POPULARITY
Emma Hale Smith; the sacrament; authority in the Church (D&C sections 25, 27–28) by Mike Parker (Mike Parker is a long-time FAIR member who has graciously allowed us to use materials he originally prepared for the Hurricane Utah Adult Religion Class. The scripture passages covered in his lessons don't conform exactly to the Come, Follow Me […] The post Come, Follow Me with FAIR – Doctrine and Covenants 25, 27–28 – Mike Parker appeared first on FAIR.
March 17-23After the sacred gathering of nearly four dozen Saints in the Whitmer Home in Fayette, New York on Tuesday, April 6, 1830, this tiny band was given the commission to take the restored gospel of Jesus Christ to all the world. What an overwhelming task! How could so few bless so many? And yet, the Lord knew who He was calling and what various converts would do. One eager young man, twenty-two-year-old Samuel Harrison Smith, younger brother of the Prophet Joseph, stepped forward and volunteered to start the work. And within 100 days, a remarkable woman was called to give her gifts and talents to the kingdom—Emma Hale Smith.
In this episode of Come, Follow Church History from Scripture Central, Lynne Wilson and special guest Mark Staker, go deeper into the life of Emma Smith. They share stories and facts about Emma Hale Smith's siblings and parents. Were they believers? Did any of them convert to the gospel? Did they serve missions?
DEPRESSION, BIPOLAR & ANXIETY - LIVING AS A LATTER-DAY SAINT, LDS
Send us a textThis week seemed appropriate to bring back Emma to our memory. She was and is a valiant servant of God. I believe that she was valiant to the end, even given what has been written. She did not travel west. She may have had some issues with Brigham and others. What I see in her is a brave, kindhearted, determined woman. Much of what occurred in her later life can be reasonably explained through the science of mental health we know today. I sincerely hope that you enjoy this podcast.
#sud #mormon #lds Canal do novo projeto. Psicanálise Play: https://youtube.com/@psicanaliseplay Matéria 60 minutes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIP_YuyiN_w Matéria The Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/may/15/mormon-church-whistleblower-taxes-hedge-fund Mande seu áudio de até 15 minutos para o WhatsApp a seguir. Lembre-se de falar seu nome e de onde é. https://wa.me/message/OYWI2WG7PAB4F1 Citações de líderes da igreja: “Você vê alguns grupos da família humana que são negros, desajeitados, feios, desagradáveis e baixos em seus costumes, selvagens e aparentemente sem a benção da inteligência [...] o Senhor pôs uma marca nele, que é o nariz chato e a pele negra”. (BRIGHAN YOUNG, Jornal dos Discursos, vol. 7, p. 290,291) “Se eu tivesse algo a ver com negros, eu os manteria limitados à sua própria espécie por lei rigorosa...”. (JOSEPH SMITH – História da Igreja, vol. 5, p. 218,219) “[...] a marca colocada nele devido à sua revolta contra Deus e o assassinato de Abel é a pele negra [...]” (BRUCE McCONKIE) “[...] A posteridade de Caim (e mais tarde de Cão) foi amaldiçoada com aquilo que chamamos características raciais negróides”. (DOUTRINA MÓRMON, p. 606) “[...] Caim foi amaldiçoado com uma pele escura; ele se tornou Pai dos negros...” (DOUTRINA MÓRMON, p.109.) “[...] a posteridade de Caim é negra porque ele [Caim] cometeu assassinato.” (O CAMINHO PARA A PERFEIÇÃO, p.105,106) “Milhões de almas tem vindo a este mundo amaldiçoadas com uma pele negra, e tem lhes sido negados o privilégio do Sacerdócio e a plenitude das bênçãos do Evangelho”. (O CAMINHO PARA A PERFEIÇÃO, p.43) “[...] era necessário que o Diabo tivesse um representante na terra assim como Deus” [Tal descendente aqui seria a raça negra]. (JOHN TAYLOR – Jornal dos Discursos, vol. 22, pg. 304.) Umas das 8 versões da primeira visão de Joseph Smith diferente da apresentada oficialmente: https://img.comunidades.net/dig/digitalizarimagens/Vers_o_da_primeira_vis_o.png