Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine and Covenants 3-5 : Dr. Gerrit Dirkmaat : Part I
Episode Date: January 17, 2021Have you made a mistake that takes 2400+ years to repair? How did the stolen 116 pages affect the relationship between Joseph Smith, Lucy Mack Smith, Lucy Harris, and Martin Harris? Join us for Episod...e 4 as Dr. Gerrit Dirkmaat dramatically shares details about Emma’s brush with death, Joseph and Emma’s first baby’s passing, and why the pages were stolen and not lost--stolen!Show notes available at followhim.coÂ
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with
their Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith.
And I'm John By the way.
We love to learn.
We love to laugh.
We want to learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow Him.
Hello, my friends.
Welcome to another episode of Follow Him, a podcast created to help
individuals and families with their Come Follow Me study. I'm here with my co-host, John,
by the way.
Hi, Hank.
We, of course, are your hosts each week, but we also invite an expert, a guest, to help
us. And this week, we have an man really, uh, scholar historian, um,
just and just an outright great guy. Uh, his name is Dr. Garrett Durkmont. Welcome, Garrett.
Thanks for having me. I'm glad to be here. Brother Garrett, Jay Durkmont is an associate professor
of church history and Dr. Nutt Brigham Young University. He received his PhD from the University
of Colorado in 2010. He's
worked as a historian and writer for the Church History Department from 2010 to 2014. He's been
involved with the Joseph Smith Papers project, which has been wonderful. He is the co-author with
Michael McCay, who we've had on the program before, of the award-winning book from Darkness
Untill Light, Joseph Smith's translation and publication
of the book of Mormon.
And he and his wife, Angela, have four children
and we're so glad to have him here today.
Thanks, Garrett.
Thank you.
Yeah, this is gonna be exciting.
One gift that Garrett has is that he can speak to scholars,
he can write the articles the way they need to be written
to be in that conversation.
But then he can speak to ordinary people like us, John.
If I'm a first-time reader in the Doctrine and Covenants, I run into the name of Martin
Harris.
Now, if I don't know my church history, this is the first time I'm really going to hear
from this guy, except for a little bit in Joseph Smith history.
So, Garrett, tell us, before we get into the meat of the section, tell us about Martin Harris and how he met Joseph Smith.
Martin Harris is a prominent farmer in the Palmyra area. He's, you know, would be overselling
it to say these, he's wealthy. He's, he's well off, right? He has, he has considerable
acreage and he's well respected in the community. In fact, he's, uh, he's so well respected that even
when people are antagonized to him, when they're angry with him,
for instance, the local newspaper editor in Palmyra,
he attacks Joseph Smith and attacks the Book of Mormon. And then when he comes to Martin Harris' support, this is in 1829, he says that Martin Harris was duped,
even though he was an honest and an industrious farmer
living in this town, right?
So even people who were looking to castigate the work
generally held Martin Harris in high esteem.
And they see him as being totally fooled by Joseph
Smith. And this is this is probably the most boring part of your entire podcast. Let me just get
this out of the way. There's this idea that that people had that was known as competency. Okay,
so what is competency? Well, today when you use the word competent, it usually means I'm looking for a way to not be mean.
You know what I mean?
Like, oh, is she a good surgeon?
Well, she's competent.
I mean, well, I mean, thank you for the resounding applause, right?
I mean, in our terminology today, we use the term competent as kind of like, yes, they're
good enough, right?
In the 19th century, there was a term known as competency
that what it meant was for you to really have made it,
for you to be considered a real contributing member
of your society, you needed to be a competent farmer.
And that doesn't mean that you could make
the pumpkins grow bigger than other people could.
What it meant was that you had the ability
with the land that you had under tillageage with the things you did on your farm, you know, whether it's fruit trees or
whatever you're doing, that you could support your own family and your family would not have to work
outside of the farm. So yes, they would work all kinds of stuff on the farm. But if you had to hire your sons out,
then you were not a competent farmer.
You were not able to take care of your family on your own.
The average American in Joseph Smith's time
makes around 300, maybe $350 a year.
And so the Smiths are poor.
They are hiring out their labor.
And there's lots of reasons behind that, right?
The crop failures in the business venture is that
That the Smith family had but for our purposes what it meant is that
Martin Harris was on the higher rung of Palmyra society a long-time resident
well-landed
Well-respected the Smiths were newcomers. They were Johnny cum-latelies who also came without a lot of property who were on the lower end. Now
it doesn't mean everyone hated them. It meant that they were among the least respected in terms of their property. So I don't know exactly how they met. Almost all of our information from this era all comes from reminiscent accounts.
