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JOSEPH SMITH—HISTORY
EXTRACTS FROM THE HISTORY OF JOSEPH
SMITH, THE PROPHET
History of the Church, Vol. 1,
Chapters 1-5
Joseph Smith tells of his
ancestry, family members, and their early abodes—An unusual
excitement about religion prevails in western New York—He
determines to seek wisdom as directed by James—The Father and
the Son appear and Joseph is called to his prophetic ministry.
(Verses
1-20.)
1
Owing to the many reports which have been put in
circulation by evil-disposed and designing persons, in
relation to the rise and progress of the Church of Jesus
Christ of aLatter-day
Saints, all of which have been designed by the authors
thereof to militate against its character as a Church and
its progress in the world—I have been induced to write this
history, to disabuse the public mind, and put all inquirers
after truth in possession of the bfacts,
as they have transpired, in relation both to myself and the
Church, so far as I have such facts in my possession.
2 In this history I shall
present the various events in relation to this Church, in
truth and righteousness, as they have transpired, or as they
at present exist, being now [1838] the aeighth
byear
since the organization of the said Church.
3 aI
was born in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred
and five, on the twenty-third day of December, in the town
of Sharon, Windsor county, State of Vermont . . . My father,
bJoseph
Smith, Sen., left the State of Vermont, and moved to
Palmyra, Ontario (now Wayne) county, in the State of New
York, when I was in my tenth year, or thereabouts. In about
four years after my father’s arrival in Palmyra, he moved
with his family into Manchester in the same county of
Ontario—
4 His family consisting of
eleven souls, namely, my father, Joseph Smith; my amother,
Lucy Smith (whose name, previous to her marriage, was Mack,
daughter of Solomon Mack); my brothers, bAlvin
(who died November 19th, 1823, in the 26th year of his age),
cHyrum,
myself, dSamuel
Harrison, William, Don Carlos; and my sisters, Sophronia,
Catherine, and Lucy.
5 Some time in the second
year after our removal to Manchester, there was in the place
where we lived an unusual excitement on the subject of
religion. It commenced with the Methodists, but soon became
general among all the sects in that region of country.
Indeed, the whole district of country seemed affected by it,
and great multitudes united themselves to the different
religious parties, which created no small stir and division
amongst the people, some crying, “aLo,
here!” and others, “Lo, there!” Some were contending for the
Methodist faith, some for the Presbyterian, and some for the
Baptist.
6 For, notwithstanding the
great alove
which the converts to these different faiths expressed at
the time of their conversion, and the great zeal manifested
by the respective clergy, who were active in getting up and
promoting this extraordinary scene of religious feeling, in
order to have everybody converted, as they were pleased to
call it, let them join what sect they pleased; yet when the
converts began to file off, some to one party and some to
another, it was seen that the seemingly good feelings of
both the priests and the converts were more bpretended
than real; for a scene of great confusion and bad feeling
ensued—priest contending against priest, and convert against
convert; so that all their good feelings one for another, if
they ever had any, were entirely lost in a strife of words
and a contest about opinions.
7 I was at this time in my
fifteenth year. My father’s family was proselyted to the
Presbyterian faith, and four of them joined that church,
namely, my mother, Lucy; my brothers Hyrum and Samuel
Harrison; and my sister Sophronia.
8 During this time of great
excitement my mind was called up to serious reflection and
great uneasiness; but though my feelings were deep and often
poignant, still I kept myself aloof from all these parties,
though I attended their several meetings as often as
occasion would permit. In process of time my mind became
somewhat partial to the Methodist sect, and I felt some
desire to be united with them; but so great were the
confusion and astrife
among the different denominations, that it was impossible
for a person young as I was, and so unacquainted with men
and things, to come to any certain conclusion who was bright
and who was wrong.
9 My mind at times was
greatly excited, the cry and tumult were so great and
incessant. The Presbyterians were most decided against the
Baptists and Methodists, and used all the powers of both
reason and sophistry to prove their errors, or, at least, to
make the people think they were in error. On the other hand,
the Baptists and Methodists in their turn were equally
zealous in endeavoring to establish their own tenets and
disprove all others.
10 In the midst of this war
of words and tumult of opinions, I often said to myself:
What is to be done? Who of all these parties are right; or,
are they all wrong together? If any one of them be aright,
which is it, and how shall I know it?
