Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 23-26 : Dr. Lisa Tait Part I
Episode Date: March 6, 2021Discover why Samuel Smith is as stalwart as William Smith is reticent with our guest Dr. Lisa Olsen Tait. Hank, John, and Dr. Tait introduce us to the first three branches of the Church and these earl...y Saints’ efforts to carry their crosses, learn the will of the Lord, and begin to weary and wear out their lives in service. They examine the concept of common consent and the rights of women and voting in the early Church.Show notes available at www.followhim.co
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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.
My friends welcome to another episode of Follow Him, a podcast designed to help individuals
and families with their
come follow me studies. I'm here with my co-host John by the way, we're back John.
Yeah, I'm so excited to be back again.
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it, go ahead and send that to us and we'll, we'll put that on there for you eventually sometime.
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So please go look up, follow him on those social media platforms,
and you'll get extras and quotes and awesome things from the podcast.
John, we have another expert here with us today. Tell us who is joining us.
Oh, we're so happy today to have Dr. Lisa Olsen Tate.
And she has a PhD from the University of Houston and is a historian and writer and specialist in women's history at the Church History Department. She is a volume editor and historical reviewer on saints at Book You All Have and is
working on a team to write a history of the Young Women's Organization, which
will be published in a couple of years. She is contributed to the revelations in
context series, which is on your gospel library app. You gotta get that.
And other church history department projects.
Before joining the department in 2013,
she taught Dr. and Covenants at classes
of Brighamming University.
She also leads the Mormon Women's History Initiative team
in independent group that sponsors scholarship
and networking in the field. She
and her husband Mike have three sons and a very special daughter Kaylee and two
dogs. So we're really really happy to have you with us, Dr. Tate. Thank you. I'm
glad to be here. Yeah, this is exciting. Dr. Tate comes highly recommended by one of
our former guests, brother Steve Harper, Dr. Steve Harper, who just couldn't tell me enough about Lisa,
and how much fun she is, too.
So you have a lot to live up to.
Not only are you brilliant, you're also fun.
So.
It was Steve saying that, so you'll have to gauge
what level that of.
Right.
That's funny.
This week, we are looking at sections 23 through 26.
So in section 23, it's still April of 1830.
The church is not even a month old.
It's our little tiny baby church.
Joseph is receiving instruction here for five men.
And we've heard of most of these names before.
We have Oliver Caldry, who we've talked about,
Hiram Smith, who we talked about with section 11.
Joseph Smith's senior, the prophet's father,
we looked at him in section 4.
Joseph Knight's senior, as a lot of
our guests have said the nights are pretty much the second family in the church. And but a new name
comes up, we've never seen before. We've talked about him before and this is Samuel Smith.
Can you tell us, Dr. Tate, can you tell us about Samuel, what we know about him, how he,
Dr. Tate, can you tell us about Samuel, what we know about him, how he, what his relationship was like with Joseph and how did he felt about the work? Samuel
Smith is Joseph's younger brother. He's just younger than Joseph. I think the
next son in line in the family. He comes to visit Joseph and Oliver in May of
1829 shortly after their experience with John the Baptist, where they've received
the priesthood and they've baptized each other.
Joseph's history says that they had begun to reason, I think what they mean is talk about
the scriptures with a few people and kind of start paving the way for introducing this
idea of the restoration to others.
Joseph says that they informed Samuel of what the Lord was about to do for the children of men
and reasoned with him out of the Bible and showed him some of the work that they had translated
and labored to persuade him concerning the gospel of Jesus Christ, which was now about to be revealed in its fullness.
Joseph says that Samuel was not very easily persuaded of these things, but after much
Enquiry and explanation retired to the woods in order that by secret and fervent prayer
he might obtain of a merciful God, wisdom to enable him to judge for himself.
So this younger brother than, this brother that's just younger than Joseph, he would be about 21
years old. And he isn't going to just accept everything at face value. And so he seeks out this
experience for himself and receives his own witness. And as a result, he becomes the third person to be baptized in this dispensation.
He receives baptism shortly after that.
So that's kind of where things are at when the church is organized.
Samuel, of course, being part of the Smith family, you know, they're going to have a really key role to play.
I think they all know that. They've been aware of Joseph's experience as at least some of them.
And so Samuel is poised to play a role here.
The Lord tells him here in section 23 in this revelation, though, he says that his calling
will be to exhortation, to strengthen the church, which the church is just barely coming into being at this point.