What I mean is people decades, decades later saying, oh yeah, yeah, I remember when Martin
Harris met Joseph Smith. Well, they're saying it in 1880, you know, I don't even remember
when I met Hank actually, right? So, and that was only like a few years ago. If you asked
me 60 years from now, the exact circumstances of our meeting, I'll say I'm sure it involved Diet Coke,
right? But I won't know, maybe the precise nature of it. So apparently, their families
are acquainted somehow, and it's a small community, so it's very easy. But the first
inclings, according to Lucy Mack Smith, who gives us most of our history from this
time period, is that preserved Harris, which is not a jam, but Martin Harris's brother,
he actually comes to Palmyra, because he preserved, yes, his name, it's very, very Calvinist,
preserved Harris, comes to Palmyra investigating these reports that he's heard that Joseph Smith
has found some kind of of ancient plates, right? Martin Harris probably has already heard the
same things at the same time, but at least according to these these later accounts, preserved
Harris seems to be the one who kind of, you know, brings it to Martin and says, hey, I'm interested in finding out about this.
His wife, Lucy Harris, is also similarly interested.
Joseph will actually, according to Lucy Max Smith, this is going to be very confusing because
there's two Lucy's.
Lucy Harris, Martin Harris's wife, and Lucy Smith, Joseph Smith's mother.
Joseph Smith, according to his mother, sends his mother, Lucy Smith to the Martin
Harris home to see about getting some kind of support for aid in this publication of this
translation work that they are going to at some point undertake very early on. And at first,
Lucy Harris is incredibly interested in what Lucy Smith has to say.
At least, again, all of this is coming from Lucy Smith.
So you have to always put a little bit of, you know, she's reflecting on this.
And at least as she tells it, Lucy Harris was very interested, even set herself, all
help pay some money to bring this forth.
And then eventually she'll meet with Martin and they agree that they're gonna go back
to the Smiths home in a few days
to go meet Joseph and to discuss it.
Lucy Harris comes with her
and they actually have this experience.
Lucy Harris comes with Martin Harris
and they have this experience of lifting the box
that the plates are in.
They're heavy, right?
In fact, Martin Harris's daughter also lifts the box that the plates are in. They're heavy, right? In fact, Martin Harris' daughter also lifts the box
that the plates are in.
So there's these three different people who will lift this.
And Harris' daughter says, I can barely lift it.
And they can hear the metal inside.
They can feel the weight on it.
So they have this kind of physical witness
of the plates very early on.
That really peaks Martin Harris's
interest but it actually kind of drives Lucy Harris's interests to want to see
more while she's an early proponent of Joseph in the plates she's actually very
quickly going to become a very big antagonist in part because she's never allowed
to actually see the plates.
That's an 1827 that all that is going on.
At the end of 1827, the Smiths are going to make the determination to move down to harmony.
That's where Emma's from, her family's down there.
I can't imagine what the reunion was like given the fact that the reason why they left
in the first place was Joseph had eloped with Emma against Isaac Hale's wishes. Joseph will buy a property of 14 acre
farm that has an existing home already on it. It apparently also already has a barn. He buys it
from his father in law, Isaac Hale. He buys it all for $200. That kind of gives you an idea of what money is worth, right?
He buys a 14 acre farm with a house on it
and it's already got improvements on it for $200.
Now when I say he buys it, I mean the same way I own my house.
I mean, he makes an agreement that he will make payments on it
and it's actually well beyond his means. He's gonna struggle to make those payments on it. And it's actually well beyond his means.
He's gonna struggle to make those payments on it.
But they do have this home that they'll be living in.
Martin Harris will come down and serve as a scribe
for part of this early translation process.
The primary scribe of this early translation,
this 1828 translation process, is actually Emma herself.
She serves as the scribe for most of what we today call
either the lost 116 pages or the book of Lehigh.
I don't even know why we call it the lost 116 pages.
I even had someone the other day ask me like,
well, where did they lose it at?
It wasn't, it was stolen.
I mean, if I went outside to get in my car today,
and it wasn't there, I wouldn't say, I've lost my car. My car is lost. Where is my car?
Now, it was stolen. And we know that they were stolen because the Lord tells us they were stolen.
So we really should call them the stolen 116 pages, but Emma serves as a scribe for the for the first part of that
She according to Martin Harris actually writes more of that early translation portion than Martin does
There are other people who help out. It's always hard to know exactly how many scribes there were on the Book of Mormon translation
in part because
most of the original manuscript of the book of Mormon doesn't exist anymore.
