Open Transcription |
Previous | 1 of 2 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
|
This page
All
Subset |
B., P. H. “ The Mormonites.” Ohio Eagle ( Lancaster, Ohio) ( 20 April 1833). Reprinted from
The Saturday Courier, circa April 1833.
From the Saturday Courier.
THE MORMONITES.
The Mormonites, though occupying now less of the public attention than they excited in
the earlier stages of their establishment, are still objects of considerable interest. The gross
absurdity of their doctrines, and the tenacity with which they cling to them, make it matter of
curious speculation, whether knavery or folly is the predominant feeling of their teachers; and
the numbers, who have joined their societies furnish conclusive proof that superstition and
fanaticism are even yet powerful agents in influencing human affairs. As this sect is still
increasing, it is gratifying to know that their habits and customs are peaceable and orderly, and
that though bad christians, they are in some places at least good citizens.
The following extracts from a letter, written by an intelligent correspondent, at Liberty,
Missouri, will repay perusal:—
“ This singular people own a large portion of the land in the adjacent county, ( Jackson),
and have made thereon some neat and comfortable improvements. Their conduct, as citizens,
appears to be as unexceptionable as that of any class of our community. They are peaceable,
unoffending, industrious, frugal, and honest; always giving a fair price for what they buy, and
asking only a similar price for that which they may have to sell. Their little buildings and farms
exhibit the most systematic neatness and order, and they appear to be accumulating wealth faster
than their neighbors in similar circumstances.
“ The information I am about to communicate, in relation to the particular tenets which
distinguish this singular sect from others, was derived from two discourses, which I heard
delivered in this place, during the last winter, by two of their most influential members. They
were both possessed of a considerable degree of scientific and historical information, and
advocated their peculiar doctrines with as much zeal and ingenuity, as are common to preachers
of other denominations. They commenced by saying that they yielded the most implicit assent to
the Old and New Testament, and said that their Book of Mormon was, in fact, but a part of those
Scriptures.
“ I’d sustain this important position, they asserted that, at the confusion of tongues which
occurred at the Tower of Babel, the Deity, by his irresistible fist, dispersed the differing nations
into all the different habitable parts of the globe; and that, after they were so dispersed, they
remained ignorant of each other, as the art of navigation was not then sufficiently known to
afford them the means of intercourse. They contended that in this way alone could we rationally
account for the fact that the New World and all the South Sea Islands were inhabited by human
beings when first discovered by Columbus, Cook, and other navigators. They further urged that
different revelations of the will of God were necessary for different ages; that the revelation
made to Moses on Mount Sinai was sufficient for the generation then existing, but that
subsequent revelations were necessary, in the nature of things, for succeeding generations of
men; that the revelation which were made after the dispersion of the human race were made
concurrently to the people of every continent; that, for instance, when the Angel revealed the
birth of Our Savior to the shepherds in Asia, the same fact was communicated to the people then
inhabiting America.— They referred to the relics of ancient structures which are to be found in
manny parts of our contry to prove the fact that this continent was long since inhabited by a race
of men acquainted with many of the arts of civilized life. They said that the pious men of those
by- gone days had made records of the revelations of Jehovah as they occurred, some of which
were engraved upon gold plates and deposited in the earth, and found by Joseph Smith in 1827,
who was favoured with a special inspiration for the purpose of translating the same.
“ To prove that many of the books of the Old Testament have been lost, they made
quotations from passages referring to books that could not be found in our present translation;
and said that their Book of Mormon was one of those books which had been lost in the Old
World, but preserved in the New. In their mode of using propeity, they profess to follow the
example of the Apostles, as recorded somewhere in Acts, where they had all things in common,
and appointed some individuals to administer in temporal things. During the delivery of their
sermons, they frequently came over the phrase, “ in the last days.” If I understand them correctly,
they profess to know more in relation to the particular time, when that date of political and
religious amelioration, called the Millennium shall arrive, than can be learned from the Old and
New Testament.
“ I have merely given you the principal outlines of the creed of this strange people, as the
limits of a letter would not contain any thing more. Since their settlement in Jackson county,
several our own citizens have joined them but have subsequently backed out. A suit was, not
long since, instituted by an individual to recover the sum of fifty dollars, which he had paid for
the purpose of procuring an interest “ in Zion in these last days,” and the Court, thinking that the
recipient of the cash had no interest in Zion of a disposable kind, adjudged the original contract
void, for want of consideration, and consequently the plaintiff recovered. It is said, that others
intend instituting similar suits.— As yet, however, they get along better than could be anticipated,
from the absurdity of their doctrine.
P. H. B.”
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Author | B., P. H. |
| Title | The Mormonites. |
| Edition | Electronic reproduction |
| Abstract | Description of the doctrines of the Mormon church, and the interactions of the members with their neighbors in Jackson County, Missouri. |
| Date Original | 1833-04-20 |
| 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 | Lancaster (Ohio); |
| Genre | Newspapers; Articles; |
| Keywords | Jackson County (Mo.); Book of Mormon; |
| Source | Ohio Eagle (Lancaster, Ohio) (20 April 1833). |
| Related Works | Reprinted from The Saturday Courier, circa April 1833. |
| 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 | 1833_OE_Apr20 |
Description
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Open Transcription