But that aren't yet called to preach before the world. And that will change. And by early in 1831,
Samuel is going to travel to Kirtland, just shortly behind Oliver Cowdery,
Parley Pratt, the first missionaries
that stop and introduce the gospel in Kirtland.
And Samuel follows them shortly thereafter.
And especially these first few years of the church's history,
Samuel is just a prolific missionary.
He walks all over the Eastern United States,
preaching the Book of Mormon, sharing the gospel,
and becomes, I believe it's he who's instrumental
in introducing the Book of Mormon to Brigham Young's family,
and instrumental in the conversion of Brigham,
and then he per se Kimball,
and some of these important early converts to the church.
So he's been on a major role to say I was going to say placing that
Bible with Brigham's that book of Mormon with Brigham's family that had some impact on the church.
Not some implications. Yeah. So I think members of the church are going to be, you know,
somewhat acquainted with Joseph and Hiram. But I hope that one of my hopes in the podcast was that
Samuel will become more important to people.
He's going to die about the same time as Joseph and Hyram.
What, six weeks after them,
or maybe a little bit longer, or two months after them, right?
Yeah. I know at least traditionally,
his death was ascribed possibly to injuries
that he suffered in writing all night
and the stress of informing the community
about the death of his brothers.
And so, you know, whatever the case was,
he doesn't outlive Joseph and Hiram in it.
So we don't know, you know,
his story doesn't continue in
the church history after that.
Yeah. And that's just, yeah, I just, I hope I told my daughter's best friend, her name
is Holland. And as I told this story, she said, he deserves a statue at Carthage Jail.
I want him to have a statue there.
So I told her that I would, I'd put this on the podcast that those who are in charge of
the statues, there needs to be a statue of Samuel there.
Carthage Jail.
Um, I was wondering, did he ever marry Samuel?
He did.
He marries Mary Bailey.
They have four keys.
Oh, another thing I like in this one is that earlier in section 11,
a hyrum is told, seek not to declare my word, but to obtain it.
And it sounds like they switch gears here in in verse three. Am I reading that right?
Yeah. Thy tongue is loose.
The Lord says to hire him is not interesting where section 11 was so restraining, you know, hold on, hold on.
And now he's saying you're calling us to exhortation, to strengthen the church continuum.
I love that.
It's like green light.
Hirem has been waiting, waiting, waiting. Now it's time.
I also had another question about in verse 6,
it speaks of Joseph Knight, senior.
Well, what's interesting here for me is that all of these guys
receive a message that they are under no condemnation,
except for Joseph Knight.
So it seems that maybe he's dragging his feet a little bit
in jumping, jumping in.
Yeah, verse 6 has always been interesting to me,
where it says, you must take up your cross
in the which you must pray vocally
before the world as well as in secret.
I don't know that we have any other sources
that would explicitly help us know where this is coming from,
but I don't know if we need them.
I mean, I think this is an example
of how these revelations speak to people in their most intimate and personal thoughts and
feelings of their heart. The Lord is showing that He knows their heart. And this expression
of take up your cross is interesting, isn't it? Of do something that's hard for you. Do something that's hard for you. Do something that will be a sacrifice that will show your commitment.
And perhaps Joseph Knight was not particularly comfortable praying and speaking publicly at this
point in his life. And so the revelation challenges him to do that. And I mean, I think it's interesting how, how Revelation often does that, our patriarchal blessings do that, sometimes, or just the promptings of the spirit that we get, that we have to take up our cross, we have to do what's difficult, we have to be willing to sacrifice our fears and our discomfort in order to follow the Lord and to do what
he would have us do and grow into what he can have us become.
Now in Joseph Knight's recollection, he mentions, and this would be a couple of months later
after this revelation is received, he observes some baptisms. And I think these are the ones we'll talk about here shortly
with where Emma is baptized.
And it's in a stream that's damned up on his property
in Colesville.
He says that he watched as these people went forth
and were baptized.
It was the first time he had seen anyone be baptized
in what he calls the new and everlasting covenant.
He said, I had some thoughts to go forward, but I had not read the book of Mormon and I
wanted to examine a little more I being a restorationer and had not examined as much
as I wanted to.
So he wants to really investigate this, but I should have felt better if I had gone
forward, but I went home and was baptized in June with my wife and family.
So, gosh, maybe I'm wrong about that.
Maybe those baptisms were some of these even earlier ones.
But this shows Joseph Knight.
I mean, he's a full on supporter of Joseph Smith.
We'll talk about this as well.
How much material and temporal help he's given him.
