THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Joseph Smith abandons Ohio – 1838

Via History.com

After his Mormon bank fails in the Panic of 1837, Joseph Smith flees Kirtland, Ohio, to avoid arrest and heads for Missouri to rebuild his religious community.

A sensitive and religious-minded man since his youth, Joseph Smith claimed the angel Moroni visited him in 1823, when he was 18 years old, and told him he was destined to become a modern prophet of God. For four years, Smith said he made annual visits to a hill in upstate New York where he received instructions preparing him for his new prophetic role. In 1827, he unearthed gold tablets inscribed in a mysterious language. Two years later, Smith created a local sensation when he revealed his discovery and made known his plans to publish a new volume of scripture based on his translation of the golden plates.

In March 1830, Smith published 5,000 copies of a volume he called The Book of Mormon. More often met with outrage than belief, Smith’s revelations nonetheless took root in the spiritually fertile era of the 1830s. Upstate New York was already a hotbed of religious revivalism, and Smith’s new Mormon religion appealed to Americans searching for spiritual values amidst the bustling economic growth of a rapidly expanding nation. In contrast to the radical individualism of the lone pioneer, Mormonism stressed the power of mutual cooperation and sacrifice for the good of the whole. Nearly two decades later, when the Mormons established their new theocratic state in Utah, this emphasis on cooperation would transform a desert into one of the richest and most productive farming regions in the West.

The path to Utah, though, was long and difficult, and Smith would not live to see the promised kingdom. Gathering his growing band of followers in western New York, Smith made the first of a long series of moves in search of a place where his unique vision of a community of Latter-Day Saints could be realized. In the 1830s, the Mormons settled in the town of Kirtland, Ohio, where Smith founded the first Mormon-controlled bank, putting his economic and spiritual practices to work. Unfortunately, Smith’s Kirtland bank failed during the national financial Panic of 1837, and he fled to avoid potential criminal prosecution by angry and disillusioned former believers, some of whom claimed he had mismanaged their investments.

The remaining faithful followed Smith to Missouri, where persecution and rumors (true but exaggerated) that the Saints were practicing polygamy forced them to flee again. In 1839, Smith established the new town of Nauvoo on the sparsely populated Illinois frontier, where he hoped the Saints would finally be left alone. Unfortunately, continued reports of polygamy and Smith’s decision to declare himself a candidate for U.S. president in the spring of 1844 inspired fierce dislike of the Mormons in Illinois as well. In June, 1,500-armed men surrounded Nauvoo, and to prevent bloodshed, Smith and his brother Hiram agreed to be jailed in the nearby town of Carthage. Several days later an angry mob stormed the jail and murdered both men.

Many predicted the religious community would collapse with Smith’s death, but under the leadership of his successor, Brigham Young, the Saints regrouped and once again moved west. This time they did not stop until they reached the shores of the Great Salt Lake of Utah. There they laid the roots for a religious community that continues to thrive to this day.

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17 Comments
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 12, 2020 9:09 am

All of your major cult leaders – Muhammad, Charles Manson, Jim Jones, Joseph Smith – were sex fiends.

flash
flash
  Iska Waran
January 12, 2020 9:27 am

i.e degenerates. You’ll know them by their fruit.

Eyes Wide Shut
Eyes Wide Shut
  Iska Waran
January 12, 2020 2:49 pm

Swindler’s and perverts.
Joe Smith and Brigham Young.
The self annointed prophet is always right and can have as many wives and as much of your money as they want.
Pathetic.

gilberts
gilberts
  Eyes Wide Shut
January 12, 2020 3:53 pm

My buddy likes to piss off morons by pronouncing it “Bring’em Young.”

Jackarlope
Jackarlope
  gilberts
January 12, 2020 11:16 pm

And bring’em often

Shinmen Takezo
Shinmen Takezo
January 12, 2020 12:58 pm

This is a nice whitewash of Mormon history–thank you very much for this.

As a recovering ex-Mormon (process ongoing BTW) I am aware of the real history of the Mormon Church.

The Kirkland bank failure was one of multiple frauds that Joe Smith and Sydney Rigdon pulled off on the members of the early LDS church. Back then, in the very early days of the LDS Church, in order to join to you had to give all your worldly possessions (money, land, etc.) to the church in what was called, “The law of concentration” –and of course it went into the Kirkland bank where it was embezzled by Smith and Rigdon… who then fled the state for Missouri.

As for the Book Of Mormon… again this was a money making scam initially which was then used as a recruitment gimmick to start a new religion. And it was not Joe Smith who penned this book. It was Sidney Rigdon who was behind this scam–using another book’s theme (A View Of The Hebrews) of ancient Jews coming to North America.

