Sunday, September 29, 2013

Lesson 35: “A Mission of Saving” - Lesson Outline

Lesson 35: “A Mission of Saving”, Doctrine and Covenants and Church History Gospel Doctrine Teacher’s Manual, 202

1.      Introduction
a)      This lesson discusses the experiences of the handcart companies
b)      Real theme of this lesson is the Atonement
i)        Rescue
ii)      Deliverance
iii)    We have come into a mortal world which, in comparison to our former home and the absence of our Heavenly Father is like a barren desert
iv)    We are unable to finish our journey back to our Heavenly Father, absent a miracle, we will be forever trapped in the wilderness, under the control of Satan
v)      Our rescuer is Jesus Christ.  His Atonement allows him to rescue us.
vi)    In our daily lives, we sometimes find ourselves in situations that we are not strong enough to endure.
(1)   Our rescuer is Jesus Christ.  The enabling power of His Atonement allows him to lend us strength so he can rescue us.
2.      Background
a)      Refer to handout
b)      Missionary work in the British Isles and Scandinavia was extremely successful during the late 1840's and 1850's.
c)      In 1850, Utah had 11,380 church members, while the British Isles had more than 30,000.
i)        To put this in modern terms, it is as if, the Utah Saints had to finance most of the cost of bringing 4.6 million impoverished Church members from Europe
d)      The Perpetual Emigration Fund –1849
e)      Grasshopper plague in 1855 put the Church and its members under severe financial strain
i)        This is less than 10 years since the first settlers entered the valley
f)       Reading 1 - Franklin D. Richards, president of the European Mission, wrote to Brigham Young in the fall of 1855: "We cannot afford to purchase wagons and teams as in times past, I am consequently thrown back upon my old plan ― to make hand-carts, and let the emigration foot it, and draw upon them the necessary supplies, having a cow or two for every ten. They can come just as quick, if not quicker, and much cheaper ― can start earlier and escape the prevailing sickness which annually lays so many of our brethren in the dust" ("Foreign Correspondence," Millennial Star, 22 Dec. 1855, 813; cited in Church History in the Fulness of Times, 358)
g)      In 1855, the First Presidency recommended the use of handcarts for the emigrants

3.      Health issues with immigrants
a)      At this time, European immigrants took a sail/rail/wagon trip
i)        Complete trip from Europe to Utah often took 6 months
ii)      5 weeks on the ocean on average on a sailing ship
(1)   Seasickness was widespread
(a)    During storms, the passengers were locked below decks with sealed hatches to prevent seawater from entering
(b)   Significant diseases from overcrowding and poor sanitary conditions
(i)     Contagious diseases spread rapidly
1.      Cholera
2.      Tuberculosis
3.      Typhoid
4.      Measles
5.      Chicken pox
(ii)   Significant danger for women giving birth at sea
(c)    On average, 1-2% of sea passengers died at sea
(2)   Liverpool to New York or Boston was the sea route of the British Saints who formed the majority of the Willie/Martin handcart companies
(3)   Traveling to New Orleans took 19 days longer, but immigrants could then go up the Mississippi, which was faster and easier on them physically
(a)    Brigham Young mandated the use of New York in 1855 because of the disease problems associated with the hot climate of New Orleans
(i)     24 of 220 Mormon passengers died on a single ship in New Orleans harbor in 1854
1.      Temperature between decks was 120 degrees
b)      Rail travel relatively quick and safe

c)      Overland Wagon travel
i)        Biggest danger was cholera
ii)      Other infectious diseases
iii)    Drowning during river crossings
iv)    Hostile Indians
v)      Cuts and broken bones
vi)    As the pioneers moved away from the trailhead cities out into the wilderness, "Mountain Fever" – likely tick-borne fever became more of a danger
(1)   Brigham Young suffered from this
d)      There was a fatality rate of about 6% for overland travelers during the middle of the 19th century
i)        First party that arrived in Salt Lake in 1847 had very few deaths
ii)      Later groups had higher rates of sickness and death
e)      An estimated 4,200-5,000 LDS immigrants died during some phase of their travels from 1846-1869.
f)       Source: Illnesses and Mortality in Nineteenth Century Mormon Immigration, Shane A. Baker
4.      1856 Immigration Season
a)      The trailhead for overland travel kept moving West
i)        In 1856, the trailhead was divided between Iowa City, Iowa, and Florence, Nebraska
(1)   Railroad ended in Iowa City
(2)   Buy wagons and handcarts in Iowa City
(3)   Leave all settlement at Florence (formerly Winter Quarters)
b)      1,900 European Saints signed up to cross the plains with handcarts in 1856

c)      Five Handcart Companies in 1856
i)        No unusual problems with the first three companies
(1)   Ellsworth Company left Florence on June 9, 1856, arrived in Salt Lake City on September 26
(2)   McArthur Company left Florence on June 11, arrived in Salt Lake City on September 26
(3)   Bunker Company left Florence on June 23, arrived in Salt Lake City on October 2
ii)      After 1856, an additional five handcart companies would cross the plains with no unusual problems
d)      Problems for the immigrants who would be in the Willie and Martin companies began in England
i)        Delays in finding passage from Liverpool

