liz3564 wrote:Wait--I thought that Joseph and Fanny were "discovered" in the barn by Emma in 1833.
Another example of the mythology that passes for "common knowledge" in our world.
liz3564 wrote:Wait--I thought that Joseph and Fanny were "discovered" in the barn by Emma in 1833.
polygamy
POLYG'AMY, n. [Gr. many, and marriage.] A plurality of wives or husbands at the same time; or the having of such plurality. When a man has more wives than one, or a woman more husbands than one, at the same time, the offender is punishable for polygamy.
(Webster's Dictionary, 1st edition, 1828)
harmony wrote:[I'm waiting also. But I'm not holding my breath. We've all seen the justifications, the caveats, the excuses for people who want to keep Joseph clothed. The problem is... Joseph had a different agenda, and keeping clothed wasn't on it.
Miss Taken wrote:
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Z_v2IAnMssMC&pg=PA450&lpg=PA450&dq=Joseph+Smith+Ms+Hill&source=Brian Laundrie&ots=5pa-abv-HT&sig=7wQgJIooRORyIcbtkgA293pbADk&hl=en&ei=a7w4SvzDGJ6UjAe1prCiDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2#PPA450,M1
(sorry about the link Shades, I'm not sure how to condense it..)
DonBradley wrote:I believe the Fanny Alger relationship was carried out under the rubric of polygamy. This is something I presented evidence on at MHA, which Nevo has alluded to.
As I went over at MHA and will also be publishing, Jenson put Fanny's name on his list of Joseph Smith's wives because Eliza R. Snow wrote the name on a list she provided him. ERS also reported to Jenson that the blow up over Fanny (Emma's discovery of the relationship) occurred while Eliza lived in the Smith's Kirtland home, which was in 1836.
Don
“Therefore Brother Joseph said ‘Brother Levi I want to make a bargain with you – If you will get Fanny Alger for me for a wife you may have Clarissa Reed. I love Fanny.’ ‘I will’ Said Father. ‘Go brother Levi and the Lord will prosper you’ Said Joseph – Father goes to the Father Samuel Alger – Father’s Brother in Law and [said] ‘Samuel the Prophet Joseph loves your Daughter Fanny and wishes her for a wife what say you’ – Uncle Sam Says – ‘Go and talk to the Old woman about it twill be as She says’ Father goes to his Sister and said ‘Clarrissy, Brother Joseph the Prophet of the most high God loves Fanny and wishes her for a wife what say you’ Said She ‘go and talk to Fanny it will be all right with me’ – Father goes to Fanny and said ‘Fanny Brother Joseph the Prophet loves you and wishes you for a wife will you be his wife?’ ‘I will Levi’ Said She – Father takes Fanny to Joseph and said ‘Brother Joseph I have been successful in my mission’ – Father gave her to Joseph repeating the Ceremony as Joseph repeated to him.”
- Mosiah Hancock Autobiography, pp. 62-63
Levi Hancock received his reward. Smith sanctioned his marriage to Clarissa Reed, which took place on March 29 1833. Mosiah’s narrative suggests that the Smith-Alger marriage occurred first, so Joseph probably married Fanny in February or March 1833, when she was sixteen and he was twenty-seven.
Page25
In November 1836 a local judge in Wayne County, Indiana, performed a marriage of considerable significance for historians of Mormon Polygamy: The clerk recorded: “Dublin November 16th 1836 This day married by me Levi Eastridge a Justice of the Peace for Wayne Country and State of Indiana Mr Solomon Custer and Miss fanny Alger both of this town.”
This marriage was noteworthy because Fanny Alger was one of Joseph Smith’s earliest plural wives, probably his first, but here she abandoned that sacred union for a secular marriage with a non-Mormon, leaving polygamy to embrace monogamy.
Levi was close to the Alger family, was in Kirtland in [b]1832 and 1833[/b], and was a friend of Joseph Smith. If Mosiah Hancock is trustworthy, he heard the story directly from the man who performed the wedding of Fanny and Joseph. Mosiah explains his motive as simply to “bear testimony.”
According to Mosiah Hancock, Joseph Smith introduced his father Levi to polygamy in spring 1832:
As early as Spring of 1832 Bro Joseph said “Brother Levi, the Lord has revealed to me that it is his will that righteous men shall take Righteous women even a plurality of Wives that a Righteous race may be sent forth upon the Earth preparatory to the ushering in of the Millennial Reign of our redeemer-For the Lord has such a high respect for the nobles of his Kingdom that he is not willing for them to come through the Loins of a Careless People-Therefore; it behoves those who embrace that Principle to pay strict attention to even the Least requirement of our Heavenly Father.”
W.W. Phelps, in 1861, recorded that Smith received a revelation in Missouri on July 17, 1831, that directed Mormon men to intermarry with “Lamanite” (Native American) women. When Phelps later asked how the group in question, mostly married men, could take other wives, Smith immediately answered, “In the same manner that Abraham took Hagar and Keturah; that Jacob took Rachel, Bilhah, and Zilpah; by revelation-the saints of the Lord are always directed by revelations.” A December 1831 letter by anti-Mormon Ezra Booth supports Phelps: “It had been made known by revelation” that God wanted “a matrimonial alliance with the natives” and that God would bless them “abundantly” if they obeyed. They would also “gain a residence” in Indian lands, despite the Indian agent’s opposition. “It has been made known to one who has left his wife in the State of New York that he is entirely free from his wife, and is at pleasure to take him a wife from among the Lamanites.”
What absolutely mystifies me are modern day LDS who know about Joseph Smith's "marriages" and yet still defend him. I've debated this issue several times with quite a few LDS (at least the ones who have enough guts to even go down this road) and when the discussion reaches this point they will nearly always fall back on: You don't understand sacred things, the Helen Kimball marriage was purely dynastic, Fanny was married to the prophet, there was no sex with his polyandrous wives, etc. etc. Instead of looking at the situation for what it is, they attempt (valiantly) to defend Joseph Smith and blame God for LDS polygamy.
You can point to the Manifesto and ask why would God back down to the U.S. Government... they don't have an answer. You can point out that Smith denied having more than one wife and it doesn't bother them. You can point to the 1835 D & C 101 and it appears to be no big deal to them that Smith either had at least one plural wife at the time or was having an affair--both of which are condemned. You can show them that Emma denied Smith's plural marriages and they will show you convincing evidence that she's lying. You can point out that John Taylor secretly sent envoys to places like AZ, Mexico & Canada in order to keep the "New & Everlasting Covenant" everlasting and now that same church considers the resulting "Fundamentalists" apostates(!) and still... they have no answer for the larger question: WHY? God did it.
truth dancer wrote:
It is what it is.![]()
~td~