11 While I was laboring
under the extreme difficulties caused by the contests of
these parties of religionists, I was one day reading the
Epistle of aJames,
first chapter and fifth verse, which reads: If any of you
lack bwisdom,
let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and
upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.
12 Never did any passage of
ascripture
come with more power to the heart of man than this did at
this time to mine. It seemed to enter with great force into
every feeling of my heart. I reflected on it again and
again, knowing that if any person needed bwisdom
from God, I did; for how to act I did not know, and unless I
could get more wisdom than I then had, I would never know;
for the teachers of religion of the different sects cunderstood
the same passages of scripture so differently as to destroy
all confidence in settling the question by an appeal to the
Bible.
13 At length I came to the
conclusion that I must either remain in adarkness
and confusion, or else I must do as James directs, that is,
ask of God. I at length came to the determination to “ask of
God,” concluding that if he gave wisdom to them that lacked
wisdom, and would bgive
liberally, and not upbraid, I might venture.
14 So, in accordance with
this, my determination to ask of God, I retired to the
awoods
to make the attempt. It was on the morning of a bbeautiful,
clear day, early in the spring of eighteen hundred and
twenty. It was the first time in my life that I had made
such an attempt, for amidst all my anxieties I had never as
yet made the attempt to cpray
dvocally.
15 After I had retired to
the place where I had previously designed to go, having
looked around me, and finding myself alone, I kneeled down
and began to offer up the desires of my heart to God. I had
scarcely done so, when immediately I was aseized
upon by some power which entirely overcame me, and had such
an astonishing influence over me as to bind my tongue so
that I could not speak. Thick bdarkness
gathered around me, and it seemed to me for a time as if I
were doomed to sudden destruction.
16 But, exerting all my
powers to acall
upon God to deliver me out of the power of this enemy which
had seized upon me, and at the very moment when I was ready
to sink into bdespair
and abandon myself to destruction—not to an imaginary ruin,
but to the power of some actual being from the unseen world,
who had such marvelous power as I had never before felt in
any being—just at this moment of great alarm, I saw a pillar
of clight
exactly over my head, above the brightness of the dsun,
which descended gradually until it fell upon me.
17 It no sooner appeared
than I found myself adelivered
from the enemy which held me bound. When the light rested
upon me I bsaw
two cPersonages,
whose brightness and dglory
defy all description, estanding
above me in the air. One of them spake unto me, calling me
by name and said, pointing to the other—This is My fBeloved
gSon.
Hear Him!
18 My object in going
to ainquire
of the Lord was to know which of all the sects was
right, that I might know which to join. No sooner,
therefore, did I get possession of myself, so as to be
able to speak, than I asked the Personages who stood
above me in the light, which of all the sects was right
(for at this time it had never entered into my heart
that all were wrong)—and which I should join.
19 I was answered that I
must join none of them, for they were all awrong;
and the Personage who addressed me said that all their
creeds were an abomination in his sight; that those bprofessors
were all ccorrupt;
that: “they ddraw
near to me with their lips, but their ehearts
are far from me, they teach for doctrines the fcommandments
of men, having a form of godliness, but they deny the gpower
thereof.”
20 He again forbade me to
join with any of them; and many other things did he say unto
me, which I cannot write at this time. When I came to myself
again, I found myself alying
on my back, looking up into heaven. When the light had
departed, I had no strength; but soon recovering in some
degree, I went home. And as I leaned up to the fireplace,
bmother
inquired what the matter was. I replied, “Never mind, all is
well—I am well enough off.” I then said to my mother, “I
have learned for myself that Presbyterianism is not true.”
It seems as though the cadversary
was aware, at a very early period of my life, that I was
destined to prove a disturber and an annoyer of his kingdom;
else why should the powers of darkness combine against me?
Why the dopposition
and persecution that arose against me, almost in my infancy?
Some preachers and other
professors of religion reject account of First
Vision—Persecution heaped upon Joseph Smith—He testifies of the
reality of the vision. (Verses
21-26.)
21 Some few days after I
had this vision, I happened to be in company with one of the
Methodist preachers, who was very active in the before
mentioned religious excitement; and, conversing with him on
the subject of religion, I took occasion to give him an
account of the vision which I had had. I was greatly
surprised at his behavior; he treated my communication not
only lightly, but with great contempt, saying it was all of
the devil, that there were no such things as avisions
or brevelations
in these days; that all such things had ceased with the
apostles, and that there would never be any more of them.
