It was a great day here in Carthage as we ended our day yesterday nearly exhausted! We were up early for our prayers and our morning devotional together. Then, at 6:15am we were off on our walk around Carthage. The early risers we see each morning are becoming more friendly towards us as they initiate the waves in the morning. That has been nice to see that positive effect on us!
We were at the Visitors Center by 8:15am and our first guests began coming in around 8:45am. I had a wonderful mixed tour of youth and adults, and all the youth were between the ages of about 7 and 16. I was especially impressed with a family with 5 young men who engaged me in questions and comments. They were so attentive to the information in the tour and wanted to hear more as we gathered around the oak tree by the well.
I have to admit that I get really excited about the youth today who are trying so hard to strengthen their testimonies. They come here, not under duress, but with a real intent of discovering more wonderful details about the Prophet Joseph Smith. I can talk for hours about his life and teachings and yet I have so much more to learn! These future leaders seem very focused on learning all they can about the life of Joseph Smith. I can't help but relate to the information from the June Ensign that Matthew Holland wrote about Joseph;
Make no
mistake about it. Whether you are a full-time missionary or not, all
Latter-day Saints are called to take the message of the Lord Jesus Christ to “all the world” (Matthew 24:14). We are called to share the pure principles and organizing practices of His gospel in His name. In order to do so, we must also remember that it is essential to teach and testify that Joseph Smith was His instrument in restoring those pure principles and organizing practices to the earth.
With
so very much at stake, you would be wise to ask yourself if you stand
ready to step forward and declare with clear conviction and sweet
boldness that “on the morning of a beautiful, clear day, early in the
spring of eighteen hundred and twenty,”1
Joseph Smith walked into a secluded grove of trees, knelt, prayed, and
the world was never the same again. If you would be the servants of God
you are called to be, you must be ready to do so.
Decide
now to become a student of the life of the Prophet Joseph Smith. There
is power and wisdom in his life like no other, save the life of the
Savior Himself. As you earnestly and prayerfully familiarize yourself
with the details of Joseph’s life, I promise that you will find your
affection and admiration for him grow, you will find comfort and
encouragement for those particularly hard days of life and service, and
you will bolster your understanding against the sneer of modern critics
so sure that worldly evidence proves Joseph could not be what he
claimed. To those ends, consider just a few glimpses of this most
remarkable man.
There
is every reason to believe that the morning of the First Vision was as
glorious and idyllic as the hymn “Joseph Smith’s First Prayer”2
makes it out to be. But in relishing such a picture, we must not lose
sight of what it took to get to that morning. The path to Palmyra—the
general location of this sacred, singular moment—was anything but a path
of sweetness and light for this boy prophet and his family.
The
Prophet’s parents, Joseph Smith Sr. and Lucy Mack Smith, married in
Tunbridge, Vermont, USA, in 1796. After six years of fairly successful
farming, the Smiths moved to nearby Randolph to try their hand at
storekeeping.3
The
line of goods Joseph Sr. acquired with the help of Boston-based
creditors moved quickly to eager new customers—not for cash but for
promises of payment once harvests came in at the end of the growing
season. As he waited for promised payments to pay off his creditors, he
jumped into a new investment opportunity.
In
those days Chinese markets were clamoring for crystallized ginseng
root. Though Joseph Sr. had a hard-cash offer from a middleman for
$3,000 for the ginseng root he had collected and prepared for shipment,
he decided on the riskier but potentially more lucrative strategy of
taking the product to New York himself and contracting with a ship’s
captain to sell his goods in China on consignment. By eliminating the
middleman, he stood to make as much as $4,500—an immense sum in those
days.4
As
bad luck or sinister planning would have it, Joseph Sr.’s shipment
ended up on the same boat carrying the son of the middleman with whom he
had declined to do business. Taking advantage of the situation, this
son sold the Smith ginseng in China “at a high price” and kept the
proceeds while spinning tales that the venture had been a bust,
producing only a chest full of tea as reward.5
Meanwhile,
just as this swindle was unfolding, the payments for a large inventory
of merchandise had fallen due at the Smith store. In the face of
demanding creditors, the Smiths hit a desperation point. To pay their
debts, Lucy gave up a wedding gift of $1,000 that she had saved for
years, and Joseph accepted $800 for the family farm in Tunbridge.6
The farm was the one thing that would have at least guaranteed a
modicum of economic stability and long-term physical security in the
often harsh world of the early American frontier. Now, penniless and
landless, the Smiths would be forced to move eight times in 14 years,
constantly looking for a way to provide for their family.
