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Revelation, 6 May 1833 [D&C 93]

Source Note

Revelation,
Kirtland Township

Located ten miles south of Lake Erie. Settled by 1811. Organized by 1818. Latter-day Saint missionaries visited township, early Nov. 1830; many residents joined Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Population in 1830 about 55 Latter-day Saints and...

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, Geauga Co., OH, 6 May 1833; handwriting of
Frederick G. Williams

28 Oct. 1787–10 Oct. 1842. Ship’s pilot, teacher, physician, justice of the peace. Born at Suffield, Hartford Co., Connecticut. Son of William Wheeler Williams and Ruth Granger. Moved to Newburg, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio, 1799. Practiced Thomsonian botanical system...

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; four pages; Newel K. Whitney, Papers, BYU. Includes docket and archival marking.
This revelation is inscribed on one bifolium and two leaves that constituted a bifolium before they were detached along the center fold. Each of the four leaves measures 12¾ × 8 inches (32 × 20 cm). Stacked on top of each other, the two bifolia were folded in half and then trifolded in the conventional filing pattern, and a docket was added by
Newel K. Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

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in graphite: “Revelation to Joseph,
Sidny

19 Feb. 1793–14 July 1876. Tanner, farmer, minister. Born at St. Clair, Allegheny Co., Pennsylvania. Son of William Rigdon and Nancy Gallaher. Joined United Baptists, ca. 1818. Preached at Warren, Trumbull Co., Ohio, and vicinity, 1819–1821. Married Phebe...

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|
Frederick

28 Oct. 1787–10 Oct. 1842. Ship’s pilot, teacher, physician, justice of the peace. Born at Suffield, Hartford Co., Connecticut. Son of William Wheeler Williams and Ruth Granger. Moved to Newburg, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio, 1799. Practiced Thomsonian botanical system...

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&
Newell

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

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by | chastisement & also relative | to the Father & Son | 6 May 1833”.
This and several other revelations, along with many other personal and institutional documents kept by
Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

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, were inherited by his daughter Mary Jane Whitney, who married Isaac Groo. This collection was passed down in the Groo family and donated by members of the family to the Harold B. Lee Library at Brigham Young University during the period 1969–1974.
1

Andrus and Fuller, Register of the Newel Kimball Whitney Papers, 24.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Andrus, Hyrum L., and Chris Fuller, comp. Register of the Newel Kimball Whitney Papers. Provo, UT: Division of Archives and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, 1978.

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    Andrus and Fuller, Register of the Newel Kimball Whitney Papers, 24.

    Andrus, Hyrum L., and Chris Fuller, comp. Register of the Newel Kimball Whitney Papers. Provo, UT: Division of Archives and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, 1978.

Historical Introduction

Few contemporary sources shed light on the background of this 6 May 1833 revelation.
1

This revelation is not mentioned in any contemporary journal or in John Whitmer’s or John Corrill’s extensive histories.


JS’s history simply states, “On the 6th. [of May 1833] I received the following.”
2

JS History, vol. A-1, 291.


Newel K. Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

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, one of the individuals mentioned in the text, made the only other known early comment on the back of perhaps the earliest extant manuscript version of the revelation. Whitney summarized the revelation by writing, “Revelation to Joseph,
Sidny

19 Feb. 1793–14 July 1876. Tanner, farmer, minister. Born at St. Clair, Allegheny Co., Pennsylvania. Son of William Rigdon and Nancy Gallaher. Joined United Baptists, ca. 1818. Preached at Warren, Trumbull Co., Ohio, and vicinity, 1819–1821. Married Phebe...

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Frederick

28 Oct. 1787–10 Oct. 1842. Ship’s pilot, teacher, physician, justice of the peace. Born at Suffield, Hartford Co., Connecticut. Son of William Wheeler Williams and Ruth Granger. Moved to Newburg, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio, 1799. Practiced Thomsonian botanical system...

View Full Bio
&
Newell

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

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by chastisement & also relative to the Father & Son 6 May 1833.” While Whitney’s summary focused first on the reprimand the men received from the Lord in relation to their families, the majority of the revelation was “relative to the Father & Son.”
The text of the revelation appears to be closely related to the first chapter of the Gospel according to John but was likely not the direct result of JS’s work revising the New Testament, since the revision had been completed three months earlier, on 2 February 1833.
3

Minute Book 1, 2 Feb. 1833.