It was destroyed. And so with the remaining a little bit less than a third that we have,
we only have so many handwriting samples of them. David Whitmer gives a much bigger
list of people who participated in the writing. Martin Harris has a really important role for Joseph Smith.
And I think that really informs
Dr. and Covenant Section 3.
Martin Harris is essentially in 1827,
the only person that's not a Joseph Smith family member
that believes Joseph Smith.
Lucy for a little bit of time, right? And even Martin's
kind of like, you know, sometimes, right? I mean, so I mean, the reality is, Joseph's been
told that it is God's requirement of him that he not only translates this book, but that
he brings it forth to the world. Now think about what I said earlier about how much Joseph Smith's farm cost.
Fourteen acre farm.
If Joseph sold everything that he had, which he didn't even own, so he wouldn't have
gotten any money out of it, but let's say that he did.
Let's say that he owned it outright.
The cost of printing the book of Mormon was 15 times Joseph Smith's entire value that
he had.
There was no possible way in Joseph's mind that he
could ever pay for the printing of the Book of Mormon. And I think that's part of the
reason why Martin Harris not only is he one of the first people who believes, so Joseph
has that kind of connection with him because only Martin has been willing to say, yeah,
this is real. But also in Joseph's mind, how in the world could this ever actually be accomplished?
This could actually be printed.
And from the beginning, Martin Harris has said, I'll pay for that.
I will pay for it.
I'll give whatever money I have to do.
I'll pay for it to be printed.
And so I think that's why when Martin, who is now facing a very antagonistic wife, when
he makes a request of Joseph, Joseph, I know I can't show the plates to anybody.
What have I just showed them the manuscript?
If I showed them the pages, they would know that this is, you know, this is obviously something
beyond your abilities, that they would know that this is not you know, this is obviously something beyond your abilities. They would know that this is not something I'm making up that they won't see the plates,
but they'll see the pages.
They might even read the pages.
They'll know this is from God.
And of course, this is a very familiar story to Latter-day Saints, right?
The Joseph asked the question, and he's told no.
But Martin Harris is unwilling to accept the answer now.
Just ask again, I really need this.
My family needs to know.
And he asked again and again and told no.
And then again, after further inquiries
from Martin Harris, that's the third time.
And this time finally, he's told, okay, you can do this,
but on the very strictest of conditions that Martin Harris would not only
covenant to protect the manuscript, which kind of seems like a no-brainer, but that he would
only show it to certain individuals that were already named.
He made a covenant.
Yes, he's going to show it to his wife.
He's going to show it to his brother, preserved. He's going to show it to several other family members, and that's it.
DNC III actually has a longer history than we think because of this history with Harris,
but also because Joseph already knew that there was a problem by the summer of 1828, because
after he asks that third time,
he gets the affirmative answer,
okay, you can do this.
But he also knows that he's under the center of the law.
Because the angel returns to him
and demands the plates
and the Yurim and Thumbam stones,
the interpreters, whatever we want to call them,
he demands them back from Joseph.
And so Joseph is
left knowing that his request to get Martin Harris, these pages, has cost him the plates, has cost
him at least temporarily, the Nephi, the seer stones, and that he can't be in very good standing with
God at that moment. This is really wonderful for our listeners
to kind of get a sense of a social standing of Joseph
as opposed to Martin.
I was just gonna mention in the Come Follow Me manual,
it says, early in Joseph Smith's ministry,
good friends were hard to come by,
especially friends like Martin Harris,
a respected, prosperous man who was in a position
to provide valuable support and Martin willingly
supported Joseph even though it cost him the respect of his peers and required financial sacrifice.
So it's easy to see why Joseph wanted to honor Martin's request to take the first portion of
the book, more translation to show his wife. And I love that you said it wasn't lost, it was stolen. Of course it was. That's right. Joseph has had essentially no one outside of his family,
except Emma, right?
But no one else has accepted what he's been saying.
Imagine the pressure of knowing that this person
has sacrificed all kinds of things
to be the only person to believe you.
And now they want just a little something in return.
And they seem to be trying to, you know,
do it the right way, right?
I'm not asking you to show me the plates, Joe,
so I'm not asking to take the plates, just the pages.
You know, the angel didn't tell you
that you couldn't take the pages to show people,
so couldn't you just kind of, you know, right?