At
least one of those moves was triggered by the financial difficulty of
accumulated medical bills incurred from the 1813 typhoid fever epidemic
that struck all the children of the Smith family with great and
debilitating force. A few weeks after Joseph’s fever had passed, he
experienced tremendous pain in his shoulder. A local doctor misdiagnosed
the pain as a consequence of a sprain. Two weeks later, when the pain
had escalated to excruciating levels, the doctor returned and discovered
a pool of infection linked to Joseph’s extended fever.7
A
lancing of the sore area drew out a quart of infected matter, but the
procedure was incomplete, and new infection moved to Joseph’s lower left
leg. For this, a surgeon was summoned. He made an eight-inch (20 cm)
incision from the knee to the ankle, which eased the pain somewhat. But
the infection, unfortunately, shot into the bone.8
At
this point the family sought the latest medical advice from leading
authorities at Dartmouth Medical College. Lucy insisted that the most
logical and customary procedure, amputation, not
be used. Instead, the Smiths would try a new and painful procedure—one
without promise of success. Doctors would open Joseph’s leg and bore two
holes in each side of the bone. Then they would chip off three large
pieces of the bone to remove all the infected area.9
All
of this was to be done without the advantages of today’s general
anesthesia. As a consequence, the family was urged to give Joseph
alcohol or to tie him to the bed so he would not jerk away in pain
during the delicate procedure. At the tender age of seven, Joseph
refused both options. Instead, he made two requests—that his father hold
him and that his mother leave the room.10
When
Joseph’s cries became so great that his mother could not be kept away,
twice she entered the room over his pleading objections. What she saw
seared an indelible memory. There was Joseph lying in a blood-drenched
bed, “pale as a corpse, [with] large drops of sweat … rolling down his
face, whilst upon every feature was depicted the utmost agony.”11 Fortunately, the operation was a success, but Joseph would spend the next three years on crutches.
After
this ordeal, the family hoped that a new start in Norwich, Vermont,
would finally bring the stability and prosperity they so urgently
sought. But once again their hopes were dashed. In their first year of
trying to make a go of farming on rented land, their crops failed. Their
crops failed again the second year. In year three, 1816, Joseph Smith
Sr. determined to give it one more try, convinced that things simply had
to get better.12
Half
a world away in 1815, Mount Tambora in Indonesia had erupted and spewed
tons of ash into the earth’s atmosphere, disrupting normal weather
cycles. From June to August of 1816—dubbed the “year without a
summer”—four killing frosts hit New England, ruining summer crops yet
again.13
With
famine setting in and thousands leaving Vermont in mass exodus, Joseph
Sr. took his most fateful step yet. He decided to leave the roughly
20-mile (32 km) radius of family, friends, and farmland he had known
most of his adult life and headed 300 miles (482 km) southwest to the
town of Palmyra in upper New York. There, it was reported, land was
fertile and long-term credit was readily available. Out of necessity
Joseph Sr. left in advance, leaving behind Lucy and the eight children
to pack up their household goods and follow him.14
It
was winter as Lucy and her brave little band loaded everything they
owned into a sleigh and later into a wagon. After paying off several
creditors, Lucy had little money left for the trip. By trip’s end she
was giving away clothing and medicine to pay innkeepers. She recalled
arriving in Palmyra with “barely two cents in cash.”15
Along
the way the man hired to drive the sleigh forced young Joseph off to
make room for two pretty daughters of the Gates family, whom they had
encountered traveling in the same direction. Joseph—still not fully
healed—was forced to limp “through the snow 40 miles [64 km] per day for
several days,” experiencing what he called “the most excruciating
weariness & pain.”16
When
Joseph’s devoted older brothers, Hyrum and Alvin, pleaded with the man
to relent, he knocked them to the ground with a violent thump from the
handled end of a whip. In Utica, when it became clear that Lucy was out
of cash, the man abandoned the family—but not until after a failed
attempt to steal their wagon, during which he tossed their belongings to
the ground.17 Somehow the family pressed on until all arrived safely in Palmyra, tearfully collapsing into the arms of Joseph Smith Sr.
