Documents, Volume 5, Part 2 Introduction: 5 December 1835–7 February 1836
Part 2: 5 December 1835–7 February 1836
As JS continued to prepare church leaders in , Ohio, to receive an of divine power in the nearly completed , jealousy and accusations of inequality
persisted among some members of the . In a 15 December 1835 letter to JS, accused of unfairly
restricting Hyde’s credit at the temple while allowing JS’s younger brother, , to accrue substantial
debt. A number of
documents in this part also relate to a mid-December confrontation
between JS and William. On 17 December, tension between the brothers
erupted into violence during a session of the Kirtland debating
school. The fight, which
left JS unable to “sit down, or rise up, without help,” and
subsequent events culminated in ecclesiastical charges against
William Smith and a disciplinary hearing before the church
presidency and other leaders.
JS lamented the divisions that existed among the Twelve
and within his own family, and his 1 January 1836 journal entry
expressed hope that the Saints would “come forth like gold seven
times tried in the fire, being made perfect throug[h] sufferings,
and temptations, and the blessings of heaven and earth multiplyed
upon our heads.” The
new year did in fact usher in a period of relative calm for JS. In
the weeks after reconciling with , JS juggled
various ecclesiastical responsibilities, including solemnizing
several marriages and giving blessings to two men who had
participated in the expedition. During the second
week of January, JS also participated in a three-day feast for the
poor, hosted by
and his wife,
. In addition to
attending to church duties, JS devoted significant time to studying
the Hebrew language. On 4 January, he organized a , which his peers asked him to lead until
the school committee was able to identify and hire a trained
teacher. On 26 January, a Hebrew scholar named arrived in and began teaching the school, which included JS
as a pupil.
In mid-January, JS met with the presidency and
other leaders of the church to “take into concideration the subject
of the .”
This “grand council”—consisting of the church presidency, the presidency, the Quorum of the Twelve, and the
and of and Missouri—voted on various administrative
changes, including filling vacant leadership positions, and
appointed JS, , , , and as a committee to draft
rules of conduct for the . On 15 January, the committee presented
their proposals—which stressed order and reverence while in the
House of the Lord—to the grand council, which approved the
rules.
The next day, JS and other members of the presidency met with the
Twelve, who had requested an opportunity to air unresolved
grievances. After listening to each of the men speak, JS
acknowledged their concerns and asked forgiveness for sometimes
speaking too harshly and injuring their feelings. It appears that
the meeting largely resolved their differences; as JS’s journal
records, the men “took each others by the hand in confirmation of
our covenant and their was a perfect unison of feeling on this
occasion, and our hearts overflowed with blessings, which we
pronounced upon eachothers heads.”
The spirit of unity continued into the following week. On 21 January, JS introduced to the presidency and
other select men a new ritual in which they and perfumed their bodies and then each other with pure oil, all in preparation for
the solemn assembly and endowment of power. After JS received
blessings and prophecies from and
the presidency, he and several others reported that they saw a
vision of God and the heavens and that angelic hosts ministered to
them. In the week following
this heavenly manifestation, JS and the presidency continued to
organize the church’s officers and
prepare them to receive the “holy anointing.”