I mean, but the problem is,
when they got their initial response from God as the revelation
points out, both Joseph and Martin feared man more than they feared God.
Martin's on the edge here is wife putting a lot of pressure on him.
If I don't give him something, I might lose him entirely. Martin's on the edge of my entire social structure,
my family life is falling apart because of this.
I need to be able to show something.
And that's no small trip, right?
Going from Palmyra to Harmony, we think it's very extensive.
I mean, it's probably two to three day journey.
He's going to go back down to Joseph to talk to him about what it is.
And Lucy, you know, demands to go with him.
She comes down.
She really wants to see the plates.
She's still not allowed to see the plates.
Martin Harris isn't allowed to see the plates.
And she will, according to Lucy Smith,
you know, turn over every single thing she can.
And she's even out surrounding the house,
looking for moved places of dirt where it might have been buried outside. In fact, it was buried outside.
Joseph had already kind of taken it off and hit it, but she wasn't able to find it. And so,
you kind of get this sense of, this is not just a foreign kind of concept to Joseph by by by summer of 1828. He knows that
Lucy Harris is adamantly opposed to what they're doing. That Martin Harris is coming down to
talk to him because he really needs this. You know, Joseph's under a great deal of personal stress.
of personal stress. His wife is nearing the end of her pregnancy for their first child. And so she will actually deliver the day after Harris takes the pages up to Palmyra. So
Harris gets the pages. He takes them up. And then Emma, we have two different accounts. Either the baby was still born, or it was born and died very shortly after it died.
And it was devastating to Joseph and Emma.
All the more so,
because Emma nearly dies.
She is hovering near death for three weeks.
Joseph is worried that when he does go back up to Palmyra to find Harris, he's actually
worried that when he comes back, he might come back and she won't be alive anymore because
it was such a traumatic delivery.
Death and childbirth was the leading cause of death of women her age and in the United States.
It's a bad time for him.
All the while they've heard nothing from Martin Harris.
No letter from Harris saying, Hey, I showed the pages to people.
I mean, the understanding appears to be that Harris was going to take those pages up,
show the five people who was allowed to show and bring them right back.
Well, he's caring
for Emma for three weeks. So, so clearly that's not going on. And in fact, according to Lucy Smith,
it's actually Emma, who eventually says, Joseph, you got, you got to go up there and find out,
you know, she's, she's as sick as she is. She's really invested in this too. She is the primary scribe for most
of those pages that were gone. She's spent months on it. It matters a lot to her too.
We have any information about what was there. Is there a story about Lehigh? We don't know.
Is there any source of this is what was in anything about those hundred sixty-fade stolen pages?
Yeah, thank you stolen pages, you know, unfortunately nothing outside of like conjecture
Actually doctrine covenant section three the text of it
Provides you some insight of that they haven't yet
provides you some insight of that. They haven't yet
retranslated the small plates of Nephi, right? This is just the lost 116 pages and what does Dr. and Cone section three talk about?
It talks about the Josephites and the Zora Mites and that right?
It lists off many of theites, right, that
that apparently were part of that record. Our best source, of course, is Mormon himself, telling us that
what was on those plates was you know a broader history
as opposed to what was on the smaller plates of Nephi that he finds and then rather than editing places them with the the the other record
Nephi's history is certainly written later and it's because God commands him to do it. And that actually is really important, right? Because when people are looking back on their life,
they tend to focus on moments of crisis
and moments of success, right?
I'm probably not going to look back
on the peanut butter sandwich I ate yesterday, right?
And unless that sandwich kills me, right?
Or brings me to the hospital.
Then, well, I guess that sandwich I never should have
in the moment.
This is a pivotomy.
And so I think sometimes when people read Nephi's words,
they kind of, that will sometimes people criticize that,
like, well, I feel like he's just going from,
you know, miracle to miracle.
Yeah, because he's reflecting back
on 30 years of his life.
And he's not saying, you know, on August 12th,
that we had a fine day of, you know,
uncooked meat that we had around the fire we didn't build.
Usually when people look back,
they're looking back for key events
and especially key controversies.
And so that tends to highlight the problems
with layman and Lemuel, right?
Mormon, I love Mormon because he's really like
our first historian, right?
I mean, he takes thousands of records.
I don't know how many records.
He takes all of these different records.
And like any historian creates a narrative
of what happened by using those records.