Perhaps
the most heart-wrenching detail of this journey, though, is found in an
underappreciated postscript Joseph later added to the original account
of his family’s journey: “On our way from Utica I was left to ride on
the last sleigh in the company, but when that came up I was knocked down
by the driver, one of Gate’s sons, & left to wallow in my blood
until a stranger came along, picked me up, & carried me to the Town
of Palmyra.”18 The significance of this should not be missed.
A Treasure of Inestimable Value
Photograph by Alan Day, courtesy of Church History Museum
Just
two miles (3 km) south of the center of Palmyra sits a grove of trees
that would become the site of one of the grandest visions in human
history. Three miles (5 km) beyond that sits the Hill Cumorah,
repository of a then-unknown set of golden plates.
When
Joseph arrived in Palmyra, the Lord had brought His foreordained
prophet to the physical resting place of a treasure of inestimable
value. This treasure would signal that after centuries of general
spiritual darkness and confusion, the heavens were again open. This
treasure would show that Jesus’s ministry was far more expansive in both
doctrine and geography than the Christian
churches of that day could possibly know. This treasure would affirm
that, in miraculous fashion, God is sweepingly active in the affairs of
men across time, languages, and continents. And this treasure would
promise teachings so pure and powerful that if you planted them deep
into your soul, you could personally be transformed, tasting of
something so delicious as to make it the ultimate and unmatched feast of
your desires.
With
mortal eyes, we might be tempted to envision that a more fitting path
for such a man and such a moment would be a path of greater ease,
efficiency, and acclaim. In recognition of the earth-shattering events
about to happen as a consequence of this boy entering this town at this
time, could not the Lord, who so carefully orchestrated the placement of
the golden plates over a millennia earlier, have provided a straighter,
more comfortable and heralded path of arrival?
Yes, He surely could have, but He did not.
There was no prominent, prophetic anointing of Joseph in his childhood (see 1 Samuel 16:11–13). There was no directive dream pointing him to a promised land (see 1 Nephi 5:4–5). There was no curious Liahona to help his family avoid missteps along the way (see 1 Nephi 16:10; Alma 37:38).
And there certainly was no open-air limousine traveling along a sunny,
streamlined parade route with cheering masses providing a triumphant
welcome.
Rather,
for Joseph and his family, there was a wildly meandering trail of
sorrow marked with bad luck, ill health, poor judgment, natural
disaster, crushing pain, callous injustice, continuing obscurity, and
unrelenting poverty. This is not to suggest that the Smith family lived
in one continual round of abject misery; they did not. But the path to
Palmyra was anything other than direct, prosperous, and publicly
notable. Lame, limp, and bloodied, the Prophet literally had to be
carried to his unparalleled rendezvous with destiny by a nameless
stranger.
