Documents, Volume 9, Part 5 Introduction: April 1842
Part 5: April 1842
In April 1842
JS spoke frequently at public gatherings, applied for
bankruptcy, and corresponded with members and
business associates. In addition to presiding and speaking at the
church’s 6–8 April
in ,
Illinois, JS delivered discourses on
at least four other occasions during the month. Part 5 includes the
surviving written accounts of three of them. For example, on 28 April, JS spoke to the —a women’s organization created the previous
month—regarding the gift of healing and other miraculous signs that
would “follow all that believe whether male or female.” As
editor of the Times and Seasons, JS also wrote or
approved editorials on religious topics, including a lengthy essay
titled “Try the
Spirits” in which he warned Latter-day Saints to be wary of
false prophets and spirits.
During mid-April attorney
of the , Illinois–based firm
Ralston, Warren & Wheat arrived in
advertising services of assisting applicants for bankruptcy. In August of the previous year, the federal government passed a
bankruptcy act that allowed—for the first time in American
history—voluntary bankruptcy. Saddled with extensive church debts (in
his own name) accrued in , , and , JS joined many other Nauvoo residents in seeking relief
through the provisions of the new law. Throughout the second half of the
month, JS spent time compiling lists of creditors and assets, giving notice
that he filed his petition, and traveling to the seat of , Illinois, to
declare insolvency.
JS also received letters throughout the
month, some of which continued ongoing correspondence with church
members across the country. Both and wrote from outlying of the church and forwarded church members’
donations to assist with construction of the
.
church
leader and land speculator (one of the men from
whom the church purchased the land on which Nauvoo was built) wrote to
JS regarding land transactions, oversight of which continued to occupy a
significant portion of JS’s time. Also in the eastern , missionaries and sent reports of their proselytizing
activities and successes. On 22 April over one hundred residents of
petitioned JS to establish a second branch of the church in
the city.
This part comprises sixteen documents. It includes accounts
of several JS sermons and discourses, along with
the minutes of the church’s April conference in ,
selections from the two April issues of the church’s newspaper
Times and Seasons, documents generated by JS’s
application for bankruptcy, seven letters to JS (though no outgoing
correspondence), and a dinner invitation to officers and their spouses.