But he is an independent, Yankee kind of man, and he wants to be sure before he moves forward. It's just a lovely little glimpse
into his soul and his personality. Well, and I also like how you're talking. You said this about
Samuel as well, that he's going to go find out for
himself. It seems that all of these, we've talked about this with Oliver. We've talked about this
with Hiram that they weren't just all in at first. It was, I'm going to have my own revelation.
I think Joseph, to his credit, was, yes, you can. Go talk to God yourself. You don't have to talk
to God through me all the time. Go talk to him yourself. I really appreciate that about Joseph Smith is that he saying I've had my own first vision experience, but you need to have your own.
Visionary experience right that the the focus was not on what he had seen but one on others could see if they went to God themselves. And I think that's extraordinary.
I think too I was reading a commentary
that Robinson and Garrett commentary.
And they mentioned that Joseph Knight was before this
a universalist and may not have sensed the importance
of baptism or something.
And maybe that's why in verse seven,
as Lisa just talked about, it says,
it is your duty to unite with the true church.
So this was in April of 1830,
and as Lisa said, June of 1830,
he went ahead and submitted to baptism.
Yeah, that's fantastic.
I just think I felt a little bit of envy
as I'm reading this going, all over again,
boy, how many do you get?
How many sections of the doctrine of cognitive?
Would we each love to have, you know,
unless they're too condemnatory or whatever,
but here, some of these same characters
are being talked to again and it sounds like kind of a,
yep, you're doing fine?
Yep, you're doing fine.
Message at some of those.
Maybe I'm oversimplifying, but I kind of like that. Oliver, you're doing fine. A message at some of those. Maybe I'm oversimplifying, but I kind of
like that. Oliver, you do a great, Hiram, you're doing a great, and a little bit of encouragement perhaps.
Yeah. Well, and this verse two and 23, make known like calling unto the church. I mean, this is
building off of the revelation we have a section 21, where the Lord tells Oliver that he's an elder to the church.
He's the first preacher of this church.
So again, the Lord is saying, take this calling
and run with it all over, you're good to go.
Yeah.
And that, I really just appreciate this.
Here's our little tiny church.
I call it a little baby church here in its first month
and you got the Lord going, all right.
Here we go, let's get underway, let's get started.
I remember me with my little children.
It was a lot of encouragement, right?
A lot of let's get, let's try new things.
Let's get going here.
And I really like what you said with Joseph
Knight, Lisa, do what is difficult. Well, I shouldn't say I like it. I feel it.
Yeah. I feel it because there's a lot of times and I like to stay in my comfort
zone. I don't know about you too, but I like to stay where I feel very safe.
You know, let me let me teach a gospel doctrine class and I'm good to go. But
ask me to administer a program.
John, I know you served as Bishop.
Ask me to do something like that
and I think the Lord is going to have to say,
you're gonna have to do some difficult things here, right?
Like take a few cross.
Yeah.
And unite yourself with the true church.
And I think sometimes maybe, you know, I'm definitely a member of
the church, but I don't know if I've fully united unless I'm willing to do those difficult things
that come with, you know, new callings and new experiences. I remember, John, when you were
called his bishop, you were pretty terrified, right? But that was part of uniting with the church, I think,
is accepting that calling.
Yeah, that's a good word for it.
I feel like I had it in me and all that sort of thing.
And so I appreciate reading about these
and the Lord's not telling him,
I'm gonna remove your trials and make this easy. As Lisa said, it's more like take up your cross. Here we go. Wow.
Here we go.
In July of 1830, Joseph Nama back in Harmony, Pennsylvania, after a really rough experience
towards the end of June, they were in Colesville. And on the 26th of June, they had damned a stream,
I think it's on Joseph Knight's property, where they were going to perform some baptisms.
And the opposition in the area had become so intense that some people came and broke up that
dam and you know, were not, they were not able to do the baptisms that day.
So they had to dam it again and then Emma and a few others are baptized on the 28th of
June, which I believe was a Monday.
And as they were preparing to have a meeting where Emma would be confirmed, along with
the others who were baptized at that time. A gospel comes and arrests Joseph for being a disorderly person by preaching the book of Mormon.
So it's interesting that these small little flock of the Church is just minding their own business,
doing what they think they need to do. And somehow other people come in and disrupt it.
And yet it's Joseph Smith who's the disordered.
You're the disorderly person.
Yeah.
But so he's hauled off.
He's taken to court.
It's an all day and all night or deal.
He's acquitted.
And then as soon as he's let go, another constable
from another county comes and arrests him. And's all to hauled off to court again.
