History, 1838–1856, volume F-1 [1 May 1844–8 August 1844]

  • Source Note
  • Historical Introduction
Page 257
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<​July 8​> and security of helpless women and innocent children. The executives of and have had loud and fair warning, by the meetings in , and , of the dreadful scheme of arson and assassination that is going on to exterminate the Mormons; and if they permit the monstrous crime of the sacking of a city, the murder of men in cold blood, and the sacrifice of women and children to the demoniac fury of an inflamed mob, they will not, they cannot be held guiltless.
“There are other means by which the course of the Mormons, if unlawful or destructive of the rights of others, can be restrained and punished, but even if there be no immediate legal redress, are murder, rapine, desolation, the brand of civil war hurled among those who should be friends and neighbors— are these a suitable substitute for a little time and patience? Let the citizens of look to their votes when next they approach the ballot box, and examine well for whom and for what principles they are cast, and they can restore the Government of their to hands that will remove their grievances and reassure them in their rights much more speedily than they can rebuild one log hut sacrificed to brutal war, or atone for the blood of a single human victim.”
9 July 1844 • Tuesday
<​9​> Tuesday 9. Elders and wrote as follows:—
, Illinois, U.S. July 9th 1844
“Elder , Presiding Elder of the Church of Jesus Christ in , and the Saints in the British Empire;
Beloved Brethren,— As our beloved brother Elder <​James​> Parsons is about to leave for , we embrace this, as the first opportunity, to communicate to you one of the most signal events which has ever transpired in the history of the church. It has been declared by all the former Prophets and Apostles, that God had reserved unto himself a peculiar people for the last days, who would not only be zealous in good works, but who should be purified as gold in the furnace seven times, and who would have to endure through faith and patience in all long suffering, in meekness, forbearance, love, and every God-like virtue unto the end as good soldiers, and meet all the scorn, scoff, and derision, and chiding, buffeting and persecution a wicked world could heap upon them, [HC 7:171] and even death itself, not counting their lives dear unto themselves, that they might obtain their inheritance in that kingdom of their heavenly Father, which Jesus their elder brother had gone to prepare for them.
“It is in this period of time that we are permitted to live. It is at the dawning of that day of days in which our Heavenly Father is about to usher in that glorious period when times and seasons shall be changed and earth renewed; when after rumors and commotions, turmoils, strife, confusion, blood and slaughter, the sword shall be beaten into ploughshares, and peace and truth triumphantly prevail o’er all the footstool of Jehovah. The day of these events has dawned, although to human view a cloud has o’er spread the horizon.
“You are acquainted with the general history of the Church to which we belong; from our lips and pens you have learned its rise and [p. 257]
July 8 and security of helpless women and innocent children. The executives of and have had loud and fair warning, by the meetings in , and , of the dreadful scheme of arson and assassination that is going on to exterminate the Mormons; and if they permit the monstrous crime of the sacking of a city, the murder of men in cold blood, and the sacrifice of women and children to the demoniac fury of an inflamed mob, they will not, they cannot be held guiltless.
“There are other means by which the course of the Mormons, if unlawful or destructive of the rights of others, can be restrained and punished, but even if there be no immediate legal redress, are murder, rapine, desolation, the brand of civil war hurled among those who should be friends and neighbors— are these a suitable substitute for a little time and patience? Let the citizens of look to their votes when next they approach the ballot box, and examine well for whom and for what principles they are cast, and they can restore the Government of their to hands that will remove their grievances and reassure them in their rights much more speedily than they can rebuild one log hut sacrificed to brutal war, or atone for the blood of a single human victim.”
9 July 1844 • Tuesday
9 Tuesday 9. Elders and wrote as follows:—
, Illinois, U.S. July 9th 1844
“Elder , Presiding Elder of the Church of Jesus Christ in , and the Saints in the British Empire;
Beloved Brethren,— As Elder James Parsons is about to leave for , we embrace this, as the first opportunity, to communicate to you one of the most signal events which has ever transpired in the history of the church. It has been declared by all the former Prophets and Apostles, that God had reserved unto himself a peculiar people for the last days, who would not only be zealous in good works, but who should be purified as gold in the furnace seven times, and who would have to endure through faith and patience in all long suffering, in meekness, forbearance, love, and every God-like virtue unto the end as good soldiers, and meet all the scorn, scoff, and derision, and chiding, buffeting and persecution a wicked world could heap upon them, [HC 7:171] and even death itself, not counting their lives dear unto themselves, that they might obtain their inheritance in that kingdom of their heavenly Father, which Jesus their elder brother had gone to prepare for them.
“It is in this period of time that we are permitted to live. It is at the dawning of that day of days in which our Heavenly Father is about to usher in that glorious period when times and seasons shall be changed and earth renewed; when after rumors and commotions, turmoils, strife, confusion, blood and slaughter, the sword shall be beaten into ploughshares, and peace and truth triumphantly prevail o’er all the footstool of Jehovah. The day of these events has dawned, although to human view a cloud has o’er spread the horizon.
“You are acquainted with the general history of the Church to which we belong; from our lips and pens you have learned its rise and [p. 257]
Page 257