22 I soon found, however,
that my telling the story had excited a great deal of
prejudice against me among professors of religion, and was
the cause of great apersecution,
which continued to increase; and though I was an bobscure
boy, only between fourteen and fifteen years of age, and my
circumstances in life such as to make a boy of no
consequence in the world, yet men of high standing would
take notice sufficient to excite the public mind against me,
and create a bitter persecution; and this was common among
all the sects—all united to persecute me.
23 It caused me serious
reflection then, and often has since, how very strange it
was that an obscure aboy,
of a little over fourteen years of age, and one, too, who
was doomed to the necessity of obtaining a scanty
maintenance by his daily blabor,
should be thought a character of sufficient importance to
attract the attention of the great ones of the most popular
sects of the day, and in a manner to create in them a spirit
of the most bitter cpersecution
and dreviling.
But strange or not, so it was, and it was often the cause of
great sorrow to myself.
24 However, it was
nevertheless a fact that I had beheld a avision.
I have thought since, that I felt much like Paul, when he
made his defense before King Agrippa, and related the
account of the vision he had when he saw a light, and heard
a voice; but still there were but few who believed him; some
said he was dishonest, others said he was bmad;
and he was ridiculed and reviled. But all this did not
destroy the reality of his vision. He had seen a vision, he
knew he had, and all the cpersecution
under heaven could not make it otherwise; and though they
should persecute him unto death, yet he knew, and would know
to his latest breath, that he had both seen a light and
heard a voice speaking unto him, and all the world could not
make him think or believe otherwise.
25 So it was with me. I had
actually seen a light, and in the midst of that light I saw
two aPersonages,
and they did in reality speak to me; and though I was bhated
and cpersecuted
for saying that I had seen a vision, yet it was true; and
while they were persecuting me, reviling me, and speaking
all manner of evil against me dfalsely
for so saying, I was led to say in my heart: Why persecute
me for telling the truth? I have actually seen a vision; and
who am I that I can withstand God, or why does the world
think to make me deny what I have actually seen? For I had
seen a vision; I knew it, and I knew that God knew it, and I
could not edeny
it, neither dared I do it; at least I knew that by so doing
I would offend God, and come under condemnation.
26 I had now got my mind
satisfied so far as the sectarian world was concerned—that
it was not my duty to join with any of them, but to continue
as I was until further adirected.
I had found the testimony of James to be true—that a man who
lacked wisdom might ask of God, and obtain, and not be
bupbraided.
Moroni appears to Joseph
Smith—Joseph’s name is to be known for good and evil among all
nations—Moroni tells him of the Book of Mormon and of the coming
judgments of the Lord, and quotes many scriptures—The hiding
place of the gold plates is revealed—Moroni continues to
instruct the Prophet. (Verses
27-54.)
27 I continued to pursue my
common vocations in life until the twenty-first of
September, one thousand eight hundred and twenty-three, all
the time suffering severe persecution at the hands of all
classes of men, both religious and irreligious, because I
continued to aaffirm
that I had seen a vision.
28 During the space of time
which intervened between the time I had the vision and the
year eighteen hundred and twenty-three—having been forbidden
to join any of the religious sects of the day, and being of
very tender years, and persecuted by those who ought to have
been my afriends
and to have treated me kindly, and if they supposed me to be
deluded to have endeavored in a proper and affectionate
manner to have reclaimed me—I was left to all kinds of
btemptations;
and, mingling with all kinds of society, I frequently fell
into many foolish cerrors,
and displayed the weakness of youth, and the foibles of
human nature; which, I am sorry to say, led me into divers
temptations, offensive in the sight of God. In making this
confession, no one need suppose me guilty of any great or
malignant sins. A disposition to commit such was never in my
nature. But I was guilty of dlevity,
and sometimes associated with jovial company, etc., not
consistent with that character which ought to be maintained
by one who was ecalled
of God as I had been. But this will not seem very strange to
any one who recollects my youth, and is acquainted with my
native fcheery
temperament.
29 In consequence of these
things, I often felt condemned for my weakness and
imperfections; when, on the evening of the above-mentioned
twenty-first of September, after I had retired to my bed for
the night, I betook myself to aprayer
and supplication to Almighty God for forgiveness of all my
sins and follies, and also for a manifestation to me, that I
might know of my state and standing before him; for I had
full bconfidence
in obtaining a divine manifestation, as I previously had
one.
