Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 81-83 Part 2 : Dr. Matthew C. Godfrey
Episode Date: July 18, 2021Have you ever felt offended on behalf of someone else? Joseph Smith and Edward Partridge have a serious disagreement yet reconcile. Ezra Booth remains bitter, long after Joseph and Edward forgive one ...another. Dr. Godfrey continues to expound upon the history of these sections, the applications of forgiveness, reconciliation, service, and how quick the Lord is to forgive.Shownotes: https://followhim.co/Â 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.
Between 81 and 82 is April 14, 1832.
And we've been talking about all these terrible things the church is going through,
but something really good happens on April 14, 1832.
At least for me personally, and I know John for you too,
a man, I think it's two families join the church.
The youngs and the Kimbles.
What can you tell us a little bit about them, Matt?
So yeah, in April of 1832, Brigham Young, heborsie Kimball, the late Kimball, Miriam Young, or
baptized.
That by the way, Matt, has a little bit of impact
on the church.
I just, the future of the church, wouldn't you say?
They're just a little.
Just a little.
Yes.
Yeah.
The great thing about this is that, you know,
what happens in April 1832 is actually the culmination
of a couple of years of work. And so so Samuel Smith in 1830
goes on a mission. He takes the Book of Mormon with him back into the Eastern United States
and he meets Brigham Young's sister, Rota, who is married to John P. Green. And he leaves the book with Rota and John, and they read it, they're intrigued by it,
and they share it with others around them. And so Rota shares it with Brigham. It's shared with
Hebrews, he Kimball at the same time too. Hebrews, you know, Brigham's best friend. And so they become
familiar with the Book of Mormon in 1830.
In the fall of 1831, there's missionaries that come to Mendon, New York,
which is where Brigham and Heber were living,
and they preach the gospel to them.
Brigham and Heber hear this, they're intrigued by it.
And I think this is interesting because it kind of shows
Brigham and Heber who they were as individuals so they hear the gospel preached evidently there wasn't a branch
In Menden at the time or a congregation of saints at the time because Brigham and Heber after these missionaries
Have talked to them. They decide well, we need to go see what this church is like in action.
And so they travel to Columbia, Pennsylvania with their wives, and they spend about a week there.
Attending church meetings, talking to church members. Again, just kind of trying to see what does this
look like in the lives of people who are actually living these principles.
And they like what they see there. Now they like it so much that after Brigham gets back
from Pennsylvania, he decides that he's going to go up to Canada, where his brother Joseph
is, because he wants to tell Joseph about this. And so he goes up there, he tells Joseph
about what he's experienced. Joseph Young thinks, yeah, this sounds great. And so he goes up there, he tells Joseph about what he's experienced. Joseph Young thinks,
yeah, this, this sounds great. And so he comes back with Bergam, they come back to Menden,
and in the spring of 1832, Bergam's baptized. And like I said, shortly after that, his wife Miriam
is baptized as well. Hebrewsi Kimball and
Velaite Kimball are also baptized around the same time. So they're baptized in
April of 1832. Unfortunately not long after that, Brigham's wife Miriam dies,
leaves him with two young children. So he actually moves in with Hebron
Velaite. They kind of take him in to help take care of
the children. And in the fall of 1832, Hebra and Brigham decided that they want to meet Joseph Smith,
because they haven't met him up to this time. And so they traveled to Kurtland. And when they get
to Kurtland, they're told that Joseph's out chopping wood in a forest. And so they go out to the forest.
They see Joseph there chopping the wood. They talk to him as he's doing so.
And Brigham Young's later history says about this experience.
He said, here my joy was full at the privilege of shaking the hand of the prophet of God.
And I received the sure testimony by the spirit of prophecy
that he was all that any man could believe him to be
as a true prophet.
And so this kind of launches Brigham
and hebercy Kimball on the path that they will take
that like you were saying Hank is pretty influential
on the church.
You know, hebercy Kimball's told
when he's ordained in a apostle, he's told that millions
will be converted at his hand. And you can read that and say, what? Millions, you know, that's
just an exaggeration. But then he think about all the people he baptized on his two missions
to England. And you think about all their descendants. And I think that could very well run into
the millions of people who are in the church because of he bersie Kimball and Brigham young
We're actually starting a project right now in the
publications division of the church history department where
We're going to publish a collection of Brigham's letters to the saints to kind of show
You know, why did people follow him? What what was it about Brigham that?
