Thursday, October 10, 2024

Andrew Jenson (General Conference, October 1921) on Oliver Olney

  

Oliver Olney, who joined the Church at an early day and had presided over the teachers in Kirtland, was disfellowshipped in Nauvoo, Illinois, by the high council of that place for setting himself up as a prophet. Later (February 10, 1843) Oliver Olney was tried before a court in Nauvoo for stealing goods. He declared before the court that he had been visited many times by the Ancient of Days, that he had a mission from him to the four quarters of the world, that he had visited them all except one in the south, that he had suffered much for two or three years for want of clothing, that he despised a theft except to clothe himself, etc. Joseph the Prophet declared that Olney had never seen the Ancient of Days, or anything like him, but that he was under the influence of a wicked and delusive spirit. (A Voice in the Wilderness: The 1888-1930 General Conference Sermons of Mormon Historian Andrew Jenson, ed. Reid L. Neilson and Scott D. Marianno [Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018], 225)

 

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