Remember this as perhaps the first lesson of Joseph’s life and the coming forth of the Book of Mormon. In spite of failure, mishap, and bitter opposition—and in many cases precisely because
of those things—Joseph Smith got exactly where he needed to be to
fulfill his mission. So, if now or on some future day, you look around
and see that other perhaps less-devoted acquaintances are succeeding in
their jobs when you just lost yours; if major illness puts you on your
back just at the moment critical tasks of service seem to come calling;
if a call to a prominent position goes to someone else; if a missionary
companion seems to learn the language faster; if well-meaning efforts
still somehow lead to disaster with a fellow ward member, a neighbor, or
an investigator; if news from home brings word of financial setback or
mortal tragedy you can do nothing about; or if, day after day, you
simply feel like a bland and beaten background player in a gospel drama
that really seems made for the happiness of others, just know this:
many such things were the lot of Joseph Smith himself at the very
moment he was being led to the stage of the single most transcendent
thing to happen on this earth since the events of Golgotha and the
Garden Tomb nearly 2,000 years earlier.
“But,” you may say, “my life and earthly destiny will never be like that of the Prophet Joseph.”
That
probably is true. But it is also true that your lives do matter to God,
and your eternal potential and that of every soul you will meet is no
less grand and significant than that of the Prophet Joseph himself.
Thus, just like our beloved Joseph, you must never give up, give in, or
give out when life in general, or missionary work in particular, gets utterly painful, confusing, or dull. Rather, as Paul teaches, you must see that “all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose” (Romans 8:28; emphasis added).
Just
as He did with young Joseph Smith, God is shaping and directing you
every single day to ends more glorious than you can know!
-
Hymns, no. 26.
- See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and His Progenitors for Many Generations (1853), 37, 45. For a concise summary of events related to the Smith family’s move to Palmyra, see also Richard Lyman Bushman, Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling (2005), 17–29.
-
See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 49.
-
See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 49–50.
-
See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 51.
-
See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 60, 62.
-
See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 62–63.
-
See LeRoy S. Wirthlin, “Joseph Smith’s Boyhood Operation: An 1813 Surgical Success,” BYU Studies 21, no. 2 (1981): 146–54.
-
See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 64.
-
Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 65.
-
See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 66.
-
See Church History in the Fulness of Times, 2nd ed. (2003), 24.
-
See Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 67.
-
Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches, 68, 70.
-
Joseph Smith, in The Papers of Joseph Smith, ed. Dean C. Jessee, 2 vols. (1989), 1:268.
-
See The Papers of Joseph Smith, 1:268.
-
Joseph Smith, in The Papers of Joseph Smith, 1:268–69.
I have used the details from this talk a few times to help young men and young women, in tours like today, to better understand the life of Joseph Smith. His was not an easy life, but he was almost always upbeat and happy with who he was and who he could become. Developing his testimony was a tremendous labor of love and sacrifice that benefits all of us today.
You know, it is the "positive addiction", that Bill Glasser spoke about in his book by the same name from the 1970's. The emphasis in that book was on things that we could do in our lives that would have a positive effect on us rather than all the negative effects of drugs and alcohol and other deceiving behaviors that were intended for 'temporary' pleasures.
Learning all we can about Joseph Smith and the life he led, and the sacrifices that he had to make, including his last act of love for the Latter-day Saints in the Martyrdom room in Carthage on June 27, 1844, will be most worth our while. What a special privilege it is to be here at this time learning about Joseph Smith!
Thank you for checking in with me tonight! I always look forward to this hour of my day!!
You know, it is the "positive addiction", that Bill Glasser spoke about in his book by the same name from the 1970's. The emphasis in that book was on things that we could do in our lives that would have a positive effect on us rather than all the negative effects of drugs and alcohol and other deceiving behaviors that were intended for 'temporary' pleasures.
Learning all we can about Joseph Smith and the life he led, and the sacrifices that he had to make, including his last act of love for the Latter-day Saints in the Martyrdom room in Carthage on June 27, 1844, will be most worth our while. What a special privilege it is to be here at this time learning about Joseph Smith!
Thank you for checking in with me tonight! I always look forward to this hour of my day!!
I love that from Matthew Holland! I think I'm going to try and tie that into my lesson!
ReplyDeleteLove you guys!