to kind of show, you know, why did people follow him? What was it about Brigham that
attracted the saints to him? And so as I've been going through some of his letters in the 1856, 1857 time period, it's interesting because you do get the Brigham young who's kind of
bombastic and kind of, you know, land down the law, but there are a lot of letters where he's just
law, but there are a lot of letters where he's just, there's a much softer side of him, where he's telling the saints, you know, just do the best you can and don't worry about
this and, you know, try to follow the spirit. And so you can see from some of these letters
that there is kind of a different side of Brigham. So I would probably say, you know, read both of them and just
kind of reach your own conclusions about Brigham from them. Well, I someone asked me the other day,
if you could choose any moment in church history to witness, what would you witness besides,
you know, the big ones, I said, oh, let's knock out those the big ones. I said, I would love to see that moment that Joseph Smith and
Brigham Young meet. Right? Because that's a coming together of two people and hebercy
Kimball who are going to change history and impact all of our lives. So I'm glad we
I'm really glad we mentioned that.
So they don't meet when they're baptized.
They meet later in the year.
Well, Matt, let's, let's go into the text
and the content of section 82.
And maybe first you could tell us specifically
what who's this revelation for and where
and then we can get died into the text.
Yeah, so this revelation comes at a council
of high priests and elders that Joseph Smith holds in
Missouri in April of 1832. It's a council that he holds specifically because the Lord has told him
in what section 78 in the doctrine of covenants, the Lord told him, you need to go to Missouri and you
need to sit in council with the saints there. And so Joseph and Sydney, Nulke Whitney, Jesse Gowse actually accompanies them on this trip too.
They go to Missouri and they have this council of high priests and elders.
And what Joseph is supposed to counsel with the saints about is this establishment
of an organization that can supervise and manage the publication and
mercantile endeavors of the church. And so they talk about this at this conference and
Section 82 is revealed to Joseph Smith in this conference. And I think there's really kind of four main
components of this revelation. So the first part
acknowledges the necessity of forgiving other people and the importance of doing
that. And that stems from a very specific incident that has occurred prior to
this revelation being received.
So when Joseph goes to Missouri in July of 1831,
when he first goes there and he gets the revelation
that that's where the city of Zion is supposed to be,
he's also told in that revelation
that Edward Partridge, who's the bishop of the church,
he's supposed to move Zion
and he's supposed to supervise the bishop of the church, he's supposed to move design and he's supposed to supervise
the purchasing of land and the distributing of inheritances.
And as Edward started to think about what land to buy in Jackson County, he and Joseph
got into an argument about this.
And they apparently were arguing over what parcels of land were the best to buy.
Edward wanted to buy certain parcels.
Joseph and Oliver Cowdery thought that there was a different area that was better suited
for the church.
And so they have, I think, a pretty heated argument about it.
As a side note, if you're reading in section 58 in the
Doctorant and Covenants, there's a couple verses in there where it talks about
Edward Partridge needing to repent. And those verses are referring to this
disagreement that he and Joseph have. So they have this disagreement and Sidney
Rigden believes that Edward has insulted Joseph Smith in this. And so after Joseph and
Sidney go back to Ohio in the fall of 1831, Sidney actually procures charges
against Edward Partridge for insulting the prophet. And there's a council that's
held in Missouri in March of 1832 where they consider the charges, Edward
is very penitent about it. He says, according to the minutes of this meeting, that he
feels sorry for the argument he has ever since it happened, and he hopes that Joseph can
forgive him of this. And it seems like Joseph was able to forgive him, but Sidney wasn't,
and even after this council's held, Sidney still just can't put this behind him. And so at
this council of elders that's held in April of 1832, Joseph takes Edward and Sidney and essentially
helps them to reconcile with each other and to forgive each other.
And so when you have these first initial verses in section 82 talking about the
necessity of forgiving, the importance of forgiving, it's related to this disagreement
that Edward and Sydney Rignan have been having for quite some time and their reconciliation
for this.
for quite some time and their reconciliation for this. Matt, I remember reading in the No Brother Joseph book, there's an essay on
Joseph Smith's ability to forgive, almost to a fault that he was just so quick to
forgive. And that's interesting. Sydney, Sydney's still upset and he wasn't the one,
he wasn't the one.
He wasn't the one being yelled at, right? Right. Yeah.
Yeah. Joseph, he always, I think some of this stem from the fact that Joseph had kind of a quick temper. And sometimes when his temper would show, he would always feel bad after.
And he'd always go and apologize to the person.
And so I think because Joseph recognized that he needed forgiveness at times, I think he was very willing to extend forgiveness to those around him.
So the second part of the revelation is this instruction to form the united firm,
this organization to supervise the mercantile
in publishing endeavors.