The book of the Mormon was released though Joe Smith who at that time had some noteriety as a treasure finder using folk magic as a gimmick (a magic seer stone). See the photo below…

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It the very early years of the LDS church, it was in fact Sidney Rigdon who ran everything–with Joe Smith being used as a “trick pony” or “child prophet” as you would see in tent revivals. Eventually as Smith grew a bit older and got better at his role as a con-man, he took complete control of his ‘church’ and pushed Rigdon aside into a supporting role… and this is the time when all the convenient revelations began to pour forth (temple rites, doctrine and so forth–all concocted BTW).

For a complete unvarnished read on the LDS church history pick up this book, “Nightfall in Nauvoo” by Samuel Wooly Taylor (LDS member and grandson of Church President Taylor).

If you read the Book of Mormon it contains nothing regarding anything supporting any of Smith revelations–it is still being used as a recruitment gimmick for LDS missionaries.

FYI–people are leaving the LDS in droves. The membership numbers that the old men in Salt Lake City hold up every year are in fact an on going fraud. Yes–the Koolaide LDS drinkers in the Mormon belt (Utah/Idaho) are still strong with numbers being maintained mainly by the birth rates–outside of this, number are falling and it is not uncommon (rather it is common) that missionaries have zero converts on their missions. And this is due to the real history of the LDS church readily available on the internet.

If you want to see the hogwash that takes place inside an LDS temple–watch the video below taken with a hidden camera…

Saami Jim
Saami Jim
  Shinmen Takezo
January 12, 2020 3:31 pm

Shin,
May your journey lead you to peace.
Martha Beck’s writings were a great help to me, although I was not Mormon.
Escape, by Carolyn Jessup, was another powerful book for me, I read that when I was still a fundamentalist, was captivated, enthralled and more importantly, motivated.
I guess I read Beck during my recovery phase.

TC
TC
January 12, 2020 1:07 pm

We’ve had good friends who are mormon – good people who work hard, believe in family and live a clean life. That said, the last kids who came to our property doing the LDS mission weren’t on bicycles but riding in a car, and didn’t have any answers to basic questions I had for them. Clearly they were just going through the motions, and barely even that.

Shinmen Takezo
Shinmen Takezo
  TC
January 12, 2020 1:27 pm

Yes, they all believe in family and lead a clean life…. a clean, deluded life, living a lie fostered by clever con-men and perpetuated by con-men in Salt Lake City.

FYI–most of the elites in SLC know full well that their religion is based on hogwash, yet because of being so deep in the culture and being so sewn into the financial structures of the church and their businesses they go along with the lie.

Unsound
Unsound
January 12, 2020 1:47 pm

When they come to my house I just ask them about Galatians 1:8 which says:

But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach a gospel other than the one we preached to you, let them be under God’s curse!

Then ask them to to read what it says on the cover of their Book of Mormon; printed after Joseph Smith’s alleged encounters with the angel Moroni.

Moroni? Really? These names. They’re like cosmic punchlines.
comment image

Eyes Wide Shut
Eyes Wide Shut
  Unsound
January 12, 2020 2:38 pm

Moron-I?

gilberts
gilberts
  Unsound
January 12, 2020 11:07 pm

I feel like the book of moron is like the new star wars sequels. Unnecessary, stupid, and tacked onto an already finished story just to grab some cash. Nobody needed that and nobody needed them, either.

gilberts
gilberts
January 12, 2020 3:52 pm

And just like that, a crazy cult was born.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
January 12, 2020 5:04 pm

All these cult leaders have the same thing in common. They all report that an angel spoke to them. They are either liars, insane or telling the truth. I personally believe that in most cases they are reporting the truth as they “experienced” it.

Unsound found the right verse. Paul used it for a reason.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  grace country pastor
January 12, 2020 5:13 pm

Maybe an angel did talk to them. Just not a good angel. I figure the Mohammedans’ “Jibril” (Gabriel) may have been “Shaitan”. Or Mo made it all up so he could have more sex.

gilberts
gilberts
  Iska Waran
January 12, 2020 11:04 pm

Mo’ was a child molesting highway robber who cribbed his shit from the Jews in the hopes of winning them over, failed, and then turned them into his mortal enemies. Nothing holy there.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 13, 2020 1:27 am

Mark Twain mocked the shit out of the Book of Mormon – a mockery unmatched until Matt Taibbi took on Thomas Friedman.

http://www.truthandgrace.com/twainbom.htm

https://delong.typepad.com/egregious_moderation/2009/01/matt-taibbi-flathead-the-peculiar-genius-of-thomas-l-friedman.html