O relato de Emma Smith ter pego Joseph com Fanny Alger no celeiro: Em 1872, William McLellin escreveu uma carta para Emma e o filho de Joseph, Joseph Smith III (Necessário traduzir em português) https://www.fairlatterdaysaints.org/respostas/Joseph_Smith/Poligamia/Esposas_plurais/Fanny_Alger/Descoberto_em_um_celeiro Sobre o Banco de Joseph Smith: https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/topic/kirtland-safety-society Presidente do CTM acusado de abusos: https://vozesmormons.org/2018/03/26/funcionario-do-ctm-corrobora-parte-da-acusacao-de-abuso-sexual/ Esposas de Joseph Smith: http://investigacoessud.blogspot.com/2010/01/poligamia-joseph-smith-e-suas-33.html Como é que Emma Hale Smith reagiu à prática de casamento plural de Joseph? https://www.fairlatterdaysaints.org/respostas/Joseph_Smith/Poligamia/Emma_Smith/Qual_foi_a_rea%C3%A7%C3%A3o_dela Plágio do Livro do mórmon: https://www.fairlatterdaysaints.org/respostas/O_Livro_de_M%C3%B3rmon/Acusa%C3%A7%C3%B5es_de_Pl%C3%A1gio Carta do presidente dos Estados Unidos para Joseph Smith em 1843: https://img.comunidades.net/dig/digitalizarimagens/pres_eua.png Matéria sobre a multa de 5 milhões de dólares : https://g7.news/noticias/2023/02/21/igreja-mormon-multada-em-us-5-milhoes-por-usar-empresas-de-fachada-para-esconder-investimentos-da-sec Parte da entrevista em que falo sobre o mórmon uma ova: https://youtu.be/8_M2DgJluCI Entrevista completa: https://www.youtube.com/live/P_MpIu5LImc?feature=share Imprima e assine seu certificado de "Participante da locomotiva em alta velocidade que não tem parada do mórmon uma ova podcast" pelo link abaixo: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1drxICtuddY38MzEKtFFRONtpYGONQQqW/view Mande a sua foto com o certificado informando seu nome para o e-mail: mormonumaova@gmail.com Modelo de Carta de Renúncia á condição de membro (Pedido de Resignação) para ser preenchido e enviado aos líderes locais - presidente do ramo, bispo ou presidente da estaca. httpsshaive.google.com/file/d/1o-_PVzYvh
We delve deeper into the hardships of last year, our response, and talk about the blessings of remaining true to the gospel during trials of
Lindsay Hansen Park interviews two actors who took on iconic Mormon roles for "Under the Banner of Heaven": Tyner Rushing as Emma Hale Smith, and Scott Michael Campbell as Brigham Young. Did one of them really end up in Relief Society one Sunday?
Lindsay Hansen Park interviews two actors who took on iconic Mormon roles for “Under the Banner of Heaven”: Tyner Rushing as Emma Hale Smith, and Scott Michael Campbell as Brigham Young. Did one of them really end up in Relief Society one Sunday?
DEPRESSION, BIPOLAR & ANXIETY - LIVING AS A LATTER-DAY SAINT, LDS
Thoughts and perspective of the life of Emma Hale Smith, wife of the prophet Joseph Smith
From acting as a scribe for the translation of the Book of Mormon to founding the Relief Society, Emma Hale Smith was a key figure in the Restoration. She was also her husband's anchor and the love of his life. But how much do we really know about her role, teachings, and leadership? Drawing upon letters written by Emma to Joseph and to many others, along with minutes from Relief Society meetings and other artifacts, this book sketches a more complete portrait of this elect lady. It allows each of us to become personally acquainted with Emma as we learn more about her essential work as a leader, a wife, and a mother in the early days of the Church. Today's guest is Dr. Jennifer Reeder, who wrote a biography of Emma Smith, entitled FIRST: THE LIFE AND FAITH OF EMMA SMITH from Deseret Book. Dr. Reeder will be delivering the Neal A. Maxwell Institute Lecture on November 13 at 7 PM at the Hinckley Alumni Center at BYU. Make plans to attend her lecture! And follow us on Instagram at @BYUMaxwell. The post Maxwell Institute Podcast #131: An Elect Lady, with Jennifer Reeder appeared first on Neal A. Maxwell Institute | BYU.