And so what you would have with the book of
Lehi is a third person, you know, omniscient narrator perspective. And you get such great insights
from Mormon when he's talking about Alma, right? You can only imagine he's doing the same thing
in what was the book of Lehi because he already knows the end from the beginning. It's not going to be as stark a difference because Nephi also knows
the end from the beginning because he's writing his book after their already in
the New World, right? And so obviously the greatest thing in the history of ever
would be when we have those 116 pages to read again. I know I tell my students
when we get those and we get the brass plates back
you're gonna have a lot more classes that you have to take so many more required
classes and it just be more things for you to complain about to not finish
i'm going to bpl brass plates a late in class you know
yeah that's exactly right but yeah i mean there's so there are some uh... insights
uh... that
scholars have tried to show i mean so for instance emma talks about
you know very famous instance famous instance of Joseph not knowing
that Jerusalem had walls around it, right?
Well, she's only serving as a scribe
for the portion of the pages that are lost.
When Martin does take the pages, what happens?
He gets up, Palmyra, do we know anything about
what happens when he gets there?
Because yeah, it's a lot of conjecture
and mainly from Lucy Smith,
right? So apparently Martin will not only show the people that he has coveted that he will show,
he also begins showing it to other people. So he made a covenant with God that he will only show
the pages to these five people. And also these other people,
he starts showing the pages. So, so he's already, he's already broken that. Now, at least
according to Lucy Smith, Harris at first, uh, locks the pages in his wife's drawer, right?
And you know, for safe keeping. But at one point, a visitor shows up and Lucy's not there.
And she has the key to the drawer
and he's like, so desperate to show this guy these pages
that he actually breaks the lock on the drawer,
you know, busted open so we can get in there
and grab the pages to show one of this person
who he was never supposed to show in the first place.
So I don't know if after that they continue to reside
in the unlocked broken drawer. I don't know if after that they continue to reside in the unlocked broken
drawer. There are all kinds of theories that circulate about what happens in the pages. All we
know is that eventually Martin Harris goes back and those pages are gone and he searches the house
up and down and he can't find them. And probably he's hoping that somehow they'll turn up that
that's that he'll get a lead on them before Joseph comes calling.
When Joseph shows up and the Smiths send, you know, word to Martin to come to breakfast the next
morning, it is a traumatic event according to Lucy Smith that, you know, first of all, you know,
they're all sitting there waiting to eat breakfast together. And they've already got a ton of
tension. Joseph is so worried about this. He feels this such a knot that he actually pays
the money that it costs to take the stage most of the way to Palmyra. And he's actually so distraught
that one of the passengers on that stage is so worried about Joseph that he actually walks several
miles with Joseph to make sure Joseph gets his way to his destination
Because he can tell I'll upset Joseph is at the stage is really expensive, but it's also really fast
So if they ever take the stage somewhere, that's how you know that this is a big deal
They are are really worried so Joseph has spent all kinds of money
Just to get back to Palmyra as fast as he could.
Only to have Martin Harris not come over that night and then the next morning when they're
waiting for breakfast, still no Martin Harris.
Imagine the tension in that home.
As you're sitting around the breakfast, first of all, I want to eat.
But second of all, you're still waiting for the answer.
Everyone's sitting around waiting, waiting.
Eventually they see him walking down the lane to their house.
Now he lives clear on the other side of the township from them, right?
So he finally gets to their front gate.
And instead of coming in, he just sits down on the fence.
He pulls a hat over his eyes and stays there for some time.
Is what the source says.
You have to think that every person in that Smith house is just ready to bust right out
the house and go out there.
What are the pages?
But they don't, you know, they're trying to maintain the proper decorum, you know, eventually
Harris comes in and he sits down to the table like they're all going to have breakfast.
I can't imagine how deafening the silence was with
the tension until eventually Harris breaks down and just says, I've lost my soul. I've
lost my soul. I'm sure Joseph knew that there was something wrong. That's why he was there
in the first place. But like all of us, we're in when we're in a terrible situation. There's
always that little bit of maybe it's not as bad.
Maybe he only lost one page, right?
Maybe you can't find one of the pages.
And that's what, you know, I don't know what Joseph thought.
But Joseph's reaction is he's both angry and crushed
all at the same time.
Have you brought down condemnation upon your own head,
as well as my own?
Have you broken the oath that you made?
And Lucy says that there is just tears all over the house.
We talk about Liberty jail, but I almost can't imagine a lower time in Joseph's life.