And the Lord says in this section,
you know, he lists by name the nine individuals
who are supposed to be the members of this United Firm.
And it's interesting when you look at the nine individuals
who are named, each of them has a very specific stewardship
over something in the church.
So you have the six men who are the members of the literary firm the six who are the stewards over the revelations.
In addition to those six you have
the two bishops in the church so Edward Partridge and Nuel K. Whitney,
who are responsible, you know,
Edward for purchasing land in Missouri,
Nuel's responsible for keeping a store in Kirtland,
and then the ninth member of the United Firm
is Sidney Gilbert, who again is the one
who's responsible for the store and independence.
So you can see very clearly why the Lord says, these are the nine that need to be the ones coordinating these efforts
because they're the nine that had the responsibility, the stewardship over publishing and over the church's storehouses. And the Lord tells them in this section, in this revelation, the Lord tells them
that they need to bind themselves together. And he's speaking there, I think, both in terms of
spiritual binding together, but there's also a very practical temporal binding that he's talking about here, where he wanted them to enter into a legal bond with each other, so that each of them were responsible as a collective whole for, you know, the mercantile and publishing endeavors.
do that. We have minutes of a meeting of the United firm that's held after this where they say that William W.
Phelps is supposed to be the one to draft this bond, this legal
agreement that they're supposed to enter into. And I think
that's important kind of as a backdrop for the verse that I
think many church members know from this section. And that's where the Lord says,
I the Lord am bound when you do what I say,
but if you do not what I say, you have no promise.
And so I think as the Lord's kind of telling them,
you know, I want you in a very real practical sense
to be bound together.
I think he's telling them too,
and you need to realize that, yes, I don't
enter into a legal bond with you, but I am just as bound to do what I've said that I
will do as you are bound to do what you say that you will do legally after you've entered
into this bond. And so I think that's important to consider just how serious the Lord takes it, that when you
do what he says, he has to bless you.
He's bound to bless you for those things, which kind of reminds me when King Benjamin's
talking in to the Nephites in Mosiah, and he talks about how you can never get out of
the Lord's debt
because whenever you do what he says he blesses you and those blessings just multiply over time
and so you're always going to be in the debt of you know our our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ
and our Heavenly Father because of that. That's great. Matt is there's another verse that I think a lot of people have used to kind
of beat themselves up and that's verse seven. And I wonder how much of verse seven we can say was
specific to this context. This has been a throw up your hands verse for some of my students. We'll
look, if I sin again, all the former sins return,
and I'm probably going to sin again maybe in the near future.
And what's, it sounds like I have to be perfect.
Yeah, but is part of this specific to this situation,
or do you know what I'm asking?
Yeah.
So yeah, it's interesting because for me, I kind of read that verse not so much as a verse of discouragement, although I can see how you could read it that way.
But as a verse, as to where the Lord is saying, you know, essentially in verse six, he's saying, you know, there's no one on the earth that's doing good. Everyone's gone
out of their way. But he's saying, but even with that, you know, I forgive you. When you
repent, I forgive. And just, you know, go on with your life and do the best you can. And
I'll be there always willing to forgive when you repent. So I don't know if the
former sins has a specific application here if the Lord's telling Sydney Rigden and Edward
Partridge, you know, if you can't put this behind you. Yeah, if you get in another fight,
the former sin returns. In, and, and in fact,
I don't even really know what that would mean. I don't know how, how that would work.
Maybe he's just telling them, look, in order to build the city of Zion, you need to be unified.
And if you can't be unified with each other, if you're going to keep fighting with each other,
you're never going to be able to create that unity. Maybe it's something like that that the Lord's saying here. Yeah, I have a completely different thought on that, John, then
then students who hear that going, oh, all my sins come back. And I think we've probably taught
that wrong in the past as teachers saying, well, if you sin again, all of those sins come back,
saying, well, if you sin again, all of those sins come back, I think there's a warning here of
this idea of don't go back to, you know, don't go back to your sins. What does Paul say? We return to our sins like a dog to its vomit.
The Savior gives a parable in Matthew chapter 12 about a man who gets rid of an evil spirit, but doesn't fill his life with other things, his house, with other things, and all these other evil spirits come back. So
I wonder if the Lord is saying here, I am not going to forgive you. Stay away from sin because if
you go back to sin, all your bad habits will come back.
All of the, you know, don't let that happen instead of,
I'm gonna hold you accountable again for every other sin.
I would love to see that taught differently.
Because John, I don't think that encourages,
I don't think that's a very encouraging thought, is it?
Well, you repented, you did really well, you did it again.
All your former repentance is good.
It's like it never happened, right?
That's a discouraging thought.