And meanwhile, Emma has taken refuge at the home of her sister, which is not too far off and is leading some of the members of the church there in prayer and supplication on behalf of Joseph. And the upshot of all of this is that they're
not able to hold that confirmation meeting at the time. And so Joseph and Emma return back to
harmony, Pennsylvania, where their farm is. And then these revelations, 24, section 24, 25, 26 are going to come in shortly after they get back to
harmony.
So it's been a rough go.
Let's put it that way.
The very beginnings are not, it's not smooth sailing here for these little branches.
The Lord does say in verse 3, you've got basically three little
branches of the church, right? You've got Colesville, which is down by harmony. You've got Fayette,
which is where the Whitmers are. And Manchester, where the Smith Farm is. Right. So you've got your
three tiny little branches of the church, and they're already receiving some pretty intense persecution, which doesn't make a lot of sense
for a tiny little church, right, to all the sudden people up in arms against it, which to me
tells us about the work of the adversary. He's going to crush this thing,
going to attempt to crush it before it even can grow some legs.
Nippet in the bud.
Yeah.
before they even can grow some legs. Nip it in the bud.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think when we have that same feeling like this doesn't make sense, it's like, yeah,
then this must really be something.
Right.
I mean, I feel like you, dude, there's a testimony of it.
Why would it be opposed if somebody on their own property makes a little dam of a river to have a baptism.
Why would that bother you? Apparently the adversary knew this is the beginning of something big.
It's kind of the same question that Joseph will later write in his history, right, when he recounts
the story of his first vision. It's caused me a lot of reflection why this little obscure boy that I was
would call forth such opposition from these important people.
And why did they even take notice of me?
That's gonna be the story all the way along.
There's one point in his history,
and we didn't cover this in the history,
but I'm glad you brought this up, Lisa.
He says, it seems as though this is Jules Smith history, verse 20, it seems as though the adversary was aware at a very early
period of my life that I was destined to prove a disturber and an annoyer of his kingdom.
Why would the powers of darkness combine against me? Why the opposition and persecution that
arose against me almost in my infancy? That. That could be said about the church as well, right? That even in its infancy, it is receiving severe opposition and persecution.
And would you say, John, just a couple of believers getting together to have a little
of a baptism on our own property. I always love that line. I think Sherry do even gave a talk about being a
noirs and disturbors.
Right.
Of, of, of that kind of thing really got the attention
of the adversary apparently, even though it's,
it to us, it doesn't make sense.
You're looking at like, why would you care?
Yeah.
Some of the teenagers listening would probably agree
that they have little brothers and sisters
that are disturbers and lawyers.
What are some of the things that we, some of the things that are markable, some of the
things that you, you put red pencil under or whatever in 24 and 26?
I mean, for me, one of them is, is first two, and Joseph's willingness to have this
out there.
Yeah.
It's fascinating, isn't it? how the Lord starts out by saying,
I've lifted the up out of nine afflictions, which is probably at least a direct
reference to this recent experience. But then in the very next first,
nevertheless, that were not excusable in my transgressions. Go thy way and
sin no more. Again, I mean, this is the Lord speaking to Joseph in a very personal way, presumably Joseph knew what those were at the time.
And that's the, I mean, I think that's the Lord's way of dealing with us. He'll lift us up out of our afflictions and he'll reprove us with times with sharpness when that's what we need to hear. This also shows Joseph's sincerity.
Like, well, the Lord said it, it's going in the book.
If it was me, I'd say, let's start it first three.
Can we edit that part?
Do we have to put that in?
That was meant just for me, not for everybody else.
Everybody to read about my transgression.
But he's sincere.
This was the Lord speaking. It goes in the revelation.
Yeah, it's one of the interesting things about the revelations, isn't it? There's, um,
like the voice of these revelations. Joseph, presumably is literally physically speaking these words and someone is writing them down.
physically speaking these words and someone is writing them down. But Joseph himself is not present in the revelations as a narrator. And so as Richard
Bushman has said, you know, when Rebuke's are handed out, he's as just as
likely as anyone to receive one along with everybody else. It is really
interesting. Yeah, and it's I look at verse eight, how would you like to have verse eight said to you?
Be patient in afflictions for Thal's shelf have many.
Yeah, it's probably feeling like I've already had many.
Thank you very much.
Yeah, could we change that to Thal's shelf have a few?
Yeah, or you have had many already.
