Part I - Church History
Thought: “This
glorious First Vision … was the parting of the curtain to open this, the
dispensation of the fulness of times. Nothing on which we base our doctrine,
nothing we teach, nothing we live by is of greater importance than this initial
declaration. I submit that if Joseph
Smith talked with God the Father
and His Beloved Son, then all else of which he spoke is true. This is the hinge
on which turns the gate that leads to the path of salvation and eternal life.”
(GBH - Ensign, Nov. 1998 p. 71)
"The greatest event that has ever
occurred in the world, since the resurrection of the Son of God from the tomb
and his ascension n high, was the coming of the Father and of the Son to that
boy Joseph Smith, to prepare the way for the laying of the foundation of his
kingdom-not the kingdom of man-never more to cease nor to be overturned. Having
accepted this truth, I find it easy to accept of every other truth that he
enunciated and declared during his mission of fourteen years in the world. He
never taught a doctrine that was not true. He never practiced a doctrine that
he was not commanded to practice. He never advocated error. He was not
deceived. He saw; he heard; he did as he was commanded to do; and, therefore,
God is responsible for the work accomplished by Joseph Smith-not Joseph Smith.
The Lord is responsible for it, and not man." (Joseph F. Smith, Gospel
Doctrine, p. 495-6A)
Book of the
Week- " Joseph Smith's First Vision-A Guide to the Historical
Accounts" Steven C. Harper. This
book was written to provide a context and a community for readers who desire to
trust Joseph. He told friends that when as a youth, he attended revival
meetings, he wanted badly to join in the shouts of joy but, I could feel
nothing.
1775
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Lucy Mack Smith born
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1777-81
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US Constitution
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Separation of Church and
State
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1798
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Lucy & Joseph married
by JP
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Parents and grandparents
in Congregational Church.
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1799
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Asael & Joseph Smith
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Organize Universalist
Society
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1802
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Lucy nearly dies
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Makes promise to find
religion to help her serve God.
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1816
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Smiths Move to
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Population 600
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1818
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Smith purchase farm in
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100 acres. They cleared 30
acres in 1st year.
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1819
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Revivals Intensify in
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Baptists, Methodists and
Presbyterians all growing very rapidly in
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1819
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Attempted Assassination of
Joseph
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1820
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6000 converts to
Presbyterianism in
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1/3 in
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1820
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First Vision
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Most significant
historical event since Christ's resurrection.
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1821
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Catharine born
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Family now is 11
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1822
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Smith farm became part of the newly
created
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1825
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363 miles from Hudson
River to
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1. Best documented theophany in history. It's not a matter
of life & death. It is much more important than that! Therefore... Moroni 10:4 - A
"seeker" is a searcher, an explorer, one who endeavors to find
something hidden or lost, as in seeker after truth. Like Joseph Smith. Assuming
is the enemy of seeking. (D&C 88:118)
2. The contests about religion centering on the role of
individual choice in salvation.
A.
Calvinism - Man is depraved because of the Fall. God chooses a few to save.
Puritans who founded the Congregational church and Presbyterians.
B. Arminian
theology - God's grace endowed man with the ability to choose Christ and be
saved. (Methodists)
C. Baptists
were split. Some with A and some with B.
D.
Universalists believed God would save all
3. Smith Family
A. Joseph
Sr. has dreams (http://saintswithouthalos.com/n/visions_js_sr.phtml) which left
him with questions, but doesn't believe in organized religion. Influenced by
father and brother. (Both named Asael)
B. Lucy
tries to fulfill promise to serve God. Tries Presbyterianism, but it seemed
empty. Joseph Sr. discouraged her from the Methodists. Lucy prayed and had
dream of 2 trees. While his mother, Hyrum, Samuel, and Sophronia joined the
Presbyterian faith, he, his father, and Alvin remained unchurched.
C. Joseph
Jr. -
a.
at about the age of twelve my mind became seriously iprest with regard to the
all importent concerns for the welfare of my immortal soul.
b.
Joseph's pre-First vision revelation. James 1:5
c.
Joseph actually spoke with God the Father and his Son Jesus Christ.
d.
He learned that the promise of James is true. Prayers are answered.
e.
God was a loving Heavenly Father.
f.
The Father and the Son are 2 separate and distinct glorious beings in whose
literal image man is made. When Joseph walked away from the grove of trees near
his home, he knew more about the Father and his Son, Jesus Christ, than any
other living soul. The heresy of the great apostasy concerning the trinity was
dispelled in a moment of vision. No amount of philosophical debate can hold a
flicker of light to the revelatory flame, brighter than noonday sun, that
Joseph witnessed.
g.
The reality of Satan. (JSH 15-16) The power of some actual being. Joseph
was not wrestling with a formless power void of body but with a spirit being
whose body is in the form and likeness of man. Devils are spirit beings that
followed Satan in his rebellion against God in pre-mortality. In one account of
this experience, Joseph said, "I heard a noise behind me like someone
walking towards me. I strove again to pray, but could not; the noise of walking
seemed to draw nearer, I sprang upon my feet and looked around, but saw no
person or thing that was calculated to produce the noise of walking"
(Backman, First Vision, 159).
h.