Yeah, and that's why I like what you said.
The, the, the parable you refer to is in, is in the footnotes there.
It's a, it's a good thing to read along with that.
And, and I, I'm thinking of of is it Mosiah 26. And as
office, my people repented, I forgave them. And it's as we talked about in a
previous podcast, you repent relentlessly, right? And I hope this isn't discouraging
when you think, well, I'm probably going to sin again, aren't I? Well, yeah, probably
in so will I. But look, look how merciful the Lord is. And I like the first part of it. I will not lay any sin to your charge.
I'll go your ways and send no more. And I think he knows we will.
That will make mistakes, but provision has been made for that as well.
Anyway, I do wish we could teach that better because I don't want that to be a discouraging verse
Yeah, and oh how frustrating
for
For anyone but especially a teenager who is trying their best to stop whatever habit they have and
Eventually, I think you're right John. You just like I can't I
Can't I give up right I tell take the T-l, I can't. I can't. I give up. Right? I'll take the
T-lustial kingdom because I just can't, you know, do this. So, um, well, it kind of, it kind of makes
repentance sound like a one-time thing. I think that's why it can be scary. It sounds like it's that,
I gotta, I gotta do this one time. Because if I, if I don't make it this one time and live perfectly thereafter, it's all for not.
It's all gonna come back.
And that's why I think it can be a scary verse
for some reason.
John, I think you're right here that there are so many
other verses in the doctrine of covenants
and other places in scripture,
where the Lord talks about how quick he is to forgive and to forget our sins, that this verse, if someone were to use it as, hey, if you sin
again, you're now guilty of all those former sins, I think that would be taking this verse out of
context and be doctrically incorrect. I would like to believe this is more about you can sin and still be loyal to Christ and
relying on Christ as your Savior.
I think returning maybe to a sinful life is maybe a different thing than committing us
in.
I'd like to believe it's more about loyalty to Christ
than living morally perfect, which none of us can do and won't do for the rest of our
lives. And I think that that is taking everything else into context with this.
Yeah, I wonder if he's almost saying something like, but unto that soul who stops repenting,
you're on the wrong track, right? Keep repenting.
Maybe going back to a sinful life and if you take this in and this is what I love
about having the standard works, we have so many places to look to get an
overall picture of things and not take one verse and make it the whole gospel,
right? Or beat ourselves up with it. We take a lot of verses and not take one verse and make it the whole gospel, right? Or beat ourselves
up with it. We take a lot of verses and put them all together. And the one that I mentioned,
let me grab my book of Mormon, Go to Mosiah 26, 30. And I seem to remember in an institute manual, it actually put this verse and that verse together and said,
you know, look at them together and see what you think. So let's see. Mosiah 2630A, and as often as
my people repent, well, I forgive them, their trespasses against me. And you shall also forgive one
another, your trespasses. That verse
verse 30 is awesome. In fact, the student manual, the book, the book, the student manual
says, every young person should have this verse memorized as a source of hope. So if I
had to pick one, I might pick this one. But I also don't want to think I can deliberately
sin over and over. And maybe when we put these two together, we can get some wisdom with that with a little inspiration. Very good. Very good. Yeah, I like this
idea of, you know, one single verse cannot cancel out that hundreds of other verses about the
Lord's forgiveness. Well, I think a third kind of large thing that comes out of this is the importance of
Kurtland, Ohio, in the scheme of things and how it relates to the city of Zion.
So the Lord says, you know, in this section, starting in verse 12, and talking about how
this united firm would be managing these mercantile and publishing endeavors both in Zion and in
Kurtland. He says in verse 13, I've consecrated the land of Kurtland in my own due time for the benefit of the saints of the most high and for a stake to Zion.
And so, Kirtland, at the time, you know, if you're looking at what the church looks like at this time, you have a large body of saints who are in Missouri trying to build the city
of Zion there, but you also have a large body of saints who are in Kirtland.
And then you have throughout the Eastern United States, you know, smaller congregations,
what we would call branches that exist.
But the two main locations for the church are in Kirtland and in Missouri.
And when the Lord first told the saints that they needed to go to Kirtland back in January 1831 and in what's now Dr.
and Covenant Section 38, he said that Kurtlein would be a temporary place
for members of the Church to stay until the Lord identified where the New Jerusalem was.
Well, the New Jerusalem, of course, has been identified at this point in Jackson County,
where a lot of the saints are. But the Lord also told the saints and Dr.
Inc. Section 51 that he had consecrated
Kurtland for a little season until I, the Lord, shall provide
for them otherwise. And then in September of 1831, another
revelation, Section 64, the Lord says that he would retain a
stronghold in the land of Kurtland for the space of five
years.
