1979
Kirtland: The Crucial Years
January 1979


“Kirtland: The Crucial Years,” Ensign, Jan. 1979, 24

Kirtland:

The Crucial Years

The Kirtland experience, spanning much of the 1830s, is too vast and too varied to explain in a succinct statement. We can say, however, that this was a time of paradox: it was a period of great growth in membership, but also a period of crippling apostasy; it saw the successful building of a temple, yet also severe economic depression; it was a time of unparalleled spiritual manifestations, but also a time of great persecution. We can safely say that the Kirtland years, perhaps much like our present period, brought rapid and profound change—change that has had lasting impact.

A corollary to change is often sacrifice, and sacrifice was an important characteristic of the Kirtland era. Latter-day Saints have always been challenged to give of their time and substance for the kingdom, but in the 1830s unusually demanding sacrifices were required of the Saints. Many early converts were called by revelation to gather in Ohio. At the call of the Prophet, they sold homes and farms and migrated west. They were then asked to sacrifice again by giving to the poor and contributing to various Church programs. At a time when they were few in numbers and material goods, members were called by revelation to build a temple for the Lord. While this building was under construction, brethren living in the eastern states were commanded to leave their families and march nine hundred miles to western Missouri to aid in the work there.

Non-Mormons could not comprehend why Latter-day Saints were willing to make such a variety of sacrifices, and they denounced them for their actions. These critics did not realize that the converts of the Church were motivated by a new spiritual force: the revelations recorded by a modern-day prophet of God and the Holy Ghost which testified to the new members concerning these revelations.

Throughout the 1830s Joseph Smith unfolded principles which influenced not only beliefs, but also daily behavior. Members were challenged to incorporate these concepts into their lives. Many of these converts had joined the Church shortly after meeting itinerant missionaries who were new converts themselves. At their baptism these early members understood only a few basic principles of the gospel. But while many members were initially shallow in doctrinal understanding, they were blessed with the constant flow of revelation recorded during the 1830s.

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map of northeastern Ohio

Branches of the Church in Northeastern Ohio, 1831–38

Almost half of the 136 revealed sections or revelations currently included in the Doctrine and Covenants were recorded in Ohio. Members also learned doctrine while attending school in Kirtland and while listening to the Prophet Joseph and other leaders during Sabbath and week-day meetings. Some doctrines were initially disclosed by the Prophet during private conversations and then told to others by his associates.

A multiplicity of themes was included in the revelations constantly being unfolded by the Prophet to the new members of the Church. In some instances the revelations confirmed contemporary Christian conduct. Members were instructed that pride, selfishness, idleness, dishonesty, stealing, killing, and sexual perversions were transgressions. They were told to observe the Sabbath and the laws of the land. In other instances, principles were revealed that were not emphasized by most ministers. Every member had the responsibility of teaching the gospel to others, and men of the priesthood were directed to serve as traveling elders, preaching from community to community and from house to house. Members were instructed to become acquainted with good books and to study history, geography, languages, and many other disciplines. A number of revelations emphasized that members had a responsibility to impart their substance to the poor and to consecrate material goods and talents for the building of God’s kingdom. Members were also told to magnify their callings and to be “anxiously engaged” in righteous causes.

The Saints’ understanding concerning the antiquity of the gospel, premillennial developments, the thousand years of peace, and life beyond the grave was also expanded considerably during the 1830s. While working on the inspired revision of the Bible, Joseph Smith gained new insight into the mansions in heaven. During a remarkable vision in the John Johnson home in Hiram, Ohio, the Prophet learned of the distinctive glories of the celestial, terrestrial, and telestial kingdoms. (See D&C 76.) A few years later, during a vision in the Kirtland Temple, the Prophet gained his initial understanding of the doctrine of salvation for the dead. He learned at that time (21 January 1836) that all who would have accepted the gospel had they been granted an opportunity were heirs of the highest kingdom in heaven. (See D&C 137; History of the Church, 2:380–81.)

During a series of remarkable visions in Ohio, many members of the Church gained a personal knowledge of God. Sidney Rigdon testified that on 16 January 1832, in the company of Joseph Smith, he beheld Christ on the right hand of the Father and witnessed angels worshipping God. (See D&C 76:11–14, 20–24.) In March 1833, in the Newel K. Whitney store located on the Kirtland flats, members of the school of the prophets beheld Christ and angels. (See History of the Church, 1:334–35.) Many other members beheld angels and saw the Savior of mankind during visions in the Kirtland Temple. (See History of the Church, 2:380–83, 386–87, 391–92, 430–33, 434–36.) As a consequence of these and many other visions, Joseph Smith and the Saints grew in their understanding of God. In contrast to the traditional Christian view that God was an immaterial being and was three persons of one essence, Joseph Smith taught during the 1830s that the Father and Son were two separate and distinct personages, that God had a body, and that he literally created man in his own image.1

While members were gaining an increased understanding of their responsibilities and of the future rewards that awaited the righteous, they were given the Word of Wisdom. In an age when a great many adults in America used tobacco and drank alcoholic beverages, tea, or coffee, Latter-day Saints were challenged to abandon these unhealthy habits.