Further, the revisions to John’s record made in this revelation generally vary from the changes JS made to the same text in his larger project of revising the Bible. The revelation was not the first JS document to involve passages from John’s gospel. One of the earliest recorded JS revelations, dictated April 1829, was a result of a disagreement between JS and
Oliver Cowdery

3 Oct. 1806–3 Mar. 1850. Clerk, teacher, justice of the peace, lawyer, newspaper editor. Born at Wells, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of William Cowdery and Rebecca Fuller. Raised Congregationalist. Moved to western New York and clerked at a store, ca. 1825–1828...

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over the final chapter of John and whether Jesus Christ’s statement about John tarrying meant that he would not die.
4

Account of John, Apr. 1829–C [D&C 7]; John 21:21–23.


Through the means of a seer stone or stones in his possession, JS dictated the 1829 revelation, which he explained had been “translated from parchment” and included a fuller account from John, which John had “written and hid up.”
5

Account of John, Apr. 1829–C, in Book of Commandments 6:1 [D&C 7].


The Book of Mormon also references John by name several times, while no other apostle of Jesus is specifically mentioned in the book. In addition, in March 1832 JS created a document that explained the content of many verses in the book of Revelation, which the Book of Mormon explicitly asserts was authored by John the Apostle.
6

Answers to Questions, between ca. 4 and ca. 20 Mar. 1832 [D&C 77]; Book of Mormon, 1830 ed., 35 [1 Nephi 14:27]. While the Bible makes no express connection between the John that authored the gospel and the John that authored the book of Revelation, the two Johns were widely held during JS’s time to be the same person.


The revelation featured here directly challenged several prevailing Christian beliefs of the time, including doctrines regarding the nature of Jesus Christ, especially his humanity and divinity, that most Christians believed had been settled by the Council of Chalcedon in AD 451. That council held that Jesus Christ was both fully human and fully divine, “that in Christ two distinct natures were united in one person, without any change, mixture, or confusion.”
7

“Chalcedon,” in Encyclopaedia Americana, 49–50; “Eutychians,” in Ecclesiastical Cyclopaedia, 260.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Encyclopedia Americana. International ed. 30 vols. Danbury, CT: Grolier, 1995.

The Ecclesiastical Cyclopaedia; or, Dictionary of Christian Antiquities and Sects, Comprising Architecture, Controversies, Creeds, Denominations, Doctrines, Government, Heresies, History, Liturgies, Rites, Monastic Orders, and Modern Judaism. Edited by John Eadie. London: Griffin, Bohn, 1862.

This revelation instead describes Jesus as having “received not of the fulness at the first but received grace for grace and he received not of the fulness but continued from grace to grace until he received a fulness.”
Aside from addressing the nature of Jesus, the revelation also addressed humankind’s relationship with God, asserting that “man was also in the begining with God.” The premortal existence of humankind was also discussed in an earlier document dictated by JS; in his early
translation

To produce a text from one written in another language; in JS’s usage, most often through divine means. JS considered the ability to translate to be a gift of the spirit, like the gift of interpreting tongues. He recounted that he translated “reformed Egyptian...

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of the Bible, he recorded a conversation between God and Moses in which Moses was told, “For I the Lord God created all things of which I have spoken spiritually before they were naturally upon the face of the Earth . . . & I the Lord God had created all the children of men & not yet a man to till the ground for in Heaven created I them & there was not yet flesh upon the Earth.”
8

Old Testament Revision 1, p. 5 [Moses 3:5]. The belief that God created beings spiritually before he created them physically was espoused by others, including Origen, an early proto-orthodox Christian father. Asserting belief in a premortal existence, Origen wrote, “God did not begin to work for the first time when he made this visible world, but that just as after the dissolution of this world there will be another one, so also we believe that there were others before this one existed. . . . Rational creatures . . . have undoubtedly existed right from their beginning in those worlds ‘that are not seen and are eternal.’” (Origen, Origen De Principiis, bk. 3, chap. 5, secs. 3–4, in Butterworth, Origen on First Principles, 239–240; see also Scott, Journey Back to God, 53–55.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Butterworth, G. W., trans. and ed. Origen on First Principles Being Koetschau’s Text of the De Principiis Translated into English, Together with an Introduction and Notes. Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, 1973.

