Tuesday, November 14, 2023

Joseph Smith's November 29, 1834, Prophecy Concerning the Church Being Delivered from Debt

In his 1957 PhD dissertation on the growth of the LDS Church in Kirtland, Ohio, Robert Kent Fielding wrote the following concerning the financial status of the Church in 1834:  


Undoubtedly the lowest point in the finances of the Church came in the early winter of 1834. So desperate was the situation that when members living in Lewis, New York, sent in money to be used in purchasing inheritances in Zion, Smith eagerly sought to borrow it to aid the Kirtland Church, although it was only four hundred and thirty dollars. (Smith, History, II, p. 175) From this depression the only direction was up. When the missionaries began to come in to school in November, each with his stories of newly won converts and their plans to come to Zion or to Kirtland in the Spring, there was room for optimism. If the Church could survive the winter its crisis would be past. The spirit of the gathering was powerfully affecting the Saints and would soon directly said the Kirtland cause. Smith prophesied that in a short time, God would deliver them from bondage and from debt. (Ibid.)

 

Peculiarly does he note the fulfillment of this prophecy in his journal. In January, John Tanner, a well to do merchant, came to Kirtland in response to an impression that he was needed. (Ibid., I, p. 410. Tanner had inquired more than a year before he had been advised to come to Kirtland at that time but had not done so. See “Scraps of Biography, John Tanner—Sketch of an Elder’s Life,” Faith Promoting Series. [Salt Lake City, 1882-1884[, book 10) His impression was entirely justified and surely no person was ever more welcome. He had sold his holdings in Boston, New York, and was prepared to aid the Church. He loaned Joseph two thousand dollars to pay the mortgage on his farm, loaned the temple committee thirteen thousand dollars in merchandise at New York prices and signed a note with his Prophet for thirty thousand dollars worth of goods to be shipped to New York. Tanner’s contributions brought the Church through a great financial crisis. With the coming of spring 1835, the gathering to Kirtland assumed new momentum. The newly formed Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and the Quorums of Seventies were active among the scattered Saints and stirred them up with enthusiasm to gather with the Church. By mid-summer of 1835, there were one thousand members in the Kirtland area; five or six hundred worshipped regularly with their leaders in that place. (Smith, History II; p. 296) (Robert Kent Fielding, “The Growth of the Mormon Church in Kirtland, Ohio” [PhD Dissertation; Indiana University, May 1957], 91-93)

 

Here is the prophecy Fielding refers to, from November 29, 1834:

 

After commencing and rejoicing before the Lord in this occasion, we agreed to enter into the following covenant with the Lord: viz.—

 

<Covenant of Joseph & Oliver.> That if the Lord will prosper us in our business, and open the way before us, that we may obtain means to pay our debts, that we be not troubled nor brought into disrepute before the world, nor his people, after that of all that he shall give us, we will give a tenth, to be bestowed upon the poor in his church, or, as he shall command; and that we will be faithful over that which he has committed entrusted to our care that we may obtain much; And that our children after us shall remember to observe this sacred and holy covenant; and that our children and our children’s children may know of the same, we have subscribed our names with, our own hands. (Signed) Joseph Smith Junr. <A Prayer.> Oliver Cowdery.— And now O, Father, as thou didst prosper our Father Jacob, and bless him with protection and prosperity whereever he went, from the time he made a like Covenant before and with thee; as as thou didst, even the same night, open the heavens unto him and manifest great mercy and power, and give him promises, So wilt thou do by us his sons; and as his blessings prevailed above his progenitors unto the utmost bounds of the everlasting hills, even so may our blessings prevail like his; and may thy servants be preserved from the power and influence of wicked and unrighteous men; may every weapon formed against us fall upon the head of him who shall form it; may we be blessed with a name and a place among thy Saints here, and thy sanctified when they shall rest. Amen. (History, 1838–1856, volume B-1 [1 September 1834–2 November 1838], p. 562)

 

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