And so you kind of see, you know, over time, that the Lord is regarding Kirtland as a fairly important place for the saints to gather. And here he says it's supposed to be a stake of Zion.
It's supposed to be something that supports the building of the city of Zion in Jackson County.
the building of the city of Zion in Jackson County. And so we see this play out
throughout the church's history
that there remains kind of these two locations
of where most of the saints are living
in the United States up until 1838.
And that finally, in 1838,
because of persecution, dissension, other things going on in Kurtland,
Joseph Smith is forced to flee Kurtland,
and he comes over to Missouri,
and that kind of leads to an exodus
of the Latter-day Saints from Kurtland.
And so they're there, roughly for about seven years,
that a large body of saints are in Kurtland, which is a little longer than the five years of the Lord said in
September of 1831, but not a great deal longer than that.
So you kind of see the plane out of this that Kirtland does serve as a
support to the building of the city of Zion for a number of years.
And then, you know, the saints gathered in Missouri.
Of course, everything happens in Missouri that, you know, you'll be talking about later
and then the saints end up in the Navu area.
But I think this just kind of highlights the importance of Kirtland and the Lord's plans. So for from 1831 through 1838, we've got two
centers of the church and it's not a short distance between the two. That's the thing. You can't
shoot an email over to Edward Partridge saying, hey, do this. I think we've talked about this before,
John. But if it's like, hey, we need some direction from Joseph on this. We'll send a letter and maybe a month later, maybe a month, two months later,
we'll get an answer. That's interesting, Matt, when you said that five years, that gets you just
past the dedication of the temple. Yeah. Right. Yep. Maybe the Lord's like, that's what we needed.
Yeah, right. Yeah, maybe the Lord's like that's what we needed. Yep. Yeah, these are the keys are there. We can move on
Well, and it kind of shows that
You know the Lord really is in charge because he's commanded the Saints at this point to build a temple in Jackson County Which they never really get started on
But it's not going to be until you know December of 1832 that he's going to tell them to build a
temple in Kirtland as well. And what's one reason why they need to build a temple in Kirtland?
Because the Lord knows what's going to happen in Jackson County. They're not going to get able to
stay there, but they're going to need a temple. They're going to need this endowment of power
that they get in the temple.
So it's just interesting to see how everything kind of unfolds.
So that was verse 13, you mentioned, that I have consecrated the land of Kirtland in
my own due time for the benefit of the saints for a stake of Zion.
It's not it's not Zion itself, it's a stake of Zion. Yeah. And then verse 14, for Zion must increase.
And then we're speaking of not just a state of being,
but we're speaking of Missouri there, right?
Yeah.
Yep.
Yeah, in a strengthened.
And it's interesting too,
because sometimes people talk about this period of time.
And when the saints are in Clay County
about the stake in Zion,
but there's no stake in Zion.
Zion is Zion, and the stakes are the locations
outside of Zion that support it's building up.
That's an Isaiah word, isn it stakes? Yeah. And larger
borders and you and the stakes and that's how we get this. That's why we call them
stakes today is. Yeah. From these revelations which I would think come from the
idea that Isaiah brought long ago. Yeah, you can kind of think of Zion as being the tent. And so the
settlements in Missouri are the tent. And then these other congregations of
saints are the stakes that help support the tent and keep the tent in place.
Matt, are these nine? Are they all going to stay there in Missouri? No, so some of them are in Missouri,
some of them are in Ohio.
So Joseph Smith, of course, will be in Ohio.
He doesn't move to Missouri till 1838.
Sydney Rigdon will be in Ohio.
New okay Whitney will be as well.
Martin Harris is in Ohio as well.
And then you have Edward Partridge, Sydney Gilbert,
John Whitmer, Oliver Caldry, and William W. Phelps are all in Missouri.
Okay.
But that's one of the kind of interesting things about this united firm that's set up
is that it not only, so kind of getting ahead a little bit,
the United firm only lasts for about two years,
and then it's disbanded in 1834 and Section 104 in the Doctrine and Covenants.
But for those period of two years when it existed, not only was it managing
kind of the church's temporal affairs, but it also kind of served as a de facto board of directors for Joseph Smith,
you could say. And what I mean by that is that whenever Joseph wanted to get information
about what was going on in Missouri, he would send letters to the members of the United
Firm in Missouri. And so you can see that Joseph considered this administrative body as being a little bit more than just
responsible for
purchasing goods for the storehouses or overseeing the the printing operation.