He has lost the plates and the interpreters. Only to have his son die in childbirth, his wife nearly
die. The only thing he has left is Martin Harris and those pages. And when he comes up,
he doesn't have those pages. He is clearly outside of the favor of God and look in the modern world when horrible
things happen to us. Many of us erroneously begin to start saying, well, what did I do
that God is punishing me like this? I can't imagine that Joseph and Emma didn't at least
one time think, I wonder if our baby died because we were violating the covenant
we made with God. I don't know that they ever did, but I'll tell you what, in the 19th century in
America, if something bad happened to you, it was always attributed to the will of God. And so
it certainly would have been the culture that he would have been taught. He didn't know about the plan of salvation yet. He hadn't translated the book of Mormon yet, right? So I mean, it would have been the culture that he would have been taught. He didn't know about the
plan of salvation yet. He hadn't translated the book of Mormon yet, right? So I mean, it would have
been a very crushing experience. And obviously he's desperate to make sure Emma's okay.
He leaves the next day and comes home. And a short time is what he says in his history. After he
arrives home, he's out walking in the field. I'm sure wrestling with God, praying,
thinking, meditating. He has the angel appear to him and give him back the interpreters that were
taken from him, the Euroman thumma stones that were taken from him, in order for him to receive a
revelation. That revelation is doctrine in covenant section three that is highly condemnatory of Joseph's actions and
Of certainly of Martin Harris and the revelation as you read it focuses very much on both of them
Fearing man instead of God, right?
Instead of saying I don't know how God is going to make this work out
But I did see Jesus so I'm pretty sure he can make it work out.
Joseph is instead the same way I would be.
I need to actually have a plan.
I know that God says he's going to help, but I need to actually have a plan.
And he allowed that pressure of how difficult the translation and publication is going to
be to kind of overwhelm what he knew God wanted him to do.
It's very much a chastisement, but it also has some hope in it.
The level of pressure that he must have felt would have been incredible, because it took him four years, you know, in eight visits with Moroni, basically, to get the plates in the first place, right? And even then, he was prevented from getting them at first
because he didn't have the purist of intentions.
And so now he's losing the plates
because he isn't following what God is telling him to do.
And I don't think Joseph is being evil in any way
in this sense, right?
He's not got some kind of negative like,
oh, we've got to find a way to make money off the book of Mormon.
He's simply trying to be practical in a world where he has nothing,
his family has nothing.
They have no prospects of ever having anything.
And Martin Harris is literally the only lead that he has on doing what God has commanded
him to do.
In many ways, we're asking Joseph to be,
like the Israelites fighting the Midianites, right? Just, yeah, we'll just take a dozen,
and I'm sure they'll take out 10,000, whatever. I mean, they can do it. I mean, we're asking Joseph
to have the kind of faith that even though there is literally no possible way for him to do what God has told them to do,
that he should just still expect that he can.
I don't have that ability.
I don't know why, you know,
sometimes people are a little bit harsh about that.
To me, the most understandable thing in the world
is that Joseph let him take the pages.
I wanna throw something in from Elder Holland.
He was talking about that breakfast
that you just mentioned, Garrett,
and he tells the story of the breakfast with Martin breaking down. I've lost my soul.
Joseph standing up. Oh my God. What have you done? What have you done? Everybody's crying.
And then he makes the point, everybody at this breakfast already believes him. So why,
why do this unless, unless this is actually real? And this is what he says. He says, well,
my goodness,
that's an elaborate little side story,
which makes absolutely no sense at all.
Unless, of course, there really were plates
and there really was a translation process going on.
And there really had been a solemn covenant made with the Lord.
And there really was an enemy
who did not want the book to come forth in this generation.
Talk about a literary flair and a gift for fiction,
Lucy Max Smith gets an A
right along with her son if this is all an imaginary venture to say nothing of the terrific performances
by Mr. and Mrs. Harris and the entire first generation of the church. As we go over the text of
doctrine coming section three, it certainly is harsh. It is condemning Joseph for what he did. Right.
It's not he's probably excited to get him back. Yeah. Only to find out, oh, you got him back
because you need to hear something.
At the same time, if we take what Lucy Smith says,
that Joseph says when Martin Harris has,
you know, says, I've lost my soul,
Joseph at that point believes that he is
totally condemned by God.
It's over.
You have brought condemnation upon me and upon you.
If you have that in your mind
that Joseph returns home believing
that he has lost his soul forever
because of what Martin Harris said,
then when you read Dr. Nuccovenants 3,
it's not as condemnatory as you thought it was. Like the teenage kid who comes home
after wrecking his dad's car, he knows it's going to be bad, but the Lord still lets
him know that he still loves him, right? And that there's still a way for work.