So again, it's July Joseph Smith is a farmer. It's a farming economy and in
In verse three the Lord tells him after thou hast sowed thy fields now
I'm not an expert on 19th century farming practices, but July seems a little late to be sewing your fields and
It's because he's been building up the church.
It's because he's been fulfilling his calling
and doing the work of the church
and the work of the Lord
that he's literally not been able to come
to get back to his farm and sew his fields.
And in verse three, the Lord tells him to go to these churches, as we would say now, branches of the church, and they shall support thee.
And tells him to continue in his calling, continuing calling upon God in my name and writing the things which shall be given thee by the Comforter and expounding all scriptures and to the church. One thing we ought to make notice of is that in June of 1830,
amidst everything else that's going on,
Joseph receives the revelation that we have
as chapter one of the Book of Moses.
So he's actually launching into this Joseph Smith
translation process at the same time
that all this other stuff is going on.
And so the Lord's telling him, keep going, writing the things which shall be given to the
Comforter, expanding all scriptures under the church.
One thing to know about, especially these early revelations in the doctrine of covenants
is that when they say scriptures, they mean the Bible for the most part.
In this culture, the scriptures were the Bible.
And so I don't know, we don't know, like we have no records about the Book of Moses and its
reception. We don't know anything about how Joseph came up with the idea or the commission to study
the Bible and do the translation of it that becomes the JST, but this verse may
be a reference to that in some way.
But he tells him, you shall devote all thy service and Zion in this shalt have strength.
And then, verse 9, in temporal labor, shalt not have strength for this is not thy calling.
So the Lord is setting out here, the circumstances and expectations that Joseph can have
in terms of his life.
He isn't going to get rich.
The church is to support him.
The Smith family was a hard working independent family.
They weren't the type of people to go asking for handouts
and asking for other people to support them.
And so that's going to be maybe something that's going to be difficult for Joseph.
And certainly Emma, as we'll talk about here in a minute.
And to say in temporal labors, that shout-out not have strength.
I mean, I've heard some people kind of joke about this.
It's like, you know, Joseph's no good at business or whatever.
I don't think that's what it's saying here.
It's just saying, your calling is to the church.
Your calling is to do the work of God.
And that is not where you're going to have your time and your energy
and your greatest ability to put your efforts into, not in the temporal labors.
I remember, I remember John used to say this as Bishop,
he would say, my time is not my own.
And I think Joseph could probably say that
from April of 1830, and even before that,
onward, my time is not my own.
I cannot go so my fields.
I cannot go and make an income
because, do you remember, President Hinckley said this,
the life of the president of the church belongs to the church.
I remember him saying that, it belongs to the church.
And it's almost as if you're getting that from the Lord
that you're not gonna be a farmer really a lot anymore,
brother, you're all going to be a farmer really a lot anymore, brother. You, you're, you're going,
all thy service, all seems like a pretty high percentage word, right? All thy service goes
to Zion. And that's where you're going to have your strength, your energy. I like that you said
that. That's where you're going to be effective. Temporal labors, you're going to have to rely on
others. And I, I'm really glad that we have Lisa here today because I'm trying to think,
what does your, what does your spouse think when you are told that by the Lord? What? You're,
we're going to have to rely on others all of our lives. And how does that, that make Emma feel?
I love that she gets some instruction from the Lord coming up here because I just wonder now that would make her feel now. You're not gonna be any good at that
Well, I'm overstating it, but that's not you that's not where your focus is
Well, this is this is where I've always felt that section 24 and 25 go together
Because section 24 sets up the circumstances that the revelation
that Emma is going to address.
And so, you know, we can talk about that more in a minute.
But if you think about this already, I mean, again, going back to Joseph Knight and his
recollections, he talks about how several times when Joseph was translating the book of Mormon, Joseph
Knight came to visit him or the Smiths went to visit him.
But anyway, Joseph Knight came to see that Joseph was in need or in want, as he would say.
And he provides shoes, $3 paper, a barrel of mackerel, some taters, as he says, potatoes.
You know, I mean, like he's Joseph literally has gotten already through the translation
of the Book of Mormon because of the support of Joseph Knight.
And that has been a demonstration of this dynamic that this revelation is talking about.
The church is going to support the, he's going to have to learn to accept that and the church
themselves, as it says, if they receive the knot, I will send upon them a cursing instead of a blessing.