Scott, Mark S. M. Journey Back to God: Origen on the Problem of Evil. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012.

The 6 May revelation also challenged the general Christian concept of creation ex nihilo by stating that “inteligence or the Light of truth was not created or made.” In an even greater contrast to the prevailing belief in the omnipotence of God, this revelation expressly stated not only that intelligence was “not created or made” by God, but also that it could not, in fact, be created by him.
It is not known whether any discussions about early Christian creeds and doctrines preceded this revelation or how familiar JS was with them prior to dictating it.
Sidney Rigdon

19 Feb. 1793–14 July 1876. Tanner, farmer, minister. Born at St. Clair, Allegheny Co., Pennsylvania. Son of William Rigdon and Nancy Gallaher. Joined United Baptists, ca. 1818. Preached at Warren, Trumbull Co., Ohio, and vicinity, 1819–1821. Married Phebe...

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, one of the revelation’s recipients, had been a follower of
Alexander Campbell

12 Sept. 1788–4 Mar. 1866. Teacher, minister, magazine publisher, college president. Born near Ballymena, Co. Antrim, Ireland. Son of Thomas Campbell and Jane Corneigle. Raised Presbyterian. Moved to Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland, 1808. Immigrated to Buffalo ...

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’s religious movement that denied that belief in any of the traditional Christian creeds was essential. Campbell had also published a discourse in 1827, centered on the first chapter of John, rejecting the traditional Calvinist interpretation.
9

Alexander Campbell, “The Creed Question,” Christian Baptist, 2 Apr. 1827, 200–202; “The Trinitarian System,” Christian Baptist, 7 May 1827, 230–234.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Christian Baptist. Bethany, VA. 1823–1830.

In addition, the Mormon settlement in
Kirtland

Located ten miles south of Lake Erie. Settled by 1811. Organized by 1818. Latter-day Saint missionaries visited township, early Nov. 1830; many residents joined Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Population in 1830 about 55 Latter-day Saints and...

More Info
, Ohio, was not far from a large Shaker community in North Union, Ohio. The Shakers’ belief in the nature of Christ, widely viewed as heretical by orthodox Christians of the time, had in part been the subject of an 1831 revelation that commanded missionaries to preach to the Shakers.
10

Revelation, 7 May 1831 [D&C 49]. For an example of how Shakers explained their beliefs about the nature of Christ, see Testimony of Christ’s Second Appearing, part 8, chap. 1, pp. 537–546.


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Testimony of Christ’s Second Appearing; Containing a General Statement of All Things Pertaining to the Faith and Practice of the Church of God in This Latter Day. 2nd ed. Albany, NY: E. and E. Hosford, 1810.

These influences, as well as many others, may have led church members to discuss topics such as the nature of God and Jesus before this revelation was dictated.
This revelation was first published in the 1835 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants. By 1839, JS appears to have expanded upon some of the teachings it contained. In a sermon that year, he reportedly said, “The spirit of man is not a created being: it existed from Eternity and will exist to Eternity. Any thing created cannot be eternal and Earth, water, &c all these had their existence in an elementary state from Eternity. Our Savior speaks of children and says their Angels always stand before my Father. The Father called all spirits before him at the creation of man and organized them.”
11

JS History, vol. C-1, addenda, 11.


A few years later he further explained, “God was a self exhisting being, man exhist upon the same principle. God made a tabernacle & por spirit in it and it became a Human soul, man exhisted in spirit & mind coequal with God himself. . . . God has power to institute laws to instruct the weaker intelligences that they may be exhalted with himself.”
12

Woodruff, Journal, 7 Apr. 1844.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.

Although three early manuscript versions of this revelation are extant, the one featured here, from the
Newel K. Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

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collection, is most likely the earliest version. As the revelation was directed in part to Whitney, he likely received this copy immediately after it was dictated by JS. It is even possible that Whitney’s version is the original copy, recorded while JS dictated the revelation. In any case, the Whitney version is very closely related to the copy in Revelation Book 2, even including similar scribal errors and omissions.
Orson Hyde

8 Jan. 1805–28 Nov. 1878. Laborer, clerk, storekeeper, teacher, editor, businessman, lawyer, judge. Born at Oxford, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Son of Nathan Hyde and Sally Thorpe. Moved to Derby, New Haven Co., 1812. Moved to Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, ...