I think that this is where we can take the story for Joseph, but apply it to us and say, look, in verse 9, behold thou art
Joseph. And okay, I still know who you are that was chosen to do the work of the Lord, but because
of transgression, if thou art not aware, thou wilt fall. It sounds like there's a glimmer of, you
still have a couple of strikes left or something. And then the next verse tells him, remember that God is merciful, right?
It's almost as if Joseph has forgotten with all of the fear that he has of the impending
doom of of what's going on because of the breaking of the covenant, because of the loss
of the pages, because of this, you know, this 10 year odyssey to get to where he's at now that's now gone, that God is still merciful,
that God's still willing to forgive.
I think one of the beautiful things about the doctrine of covenants for all of us to apply
is how many times Joseph gets in trouble and has told Dyson's are forgiven, you know,
and we can all go, he messed up from time to time too.
Let's get into the meat of the section here. The and we can all go, whew, he messed up from time to time too.
Let's get into the meat of the section here.
The Lord starts out by saying,
the works and the designs and the purposes of God
cannot be frustrated, neither can they come to not.
That's gotta be an interesting opening for Joseph, right?
Like, I know you're devastated, but really,
it doesn't write on you.
Yeah, I think an understanding that, you know, you think that the whole Book of Mormon project
is over because of what happened, but, you know, I hate to break it to you.
I'm God, and that's not how things work.
That in fact, yes, people with their agency do evil things,
but no one, no matter how much agency they apply,
will ever be able to prevent the second coming of our Messiah.
The reality is that's happening, that's gonna happen.
And so I think that's part of what the Lord
is presenting to him here.
Yeah, the work of God cannot be frustrated, right?
I mean, he already had a plan in place,
which we read about in the book of Mormon.
It was already, ah, this is gonna happen.
For a wise purpose that, you know, Nephi doesn't know,
like, I've already done all this,
now I gotta do another thing, okay?
You know, and then Mormon feeling the same impression
that, well, I've already done with my work,
but then I found these and I'm gonna,
I'm gonna put them with these other plates.
I mean, a lot of steps going on there.
Yeah, we're talking what 2400 years in advance.
The Lord says, yeah, well, I knew you were going to do this.
It's almost as if Joseph's going to go, you knew.
Why didn't you tell me?
I think it's important when people study Doctrine Covet Section 3, that they should also, uh,
concurrently study Doctrine Covet Section 10 early that they should also concurrently study Doctrine Covets
Section 10. Early portions of it are received in 1828 as part of the response to the loss of the
pages as they're asking what's going to happen. That will help give some of the answer, but
this initial answer right, you have this, the Lord assuring him that don't worry, the work's
going to go forward without this. This is one of those places where they're not exactly in sequence.
Doesn't 10 come right after three?
Our earliest written copy of DNC 10 also suggests that there's some 1829 portions of it.
And so one of the things that we dealt with with the Joseph Smith papers is that there
are some revelations that are what we might call composite revelations, where they received
one part of it, you know, in 1829,
and then another part of it in 1830,
and then they eventually published it together
because they were the same topic, essentially, right?
There's a part of section three that I love,
and I think the Lord must get somewhat tired
of telling us the same thing of,
you should not have feared man more than God.
I can't tell you how many times in Isaiah,
Isaiah says the same thing,
like don't trust in the arm of the flesh.
God frequently tells Old Testament prophets,
why do they trust in people that will die
when they've got someone who won't die?
Right, why is it constantly this fight?
You should not have feared man more than God.
You should have been faithful in verse 8.
And I would have been there for you.
How do we as parents and teachers help,
help the people in our stewardship,
whether they be adult children or young children,
not fear man more than God,
or in other words, not give in to peer pressure,
or not worry so much about
what other people think.
Well, I am not an expert on parenting as my teenage sons would let you know.
But I can say that really the question is about Christianity and of itself.
The reality is that as Christians, we of course hope that God will bless us as we try to do the things that are
right. But fundamentally as a Christian, is believing that the real reward is not on this earth,
right? That some of the greatest people who've ever lived have suffered all kinds of horrible
difficulties in their life, even to the end of their life.
That we are laying not up for yourselves, treasures on earth, or moth and rust corrupt,
and these breakthroughs steal, but lay up for yourselves, treasures in heaven.
This is really a question of all mortality, right?
There is the immediate pleasure, power, fame that comes from our mortal flesh and our mortal experiences
that we can be engaged in and having to stop and say that there is something else.