He considered those men who are in this organization to kind of be the leaders of the church.
And so you know, he's writing to Edward
Partridge and John Whitmer and Oliver Cowdery and others to get intelligence about what's going
on in Missouri. And so it really does kind of serve as kind of a key leadership organization
for the church for about two years. Okay. Until we get that's about the time that the 12 come in as well.
Yeah, so it just bands about a year before Joseph establishes the core of the 12. But what
does happen is in February of 1834, just a couple of months before the United firm is just banded. Joseph establishes the Courland High Council.
And the High Council actually starts to take on
more of the responsibility for supervising
temporal things.
So it's really the Courland High Council that kind of
fills, fills the void of the United
firm.
That's interesting.
You can kind of see this,
they're dealing with it, but the church is going to grow, so they're going to have to adjust
you know, adjust the who's in charge of what and how, and then it's just going to do it again, and then it's going to do it again. Yeah, I love to see it, I love to see it grow, and I love to see
them adjusting. Is there anything towards the end of the section
that stands out to you as,
I mean, he does talk about them being equal,
managing their steward chips
for the benefit of the church,
improve upon your talent, right?
Every man seeking the interest of his neighbor,
which is something we already touched on earlier,
you know, about how important it is to serve those around you. And this is kind of also explaining
how the United firm was supposed to work. And so just kind of briefly, they were hoping that when
they published the compilation of Joseph's revelations that they would be able to sell those
that those would generate money that they could then use to purchase goods for the storehouses of the church.
Now the storehouses
could be used like members of the church who were poor and a knee could go to the storehouses and get goods there,
but it would they were also, you know, for-profit
stores as well.
And so they would sell goods to people too.
And so as they sold goods in the storehouse, they hope that would generate money that they
could then use to help support the printing efforts.
So it's kind of this symbiotic relationship between the two, which never actually really
worked out that way, which is one reason why the
United firm was disbanded, because once the saints were kicked out of Jackson County in 1833,
they don't have the storehouse there anymore, but they're still responsible for the debts that
they entered into to buy the gifts for the storehouse, and they don't have the printing operation
to buy the gifts for the storehouse, and they don't have the printing operation as well. And so that kind of throws a wrench into the whole thing.
The United Firm falls into quite a bit of debt, and that's why they decided to disband
it in 1834.
But then the other thing that's important for this is that the idea was that if there was anything, any
profits that were created through these things that were not needed for the
poor and the needy, or to run these storehouses or the printing operation, that
those who were members of the United Firm could draw on those to support
their families. Because they really were, I mean, their full-time job really was the church at this time.
And so that was the other hope that somehow by doing these things they could provide for the
necessities that their families had in, you know, by managing their stewardship wisely.
I do find it interesting too in verse 22 where the Lord says,
make unto yourselves friends with the maman of unrighteousness.
Where I think he's basically saying, you know, we have a church here.
You have to have money to operate the church and all of the different things that we have going on.
And so you're going to have to go out into the world.
You're going to have to at this time get some loans for things because the church just doesn't
have the money to fund these things. And so he's telling them that it's okay to do this at this time
because they need funds in order to make this all happen. Okay, so it looks to me like if you look at section 83 still in Missouri, section 84,
here it turns back to Kirtland.
So this trip to Missouri gives us these two sections, 82 and 83.
So what's 83 all about?
So 83 also kind of has its roots in the law of consecration and trying to define further what would happen to
a woman whose husband had consecrated his property but had been died and
also what would happen to
children who were orphaned
how they would be taken care of by the church as well. And we don't have a lot
of good background behind this section. What we do know is that the couple of days before this
section was given to Joseph Smith, he had traveled from independence to Caught Township in Jackson County, which is about 12 miles away.
And he had gone there because the Colesville Saints, so Saints who were from Colesville, New York,
had moved to Caught Township.
And many of these individuals were Joseph's good friends.
People who had supported him almost from the beginning,
like the Knight family and others. Now it's possible, again we don't know this for sure,
but there were at least a couple of women among the saints in Katochip who were widows.
So Phoebe Crosby Peck and Anaslaid Rogers, both of them, their husbands had passed away.
And so perhaps in kind of associating with them, Joseph had started to wonder, yeah, what
would happen if somebody consecrated their property to the church and then died?
What would happen to their widow, to their surviving spouse.
And, you have to remember that in the 19th century, at this time, women did not have a lot
of rights, essentially, when they married, they gave up all their rights to property to
their husband.
If their husband died, they had what was called a Dowager's right, which was a right to a third of the property.