No church on the earth had divine approval.
i.
The creeds were an abomination
j.
The Father introduced the Son. (3 other times)
k.
Visions made one tired: JSH 1:20; Daniel 10:8-9; 1 Nephi 1:6-7; Moses 1:9-10;
D&C 76.
l.
Joseph was promised that at some future time the fullness of the gospel would
be made known unto him. (HC 4:536)
1832 - Autobiography written on the first pages of a book
used by Joseph to record letters he sent and received. (See D&C 85:1-2 and
Sidney Rigdon's July 5 declaration) A highly personalized experience using the
language of the revivals. He describes his consciousness of his sins and of his
frustrating inability to find forgiveness in a church that matched the New
Testament. It emphasizes the atonement and the personal redemption it offered
Joseph. He wrote in his own hand of the joy and love he felt as a result of the
vision, though he could find no one who believed him.
1835 (Nov. 9) - entry in Joseph's journal by his scribe,
reporting Joseph's account of the vision to a visitor, reproduced in 1834-36
history. In this account Joseph cast the vision as the first in a series of
events that led to the translation of the Book of Mormon. He emphasized the
opposition he felt in the grove and how he attempted to pray but could not at
first. It says that one divine personage appeared in a pillar of fire, followed
shortly by another, and that Joseph envisioned many angels as well. Joseph
added that he was about 14.
1835 (Nov. 14) - entry in Joseph's journal by his scribe,
reporting Joseph's account of the vision to Erastus Holmes, reproduced in
1834-36 history.
1838 - account scribed by George Robinson and copied into
Joseph's history by James Mulholland and later revised, presumably by Joseph,
and copied again by Howard Coray about 1841; published in the Times and Seasons
newspaper on March 15, 1842, redacted by Willard Richards later that year;
later excerpted in the Pearl of Great Price. It emphasizes unusual religious
excitement and Joseph's quest for a church as a catalyst for the vision. Other
accounts emphasize more the internal process. This was the first fully
organized attempt to place the events that had transpired in relation to the
restoration of the gospel into a comprehensive and chronologically arranged
record.
1842 - Joseph's letter to John Wentworth, published in the
Times and Seasons newspaper on March 1, 1842, reproduced for Israel Daniel
Rupp's An Original History of the Religious Denominations at Present Existing
in the United States .
A brief but telling account. It says that the 2 beings looked exactly alike and
they told him the existing churches believed in incorrect doctrines.
http://en.fairmormon.org/Joseph_Smith's_First_Vision/Accounts
Ensign, April, 1996 - Joseph Lloyd Anderson - Joseph Smith’s
Testimony of the First Vision
Thought: This Doctrine and Covenants is my book and your
book; but more than that, it belongs to all the world, to the Catholics, to the
Presbyterians, to the Methodists, to the infidel, to the nonbeliever. It is his
book if he will accept it, if he will receive it. The Lord has given it unto
the world for their salvation." (Doctrines of Salvation, 3:201)
1783
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Martin Harris born
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Easttown, Saratoga County,
New York
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Married Lucy Harris
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1st Cousin
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3 Children
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Duty, George, Lucy
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Owned 240 acres of land
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Palymyra
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1828
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Scribe for Joseph
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April 12-June 14 - 116 pages
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1828
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Martin given permission to
take manuscript home
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Able to show it to 5
people: Lucy (wife), brother (Preserved); Father and Mother (Nathan &
Rhoda); wife's sister (Mrs. Cobb)
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1828
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Emma gives birth to 1st
child
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June 15, Died the same day
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1829
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One of 3 Witnesses to Book
of Mormon
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June
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1829
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Gave $3000 to publish Book
of Mormon
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Mortgaged Farm
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1830
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Baptized
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April 6- Ordained Priest
by June of 1830
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1831
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Ordained High Priest
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Member of Literary and
United Firms
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1834
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Member of Kirtland High
Council
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Marched with Zion's Camp
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1835
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Assisted in choosing 12
Apostles
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1837
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Married Caroline Young
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Lucy had died - 5
children: Martin Jr., John, Julila, Solomon, Ida Mae.
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1837
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Excommunicated in December
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Did not move to Nauvoo or
follow Brigham to Utah
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1842
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Rebaptized Nov. 6
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1846
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Joined James Strang &
Strangites
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Served Mission to England
in 1846
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1847
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Organized New Church in
Jan.
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Working with William E.
McLellan
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1856
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Wife, Caroline left him
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She went to Utah to gather
with Saints
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1858
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Organized new church in
Kirtland
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Working with William Smith,
Custodian in Kirtland Temple
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1870
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Arrived in Salt Lake City
in August
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Rebaptized & received
endowment in September
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1875
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Died in Clarkston, Cache
County
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