Trusting that there is a God that is going to make things work out somehow, even if it's
only eternally over what my friends have to say tomorrow.
For me and my sons, I try to help them reorient themselves.
I try to help them remember who we really are,
who we really are, our sons of Heavenly Father and Heavenly Mother,
who we really are, is someone who has an eternal existence.
And however important that relationship with that friend of yours who was just a jerk to you was today,
not only in 10 years will it not matter.
Certainly in the eternity is it won't right that we have to focus on what our value is.
John, what do you think how do you how do you help young people and even old people.
Fear God more than man and I don't know if I want to use the word fear here,
but to care more, I care more about what God thinks
than what so and so things.
Well, I think this section and many others
kind of provide a model.
Joseph just learned a choice and a consequence.
And try to help our kids.
What have you learned?
Did you see this choice and did you see this consequence?
What happened?
What did you learn?
Are you discovering that not only is it better to follow God,
it's probably easier because the consequences of not following
him are so bad that when it comes to the standards,
I love to teach that.
The gospels the easiest way to live
because the consequences of not living it are so bad that when it comes to the standards, I love to teach that, that gospels the easiest way to live
because the consequences of not living it are so bad
that you eventually learn,
and the Lord lets us learn, I think,
and this is one of those,
connect choices and consequences,
and then notice that he's saying,
okay, you can be forgiven and let's move forward.
And Garrett, you could speak to this better than I could,
but it seems to me that the Joseph of 1828
and the Joseph of the 1840s is someone who trusts in God.
By the end of his life, I think he has this lesson.
One of the things that we get with the 2013 edition
of the Dockron and Covenants is a redating
of many of the sections and a reorienting of them.
By getting back to the earliest manuscript revelation books, some of the section headings
provided an entirely different context than what we once thought it meant.
This was due to no fault of anyone in the past.
The reality was the book of commandments and revelations, which was this giant manuscript
revelation book.
It had been lost for years and years and years.
It was only rediscovered the beginning of the 20th century,
right, and so you can't fault people from before
for not knowing the sources.
As a historian, you get very used to knowing
that whatever you think today might change
based upon a source that's found tomorrow.
For other people, it's really hard thing, like,
no, no, it's always been like, well, yeah,
because we didn't have the best source, right? I just think doctrine
covenant's three can be such an excellent lesson. One, that God is merciful, like he says
in verse 10, God is merciful. And two, let's be like Joseph and learn the lesson. Remember
the pain, like John said, of being disobedient. Remember the pain of what you went through when you made that choice
to fear man more than God, and don't do it again, or at least really keep your drive
up to not do it again. Because to me, one, I love the story too. I just love Joseph
for adding it in the Doctrine of Covenant to run the book of God.
Why would you want to add that in there if it was about this big mistake that you made.
Let's take that out.
We'll edit it down.
One thing I think is really interesting is verse four,
for although a man may have many revelations
and have power to do many mighty works,
yet if he boasts in his own strength
and sets it not the counts of God
and follows after the dictates of his own will
and carnal desire, so earthly desires, right? He must fall and incur the vengeance of a just God upon him, right?
I mean, that's already part of what we've been talking about about this choosing God of her man,
which is really the choice of all it's the choice of mortality, right? To continually choose God rather than
this earth. We in the church today have had a lot more discussions about priesthood power and
the power and authority to act in God's name
and the difference between priesthood office and priesthood power. And I want to just point out for
your listeners that Joseph Smith receives more than a dozen revelations. He translates the entirety of the book of Mormon, he sees multiple visions, multiple powerful
manifestations, and he's not a deacon yet.
Okay.
All of this is going on prior to Joseph Smith having been given one ounce of priesthood
authority associated with an office. Of course, it's by the power of the priesthood
that Joseph Smith is translating the book of Mormon, that he is receiving these revelations
from God. He's literally a prophet and a seer, even though he has not been ordained to those
positions yet. And so I think that's helpful for church members to understand when they say,
well, I don't have the ability to perform a miracle because I'm not an elder or I'm not
a man.
I'm not ordained to a priesthood office.
I think as our prophets and apostles have been trying to say, we all have the ability
to, if it is God's will, to tap into that power of God to perform mighty miracles in his name, to receive
revelations for ourselves and our families in his name, to have enlightening things given to us
and to perform miracles. And Joseph Smith is the perfect example of that. He has performed
dozens of miracles at this point, and it's not because he was ordained to a formal priesthood office yet. They hadn't been restored yet.
He couldn't have been.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
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