e)      When the Willie Company arrived in Iowa City, due to misunderstanding between the Church's agent in Liverpool and in Iowa City, there were no handcarts.
i)        Handcarts had to be built
ii)      Because of the haste, there wasn't time to season the wood, which caused maintenance problems on the trail which slowed down the travel.
f)       Martin Company arrived later and also had to wait for handcarts
g)      Both companies traveled to Florence, where they rested.
i)        Disagreement among the Saints over whether they should leave Florence or wait until the following spring

ii)      Reading 2 - The chief opponent to continuing the journey in 1856 was Levi Savage, who had been a member of the Mormon Battalion and was returning from a mission in Burma and India. He argued that the handcart pioneers could not cross the mountains so late in the season without much suffering, sickness, and death. After the vote was taken to continue Brother Savage said:  "What I have said I know to be true; but seeing you are to go forward, I will go with you; will help you, all I can; will work with you, will rest with you, will suffer with you, and if necessary, will die with you. May God in mercy bless and preserve us" (CHC, 4:89-91).

5.      Travel of Willie and Martin Companies
a)      Willie Company left Florence on on August 19
b)      Martin Company left Florence on August 25
c)      On September 12, approximately 325 miles west of Florence (near the Northeast corner of Colorado), The Willie company was overtaken by a group of returning missionaries from Europe in carriages and wagons, including the former mission presidency of Franklin D. Richards, Daniel Spencer, and C. H. Wheelock, who were going to General Conference.  This group had previously passed the Martin Company.
d)      On September 17:  The Willie company encountered their first frost of the season
e)      On September 30:  The Willie company arrived at Fort Laramie, still 500 miles from Salt Lake City.

f)       On October 8:  The Martin company arrives at Fort Laramie.
i)        To lighten their loads, the Martin Company cut the luggage allowance to 10 pounds per person, discarding clothing and blankets.
g)      Each handcart was designed to carry about 100-250 pounds and service 4-5 people
i)        Willie and Martin company were rationing their supplies. They started with one-pound of flour per person per day, a little less for children. As they continued their journey, they reduced their rations to one-half pound per day then one-quarter pound.
(1)   One pound of flour is 4 cups
(2)   4 cups is less than 1700 calories per day
(3)   Malnutrition slowed progress of handcarts, made the pioneers more susceptible to the cold and to illness