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recorded the copy in Revelation Book 2 as early as 1 June, though he most likely recorded the revelation after his appointment as scribe on 6 June 1833. Hyde apparently used Whitney’s copy of the revelation to create the Revelation Book 2 version. The copy found in Revelation Book 1 was almost certainly copied later than these two versions because that revelation book was still in
Missouri

Area acquired by U.S. in Louisiana Purchase, 1803, and established as territory, 1812. Missouri Compromise, 1820, admitted Missouri as slave state, 1821. Population in 1830 about 140,000; in 1836 about 240,000; and in 1840 about 380,000. Latter-day Saint ...

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with
John Whitmer

27 Aug. 1802–11 July 1878. Farmer, stock raiser, newspaper editor. Born in Pennsylvania. Son of Peter Whitmer Sr. and Mary Musselman. Member of German Reformed Church, Fayette, Seneca Co., New York. Baptized by Oliver Cowdery, June 1829, most likely in Seneca...

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at this time. In a few places the version in Revelation Book 1 includes words and phrases not found in the other two versions, possibly reflecting some editorial changes made by Whitmer when he copied it into the book. In the following transcript, significant differences between versions in the revelation books and the version featured here are noted.

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    This revelation is not mentioned in any contemporary journal or in John Whitmer’s or John Corrill’s extensive histories.

  2. [2]

    JS History, vol. A-1, 291.

  3. [3]

    Minute Book 1, 2 Feb. 1833.

  4. [4]

    Account of John, Apr. 1829–C [D&C 7]; John 21:21–23.

  5. [5]

    Account of John, Apr. 1829–C, in Book of Commandments 6:1 [D&C 7].

  6. [6]

    Answers to Questions, between ca. 4 and ca. 20 Mar. 1832 [D&C 77]; Book of Mormon, 1830 ed., 35 [1 Nephi 14:27]. While the Bible makes no express connection between the John that authored the gospel and the John that authored the book of Revelation, the two Johns were widely held during JS’s time to be the same person.

  7. [7]

    “Chalcedon,” in Encyclopaedia Americana, 49–50; “Eutychians,” in Ecclesiastical Cyclopaedia, 260.

    Encyclopedia Americana. International ed. 30 vols. Danbury, CT: Grolier, 1995.

    The Ecclesiastical Cyclopaedia; or, Dictionary of Christian Antiquities and Sects, Comprising Architecture, Controversies, Creeds, Denominations, Doctrines, Government, Heresies, History, Liturgies, Rites, Monastic Orders, and Modern Judaism. Edited by John Eadie. London: Griffin, Bohn, 1862.

  8. [8]

    Old Testament Revision 1, p. 5 [Moses 3:5]. The belief that God created beings spiritually before he created them physically was espoused by others, including Origen, an early proto-orthodox Christian father. Asserting belief in a premortal existence, Origen wrote, “God did not begin to work for the first time when he made this visible world, but that just as after the dissolution of this world there will be another one, so also we believe that there were others before this one existed. . . . Rational creatures . . . have undoubtedly existed right from their beginning in those worlds ‘that are not seen and are eternal.’” (Origen, Origen De Principiis, bk. 3, chap. 5, secs. 3–4, in Butterworth, Origen on First Principles, 239–240; see also Scott, Journey Back to God, 53–55.)

    Butterworth, G. W., trans. and ed. Origen on First Principles Being Koetschau’s Text of the De Principiis Translated into English, Together with an Introduction and Notes. Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, 1973.

    Scott, Mark S. M. Journey Back to God: Origen on the Problem of Evil. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012.

  9. [9]

    Alexander Campbell, “The Creed Question,” Christian Baptist, 2 Apr. 1827, 200–202; “The Trinitarian System,” Christian Baptist, 7 May 1827, 230–234.

    Christian Baptist. Bethany, VA. 1823–1830.

  10. [10]

    Revelation, 7 May 1831 [D&C 49]. For an example of how Shakers explained their beliefs about the nature of Christ, see Testimony of Christ’s Second Appearing, part 8, chap. 1, pp. 537–546.