So the church is going to have to understand that this is one of their responsibilities. If they want what the prophet can give them, they're going to have to make sure he can eat and that he can be supported
in being able to fulfill his calling. As I read section 24, it reminded me a lot of Matthew chapter 10
when the Savior calls his apostles. He's saying the workman in that chapter, he says, the workman is worthy
of his meat. And what you get from Matthew 10, that I still get the feeling from section 24,
is you can have the expectation that I and the church will care for you. When you give your
entire all your service to this to to Zion, you can have the expectation that you will be taken care of, not just by miracles,
but by members of the church, right? And by me. And I think, you know, we're learning,
this is the very beginnings of the restoration, but we're learning about a little bit about our
future general authorities, that there, this is the same idea that you give full-time service. All your time is
devoted here and you can have the expectation that the church and the Lord will
take care of you and that's that's the way it's going to work.
Yeah and thank you are you know remarking about my time as a bishop and I
was just thinking well compared to what some people do. When do you get released if you're in the quorum of the 12?
Right.
And...
I can tell you, in my job, I have opportunity to work with some of our leading brethren,
and they truly do consecrate their lives.
It's been amazing to me, as I've interacted with some of them to see the way that their
lives do totally belong to the Lord and to the church.
I had a private conversation with one of them once and he said, you know, the other day
I looked around the table.
This was years ago.
He said, I looked around the table and there were a couple of wheelchairs, a couple of oxygen
tanks and he thought, well, at least I know my future, because I will end up right there, right?
Just handing my entire life over to the church.
And, you know, in my watching, present-hinkly, going from,
remember, Mr. Vitality, and then by the the end he was just in the same thing with President
Monson. He had, he was wiggling his ears, right? And then by the end, you remember he couldn't,
he couldn't stand up for the whole talk. And you just watched them, what Joseph Smith said,
waste and wear out their lives in, in this service. So section 24 has become just over this, just in this discussion,
it's really, really become special to me
because we've watched this play out in the lives of our leaders.
Yeah, I'm glad you said that.
We kind of see a pattern of service
for those who are called with those kinds of callings
that it's inspiring because you think
of what would motivate somebody to do that
unless they had a deep abiding real testimony. You know, to give your whole life to that until the day
you die, it's amazing. Well, and in Joseph's case, you know, not only are you, you know, you're
never going to get rich, you're you're're gonna have to rely on others to support you.
And by the way, people are gonna throw you in jail
and you're gonna have all these afflictions
and it's gonna be really hard.
So, I mean, you can only guess, you know,
in July of 1830, Jez of Sweat, 24 years old,
like I don't know how someone in their mid-20s reads this,
but he certainly lives it out for the next 14 years.
Yeah. I do want to mention one thing from DNC 24 really quick. And that is, there's a reference
I think to Jacob 5 in verse 19 for thou art called to prune my vineyard with a mighty pruning even this last time and do as you have ordained.
And if you go to Jacob five,
there's a great moment where in Jacob five,
where it looks like the vineyard is done.
They're gonna burn the whole thing.
All the fruit is bad and the Lord says,
let's try one more thing, right?
It's like Steve Harper said, John, this is a great movie, right?
Where we got to make a, the heroes got to make a choice.
Let's try one more thing.
And so he says, call the servants in Jacob chapter 5 verse 61,
call the servants.
And it says in verse 70 that the Lord called his
servants and they were few, right? I wanted it to be like they were amazing. They
were awesome. They were few, but they go and work and he calls it in Jacob chapter
5 verse 71, this last time that I will nourish my vineyard. And then you see that in Dr.
E. Covenant's 2419, a mighty pruning,
ye even for the last time.
And we see in Jacob 5,
how the rest works out that these few servants of the Lord,
and especially in July of 1830,
these few servants of the Lord turn the entire vineyard around,
and it starts to produce precious fruit.
And I like that little connection there
because I can see that the Lord is saying,
this is the beginning of this last time,
but it really is going to work.
This tiny little church, they've got to be thinking us. What are we going
to do? All right. These three little towns in of the church right now, what are we going
to do? And the Lord's kind of can see. This is going to change the world.
That that's a good, that footnote is right there. It's footnote 19a to Jacob 5. So I hope people
will will mark that and go there.
One of the things when I teach Jacob 5,
I love to have my students count how many times the Lord says,
things like, what more could I have done for my vineyard?
Or it grieve with me that I should lose this tree.
And just to get the sense, trees here are people.
They are sons and daughters of God.
And it changes the pain that you feel
that the master of the vineyard has when these are people.
And those that phrase in verse 19,
I'm gonna prune my vineyard.
Pruning is not the same as,
I'm gonna trim it, make it look a little nicer.
