Footnotes
Reflections and Blessings, 16 and 23 Aug. 1842; see also Genesis 49:29–32; 50:2–13, 25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32; and Brown, In Heaven as It Is on Earth, chap. 4.
Brown, Samuel M. In Heaven as It Is on Earth: Joseph Smith and the Early Mormon Conquest of Death. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012.
Woodruff, Journal, 16 Apr. 1843.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Parley P. Pratt, Alton, IL, 1 Apr. 1843, Letter to the Editor, Times and Seasons, 1 Apr. 1843, 4:148–149. JS learned approximately two weeks before he gave the featured discourse that Barnes had died.
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
See Historical Introduction to Discourse, 4 July 1843.
Woodruff evidently left three blank pages in his journal with the intention of filling them with the discourse, but he used only two and one-third of the pages. (See Smith, “Joseph Smith’s Sermons,” 224–225.)
Smith, William V. “Joseph Smith’s Sermons and the Early Mormon Documentary Record.” In Foundational Texts of Mormonism: Examining Major Early Sources, edited by Mark Ashurst-McGee, Robin Scott Jensen, and Sharalyn D. Howcroft, 190–230. New York: Oxford University Press, 2018.
The Book of Mormon contains multiple references to the burial of the dead. Native American views on the interment of their dead were widely discussed in the United States during the 1830s, as the federal government implemented removal policies that forcibly separated Indians from the burial grounds of their ancestors. (See Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 171, 269, 554 [Mosiah 9:19; Alma 19:1; Ether 14:22]; and Speeches on the Passage of the Bill for the Removal of the Indians, 28, 127, 211.)
Speeches on the Passage of the Bill for the Removal of the Indians, Delivered in the Congress of the United States, April and May 1830. Boston: Perkins and Marvin, 1830.
The book of Genesis recounts that just prior to his death in Egypt, biblical patriarch Jacob requested that his son Joseph transport his (Jacob’s) bones to the land of Canaan and inter them near the graves of his grandparents Abraham and Sarah; his parents, Isaac and Rebekah; and his first wife, Leah. With Pharaoh’s permission, Joseph embalmed his father’s remains and led a large group of Israelites to Canaan to bury the body. After Joseph’s return to Egypt and prior to his own death, he made the same request, which was subsequently carried out by Moses and Joshua. (Genesis 49:29–32; 50:2–13, 25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32.)
See, for example, Deuteronomy 28:26; and Isaiah 14:19–20.