Many early members also found that they had to change some of their preconceptions regarding the role and conduct of a prophet. Before joining the Church, the only acquaintance that converts generally had with prophets was through the Bible; and in the view of some, Joseph Smith appeared and acted in a manner very different from the ancient men of God. Joseph Smith did not have a long flowing beard and did not wear a long robe. Instead, he looked like his contemporaries. While laboring in the fields he wore the work clothes of his age; he played with his children; he wrestled with the strongest men in the community; and he joked with his friends. He was a man with imperfections but he was also a prophet who recorded the word of God, and some early members found this difficult to reconcile. When some members claimed to have received revelations about Church affairs, Joseph had to inform them that he alone had the authority to receive such messages. Some early converts had difficulty accepting this restriction from a person who sometimes seemed so human, and yet had spiritual authority for the Church.

While many changes occurred in the Church during the thirties, few were as significant as developments in Church government. When the Church was organized on 6 April 1830, Joseph Smith served as the first elder and Oliver Cowdery as second elder. The names and principle responsibilities of the three offices of the Aaronic Priesthood (priests, teachers, and deacons) were also known at the time the Church was organized. As the Church increased rapidly in membership during the early thirties, Joseph Smith continued to unfold to Latter-day Saints the ordained offices in the priesthood. Within five years, the Prophet directed the calling and ordination of bishops and their counselors, a First Presidency, assistant presidents, a patriarch, high councils, seventies, and apostles. He also organized priesthood quorums and the first stake of the Church. As the Prophet continued to unfold revelations and instructions relating to Church government, members faced the challenge of constantly adjusting, of altering some of their opinions, and of harmonizing their actions with the new directions they had received from the Prophet.2

While Kirtland was a time of unusual sacrifice and change, it was also a time of unusual blessings. Some have suggested that between January and May 1836, probably more Latter-day Saints beheld visions, prophesied, and spoke in tongues than during any other similar period in the history of the Church. In one fifteen-week period, Latter-day Saints reported that during ten different meetings men of the priesthood beheld heavenly beings. During eight of these meetings, many saw angels; and during five, the Savior appeared to members worshipping in the temple. (See History of the Church, 2:380–83, 386–87, 391–92, 430–36.) By following the instructions of the Prophet, many testified that they partook of spiritual blessings in a magnitude unlike anything they had previously experienced. Some who attended the dedication of the temple wrote that they experienced a spiritual feast. William Hyde testified that this was, by far, the best meeting he had ever attended. “The gifts of the gospel,” he added, “were enjoyed in a marvelous manner and angels administered unto many.” Another who reflected on those events, Benjamin Brown, recalled that the Spirit of God was poured out profusely, as on the day of Pentecost. “We had a glorious and never to be forgotten time,” he explained. “Hundreds of Elders spoke in tongues. … Angels were seen by number present, and the first endowments were received. It was during this assembly that a Saints’ favorite hymn was given by inspiration commencing—‘The Spirit of God, like a fire, is burning!’”3

Several Saints observed that six months after many members had communed with the hosts of heaven, the Spirit of the Lord was partially withdrawn from them. Daniel Tyler wrote in his autobiography that after a group of priesthood holders had received what we now know as part of the endowment, Joseph Smith cautioned them, saying: “Brethren, for some time Satan has not had power to tempt you. Some have thought that there would be no more temptation. But the opposite will come; and unless you draw near to the Lord you will be overcome and apostatize.”4 Six months after this warning had been issued, three apostles were disfellowshipped, and within one year three of the original seven presidents of the seventies had been released. Before two years had passed, eight of the twenty-five General Authorities who had witnessed some of the most remarkable events in the history of the Church had been excommunicated.

Following the completion of the Kirtland Temple, the Saints were plagued with two serious problems—poverty and unemployment. For three years (1833–36) many members in Kirtland had pooled their money and resources to build the Lord’s house. Many had given almost all of their material wealth for the construction of this building. Instead of buying property for themselves, many Saints settled on farms which had been bought by leaders of the Church and there they erected small log and frame houses. For three years missionaries had secured contributions from members throughout the Church to aid in this temple project. When the temple builders needed assistance, they turned to the Church and drew supplies from the bishop’s storehouse, the Newel K. Whitney store.