From acting as a scribe for the translation of the Book of Mormon to founding the Relief Society, Emma Hale Smith was a key figure in the Restoration. She was also her husband's anchor and the love of his life. But how much do we really know about her role, teachings, and leadership? Drawing upon […] The post Maxwell Institute Podcast #131: An Elect Lady, with Jennifer Reeder appeared first on Neal A. Maxwell Institute | BYU.
Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast featuring Hank Smith & John Bytheway
Imagine growing up hearing the stories of Emma Hale Smith, Phoebe Carter, the Whitmers, Brigham Young, and Brother Joseph. This week's guest, Dr. Susan Easton Black, didn't grow up hearing fairy tales but true stories of bravery, faithfulness, betrayal, and courage. Dr. Black teaches us how the Lord taught His People that Zion and the Church were more than a place they visited on Sundays, how they received the command to “gather to the Ohio,” and how Joseph continued his New Translation of the Bible. Do we sacrifice as willingly for the Lord as our earliest Saints as we study Doctrine and Covenants 37-40?Shownotes: www.followhim.coYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcast
Recordaremos la vida, el esfuerzo y sacrificio, y el legado de Emma Hale Smith.
René and Dustin add their Queer Voices to the Voices of the Restoration alongside those who knew Emma Hale Smith!Add your voice by sending your thoughts to: lovespokenqueer@gmail.comor DM us on Social:Instagram: @lovespokenqueerTwitter: @lovespokenqueerFacebook: Love Is Spoken Queer
This discussion is about the life of Emma Hale Smith, wife of the prophet Joseph Smith, and her part in the Restoration of the Church of Jesus Christ. Jennifer Reeder is a nineteenth-century women's history specialist at the LDS Church History Department. She has a PhD in American history from George Mason University, with an emphasis in women's history and religious history. She is the author of the soon to be released book, "First: The Life and Faith of Emma Smith". This is the fourth of several Living Faith Discussions the Laguna Niguel stake will host this year connected to Church history events highlighted in Come, Follow Me. If you missed previous discussions or want to see the lineup of speakers for the year, visit our website: http://www.lnstake.org/living-faith
Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast featuring Hank Smith & John Bytheway
Part II is a deep dive into Emma Hale Smith's personality, abilities, and role in establishing the early Church. Emma is educated, adept, and gifted. She completes Joseph and enables him to accomplish the Lord's work. We learn how Emma was consistently supported and encouraged by Lucy Mack Smith, who reminds us that Emma constantly and consistently served those around her. See a new side of Emma Hale Smith with our expert, Dr. Lisa Olsen Tait, as well as reviewing her better-known accomplishments of creating a hymnal, acting as scribe, and lending her abilities to establishing the Church in this dispensation.Show notes available at www.followhim.co
March 8-14 After the sacred gathering of nearly four dozen Saints in the Whitmer Home in Fayette, New York on Tuesday, April 6, 1830, this little, no, tiny band was given the commission to take the restored gospel of Jesus Christ to all the world. What an overwhelming task! How could so few bless so many? And yet, the Lord knew who He was calling and what various converts would do. One eager young man, twenty-two-year-old Samuel Harrison Smith, younger brother of the Prophet Joseph, stepped forward and volunteered to start the work. And within 100 days, a remarkable woman was called to give her gifts and talents to the kingdom—Emma Hale Smith.