30 While I was thus in the
act of calling upon God, I discovered a alight
appearing in my room, which continued to increase until the
room was lighter than at noonday, when immediately a bpersonage
appeared at my bedside, standing in the air, for his feet
did not touch the floor.
31 He had on a loose robe
of most exquisite awhiteness.
It was a whiteness beyond anything earthly I had ever seen;
nor do I believe that any earthly thing could be made to
appear so exceedingly white and brilliant. His hands were
naked, and his arms also, a little above the wrist; so,
also, were his feet naked, as were his legs, a little above
the ankles. His head and neck were also bare. I could
discover that he had no other clothing on but this robe, as
it was open, so that I could see into his bosom.
32 Not only was his robe
exceedingly white, but his whole person was aglorious
beyond description, and his countenance truly like blightning.
The room was exceedingly light, but not so very bright as
immediately around his person. When I first looked upon him,
I was cafraid;
but the dfear
soon left me.
33 He called me by aname,
and said unto me that he was a bmessenger
sent from the presence of God to me, and that his name was
Moroni; that God had a work for me to do; and that my name
should be had for cgood
and evil among all nations, kindreds, and tongues, or that
it should be both good and evil spoken of among all people.
34 He said there was a
abook
deposited, written upon gold plates, giving an account of
the former inhabitants of this continent, and the source
from whence they sprang. He also said that the bfulness
of the everlasting Gospel was contained in it, as delivered
by the Savior to the ancient inhabitants;
35 Also, that there were
two stones in silver bows—and these stones, fastened to a
abreastplate,
constituted what is called the bUrim
and Thummim—deposited with the plates; and the possession
and use of these stones were what constituted “cseers”
in ancient or former times; and that God had prepared them
for the purpose of translating the book.
36 After telling me these
things, he commenced quoting the prophecies of the Old
Testament. He first quoted part of the third chapter of
aMalachi;
and he quoted also the fourth or last chapter of the same
prophecy, though with a little variation from the way it
reads in our Bibles. Instead of quoting the first verse as
it reads in our books, he quoted it thus:
37 For behold, the
aday
cometh that shall bburn
as an oven, and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly
shall burn as cstubble;
for they that come shall burn them, saith the Lord of Hosts,
that it shall leave them neither root nor branch.
38 And again, he quoted the
fifth verse thus: Behold, I will reveal unto you the
aPriesthood,
by the hand of bElijah
the prophet, before the coming of the great and dreadful day
of the cLord.
39 He also quoted the next
verse differently: And he shall plant in the hearts of
the achildren
the bpromises
made to the fathers, and the hearts of the children shall
turn to their fathers. If it were not so, the whole earth
would be utterly wasted at his coming.
40 In addition to these, he
quoted the eleventh chapter of aIsaiah,
saying that it was about to be fulfilled. He quoted also the
third chapter of Acts, twenty-second and twenty-third
verses, precisely as they stand in our New Testament. He
said that that bprophet
was Christ; but the day had not yet come when “they who
would not hear his voice should be ccut
off from among the people,” but soon would come.
41 He also quoted the
second chapter of aJoel,
from the twenty-eighth verse to the last. He also said that
this was not yet fulfilled, but was soon to be. And he
further stated that the fulness of the bGentiles
was soon to come in. He quoted many other passages of
scripture, and offered many explanations which ccannot
be mentioned here.
42 Again, he told me, that
when I got those plates of which he had spoken—for the time
that they should be obtained was not yet fulfilled—I should
not show them to any person; neither the breastplate with
the Urim and Thummim; only to those to whom I should be
commanded to show them; if I did I should be adestroyed.
While he was conversing with me about the plates, the vision
was opened to my bmind
that I could see the place where the plates were deposited,
and that so clearly and distinctly that I knew the place
again when I visited it.
43 After this
communication, I saw the light in the room begin to gather
immediately around the person of him who had been speaking
to me, and it continued to do so until the room was again
left dark, except just around him; when, instantly I saw, as
it were, a conduit open right up into heaven, and he aascended
till he entirely disappeared, and the room was left as it
had been before this heavenly light had made its appearance.
44 I lay musing on the
singularity of the scene, and marveling greatly at what had
been told to me by this extraordinary messenger; when, in
the midst of my ameditation,
I suddenly discovered that my room was again beginning to
get lighted, and in an instant, as it were, the same
heavenly messenger was again by my bedside.
