Smith,
and all of those blessings get kind of wiped away, at least for a time being, right? And I think something I'm going to bring up with my children is the idea of staying true
through difficulty and being humble. Let him be humble before me and without guile. Great. I think you bring up a wonderful point. I think you look at William Law's mention,
John C. Bennett, blessings, and then I think the ultimate is where Hiram Smith, as he's
being told he's going to be the patriarch in essence of the church, and that he will take the place of Oliver Cowdery.
And then you think, I don't mind being released from callings and someone else go in,
but I don't want anyone to take my place in standing before the Lord.
And I think what we're looking at is people that had talents.
They were on the scene.
They were making a great difference.
But they failed to keep their eyes single to the glory of God.
And along the way, found a reason to fall away.
And then what happens is literally, you wonder if their place, their blessings go to someone else. And you do see that in the case of Oliver Cowdery and Hiram Smith
and being told he'll, in essence, stand next to Joseph.
Isn't it true that Brigham Young was in a place
that might have been occupied by John C. Bennett?
I think maybe I could say something about the Nauvoo Temple. So you realize that
the saints will begin heading out in February. And I think it's always interesting that the man
that Brigham leaves behind is Orson Hyde. And by this point, he's dedicated Jerusalem for the
return of the Jews, right? And his job is to finish the temple, not just the third floor, but all of it.
And it's interesting when the saints go to Iowa,
and they're told to get out of there in 52.
Who does Brigham leave behind?
It's always Orson Hyde.
But I think the part that's interesting is that as the saints
left Nauvoo, there was some question in town, would they return? And that was probably a good
question because several of the saints, as they went over to Iowa, would find someone who had
received their endowment. They would cross the river so they could get their endowment in the
Nauvoo Temple and then quickly run back, right? And so in 1848, an arsonist then set fire to the
inside of the temple and will weaken the walls. And then in 1850, there was what was called a great wind, and we might call it a tornado. But a great wind comes
and three of the walls of the temple, because of the weakened inside of the temple, will literally
fall to the ground. And then you get in 1865, you get the Nauvoo City Council is saying, boy, we got people going up there on Temple Square and worried about the one wall that's still standing.
Could people get hurt?
Well, the result will be is they will people will come to the square.
They will take any of the stones and you can find Nauvoo's temple stones all over the town of
of Nauvoo go down alleyways they're everywhere foundations uh wine cellars and before long
you'd say where the temple had once stood they extended Mulholland Street, which is our main street in town. And so you extend the
block where the temple once stood. And by the time Wilford Wood is going to purchase much of
that property, you've got two apartment houses, you got a match factory, a shoe factory, an Icarian meeting hall, and people had literally
forgotten where the temple once stood. In other words, generations pass, and it's just part of
the business district. But the man I think that should be featured is Brian S. Hinckley. He was a
school teacher by trade, a principal, and he was called to be a mission president.
And while a mission president, he went to Nauvoo and he was curious, where did that temple stand?
And he went to Carthage, the county seat, and did some research and found out where the temple stood and concluded he wanted to buy that block.
But obviously his occupation indicated that he couldn't possibly do it.
But lucky for him, he has a rich friend.
And that's perhaps a message to all of us.
But his rich friend was this Wilford Wood that Woods Cross, Utah named for. He was a furrier by trade.
And it was a time when women could wear mink coats and not get sprayed, right, with paint.
And it was the American dream, you know, the big car, the mink coat, the house. And so he came back and then purchased that site in the 1930s.
And the site was given to the church, but with no plans to build a temple at that point.
And it's not until the 1950s, you get J. Leroy Kimball comes out to Nauvoo. And J. Leroy was a famous doctor
in the Salt Lake area. But what he really liked was reading the journals of Heber C. Kimball.
He's a direct relative. And he read of this beautiful house he'd built in memory of Joseph, and came back to Nauvoo, found some walls still standing,
not much. And he goes, my, in essence, great-grandfather would be embarrassed,
and I'm embarrassed. I'm going to rebuild it. And then finally, you get him inviting his cousin,
Spencer W. Kimball, to come back. And you have two great men talking about what could we do to restore Nauvoo.
And much of what you see is literally the brainchild of what they were able to accomplish.
But it's interesting, Spencer had the idea, since they had the Nauvoo Temple site,
that they build a tall elevator shaft and that it would show that the elevator shaft was higher than the water tower.
And you'd have some kind of widow's perch on the outside where you could look, you know,
across the river and everybody could do it. But obviously, that didn't happen. And I'm so grateful
for President Hinckley saying, we're going to rebuild the temple and it's just magnificent.
And what a privilege for me to have served in it.
Right?
How great is that? Yeah.
I think that you might mention too, I think that when I saw it and only it was grass and
some markers where the corners were, there was, was it a Catholic school across the street
to the west?
Right.
And they were very gracious about it?
Oh, the Catholic school, just amazing women that served there.
I always thought you could eat food off any floor.
I didn't care what floor.
They kept their lands immaculate.
And if you go out to the Catholic cemetery in Nauvoo, you can just see cross after cross.
At one point, I counted 131 of these women that had cared for their property across from where the Nauvoo Temple once stood.
And there was a school there or something?
It was a school for, right, it's since been torn down.
So the church eventually acquired it. We used to hold a Joseph Smith Academy, kind of a semester abroad for students there. It's since been torn down so
that from the temple, you just see this grassy knoll and there's some trees now planted, but,
and then you can look out over the river. Is 70s Hall original and the Browning store? Which ones are original down there?
