Footnotes
While in hiding, JS had received reports that the arresting officers threatened to set fire to Nauvoo, that a militia was on its way, and that a force would search every house in the city. (JS, Journal, 13 and 15 Aug. 1842; see also Letter from Wilson Law, 15 Aug. 1842.)
JS closed his 16 August letter to Law by stating that he would “wait with earnest expectation for your advices” and that he was “anxious” to receive Law’s response. (Letter to Wilson Law, 16 Aug. 1842.)
Near the close of his letter to Law, JS asked him to “write and give me . . . all other information that has come to hand today and what are the signs of the times.” (Letter to Wilson Law, 16 Aug. 1842.)
In his 15 August letter to JS, Law opined that the arresting officers knew better than to attack the Saints. (Letter from Wilson Law, 15 Aug. 1842.)
See Daniel 4:35.
Law used similar language in his 15 August letter to JS. (See Letter from Wilson Law, 15 Aug. 1842.)
See Proverbs 28:1.
A notice published in the 15 August issue of the Times and Seasons signaled that “a good many strangers” were in Nauvoo and encouraged city authorities to be on guard. (“Notice,” Times and Seasons, 15 Aug. 1842, 3:893.)
In his 14 August letter to Law, JS instructed him to defend the Saints against violence, if necessary. (Letter to Wilson Law, 14 Aug. 1842.)
Thomas Ford, a Democrat, won the 1 August gubernatorial election with strong support from the Latter-day Saints. Law's recommendation that JS wait for Ford to take office before returning to Nauvoo indicates that church members hoped Ford would be more sympathetic to JS and the Saints than Governor Thomas Carlin had been. Ford, as stipulated by state law, took office in December 1842. (“O Yes! O Yes!,” Wasp, 16 July 1842, [2]; “Official Returns,” Warsaw [IL] Signal, 13 Aug. 1842, [3]; Illinois Constitution of 1818, art. 3, sec. 3; Journal of the Senate . . . of Illinois, 8 Dec. 1842, 33.)
The Wasp. Nauvoo, IL. Apr. 1842–Apr. 1843.
Warsaw Signal. Warsaw, IL. 1841–1853.
Illinois Office of Secretary of State. First Constitution of Illinois, 1818. Illinois State Archives, Springfield.
Journal of the Senate of the Thirteenth General Assembly of the State of Illinois, at Their Regular Session, Begun and Held at Springfield, December 5, 1842. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1842.
See 1 Samuel 17:45.
See Proverbs 2:22; and Jeremiah 30:20.
Law might have had a theocracy in mind. An editorial in the 15 July issue of the Times and Seasons contrasted the government of God with the government of men, noting that it took the form of theocracy and promoted “the universal good, of the universal world.” (“The Government of God,” Times and Seasons, 15 July 1842, 3:855–858.)
On 5 July 1842, Nauvoo’s city council passed an ordinance that expanded the municipal court’s power to investigate all writs used to arrest Nauvoo citizens; that ordinance went beyond the city’s incorporating charter. On 8 August, when three officers arrived in Nauvoo to arrest JS and Orrin Porter Rockwell, the city council passed a new ordinance granting the municipal court even more power, and JS and Rockwell succeeded in petitioning the municipal court for writs of habeas corpus. Uncertain about whether the municipal court had power to grant these writs, the officers traveled back to Quincy for further direction. When they returned to Nauvoo with instructions to bring JS before the county circuit court, they could not find him. Although the Saints regarded their habeas corpus laws as legal, Carlin later challenged the legality of the municipal court’s power to grant writs in cases that did not fall directly under the city’s ordinances. (Ordinance, 5 July 1842; Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo, 16 Dec. 1840; JS, Journal, 8 and 10 Aug. 1842; Nauvoo City Council Minute Book, 8 Aug. 1842, 9; Petition to Nauvoo Municipal Court, 8 Aug. 1842; Writ of habeas corpus for JS, 10 Aug. 1842, copy, Nauvoo, IL, Records, CHL; “The Arrest,” Wasp, 13 Aug. 1842, [2]; “Persecution,” Times and Seasons, 15 Aug. 1842, 3:886–889; Thomas Carlin, Quincy, IL, to Emma Smith, [Nauvoo, IL], 7 Sept. 1842.)
The Wasp. Nauvoo, IL. Apr. 1842–Apr. 1843.