45 He commenced, and aagain
related the very same things which he had done at his first
visit, without the least variation; which having done, he
informed me of great bjudgments
which were coming upon the earth, with great desolations by
cfamine,
dsword,
and pestilence; and that these grievous judgments would come
on the earth in this generation. Having related these
things, he again ascended as he had done before.
46 By this time, so deep
were the impressions made on my mind, that sleep had fled
from my eyes, and I lay overwhelmed in aastonishment
at what I had both seen and heard. But what was my surprise
when again I beheld the same messenger at my bedside, and
heard him rehearse or repeat over again to me the same
things as before; and added a caution to me, telling me that
Satan would try to btempt
me (in consequence of the indigent circumstances of my
father’s family), to get the plates for the purpose of
getting crich.
This he forbade me, saying that I must have no other object
in view in getting the plates but to glorify God, and must
not be influenced by any other dmotive
than that of building his kingdom; otherwise I could not get
them.
47 After this third visit,
he again ascended into heaven as before, and I was again
left to aponder
on the strangeness of what I had just experienced; when
almost immediately after the heavenly messenger had ascended
from me for the third time, the cock crowed, and I found
that day was approaching, so that our interviews must have
occupied the whole of that night.
48 I shortly after arose
from my bed, and, as usual, went to the necessary labors of
the day; but, in attempting to work as at other times, I
found my astrength
so exhausted as to render me entirely unable. My father, who
was laboring along with me, discovered something to be wrong
with me, and told me to go home. I started with the
intention of going to the house; but, in attempting to cross
the fence out of the field where we were, my strength
entirely failed me, and I bfell
helpless on the ground, and for a time was quite unconscious
of anything.
49 The first thing that I
can recollect was a voice speaking unto me, calling me by
name. I looked up, and beheld the same messenger standing
over my head, surrounded by light as before. He then again
related unto me all that he had related to me the previous
night, and commanded me to go to my afather
and tell him of the vision and commandments which I had
received.
50 I obeyed; I returned to
my afather
in the field, and rehearsed the whole matter to him. He
breplied
to me that it was of God, and told me to go and do as
commanded by the messenger. I left the field, and went to
the place where the messenger had told me the plates were
deposited; and owing to the distinctness of the vision which
I had had concerning it, I knew the place the instant that I
arrived there.
51 Convenient to the
village of Manchester, Ontario county, New York, stands a
ahill
of considerable size, and the most elevated of any in the
neighborhood. On the west side of this hill, not far from
the top, under a stone of considerable size, lay the plates,
deposited in a stone box. This stone was thick and rounding
in the middle on the upper side, and thinner towards the
edges, so that the middle part of it was visible above the
ground, but the edge all around was covered with earth.
52 Having removed the
earth, I obtained a lever, which I got fixed under the edge
of the stone, and with a little exertion raised it up. I
looked in, and there indeed did I behold the aplates,
the bUrim
and Thummim, and the breastplate, as stated by the
messenger. The box in which they lay was formed by laying
stones together in some kind of cement. In the bottom of the
box were laid two stones crossways of the box, and on these
stones lay the plates and the other things with them.
53 I made an attempt to
take them out, but was forbidden by the messenger, and was
again informed that the time for bringing them forth had not
yet arrived, neither would it, until four years from that
time; but he told me that I should come to that place
precisely in one year from that time, and that he would
there meet with me, and that I should continue to do so
until the time should come for obtaining the plates.
54 Accordingly, as I had
been commanded, I went at the end of each year, and at each
time I found the same messenger there, and received
instruction and intelligence from him at each of our
interviews, respecting what the Lord was going to do, and
how and in what manner his akingdom
was to be conducted in the last days.
Joseph Smith marries Emma Hale—He
receives the gold plates from Moroni and translates some of the
characters—Martin Harris shows characters and translation to
Professor Anthon, who says: “I cannot read a sealed book.”
(Verses
55-65.)
55 As my father’s worldly
circumstances were very limited, we were under the necessity
of alaboring
with our hands, hiring out by day’s work and otherwise, as
we could get opportunity. Sometimes we were at home, and
sometimes abroad, and by continuous blabor
were enabled to get a comfortable maintenance.
56 In the year 1823 my
father’s family met with a great aaffliction
by the death of my eldest brother, bAlvin.
