Documents, Volume 9, Part 4 Introduction: March 1842
Part 4: March 1842
In March 1842
JS engaged in several significant endeavors that shaped later
practices and beliefs. These
included editing the church newspaper Times and Seasons,
translating a portion of the Book of Abraham, joining the fraternal order of
Freemasonry, participating in the organization of the , and expounding church doctrine in sermons. He also
attended to various administrative responsibilities as trustee-in-trust
of the church and as a member of the ,
Illinois, city council. Part 4 contains thirty-one documents, including
numerous letters, editorial content published in the Times and
Seasons, and a variety of discourses, financial documents,
city council motions, and meeting minutes.
In early March, JS focused on producing content for the Times and
Seasons. Part 4 features a draft of
an unpublished editorial, a notice to laborers, and editorial passages from the 1 March and 15 March issues of the Times and
Seasons.
This part also includes two more notable documents that appeared in the
newspaper in March: The first, titled “Church
History,” is a narrative account of JS’s early visions and of
the rise and growth of the church, concluding with a summary of
Latter-day Saint beliefs. The second is an installment of
the Book of Abraham, a document that JS presented as an
inspired translation of Egyptian papyri acquired in , Ohio, in 1835. Though JS translated portions of the Book of Abraham
between July and November of that
year, it appears that he stopped for a period and did not resume his
translation efforts until early 1842.
In late February 1842
JS directed to prepare woodcuts of
scenes depicted on the papyri for publication in the Times and Seasons. The
portion of the Book of Abraham featured in this part appears to have
been translated in 1842 and was published in the 15 March
issue of the newspaper; also featured is a facsimile of an
Egyptian hypocephalus—a circular funerary amulet placed beneath the head
of a deceased person to warm and protect them in the afterlife—with an
accompanying explanation.
In addition to editing the Times and Seasons,
JS spent time in early March negotiating a financial
settlement with , the son of former church
.
Oliver Granger began acting as a financial agent for church leaders
during early fall 1837 and
continued in that capacity through the late 1830s. In
1840 he was authorized to settle church debts incurred in
and . After Granger passed away in in August 1841, his eldest son, Gilbert, took possession of
some church property and records. Part 4 features two documents produced
prior to or during JS’s negotiations with Gilbert Granger over his
father’s estate, which took place on 2–3 March.
In mid-March, JS participated in the organization of a fraternal society
and of a sororal society in . On
15 March 1842 JS officiated as Grand
Chaplain during the establishment of the Nauvoo Lodge of Freemasonry,
and later that evening he was initiated into the organization as an
Entered Apprentice (first degree) Mason; on the following day JS and
were both “passed” as Fellow Craft (second
degree) Masons and then “raised” as Master (third degree) Masons. This
was an unusually rapid advancement through the three degrees of a
Freemasonry lodge. Two documents featured in part 4 relate to these
events.
On 17 March, JS attended and spoke at the organization of the Female
Relief Society of , an association
created to provide relief to the city’s poor and to strengthen the moral
values of the city’s female community. The
fledgling organization selected , JS’s wife, as
its leader and initially met on Thursdays in the large room on the
second floor of . Part 4 features three documents that relate to JS’s
involvement with the Relief
Society: minutes from the 17 March organizational meeting, a 31 March
discourse, and a 31 March letter
addressed to Emma Smith and the Relief Society that warned members to be
wary of unscrupulous men who were soliciting sex from some of the women
in the community.
Throughout the month of March, JS continued to fulfill his
responsibilities as trustee-in-trust of the church, a member of the
Nauvoo City Council, lieutenant general of the , and a husband and father, as well as to elucidate
doctrine as the church’s spiritual leader. Part 4 features eleven
letters to and from JS that cover a wide range of subjects, including
reports from missionaries preaching in the Northeast and in
Great Britain, communications related to land
transactions, and correspondence with about
abolitionism and the need to obtain redress for the persecutions the
Saints suffered in . This part also contains a
deed in which JS and transferred a
large parcel of land south of to
their four young children. Also included are three
motions for resolutions that JS drafted and put before the Nauvoo City
Council. On 20 March and 27 March, JS delivered discourses on the subjects of infant
mortality and , respectively; after the 27
March discourse, he baptized dozens of church members in the on behalf of their deceased relatives. Both
discourses appear here as reported by .
All told, the month of March was the most prolific month for document production in
the five-month period covered by this volume. The documents from this
month reflect the tremendous scope of JS’s vision for the
church and its growing membership.