Footnotes
JS History, vol. A-1, 16; see also Historical Introduction to Revelation, Apr. 1829–A [D&C 6].
Revelation, Apr. 1829–A [D&C 6:11, 25].
Book of Mormon, 1830 ed., 172–173 [Mosiah 8:9, 13, 16].
See Bushman, Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism, 98.
Bushman, Richard Lyman. Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1984.
This affirmation of Cowdery’s use of a “rod” as a divine gift illustrates the compatibility some early Americans perceived between biblical religion and popular supernaturalism. “From the outset,” according to historian Robert Fuller, “Americans have had a persistent interest in religious ideas that fall well outside the parameters of Bible-centered theology. . . . In order to meet their spiritual needs . . . [they] switched back and forth between magical and Christian beliefs without any sense of guilt or intellectual inconsistency.” (Fuller, Spiritual, but Not Religious, 15, 17; see also Ashurst-McGee, “Pathway to Prophethood,” 126–148; and Agreement of Josiah Stowell and Others, 1 Nov. 1825.)
Fuller, Robert C. Spiritual, but Not Religious: Understanding Unchurched America. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001.
Ashurst-McGee, Mark. “A Pathway to Prophethood: Joseph Smith Junior as Rodsman, Village Seer, and Judeo-Christian Prophet.” Master’s thesis, Utah State University, 2000.
Revelations, Apr. 1829–A, B, D [D&C 6, 8, 9]; Account of John, Apr. 1829–C [D&C 7]. Revelation Book 1 places Revelation, Spring 1829 [D&C 10], after Revelation, Apr. 1829–A.
Cowdery’s opportunity to translate is discussed in Revelation, Apr. 1829–A [D&C 6:25–27]; and Revelation, Apr. 1829–D [D&C 9:1–3].
See Exodus 14:16–22.
See Revelation, Apr. 1829–A [D&C 6:30, 34].
In preparing the text of Revelation Book 1 for publication, Sidney Rigdon replaced “sprout” with “rod.” Green, flexible shoots or rods cut from hazel, peach, or cherry trees were sometimes used as divining rods. (Revelation Book 1, p. 13 [D&C 8:6]; see also Silliman, “Divining Rod,” 202; and “The Divining-Rod,” Milwaukie [Wisconsin Territory] Sentinel, 7 Sept. 1842, [1].)
[Silliman, Benjamin]. “The Divining Rod.” The American Journal of Science, &c 11, no. 2 (Oct. 1826): 201–212.
Milwaukie Sentinel. Milwaukee, Wisconsin Territory. 1841–1845.
In preparing the text of Revelation Book 1 for publication, Sidney Rigdon replaced “thing of Nature” with “rod.” Editors of the Book of Commandments reinstated “of nature” so that the phrase read “rod of nature.” (Revelation Book 1, p. 13; Book of Commandments 7:3 [D&C 8:7].)
Accounts of how divining rods were held and how they functioned were prevalent in 1820s America. Wrote one skeptic: “To use the divining rod, the hands are spread, with the palms upward and the thumbs pointing out, when the ends of the forks are grasped by closing the fingers, and the rod is carried along perpendicularly over the ground to be explored. The practitioners pretend, that on arriving over water, or mass of precious ore, the top of the rod will bend over, and point at it.” (“Divining Rods,” Aurora and Franklin Gazette [Philadelphia], 14 Nov. 1826, [2]; see also “The Electrometrical or Divining Rod,” Daily National Intelligencer [Washington DC], 5 Sept. 1820, [2]; “The Divining Rod,” Maryland Gazette and Political Intelligencer [Annapolis], 28 Sept. 1820, [3]; “The Divining Rod,” Worcester Magazine and Historical Journal, Oct. 1825, 29; and Silliman, “Divining Rod,” 201–212.)
Aurora and Franklin Gazette. Philadelphia. 1824–1828.
Daily National Intelligencer. Washington DC. 1800–1869.
Maryland Gazette and Political Intelligencer. Annapolis, MD. 1813–1823.
Worcester Magazine and Historical Journal. Worcester, MA. 1825–1826.
[Silliman, Benjamin]. “The Divining Rod.” The American Journal of Science, &c 11, no. 2 (Oct. 1826): 201–212.
The injunction to Cowdery to “trifle not” with his gifts but to use them to unlock the “mysteries of God” and the translation of “ancient Records” is similar to counsel Cowdery received in another April 1829 revelation. (See Revelation, Apr. 1829–A [D&C 6:10–12, 26–27].)
TEXT: Or “spoke”.