    The Testimony of Christ’s Second Appearing; Containing a General Statement of All Things Pertaining to the Faith and Practice of the Church of God in This Latter Day. 2nd ed. Albany, NY: E. and E. Hosford, 1810.

  11. [11]

    JS History, vol. C-1, addenda, 11.

  12. [12]

    Woodruff, Journal, 7 Apr. 1844.

    Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.

Asterisk (*) denotes a "featured" version, which includes an introduction and annotation. *Revelation, 6 May 1833 [D&C 93] Revelation Book 2 Revelation Book 1 Doctrine and Covenants, 1835 History, 1838–1856, volume A-1 [23 December 1805–30 August 1834] Doctrine and Covenants, 1844 “History of Joseph Smith”

Page [2]

men were made by him all things were made by him and through him and of him
14

The Gospel according to John reads, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life; and the life was the light of men.” (John 1:1–4.)


and I, John bear reccord that I beheld his glory as the glory of the only begotten of the fathe[r] full of grace and truth even the spirit of truth which came and dwelt in flesh and dwelt among us
15

John 1:14 reads, “And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.”


and I John saw that he received not of the fulness at the first but received grace for grace and he received not of the fulness but continued from grace to grace until he received a fulness and thus he was called the son of God because he received not of the fulness at the first
16

John 1:16 reads, “And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace.” In his translation of the Bible JS modified this verse to read, “For in the begining was the word, even the son, who is made flesh, and sent unto us by the will of the Father. And as many as beleive on his name shall receive of his fullness. And of his fullness have all we received, even imortality and eternal life, through his grace.” (New Testament Revision 2, p. 105 [second numbering] [Joseph Smith Translation, John 1:16].)


and I John bear reccord and lo the heavens were opened and the holy ghost decended upon him in the form of a dove and set upon him and there came a voice out of heaven saying this is my beloved son,
17

See John 1:32; Matthew 3:16–17; Mark 1:10–11; and Luke 3:21–22.


and I John bear reccord that he received a fulness of the glory of the eternal God
18

The phrase “eternal God” is not found in any other extant version of this revelation and is, except for one usage in the Old Testament, a term exclusive to the Book of Mormon. (See, for example, Deuteronomy 33:27; Book of Mormon, 1830 ed., 28, 107, 319 [1 Nephi 12:18; 2 Nephi 26:12; Alma 34:9].)


father and he receivd all power both in heaven and on earth
19

See Book of Mormon, 1830 ed., 163 [Mosiah 4:9].


and the glory of the father was with him for he dwelt in him and it shall come to pass that if you are faithful you shall receive the fulness of the reccord of John I give unto you these sayings that you may understand and know how to worship and know what you worship
20

See John 4:22.


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Related Case Documents
Editorial Title
Revelation, 6 May 1833 [D&C 93]
ID #
2679
Total Pages
8
Print Volume Location
JSP, D3:83–91
Handwriting on This Page
  • Frederick G. Williams

Footnotes

  1. [14]

    The Gospel according to John reads, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life; and the life was the light of men.” (John 1:1–4.)

  2. [15]

    John 1:14 reads, “And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.”

  3. [16]

    John 1:16 reads, “And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace.” In his translation of the Bible JS modified this verse to read, “For in the begining was the word, even the son, who is made flesh, and sent unto us by the will of the Father. And as many as beleive on his name shall receive of his fullness. And of his fullness have all we received, even imortality and eternal life, through his grace.” (New Testament Revision 2, p. 105 [second numbering] [Joseph Smith Translation, John 1:16].)

  4. [17]

    See John 1:32; Matthew 3:16–17; Mark 1:10–11; and Luke 3:21–22.

  5. [18]

    The phrase “eternal God” is not found in any other extant version of this revelation and is, except for one usage in the Old Testament, a term exclusive to the Book of Mormon. (See, for example, Deuteronomy 33:27; Book of Mormon, 1830 ed., 28, 107, 319 [1 Nephi 12:18; 2 Nephi 26:12; Alma 34:9].)

  6. [19]

    See Book of Mormon, 1830 ed., 163 [Mosiah 4:9].

  7. [20]

    See John 4:22.

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