After the completion of the temple and its dedication, the flow of money to Kirtland nearly ceased. Yet the members in Kirtland had not paid all the debts which they had incurred while building the temple. In order to assist the Saints financially by increasing the supply of money, Church leaders organized the Kirtland Safety Society in January 1837. But this banking venture failed. Then in the spring, the panic of 1837 swept across the state of Ohio, and creditors insisted that the Mormon leaders pay their debts. In the midst of a cancerous depression, Joseph Smith was unable to collect money from others and he was unable to meet all of his financial obligations. Enraged, a few individuals blamed Joseph Smith for their plight and left the Church.5

While the economic distress of the Saints was aggravated by the collapse of the Kirtland Safety Society and the Panic of 1837, persecution of Latter-day Saints intensified. Members of the Church had been threatened by others; and while Joseph Smith was living in Hiram, he and Sidney Rigdon had been brutally beaten and tarred and feathered by an angry mob. (See History of the Church, 1:261–65.) During the construction of the temple, members had to guard the building at night.6 Then, amidst intensified apostate mobocracy, Joseph Smith fled Kirtland early in 1838. (See History of the Church, 2:529; 3:1.) Shortly thereafter other Latter-day Saints were warned of an imminent attack if they did not abandon their homes. As in Clay County in 1836 and later in Nauvoo (1846), members left Kirtland because they were forced to. In 1838 much of the Church membership in the Kirtland area (which had grown from about 150 in 1833 to approximately 2000 in 1837) headed west towards Missouri. Only 200 Saints remained for a few years within the shadows of the recently completed temple, after which many of them migrated to Nauvoo.

Today, members encounter some of the same challenges experienced by the Kirtland Saints. We sacrifice financially by supporting missionaries and by contributing to building projects and other Church programs. With the current growth and expansion of the Church, more and more converts are being called to positions of responsibility. Like the Kirtland Saints, members are currently challenged to learn their duties and magnify their callings. In this contemporary world of rapid change, Latter-day Saints are also constantly challenged to endorse new policies and programs of the Church. As in the 1830s, individuals today have the responsibility of gaining a witness of the reality of the Restoration and of learning to harmonize their pattern of conduct with the inspired teachings of the living prophets.

Notes

  1. Truman Coe, “Mormonism” The Ohio Observer (Hudson), 11 Aug. 1836, pp. 1–2; N. B. Lundwall, comp., A Compilation Containing the Lectures on Faith, Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, n.d., p 48. See also remarks of Zebedee Coltrin in High Priests Records of Spanish Fork, Utah, Sept. 1880, Church Archives; Salt Lake School of the Prophets Minutes, Church Archives, 3 Oct. 1883, p. 59.

  2. William Hyde, “The Private Journal of William Hyde,” typescript, Brigham Young University, Special Collections, p. 7.

  3. Benjamin Brown, Testimonies of the Truth, Liverpool: S. W. Richards, 1853, pp. 10–11.

  4. Daniel Tyler, “Incidents of Experience,” Scraps of Biography. Tenth Book of the Faith-Promoting Series, Salt Lake City: Juvenile Instructor Office, 1883, pp. 32–33.

  5. For additional information on Mormon economy in Kirtland, see Marvin S. Hill, C. Keith Rooker, and Larry T. Wimmer, “The Kirtland Economy Revisited: A Market Critique of Sectarian Economics,” Brigham Young University Studies 17 (Summer 1977): 391–95.

  6. “Elder Kimball’s Journal,” Times and Seasons 6 (15, Jan. 1845): 771; History of the Church, 2:2.

  • Milton V. Backman, Jr., a professor of Church history and doctrine at Brigham Young University, teaches the Gospel Doctrine course in the Edgemont Ninth Ward, Provo Utah Edgemont Stake.

Top, far left: The Chagrin River near Mayfield, Ohio, where many of Sidney Rigdon’s followers were baptized, following his example. Top left: Old Randall Road, Kirtland, Ohio, looks just about the same now as it did to the early Saints. Below, left: Kirtland homesite of John E. Page who served two highly successful missions in Canada in the late 1830s and was ordained an apostle in 1838 by Brigham Young and Heber C. Kimball. Eight years later he was excommunicated for a “murmuring disposition” that led him astray from Church teachings. Below: Kirtland, today, viewed from the north. The Chillicothe (Smith) Road extends diagonally past the temple, center, to the junction at lower right where Orson Hyde’s home and Newel K. Whitney’s store still stand amid more modern structures. (Photography by Jed A. Clark.)