Laryssa Waldron joins us to share her insights about the Mother, and the Wife of the Prophet Joseph Smith. For more info see https://solo.to/bro.erekson
Episode 11: Emma Hale Smith: One of those whose contribution to the Restoration is incalculable was Emma Hale. A revelation, now known as Doctrine and Covenants 25, referred to her as “an elect lady whom I have called.” Emma was Joseph Smith's wife, companion and confidant. This episode of History of the Saints is about her, her family, and those early years. Scholars: Brittany Chapman, Mark Staker, Larry Porter, Steven Harper
The son of converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Jason Deere has lived most of his life in Oklahoma or Tennessee. After finding success in the music industry, Deere took his love for country music and combined it with a love for the gospel. The result, The Nashville Tribute Band, has inspired thousands and redefined Deere’s career. "The heartbeat [of the Church] is family by family and it’s when you put a bunch of heartbeats together that you have something that really starts to sound like thunder.” Show Notes: 2:46- The Son of Converts 6:50- A Bishop’s Encouragement 9:08- Driven by a Love for Music 12:38- “Too Stupid to Know I Couldn’t Do It” 15:30- Secular Taking a Backseat to the Spiritual 18:43- Beginning of Nashville Tribute Band 21:40- What You’re Known For 24:20- Respect of Other Artists 26:27- Two Songs About Women 29:20- Don’t Miss This 33:53- Miracles That Brought Us Here 38:04- Soundtrack 39:35- The Power of Families 43:03- What Does It Mean To Be “All In” the Gospel of Jesus Christ? Find the full episode transcript at ldsliving.com/allin. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Interview: In this episode of the LDS Perspectives Podcast, Laura Harris Hales interviews Mark Ashurst-McGee, a co-editor of a new book, Producing Ancient Scripture: Joseph Smith’s Translation Projects in the Development of Mormon Christianity. The Book of Mormon is well known, but there were several subsequent texts that Joseph Smith translated after the Book of Mormon. This collaborative volume is the first to provide in-depth analysis of each and every one of Joseph Smith’s translation projects. The compiled chapters explore Smith’s translation projects in focused detail and in broad contexts, as well as in comparison with one another. The various contributors approach Smith’s sacred texts historically, textually, linguistically, and literarily to offer a multidisciplinary view. While most of the contributors are Latter-day Saints, not all are. From its inception, the book was meant to be a scholarly work that anyone could read and engage in—whether a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or from any other branch of the Restoration or any denomination of Christianity or any other faith or no faith. Due to this intentional editorial decision, there is nothing in the book asserting or excluding supernatural involvement. The various translation projects are studied not in terms of the ancient origins they claim for themselves but rather in terms of their translation into English by Joseph Smith in the modern age. Here is a brief overview of the comprehensive coverage provided in the book: A chapter by religious studies scholar Christopher James Blythe examines Joseph Smith’s translation projects broadly within the Christian tradition of spiritual gifts, especially the gifts of speaking in tongues and the interpretation of tongues. A chapter by literary scholar Jared Hickman compares Smith’s teachings about the “translation” of scripture and the “translation” (bodily transfiguration and ascension) of prophets such as Enoch and Elijah, showing how these two types of translation are related. A chapter by historian Michael Hubbard MacKay investigates Joseph Smith’s earliest efforts toward translation, when he transcribed characters from the golden plates and sent a transcript thereof with Martin Harris to have it translated by prominent scholars like Samuel Mitchill and Charles Anthon. A chapter by scholars Amy Easton-Flake and Rachel Cope shows how Emma Hale Smith, Mary Musselman Whitmer, and other women made Joseph Smith’s translation work possible and how they took on the roles of witnesses to the golden plates and their translation. A chapter by scholarly writer Samuel Morris Brown investigates what the Book of Mormon has to say about the method of translation and related forms of scriptural generation. A chapter by religious studies scholar Ann Taves compares Joseph Smith and the “translating” of the Book of Mormon with Helen Schucman and the “scribing” of A Course in Miracles—another long and complex religious text produced within a relatively short period of time. A chapter by historian Richard Lyman Bushman explores how the Book of Mormon has a heightened and unusual awareness of its own construction as a book. It also considers how the early American history and culture of books and bookmaking may have influenced the way people understood this and other translation projects. A chapter by historian and comparative religion scholar Grant Hardy explores the similarities and differences between the Book of Mormon and Joseph Smith’s “thus saith the Lord” genre of commandments and other revelations (like those found in the Doctrine and Covenants), along with giving special attention to the rhetorical effect of the narrative history found in the Book of Mormon. A chapter by scholars David W. Grua and William V. Smith thoroughly investigates the text of the new account of John now found in Doctrine and Covenants 7. A chapter by New Testament scholars Thomas A.