But that was essentially it. And if you think about it, when the law of consecration is revealed
in section 42, it doesn't say anything about what happens, you know, if someone who's
consecrated property has died. And so you'll note that when this revelation begins section 83
that the first verse says, Verily thus say, the Lord, in addition to the laws of the church,
concerning women and children. And so he's kind of saying, in addition to what I've already told you
in section 42, let me clarify a few things here. And so then he goes into the fact that if somebody
dies that a woman can still have right to that property that's been consecrated to the
inheritance that it's been given, and that all children have claim on their parents for
their maintenance until they are of age, but essentially, those who children have a claim on their parents,
and if you don't have parents, if you're orphans,
then the storehouse of the church and the church would take care of you in those conditions.
So I see this as a very practical revelation,
kind of dealing with how the law of concentration works and how the church should take care of those who are
widowed or orphaned at the time, that's one of the main reasons why the law of
consecration is given to take care of the poor and the needy and the Lord seems
to constantly be reiterating to the saints that you need to take care of the poor and the needy. And the Lord seems to constantly be reiterating to the saints
that you need to take care of those
who aren't able to take care of themselves,
that that's really what it means to be a saint,
to have charity that you look out for those
who need your help.
It seems like you wrote the,
the come follow me manual here, Matt. It says,
what do you learn from Section 83 about how the Lord feels about widows and orphans? Do you know
anyone in this situation who would benefit from your love or care? I remember when my sister,
her her husband made some decisions that took them that he left.
And I remember her saying, you know, she didn't want help.
She kept saying, I don't need help from the church.
I'm fine, I'm fine.
And I said, in a way, I know that your husband's not,
he didn't pass away, but he's not helping, he's gone,
he left. You could be considered a widow. So when I read this, I also think of single mothers,
not maybe that their husband has passed away, but their husband has walked away.
And that we need to be there. I mean, how many single mothers
are there in this church that are doing it all, right, that are raising kids on their own,
working as well, and how we could support them is, I think, is, is I think is crucial to the Lord.
What do you both think about that?
I have two sisters that are single mothers, and they got backbones of steel and hearts of gold.
They are just something else. I think one of the things that is so crucial is you're a
single mom and you have boys to be able to take them to church and have the boys
see men at the church that are committed and that are striving to live the
gospel so that they can look and see role, role models if, if dad is gone. They can be strengthened by that and see
uh, to, to model what manhood might look like for them. I think that's a wonderful thing that the church can provide is a sense of community when sometimes there's
uh, something missing in, in families. So I'm glad you said that. Well, I think Elder Cook just talked about that in this last
general conference, um, where he talked about bishops and yeah,
and he talked about, you know, his own experience where his
father was an active and they moved to a new new place and, uh,
or a new ward. And a member of the bishop Brick when a father and son's outing was coming
up, you know, invited Elder Cook to come with him to that.
Yeah, that's right.
And that, you know, that had a great impact on Elder Cook.
This man would care enough about him to try to do that.
And then he talked about how not long after that, this member of the Bishop Brick passed
away at a, you know, at a pretty young age.
And then his family benefited from other leaders
and others in the ward stepping in
and helping him to raise, raise his children as well.
Beautiful.
Yeah, this to me is, you don't have to look very far.
I don't think for a
single mother or a child who needs an
Adult figure in their life to to bless them. I can't imagine
Anybody listening today going I don't know any of those right?
I remember my like I said my sister sister, she did not want help.
And I had to somehow convince her that this is why we have these fast offerings for people
like you, right?
And she just, she said, no, I will be fine.
We'll be fine.
And I said, this is exactly who it's for.
The storehouse shall be kept by the consecrations of the church,
and the widows and orphans shall be provided for.
That's exactly who it's for.
Sometimes part of this is allowing yourself to be served by the church.
Well, there were times when I was a bishop when I didn't offer things, I just told
people things. We are taking care of that. And because I felt inspired too, because some people
who would never ask for any help really needed it, but would feel so uncomfortable asking,
he's kind of had to step in and say,
oh, we're taking over. We want to help you here. So that was that was some of the joys of being
a bishop when somebody was so faithful and didn't want to ask for help, but you knew they needed it
and you could step in and say, let the Lord storehouse help you.
And maybe if your family doesn't look like the perfect family that you don't
that maybe feel like you don't belong in the church, right? When there's only one parent there
and you you absolutely do. That's what this that's what this is about Matt. I'm glad you brought
that up. It does seem like a practical type thing. Well, what are we legally going to do? Oh, I wanted to mention one thing and see what you thought. He says in verse three,
if the woman, the widow, is not faithful, they shall not have fellowship in the church, right?
