Commentary on Doctrine & Covenants 97

/ Doctrine & Covenants 97 / Commentary

Verses 1-2

Casey Paul Griffiths (LDS Scholar)

While this revelation generally reproves the Saints in Missouri, the Lord does begin the revelation by proclaiming that many of them are truly humble and are seeking to “learn wisdom and find truth” (D&C 97:1). Among the Missouri Saints who should be commended for their integrity in the face of persecutions were two of the three witnesses of the Book of Mormon, Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer. William McLellin, who was in Jackson County during the persecutions, later recounted:

In 1833, when the mobbing reigned triumphant in Jackson Co., [Missouri], I and O[liver] fled from our homes, for fear of personal violence . . . They offered eighty dollars reward for any one who would deliver Cowdery or McLellin in Independence . . . I slipped down into the Whitmer’s settlement, and there in the lonely woods I met with David Whitmer and Oliver Cowdery. I said to them, “Brethren, I have never seen an open vision in my life, but you men say you have, and therefore you positively know. Now you know that our lives are in danger every hour, if the mob can only catch us. Tell me in the fear of God, is that book of Mormon true?” Cowdery looked at me with solemnity depicted in his face, and said, “Brother William, God sent his holy angel to declare the truth of the translation to us, and therefore we know. And though the mob kill us, yet we must die declaring its truth.” David said, “Oliver has told you the solemn truth, for we could not be deceived. I most truly declare to you its truth!!” Said I, “boys, I believe you. I can see no object for you to tell me falsehood now, when our lives are endangered.”1

During this time McLellin also recorded a mob attack on Hiram Page, one of the eight witnesses of the Book of Mormon. He wrote,

While the mob was raging in Jackson Co., [Missouri,] in 1833 some young men ran down Hiram Page in the woods, one of the eight witnesses, and commenced beating and pounding him with whips and clubs. He begged, but there was no mercy. They said he was a damned Mormon, and they meant to beat him to death! But finally one of them said to him, “If you will deny that damned book, we will let you go.” Said he, “How can I deny what I know to be true?” Then they pounded him again. When they thought he was about to breathe his last, they said to him, “Now what do you think of your God, and when he don’t save you?” “Well,” said he, “I believe in God”—“Well,” said one of the most intelligent among them, “I believe the damned fool will stick to it though we kill him. Let us let him go.” But his life was nearly run out. He was confined to his bed for a length of time. So much for a man who knows for himself. Knowledge is beyond faith or doubt. It is positive certainty.2

While the Saints in Missouri were reproved by the Lord for their transgressions (see D&C 101:1–8), it is important to remember that many were faithful to their testimonies. The persecutions in Missouri came about through a mixture of the Saints’ transgressions and the bigotry and intolerance of the original settlers of Jackson County, who saw the infusion of the Saints into the region as a threat to their political power.

Citing the sources of the outside opposition to the Saints, Parley P. Pratt later wrote, “The portion of the inhabitants of Jackson County which did not belong to the Church, became jealous of our growing influence and numbers. Political demagogues were afraid we should rule the county; and religious priests and bigots felt we were powerful rivals, and about to excel all other societies in the state in numbers, and in power and influence. These feelings, and the false statements and influences growing out of them, gave rise to the organization of a company of outlaws, whose avowed object was to drive the Church of the Saints from the county.”3

1. William E. McLellin’s Lost Manuscript, ed. Mitchell K. Schaefer, 2012, 166–67, spelling and punctuation modernized, emphasis in original.

2. McLellin’s Lost Manuscript, 166–67, spelling and punctuation modernized, emphasis in original.

3. Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt, 2000, 116.

 

(Doctrine & Covenants Minute)

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