The Interview: In this episode of the LDS Perspectives Podcast, Laura Harris Hales interviews Mark Ashurst-McGee, a co-editor of a new book, Producing Ancient Scripture: Joseph Smith’s Translation Projects in the Development of Mormon Christianity. The Book of Mormon is well known, but there were several subsequent texts that Joseph Smith translated after the Book of Mormon. This collaborative volume is the first to provide in-depth analysis of each and every one of Joseph Smith’s translation projects. The compiled chapters explore Smith’s translation projects in focused detail and in broad contexts, as well as in comparison with one another. The various contributors approach Smith’s sacred texts historically, textually, linguistically, and literarily to offer a multidisciplinary view. While most of the contributors are Latter-day Saints, not all are. From its inception, the book was meant to be a scholarly work that anyone could read and engage in—whether a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or from any other branch of the Restoration or any denomination of Christianity or any other faith or no faith. Due to this intentional editorial decision, there is nothing in the book asserting or excluding supernatural involvement. The various translation projects are studied not in terms of the ancient origins they claim for themselves but rather in terms of their translation into English by Joseph Smith in the modern age. Here is a brief overview of the comprehensive coverage provided in the book: A chapter by religious studies scholar Christopher James Blythe examines Joseph Smith’s translation projects broadly within the Christian tradition of spiritual gifts, especially the gifts of speaking in tongues and the interpretation of tongues. A chapter by literary scholar Jared Hickman compares Smith’s teachings about the “translation” of scripture and the “translation” (bodily transfiguration and ascension) of prophets such as Enoch and Elijah, showing how these two types of translation are related. A chapter by historian Michael Hubbard MacKay investigates Joseph Smith’s earliest efforts toward translation, when he transcribed characters from the golden plates and sent a transcript thereof with Martin Harris to have it translated by prominent scholars like Samuel Mitchill and Charles Anthon. A chapter by scholars Amy Easton-Flake and Rachel Cope shows how Emma Hale Smith, Mary Musselman Whitmer, and other women made Joseph Smith’s translation work possible and how they took on the roles of witnesses to the golden plates and their translation. A chapter by scholarly writer Samuel Morris Brown investigates what the Book of Mormon has to say about the method of translation and related forms of scriptural generation. A chapter by religious studies scholar Ann Taves compares Joseph Smith and the “translating” of the Book of Mormon with Helen Schucman and the “scribing” of A Course in Miracles—another long and complex religious text produced within a relatively short period of time. A chapter by historian Richard Lyman Bushman explores how the Book of Mormon has a heightened and unusual awareness of its own construction as a book. It also considers how the early American history and culture of books and bookmaking may have influenced the way people understood this and other translation projects. A chapter by historian and comparative religion scholar Grant Hardy explores the similarities and differences between the Book of Mormon and Joseph Smith’s “thus saith the Lord” genre of commandments and other revelations (like those found in the Doctrine and Covenants), along with giving special attention to the rhetorical effect of the narrative history found in the Book of Mormon. A chapter by scholars David W. Grua and William V. Smith thoroughly investigates the text of the new account of John now found in Doctrine and Covenants 7. A chapter by New Testament scholars Thomas A.
On this episode, Joseph and Hyrum Smith are locked up in Carthage Jail and they aren’t going anywhere. We take a little time to catch up with other prominent figures in Nauvoo history; this week begins with Emma Hale Smith. We discuss her role in the Relief Society, unwillingly policing polygamy rumors, running land speculation and deals while her husband is occupied, and fighting with her sister wives. Then we focus on her role in the two week period of June 12-25 1844 and her actions which have been construed by the SLC leadership to lead to Jo’s death. Is she responsible? Or, are those myths fabricated by the SLC propaganda machine which have been debunked by historians? This episode interweaves Emma’s story with the story of her seminal biographers, Valeen Tippets Avery and Linda King Newell on their journey writing Emma’s biography through the 1970s-80s. Links: Check out Writing Mormon History; Historians and their Books http://www.signaturebooks.com/product/writing-mormon-history/ Also pick up a copy of Mormon Enigma; Emma Hale Smith https://www.thriftbooks.com/w/mormon-enigma-emma-hale-smith_linda-king-newell/302792/#isbn=0252062914&idiq=9621239 Relief Society Minutes https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/nauvoo-relief-society-minute-book/1#full-transcript Emma Biography JSP https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/person/emma-hale-smith SUNSTONE!!! https://www.sunstonemagazine.com/2020symposium/ Show links: Website http://nakedmormonismpodcast.com Twitter @NakedMormonism Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Naked-Mormonism/370003839816311 Patreon http://patreon.com/nakedmormonism Music by Jason Comeau http://aloststateofmind.com/ Show Artwork http://weirdmormonshit.com/ Legal Counsel http://patorrez.com/
Plural Marriage in Nauvoo tests the faith of Church members and leaders including Joseph Smith’s wife Emma Hale Smith and his brother Hyrum.
