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“ Letter No. 6.” W. W. Phelps to Oliver Cowdery, 24 February 1835. Latter Day Saints’
Messenger and Advocate ( Kirtland, Ohio) 1, no. 7 ( April 1835): 97.
LETTER NO. 6.
Liberty, Mo. Feb. 24, 1825.
Dear Bro. in the Lord:— I take a little time to answer your 3rd letter, addressed to me in the
December number of the Messenger and Advocate. Passing your apology, I come at once to the
great point, in question, that this church has suffered persecution from its commencement; and
that, too, in most cases, without the least provocation. Here suffer me to say, as you and I are
fellow members, and have been co- servants nearly from the beginning, that we have known by
example, what thousands are preaching in precept, that “ they that will live Godly in Christ Jesus,
must suffer persecution.”
Now, notwithstanding my body was not baptized into this church till Thursday the 16th
of June, 1831, yet my heart was there from the time I became acquainted with the book of
Mormon; and my hope, steadfast like an anchor, and my faith increased like the grass after a
refreshing shower, when I for the first time, held a conversation with our beloved brother Joseph,
( December 24th 1830,) who I was willing to acknowledge as a prophet of the Lord, and to
whom, and to whose godly account of himself and the work he was engaged in. I owe my first
determination to quit the folly of my way, and the fancy and fame of this world, and seek the
Lord and his righteousness, in order to enter a better world, where the duration, and glory, and
honor, and power, and space, are equal and endless: And let me add that though all old churches,
and some disciples, like Orpah may kiss their mother- in- law, and go back to their people, and
their gods, yet, as Ruth, I am fixed in my purpose to “ entreat me not to leave thee, or to return
from following after thee: for whither thou goest I will go; and where thou lodgest I will lodge:
thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God.”
Well may you say that it is known unto me, “ that this church has suffered reproach and
persecution from a majority of mankind who have heard but a rumor, since its first organization,
& c.— So it is. On the 30th of April, 1830, I was thrown into prison at Lyons,* N. Y. by a couple
of Presbyterian traders, for a small debt, for the purpose, as I was informed, of “ keeping me from
joining the Mormons.” How many hair- breadth escapes you and brother Joseph passed, for
writing and publishing the truth in the book of Mormon, as the constitution and the law allowed,
I know not, but I heard church members and others declare in language similar to the following:
that every believer in the ‘ Golden Bible,’ ( as the book of Mormon was called by many) ought to
be sued and sent or driven out of society. The Rochester Observer, one of the principal
Presbyterian organs of the day, introduced the book of Mormon to the world with a flashy article
headed Blasphemy! and to cap the climax of gullibility, against which the ‘ men of the meeting
houses’ showed an ardent zeal to guard their flocks, it was carefully circulated, that ‘ a Jesuit’ had
employed a young man by the name of Cowdery, to write, and through the aid of one Smith, was
bringing forth a book to break down all religions. And when it came forth, some actually said
that they believed it was written to destroy the present religions, because it carried religion to a
nicer, or higher pitch than the old Bible.
One thing is remarkable, that of all I ever heard said about the work or book, in that day
of gross darkness, not one pretended, in truth, to have the least particle of positive proof, that a
man or woman joined the church for sinful purposes, or that the book contained one precept of
doctrine that was contrary to pure religion; ‘ but the idea of a church with a prophet in it, in this
* My family sick at my residence in Canandaigua.
enlightened age and land of liberty, was so exactly like old times; so agreeably to the order of the
Scriptures, and so perfect a way of knowing the will of the Lord, and of what religion consisted,
that the wise men of the world, and the wary who, watched diligently over their flocks, that their
fleeces might be long, white and clean, against the shearing, whispered, and sometimes talked
aloud something very like or approaching this: What is the reason, if God has any thing to reveal
for the benefit of his people or his numerous churches, as he is no respecter of persons, that he
does not do it, or reveal it to Dr. Clarke, Dr. Gill or Dr. Scott, the commentators, or to some great
minister, such as the Archbishop of England, or Dr. Ely, or even the president of the United
States, or some great man that could be believed? Then every body would know it was true, and
the different churches would be bound to accept of it as they have the Bible, and our priests who
are brought up and educated for the purpose, could explain it, and every body would have to
obey it. But God has done his work, and we don’t need any more prophets. We have Bible
societies, missionary societies, abolition of slavery societies, and temperance societies, to
convert the world with and bring in the Millenium, and away with your deception! False
prophets, false prophets, beware! Blasphemy! We have plenty of churches, and plenty of priests
to regulate them, and don’t you know that God, man and the Devil will oppose you? If you start
a church with a prophet in it, every body will be against you, as they were against Ann Lee,
Joanna Southcoate, and old Jemima Wilkinson.
But I will not pursue the subject further at present, leaving it for your addition of facts.
Instead of standing in the way, and asking for the old paths, they have stood in the way, and put
darkness for light, and light for darkness, till not only ‘ large sheets of their opinions, and attested
volumns of our lives and characters,’ have ‘ inundated our land with scurrilous reports,’ but the
blood of the saints has curdled upon the sacred soil of freedom, and now smokes up to heaven as
a testimony that they are martyrs to that religion which has ever been despised and rejected, by
every church and people that have fallen away from its true principles, and lost the gift of the
Holy Ghost. Our tribulation, our suffering for the truth’s sake, and our blood, ( shed in defence of
holiness) are testimony that says: your religion is true— and hold out faithful to the end and you
will earn a crown, and a fulness of joy where the wicked cannot come— eternal with God.
As ever, W. W. PHELPS.
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Author | Phelps, William Wines, 1792-1872 |
| Title | Letter No. 6. |
| Edition | Electronic reproduction |
| Abstract | Letter from W. W. Phelps to Oliver Cowdery. Contains Phelps's testimony of the Book of Mormon and a discussion of the persecution of the church. |
| Publisher Original | F. G. Williams and Co. |
| Date Original | 1835-04 |
| Digital Publisher | Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship at Brigham Young University |
| Date Digital | 2009-06 |
| Owning Institution | Brigham Young University |
| Subject | Book of Mormon--History; |
| Geographic Place Name | Kirtland (Ohio); |
| Genre | Newspapers; Letters; |
| Keywords | Book of Mormon; |
| Source | Latter Day Saints’ messenger and Advocate (Kirtland, Ohio) 1, no. 7 (April 1835) : 97. |
| Related Works | See HBLL Digital Collections, http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/u?/NCMP1820-1846,7074. |
| Language | English; eng; en; |
| Patron Usage Instructions | http://www.lib.byu.edu/genericnote_copyright.html |
| Copyright status/owner | Public Domain, Courtesy Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship at Brigham Young University |
| Type | text |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Conversion specifications | E-Image Data Scanpro 1000; 600dpi; pdf |
| Full text | Transcriptions provided by the Maxwell Institute |
| Identifier | 1835_MA_Apr_c |
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