In the month of October, 1825, I hired with an old gentleman
by the name of Josiah Stoal, who lived in Chenango county,
State of New York. He had heard something of a silver mine
having been opened by the Spaniards in Harmony, Susquehanna
county, State of Pennsylvania; and had, previous to my
hiring to him, been digging, in order, if possible, to
discover the mine. After I went to live with him, he took
me, with the rest of his hands, to dig for the silver mine,
at which I continued to work for nearly a month, without
success in our undertaking, and finally I prevailed with the
old gentleman to cease digging after it. Hence arose the
very prevalent story of my having been a money-digger.
57 During the time that I
was thus employed, I was put to board with a Mr. Isaac Hale,
of that place; it was there I first saw my wife (his
daughter), Emma Hale. On the 18th of January, 1827, we were
married, while I was yet employed in the service of Mr.
Stoal.
58 Owing to my continuing
to assert that I had seen a vision, apersecution
still followed me, and my wife’s father’s family were very
much opposed to our being married. I was, therefore, under
the necessity of taking her elsewhere; so we went and were
married at the house of Squire Tarbill, in South Bainbridge,
Chenango county, New York. Immediately after my marriage, I
left Mr. Stoal’s, and went to my father’s, and bfarmed
with him that season.
59 At length the time
arrived for obtaining the plates, the Urim and Thummim, and
the breastplate. On the twenty-second day of September, one
thousand eight hundred and twenty-seven, having gone as
usual at the end of another year to the place where they
were deposited, the same heavenly messenger delivered them
up to ame
with this charge: that I should be bresponsible
for them; that if I should let them go carelessly, or
through any cneglect
of mine, I should be cut off; but that if I would use all my
endeavors to dpreserve
them, until he, the messenger, should call for them, they
should be protected.
60 I soon found out the
reason why I had received such strict charges to keep them
safe, and why it was that the messenger had said that when I
had done what was required at my hand, he would call for
them. For no sooner was it known that I had them, than the
most strenuous exertions were used to aget
them from me. Every stratagem that could be invented was
resorted to for that purpose. The persecution became more
bitter and severe than before, and multitudes were on the
alert continually to get them from me if possible. But by
the wisdom of God, they remained safe in my hands, until I
had accomplished by them what was required at my hand. When,
according to arrangements, the messenger called for them, I
delivered them up to him; and he has them in his charge
until this bday,
being the second day of May, one thousand eight hundred and
thirty-eight.
61 The excitement, however,
still continued, and rumor with her thousand tongues was all
the time employed in circulating afalsehoods
about my father’s family, and about myself. If I were to
relate a thousandth part of them, it would fill up volumes.
The persecution, however, became so intolerable that I was
under the necessity of leaving Manchester, and going with my
wife to Susquehanna county, in the State of Pennsylvania.
While preparing to start—being very poor, and the
persecution so heavy upon us that there was no probability
that we would ever be otherwise—in the midst of our
afflictions we found a friend in a gentleman by the name of
bMartin
Harris, who came to us and gave me fifty dollars to assist
us on our journey. Mr. Harris was a resident of Palmyra
township, Wayne county, in the State of New York, and a
farmer of respectability.
62 By this timely aid was I
enabled to reach the place of my destination in
Pennsylvania; and immediately after my arrival there I
commenced copying the characters off the plates. I copied a
considerable number of them, and by means of the aUrim
and Thummim I translated some of them, which I did between
the time I arrived at the house of my wife’s father, in the
month of December, and the February following.
63 Sometime in this month
of February, the aforementioned Mr. Martin Harris came to
our place, got the characters which I had drawn off the
plates, and started with them to the city of New York. For
what took place relative to him and the characters, I refer
to his own account of the circumstances, as he related them
to me after his return, which was as follows:
64 “I went to the city of
New York, and presented the characters which had been
translated, with the translation thereof, to Professor
Charles Anthon, a gentleman celebrated for his literary
attainments. Professor Anthon stated that the translation
was correct, more so than any he had before seen translated
from the Egyptian. I then showed him those which were not
yet translated, and he said that they were Egyptian,
Chaldaic, Assyriac, and Arabic; and he said they were true
characters. He gave me a certificate, certifying to the
people of Palmyra that they were true characters, and that
the translation of such of them as had been translated was
also correct. I took the certificate and put it into my
pocket, and was just leaving the house, when Mr. Anthon
called me back, and asked me how the young man found out
that there were gold plates in the place where he found
them. I answered that an angel of God had revealed it unto
him.