Pruning is, I'm gonna take off the bad vines
and keep the good ones. It's the pruning could be a little nicer. Pruning is I'm going to take off the bad vines and keep the
good ones. Pruning could be a painful process. I'm glad you brought the, that was very agrarian
Hank those. Yeah, it's it. He just brought up there. We're learning these bigger words
that our experts use. We had to warn, we had to warn Dr. Tate, right? Not to use multicellable words on John.
Especially John. PhD language.
Yeah, well, he even, he even calls it a mighty pruning. And I
would just point out, and you guys would be better prepared to
speak to this than I am. But I think we should remember to, I
don't know how familiar these very early saints are with the
book of Mormon at this period.
Yeah.
But the language of vineyard and pruning, that's biblical language.
Yeah.
And it's so important to understand and recognize how much Joseph and the early saints understand
that what they are doing in terms of the Bible.
They understand that they are, they're living the Bible.
They're living out what's in the Bible. They understand that they are living the Bible. They're living out what's in the Bible.
And there's another example of that here in section 24, in verse 14. I mean, the Lord has talked about requiring not miracles, casting out devils, healing the sick and so forth. And then he says that the scriptures might be fulfilled.
And he goes on to talk about leaving a cursing instead of a blessing and so forth. If we
look at those verses carefully, this is New Testament language. This is the same kind of instructions
that Jesus gave to his disciples. And so again, we have this sense that they're understanding
this restoration, they're understanding what they're doing through the lens of the Bible,
the scriptures, that they're fulfilling that.
And so, and I think, you know, in Jacob, and, you know,
we could talk about this for a long time, but in Jacob,
he's also drawing on imagery and ideas about the world as the Lord's vineyard,
the comes from the prophets of the Old Testament.
So we're really putting all the dispensations together here in this kind of language.
You could go to Isaiah 5 or 2 Neph 515. It's like Isaiah's only parable. I had a vineyard in a very
fruitful hill and I did everything and it brought forth what does Terry Baal call it? He uses the Hebrew like Bano Shem and it,
it doesn't mean wild grapes.
It means worthless stinking things.
It's funny.
I did everything I could.
What more could I have done?
And boy, that ties beautifully to that.
I'm glad you said that, Lisa,
because maybe they're going,
hey, this sounds like Isaiah, we gotta go prove the vineyard.
Yeah.
And Matthew chapter 10,
I mean, there's take no script, neither state.
Right. Who codes?
This is all Matthew chapter 10 length.
Right. It made me think,
are there a lot of poisonous snakes in the frontier or something?
Or is he saying that because that's very much biblical language?
And you'll notice that string of
footnotes there from the new gospels about instructions given to the 12th?
If you read Wilford Woodruff's missionary journal about waiting through the swampy
streams in the southern United States, I think they're probably worsens.
They're probably there as well.
I think they're probably worsens. They're probably there as well.
But yeah, it's a real key to engaging with the doctrine and covenants to recognize how much these
revelations are drawing on share language with the Bible and how powerful that would have been for Joseph and the early saints for them.
It's the lens that they're that they're looking at this through and that they're interpreting their experiences through.
I think it's really important to understand that.
And it's kind of easy for us to miss it today because our culture is not as
biblically literate as theirs was.
And in the church, we know the book of Mormon really well now,
probably more than we know the Bible, but it's really important. I think it's a key for understanding the doctrine of incumbents.
If you're using old-fashioned paper scriptures, just look at the columns of footnotes and
how many of our biblical on page 43 there about these instructions. Thank you for saying
that, Lisa. Yeah, and when we'll get to this later, but when they leave for Ohio, they're going to relate it to the exodus of the children of Israel, right?
Yeah, leaving and the miracle where the ice parts, right? We'll talk about this later, but the endowment power.
These are a bit of a lot of people.
Yep. Let's go to section 26 and then we'll come back and we'll spend the rest of our time talking about Emma.
In section 26, the Lord speaking to Oliver and John, and we're tying in into section 24 just because the heading does as well.
And the Lord says this, I say unto you that you shall let your time be devoted to the studying of the scriptures and to preaching and to confirming the church at Colesville
That's down in Pennsylvania by harmony and
Performing your labors on the land such as required until after you shall go west
To hold the next conference and then it shall be made known what you shall do and all these things shall be done by
Common consent in the church by much prayer and faith for all things you shall receive by faith, amen. So we have a tiny little section here in section
26. It doesn't tell them to do much more than you would expect, but then he adds this,
all things shall be done by common consent in the church. Do you either of you have any thoughts
on what that means for the church moving forward?