Plural Marriage in Nauvoo tests the faith of Church members and leaders including Joseph Smith's wife Emma Hale Smith and his brother Hyrum.
Plural Marriage in Nauvoo tests the faith of Church members and leaders including Joseph Smith’s wife Emma Hale Smith and his brother Hyrum.
On this episode, we discuss the historicity of an altercation between Eliza Snow and Emma Hale Smith. Legend has it that Emma saw Eliza who was “heavy with child” kiss Jo and pushed Eliza down the stairs in a fit of jealous rage. It’s common oral tradition passed down for generations, but did it really happen? We dive into where the story came from and what the documentary history can tell us of the supposed incident. History isn’t always so cut and dry. Links: Go help BROTHER JAKE!!! https://www.gofundme.com/GoJakeGo Check out our sponsor this week promo code "Naked" for free upgrade to PRO! https://49dollarsites.com/ Figures of the Past https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101072314014;view=1up;seq=402 Nauvoo Mansion and Homestead https://history.lds.org/article/historic-sites/illinois/nauvoo/joseph-smith-homestead-and-mansion-house?lang=eng FairMormon did Emma push Eliza down the stairs https://www.fairmormon.org/answers/Joseph_Smith/Polygamy/Plural_wives/Eliza_R._Snow/Emma_pushing_Eliza_down_the_stairs Emma and Eliza and the Stairs by Beecher, Avery, and Newell https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2160&context=byusq Joseph Smith, the Prophet, His Friends, and his Family https://archive.org/details/josephsmithproph01wyme/page/58 Show links: Website http://nakedmormonismpodcast.com Twitter @NakedMormonism Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Naked-Mormonism/370003839816311 Patreon http://patreon.com/nakedmormonism Music by Jason Comeau http://aloststateofmind.com/ Show Artwork http://weirdmormonshit.com/ Legal Counsel http://patorrez.com/
On this episode, we take a time warp back to episode 2 to revisit an aspect of Mormon history largely ignored in our timeline to this point, Emma Hale Smith. Little of her own writings survive the years and she left no journal or diary. We’re forced to construct an image of Emma to live in our minds through other peripheral mentions in the hand of her closest friends and associates. We rediscover her timeline with the help of Mormon Enigma and catch up on her story leading up to the formation of the Nauvoo Female Relief Society. Check out this week's sponsor! Use promo code 'Naked' at checkout. https://49dollarsites.com/ Mormon Enigma by Newell and Avery https://www.amazon.com/Mormon-Enigma-Emma-Hale-Smith/dp/0252062914 Emma Hale Smith Bidamon biography http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/person/emma-hale-smith Smith Family https://www.lds.org/ensign/2005/12/family-of-joseph-smith-sr-and-lucy-mack-smith-the-first-family-of-the-restoration?lang=eng Lucy Mack Smith biography http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/person/lucy-mack-smith Timeline of Joseph Smith http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/bc-jsp/content/jsp/library/pdf/chart1.pdf Fanny Alger http://josephsmithspolygamy.org/plural-wives-overview/fanny-alger/ Lucinda Pendleton Morgan Harris http://josephsmithspolygamy.org/plural-wives-overview/lucinda-pendleton-harris/ Children of Emma and Joseph Smith https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children_of_Joseph_Smith God Awful Movies, Joseph Smith Prophet of the Restoration https://audioboom.com/posts/6884005-joseph-smith-prophet-of-the-restoration Show Links: Website http://nakedmormonismpodcast.com Twitter @NakedMormonism Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Naked-Mormonism/370003839816311 Patreon http://patreon.com/nakedmormonism Music by Jason Comeau http://aloststateofmind.com/ Show Artwork http://weirdmormonshit.com/ Legal Counsel http://patorrez.com/
After the martyrdom of Joseph Smith, Jr., his wife Emma Hale Smith was left with much to shoulder: salvaging Joseph's estate, the safety of her family, her own grief, and growing isolation as danger and rumors swirled around her. Through... The post In Emma's Footsteps Ep 271 The Cultural Hall appeared first on The Cultural Hall Podcast.