They're not going to be in the church. They chose to leave it, but they get to keep their land.
to leave it, but they get to keep their land. I see in that verse the Lord saying, we're not going to force anybody to stay in the church by threat. Well, I can't leave the church
because I'll lose my land. And the Lord is saying, no, no, no, we're not going to do it
that way. There is no force to stay in the church for this woman who, you know, perhaps might leave it.
And to me, that is a, that's a testament
to the Lord's love of agency.
He won't force anyone.
Is that, am I reading that correctly?
We all, I mean, I'll just say for me,
I need to remember better that my relationship
to the church has no bearing on my value in the eyes of my Heavenly Father,
that he loves me regardless and always will love me no matter what it is that I do.
I get asked quite a bit, you know, how working on the Joseph Smith papers has affected my testimony,
and sometimes when I'm asked that question,
I think the assumption on the part of the person asking it
is that it's had a negative effect on my testimony.
And actually nothing could be further from the truth.
I grew up in a family where history was present.
My father as a PhD in history, my mom has a master's
degree in history. And so, Joseph Smith in history was just kind of always around me, but I felt like
I didn't really know a lot about Joseph Smith until I started working on the Joseph Smith papers,
and I've spent almost 11 years now working on the on the project.
And it's just been a real privilege to be able to delve that deeply into Joseph Smith's life. I've learned a lot about Joseph as a person,
about Joseph as a prophet. And one of the things that I've learned is that
Joseph really wasn't that different from you or I. I think sometimes we think
that this great prophet of this dispensation was just in constant
communication with God. And he certainly had, you know, grand visions
like the first vision,
and the visitation of Jesus Christ to him
in the Kirtland Temple.
Just really, just extraordinary spiritual experiences.
But I think those were the outliers
and that most of the time he was getting revelation
the same way you and I get revelation to his mind
and to his heart.
And he had to struggle at times in moments
where he was asking God questions
and God wasn't giving him answers.
And he had to kind of do the best that he could
until the Lord saw fit to reveal more to him.
And so that's made Joseph Smith a much more real person to me.
And it's increased my admiration for him, tenfold,
because I just look at myself and I think,
if I was in that situation right now
and was trying to establish a church and lead a church at the same time that I'm just trying to deal with normal ordinary life. I don't think I could do that.
But Joseph Smith could just grown so much.
And I look forward to the day, you know, when I pass on from this life,
and I hope I can meet him, I hope he'll think that we've been fair to him
with the Joseph Smith papers that we've depicted him in a way that is accurate to who he was as a person.
And I just, I know now more than ever that he was a prophet of this restoration and that the Lord did an extraordinary work through him.
Thank you so much. Thank you. I just I I personally I love the Joseph Smith
Papers project not necessarily because I'm going to read every page of those
massive books but because of what would he say in section 89 because of evil
and conspiring men we're going to do the Joseph Smith
Faper's project so you can know him.
You can know him who he was and who he what his character was.
John, how did we get this lucky?
How did we get this blessed to do this?
Hank, I think about it all the time.
This has totally changed my doctrine of
covenants. And I thought I'd read it before, but every one of these sections now, I've got notes
all over. And it's really helpful. I think I've got a better backdrop of the history and that helps.
But I'm constantly reminded how young these people were in this restoration. And as Matt was talking about the personal responsibility,
you must feel Matt that I hope Joseph feels we've treated him
fairly. I'm like, wow, yeah, because you're part of the getting
these papers out. And but I'm so glad Matt that you are,
you're seeing that his character come through. And, and I love
the project too. And thank you very much. I really enjoyed
those. I've learned a lot too from both of you. I'd a lot of great insights. I just really appreciate
it. That was a lot of fun. We want to thank all of our listeners. This would not be happening
without you. And it seems like we're gaining more and more of you. So welcome to our audience.
We're grateful for you.
We want to thank our executive producers, Steve and Shannon Sorenson.
We have a great production crew, John.
And if we don't mention them, we would be very ungrateful
because they do the work.
We have the easy fun part.
Yeah. David Perry does so much work on this podcast. because they do the work. We have the easy fun part. Yeah, yeah.
David Perry does so much work on this podcast, Lisa Spice.
Yeah, I can't tell you.
I just wish I could somehow just list off all the things
Lisa Spice does for this podcast.
Jamie Nielsen in social media, Kyle Nelson,
who just donates so much of his time and energy to us, Will Staten, who has to hear the long versions of these and edit them.
We love him and we have Maria Hilton, who works on our show notes and our transcription.
So, we love our team and we want to thank them.
And we hope all of you will join us for our next episode of Follow Him. you