Most of it is actually rebuilt, John. The building that was in best order was the Wilford Woodruff
House. And it's because he wanted to have the biggest memory of Joseph Smith. So you got John D. Lee, his 23-room house spreads out.
But Wilford stuffed his walls so that the walls inside were eight bricks thick.
And he counted every brick and put the nicest ones in the front.
But one of the ones that we like to visit is Joseph Smith's Red Brick Store.
That's rebuilt from ground up. And as we in 1980,
we rebuilt the Whitmer cabin there in Fayette, New York. And at the very same time,
the reorganized church then called that a rebuilt the red brick store.
So much of Nauvoo is rebuilt as opposed to it still standing.
And there's good cold root beer at that red brick store.
For sure. But if I were to say, you know, let's say you go to Nauvoo and someone pretty famous said Nauvoo is like a
gigantic cake, most of it's frosting. So you could maybe, you know, if you didn't see the
bakery, you'd probably be okay. But the sights to see, you want the temple. You want the temple for sure. And then any burial ground.
And you couldn't always count in Nauvoo that Joseph would speak on Sundays.
But invariably, he would show up at the burial grounds.
And it's interesting, they would bury on Thursday and Monday.
And Thursday is a traditional day when Moses climbed Mount Sinai.
And Monday is a traditional day when he came down with the tablets.
And you see Joseph and Nauvoo becoming very Israelite in his thinking.
And why you want to visit those cemeteries is because in the cemeteries,
he introduces much of what today we know of as
temple work you know baptisms for the dead families can be together uh that kind of thing
i noticed reading this section kind of uh where was it hank a restatement of the abrahamic covenant
in verse 58 you know uh and as i said unto abraham concerning the kindreds of the earth even so i say unto my
servant joseph in thee and in thy seed shall the kindred of the earth be blessed
so yeah there's the evidence of that thinking of going way back to the uh the fathers was was
robert d foster also somebody who turned against the prophet in verse 150. Right. Robert D. Foster, he's someone that owned the Mammoth Hotel,
which is a 50-room hotel during Joseph's lifetime.
There were 11 hotels at the time, and his was the largest.
But Robert Foster was one of those that turned their heel against the prophet Joseph.
I guess my favorite story about him was after Joseph was martyred.
Many of the saints knew of his affiliation with conspirators
and actually thought he had been in the mob that had killed Joseph Smith.
And they wanted him to leave town. And several of the men
came to see him, but he refused to leave. But then there's a great story of Mary Fielding Smith
getting an entourage of women coming to see him and telling them if he didn't get out of town
right away, they would waste him. And suddenly you see him just packing up and he's gone,
never to return. Although he was one of the big landowners, had money in town, had been successful.
So, you know, all these men, you just wonder, they were there on the scene at the time, but
how many forfeited their blessings?
And that's never good.
If you see me doing it, you know, I helped bring in the church a guy that was a bouncer in the bar. And, you know, he'd wear wife beater shirts, even with the temple clothes.
And, you know, I've said to him, hey, if you hear I'm messing up, find me.
And he's indicated he will.
And you guys joined that team, right?
That, you know, we got to help each other.
The blessings are in the center.
Yeah, it's a sobering section to go through so many names and to think what happened to these folks.
And it's inspiring when you look at like verse 129, Heber C. Kimball, Parley Pratt, Orson Pratt, and Wilford Wood are some of those that were faithful to the end as well.
Just Star Wars.
Yeah.
Susan, to finish, I want to look at section 124, of course.
That's our only section today.
Verse 125.
So 124, 125.
And it says, Joseph is a presiding elder over all my church, translator, a revelator, a seer, and a prophet.
You've studied his life as much as anyone alive today.
Joseph, his name is known for both good and evil all over the planet.
And we all know what side we're on when it comes to that argument. So I think our listeners would love to
hear from someone who studied him so much, what you think of Joseph, the presiding elder, the
translator, revelator, seer, and prophet. Thanks so much for asking, Hank. I know that
Joseph Smith was a translator. I mean, we have such evidence. Just look at the Book of Mormon, right?
Prophet, seer, revelator, all of the above. I've studied the life of Joseph, well, you know, for,
well, as old as you can possibly get. Here I am. And I'm not bored in the process. I am very concerned of the day in which we live, in which people who have done
sloppy scholarship are getting so much time on the internet and space. Truth has to edify.
And what I'm seeing in their work, I'm not immune from that. There's hardly a day I don't get something
that goes, really, how do you know that lady? I'm so grateful that I can turn to documents,
pages. I mean, it's just obvious that Joseph is being attacked, I'm grateful that I can stand on the side to still
say that he is a prophet of God. And the blessings that that has brought to me and to my family and
to my loved ones, I will be forever grateful. Yeah. I think one day, Susan, you're going to
meet Joseph Smith and Emma Smith, and they are going to be grateful to you for your work.
You have touched thousands, thousands of lives in holding up their names.
Look what you guys are doing.
I'm a pawn.
You're big players.
We feel so blessed to have had you with us a third time.
This was just a treat for us.
Oh, that's a treat.
Choose me again.
It's my favorite.
Yeah, we love having you with us.
You know, tell everybody to go to Nauvoo.
Don't miss it.
We want to thank Dr. Susan Easton-Black for her time with us today.
We want to thank all of you for listening.
Thank you so much for being with us.
We have an incredible production team and executive producers that we need to thank. Stephen Shannon Sorensen,
and then our production crew with David Perry and Lisa Spice and Jamie Nielsen and Will Stoughton.
We want to thank you so much for your work and effort, our wonderful team,
and we hope you'll join us on our next episode of follow
him
you