On this episode, the Female Relief Society of Nauvoo is finally established. We walk through the set and setting of Nauvoo in early 1842 being built on nothing more than credit. Men are the providers, while women are tasked with home chores, raising children, and maybe doing a small money-making hobby on the side to keep the house afloat. We discuss women’s roles in 19th-century America and how early feminism caused small movements to rise long before the official beginning of the Women’s Era. We read through the meeting minutes of the foundation of the Female Relief Society of Nauvoo when Emma Hale Smith was elected President. We speculate on Joseph’s intentions when it was first organized and opine on how stagnant and solidified Mormon doctrine today is in comparison to Nauvoo Mormonism of 1842. What does it take to change Mormon doctrine today? We invite on Kate Kelly to discuss her history with the Ordain Women movement. Links: Relief Society minute book http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/nauvoo-relief-society-minute-book/1#ft-historical-intro History of Relief Society http://eom.byu.edu/index.php/Relief_Society Joseph Smith Journal May 1842 http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/journal-december-1841-december-1842/25#source-note Ordain Women into priesthood https://ordainwomen.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/34WomenandPriesthoodQuotes.pdf Masonic Adoption rite http://www.masonicdictionary.com/adoptive.html Mormon Law of Adoption https://byustudies.byu.edu/content/law-adoption-one-phase-development-mormon-concept-salvation-1830-1900 Emmeline B. Wells A Voice for Mormon Women by Carol Cornwall Madsen https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1R_F9XDNepwuxB_KJUeuTmy895QDNqPtx Women in Masonry http://www.masonicinfo.com/women.htm History of Women’s Freemasonry http://womenfreemasonusa.com/history.html Order of the Eastern Star Robert Morris 1850 https://repository.library.brown.edu/studio/item/bdr:411520/ Kate Kelly http://www.katekellyesq.com/ The Fern Foundation Short Creek Service Project http://thefernfoundation.org/donate Show Links: Website http://nakedmormonismpodcast.com Twitter @NakedMormonism Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Naked-Mormonism/370003839816311 Patreon http://patreon.com/nakedmormonism Music by Jason Comeau http://aloststateofmind.com/ Show Artwork http://weirdmormonshit.com/ Legal Counsel http://patorrez.com/
Join Lindsay as she interviews historian Clair Barrus about the three American women named as “Elect Ladies,” including Jemima Wilkinson, Ann Lee, and Emma Hale Smith. Links mentioned or read from in this podcast: Clair's paper on Elect Ladies […]
Join Lindsay as she interviews historian Clair Barrus about the three American women named as “Elect Ladies,” including Jemima Wilkinson, Ann Lee, and Emma Hale Smith. Links mentioned or read from in this podcast: Clair’s paper on Elect Ladies Clair’s blog
On this episode, we discuss the lovely Emma Hale, who later became Emma Hale Smith when she married Joe, and even later becomes Emma Hale Bidamon, much after Joe dies in his notorious gunfight. We find out what Joe's father in law thinks of Joe, as well as how it relates to his conviction for fraud. There's even an interview on Emma's deathbed, given by her son, Joseph Smith III, to close the episode out.
John Larsen is joined by Jessica, Robyn, Alyssa and Zilpha to discuss the Book Mormon Enigma: Emma Hale Smith. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mormonexpression/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mormonexpression/support