65 “He then said to me,
‘Let me see that certificate.’ I accordingly took it out of
my pocket and gave it to him, when he took it and tore it to
pieces, saying that there was no such thing now as
ministering of aangels,
and that if I would bring the plates to him he would
translate them. I informed him that part of the plates were
bsealed,
and that I was forbidden to bring them. He replied, ‘I
cannot read a sealed book.’ I left him and went to Dr.
Mitchell, who sanctioned what Professor Anthon had said
respecting both the characters and the translation.”
Oliver Cowdery serves as scribe
in translating the Book of Mormon—Joseph and Oliver receive the
Aaronic Priesthood from John the Baptist—They are baptized,
ordained, and receive the spirit of prophecy. (Verses
66-75.)
66 On the 5th day of April,
1829, aOliver
Cowdery came to my house, until which time I had never seen
him. He stated to me that having been teaching school in the
neighborhood where my father resided, and my father being
one of those who sent to the school, he went to board for a
season at his house, and while there the family related to
him the circumstances of my having received the plates, and
accordingly he had come to make inquiries of me.
67 Two days after the
arrival of Mr. Cowdery (being the 7th of April) I commenced
to translate the Book of Mormon, and he began to awrite
for me.
68 We still continued the
work of translation, when, in the ensuing month (May, 1829),
we on a certain day went into the woods to pray and inquire
of the Lord respecting abaptism
for the bremission
of sins, that we found mentioned in the translation of the
plates. While we were thus employed, praying and calling
upon the Lord, a messenger from heaven descended in a ccloud
of light, and having laid his dhands
upon us, he eordained
us, saying:
69 Upon you my fellow
servants, in the name of Messiah, I confer the aPriesthood
of bAaron,
which holds the keys of the ministering of angels, and of
the gospel of repentance, and of cbaptism
by immersion for the remission of sins; and this shall never
be taken again from the earth until the sons of dLevi
do offer again an offering unto the Lord in erighteousness.
70 He said this Aaronic
Priesthood had not the power of laying on hands for the gift
of the Holy Ghost, but that this should be conferred on us
hereafter; and he commanded us to go and be baptized, and
gave us directions that I should baptize Oliver Cowdery, and
that afterwards he should baptize me.
71 Accordingly we went and
were baptized. I abaptized
him first, and afterwards he baptized me—after which I laid
my hands upon his head and ordained him to the Aaronic
Priesthood, and afterwards he laid his hands on me and
ordained me to the same Priesthood—for so we were
commanded.*
72 The amessenger
who visited us on this occasion and conferred this
Priesthood upon us, said that his name was John, the same
that is called bJohn
the Baptist in the New Testament, and that he acted under
the direction of cPeter,
James and John, who held the keys of the Priesthood of
Melchizedek, which Priesthood, he said, would in due time be
conferred on us, and that I should be called the first
dElder
of the Church, and he (Oliver Cowdery) the second. It was on
the fifteenth day of May, 1829, that we were ordained under
the hand of this messenger, and baptized.
73 Immediately on our
coming up out of the water after we had been baptized, we
experienced great and glorious blessings from our Heavenly
Father. No sooner had I baptized Oliver Cowdery, than the
Holy Ghost fell upon him, and he stood up and aprophesied
many things which should shortly come to pass. And again, so
soon as I had been baptized by him, I also had the spirit of
prophecy, when, standing up, I prophesied concerning the
rise of this Church, and many other things connected with
the Church, and this generation of the children of men. We
were filled with the Holy Ghost, and rejoiced in the God of
our salvation.
74 Our minds being now
enlightened, we began to have the ascriptures
laid open to our understandings, and the btrue
meaning and intention of their more cmysterious
passages revealed unto us in a manner which we never could
attain to previously, nor ever before had thought of. In the
meantime we were forced to keep secret the circumstances of
having received the Priesthood and our having been baptized,
owing to a spirit of persecution which had already
manifested itself in the neighborhood.
75 We had been threatened
with being mobbed, from time to time, and this, too, by
professors of religion. And their intentions of mobbing us
were only counteracted by the influence of my wife’s
father’s family (under Divine providence), who had become
very afriendly
to me, and who were opposed to mobs, and were willing that I
should be allowed to continue the work of translation
without interruption; and therefore offered and promised us
protection from all unlawful proceedings, as far as in them
lay.
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