Yeah, this principle of common consent in the church is very interesting that it's here from the
very beginning. There's actually a whole context for this in American Christianity at the time,
where in some churches they've established this principle that this is one of the,
this is one of the ways of governing a church
or of legitimating the decisions and the actions of a church
is by what's called common consent.
And it goes along with, you know, the early American experience,
right, the, I'm going to use a PhD word here, the democratization of religion
in the United States, where common people are becoming more involved, are having more
opportunity to lead, to preach, to influence the direction of religion at the time. And so Joseph would have understood
this concept of common consent
in that larger context of religion of the day.
And I'll just add here, if you're interested
in knowing more about this,
the Joseph Smith Papers podcast
that has just been released on the restoration
of the priesthood
has an excellent discussion about this idea of common consent
and where it came from in early America.
And the whole podcast is excellent.
So I'm going to just put in a pitch for that there.
I mean, basically the idea is that the members of the church can vote,
can signify their support of what's done in the church.
That's the idea of common consent. And this is totally different from their European heritage,
where they were. Yeah, especially from the older, what we would call high church tradition
that's very much dependent on ordained ministers and, you know, educated clergy and so forth.
As I say, there is a context for it in early in the early United States where this idea of common consent wasn't original
to Joseph Smith and to the church, but it definitely aligns them with that more democratic streak of Christianity that's taking hold in the United States at the time.
Now I can tell you that over time there have been various claims made about this common
consent that it, for example, one of the women that I do a lot of study on likes to, and
she's writing in the early 20th century and she likes to claim that this means that women
could vote in the church from the very beginning and that that that that that Joseph Smith was the first to give women the right to vote
in that sense. And it's actually a little bit more complicated than that. It seems at first
that most of the conferences and places where common consent would have been employed
it applied to official members of the church, which at first were men who held the priesthood.
official members of the church, which at first were men who held the priesthood. But by the time you get to Na'avu, women are voting, offering a sustaining vote in conferences and so forth. And so certainly by
the Na'avu period into the middle of the 19th century, this does give women at least a vote or a...
It does give women the opportunity to make their support known and to vote on church matters in some capacity.
Wow. Wow, that's absolutely fascinating.
And we can see that this is still important to us.
You know, at a general conference, we're still saying all in favor, right?
In our words, we're still doing the all in favor.
And sometimes those of us who are sitting there going, what do you think I'm going to say?
Of course, I'm going to support the stake basketball coach, right?
Like, I'm good.
I'm happy to, you know, but we still, it seems like we still, this is still important to us,
this common consent that everybody gets to get to say.
is still important to us, this common consent that everybody gets to say. And I think that's evolved over time.
It's been understood and taken different forms over the time.
If you go back into the 19th century records, you will find examples of people voting against,
of it being more of a vote than the way that we think about it. Now, I think we've
come to think about it now more in a personal sense of our covenants to support the Lord and
support the church and its leaders. And so the question, as we raise our hands in common consent,
now is, will I support this for it?
It's more of a personal commitment than being an absolute vote.
But it is still, uh, should we call it a pressure relief mechanism within the church where
there is the opportunity to, to let it be known if, if you know something that maybe the
bishop doesn't know or you have concerns,
there is this mechanism for making that known.
I really like this.
I like to compare it to when Paul says that the church is a body and that the body needs
every piece.
The head doesn't say to the hand, we don't need you.
The hand doesn't say to the feet, we don't need you. And the hand doesn't say to the feet, we don't need you. And I often like to say, in that paradigm, in that way, the head can receive information from
the rest of the body, right? If the hand is hurting, it sends that information up to the head and
says, hey, I'm really hurting here. So one of the ways that I think the head of the church, according
to this way of thinking, can receive revelation, is from the body of the church, according to this way of thinking, can receive revelation,
is from the body of the church.
Can receive that information up from the body of the church, and that you matter.
You matter in this organization.
We need you.
I just, I really like that idea.
I was kind of going back to the sustaining, I was a little bit of a stickler when I was
bishop for the wording that doing this isn't sustaining. Doing this is signifying
that you will sustain future tense throughout their calling type of a thing.
And I wanted to make sure people knew that that's not sustaining somebody.
That's just saying that you're making this covenant of common consent that you will sustain them.
Even if you know other people who could be better at that calling, you don't know what the Lord
had in mind, but you will signify it by the rays of the hand. I liked the language and I liked that it was a future commitment.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.