h)      October 19 - Severe storms hit the Willie and Martin companies West of Fort Laramie and their travels slowed until they stopped near the Sweetwater River and Continental Divide and were unable to continue.
i)        Reading 3 - Elizabeth Sermon, Martin Company - November 1856:  "My husband's health began to fail and his heart almost broken to see me falling in shafts. Myself and children hungry, almost naked, footsore and himself nearly done for. Many trials came after this. My oldest boy had the mountain fever, we had to haul him in the cart, there was not room in the wagon. One day we started him out before the carts in the morning to walk with the aged and sick, but we had not gone far on our journey before we found him lying by the roadside, unable to go any farther. I picked him up and put him on my back and drew my cart as well, but could not manage far, so put him in the cart, which made three children and my luggage. My husband failing more each day, the Captain put a young man to help me for a short time. My other son Henry walked at 7 years old, 1300 miles with the exception of a few miles.....
    "My husband's sufferings have always pained me and I can never forget them. Poor Rob's (age 5) feet began to freeze. I cannot remember the place's; it was after wading a very deep river (Platte?) the freezing commenced. We had no wood but sagebrush. I went out and cut the sage to keep the fire all night. Covered them up with their feet to the fire and cut some more and kept the fire as well as I could. My clothes froze stiff. Well, we got through that night. Your father would not walk now. He would get into wagon after wagon, only to be turned out. The cattle were giving out and everyone had their friends, but the friend death, would soon end his sufferings. John (age 9) and Rob had to ride, Henry (age 7) walked, your father would take my arm and walk a little distance, fall on his knees with weakness. We moved from Devil's Gate. I believe it was brother David Kimball who carried us over a river (Sweetwater) and a great many more besides us. My poor husband blessed him for so doing." (Faith In Every Footstep)
ii)      Reading 4 - Elizabeth Horrocks Jackson Kingsford in the Martin Company recorded the following on October 19, 1856:  "Some of the men carried some of the women on their back or in their arms, but others of the women tied up their skirts and waded through, like the heroines that they were, and as they had gone through many other rivers and creeks. My husband (Aaron Jackson) attempted to ford the stream. He had only gone a short distance when he reached a sandbar in the river, on which he sank down through weakness and exhaustion. My sister, Mary Horrocks Leavitt, waded through the water to his assistance. She raised him up to his feet. Shortly afterward, a man came along on horseback and conveyed him to the other side. My sister then helped me to pull my cart with my three children and other matters on it. We had scarcely crossed the river when we were visited with a tremendous storm of snow, hail, sand, and fierce winds. . . .
"About nine o'clock I retired. Bedding had become very scarce so I did not disrobe. I slept until, as it appeared to me, about midnight. I was extremely cold. The weather was bitter. I listened to hear if my husband breathed, he lay so still. I could not hear him. I became alarmed. I put my hand on his body, when to my horror I discovered that my worst fears were confirmed. My husband was dead. I called for help to the other inmates of the tent. They could render me no aid; and there was no alternative but to remain alone by the side of the corpse till morning. Oh, how the dreary hours drew their tedious length along. When daylight came, some of the male part of the company prepared the body for burial. And oh, such a burial and funeral service. They did not remove his clothing—he had but little. They wrapped him in a blanket and placed him in a pile with thirteen others who had died, and then covered him up with snow. The ground was frozen so hard that they could not dig a grave. He was left there to sleep in peace until the trump of God shall sound, and the dead in Christ shall awake and come forth in the morning of the first resurrection. We shall then again unite our hearts and lives, and eternity will furnish us with life forever more.
"I will not attempt to describe my feelings at finding myself thus left a widow with three children, under such excruciating circumstances. I cannot do it. But I believe the Recording Angel has inscribed in the archives above, and that my suffering for the Gospel's sake will be sanctified unto me for my good." (Elizabeth Jackson, as quoted in LeRoy and Ann Hafen, Handcarts to Zion, 110-13.)
6.      Rescue Effort
a)      When the Bunker handcart company arrived on October 2, Brigham Young thought that was the last of the immigrants who would arrive in 1856
b)      On October 4, Franklin D. Richards and his company arrived in Salt Lake and immediately went to Brigham Young to tell him about the two handcart companies still on the plains
c)      The next day, October 5, General Conference began and, although not scheduled to speak, Brigham Young immediately stood up to address the Saints
i)        Reading 5 – President Young said, “ ‘I will now give this people the subject and the text for the Elders who may speak. … It is this. … Many of our brethren and sisters are on the plains with handcarts, and probably many are now seven hundred miles from this place, and they must be brought here, we must send assistance to them. The text will be, “to get them here.” …
“ ‘That is my religion; that is the dictation of the Holy Ghost that I possess. It is to save the people. …
“ ‘I shall call upon the Bishops this day. I shall not wait until tomorrow, nor until the next day, for 60 good mule teams and 12 or 15 wagons. I do not want to send oxen. I want good horses and mules. They are in this Territory, and we must have them. Also 12 tons of flour and 40 good teamsters, besides those that drive the teams. …
“ ‘I will tell you all that your faith, religion, and profession of religion, will never save one soul of you in the Celestial Kingdom of our God, unless you carry out just such principles as I am now teaching you. Go and bring in those people now on the plains’ (in LeRoy R. Hafen and Ann W. Hafen, Handcarts to Zion [1960], 120–21).  (President Gordon B. Hinckley, Conference Report, Oct. 1996, 117–18; or Ensign, Nov. 1996, 85–86).

d)      The Saints responded quickly
i)        READ - "The response was impressive. Sixteen wagonloads of food and supplies were quickly assembled; and on the morning of 7 October, sixteen good four-mule teams and twenty-seven hardy young men (known as Brigham Young's 'Minute Men') headed eastward with the first provisions. More help was solicited and obtained from all parts of the territory. By the end of October, two hundred and fifty teams were on the road to give relief" (details from Hafen and Hafen, Handcarts to Zion, 124-25; quoted from Church History in the Fulness of Times, 360).
e)      There was much suffering and heroism among those who were in the rescue parties because the weather was terrible.
i)        Reading 6 - Elder Henry B. Eyring said:  There are few comforts so sweet as to know that we have been an instrument in the hands of God in leading someone else to safety. That blessing generally requires the faith to follow counsel when it is hard to do. An example from Church history is that of Reddick Newton Allred. He was one of the rescue party sent out by Brigham Young to bring in the Willie and Martin Handcart Companies. When a terrible storm hit, Captain Grant, captain of the rescue party, decided to leave some of the wagons by the Sweetwater River as he pressed ahead to find the handcart companies. With the blizzards howling and the weather becoming life threatening, two of the men left behind at the Sweetwater decided that it was foolish to stay. They thought that either the handcart companies had wintered over somewhere or had perished. They decided to return to the Salt Lake Valley and tried to persuade everyone else to do the same.
    Reddick Allred refused to budge. Brigham had sent them out and his priesthood leader had told him to wait there. The others took several wagons, all filled with needed supplies, and started back. Even more tragic, each wagon they met coming out from Salt Lake they turned back as well. They turned back 77 wagons, returning all the way to Little Mountain, where President Young learned what was happening and turned them around again. When the Willie Company was finally found, and had made that heartrending pull up and over Rocky Ridge, it was Reddick Allred and his wagons that waited for them. (See Rebecca Bartholomew and Leonard J. Arrington, Rescue of the 1856 Handcart Companies [1992], 29, 33-34.)

f)       The Willie Company was brought into Salt Lake on November 9.
g)      The Martin Company did not arrive until Sunday, November 30
i)        Reading 7 - President Young was leading services in the old Tabernacle when he learned of the arrival of the Martin Company.  He said to the congregation, "The afternoon meeting will be omitted, for I wish the sisters to go home and prepare to give those who have just arrived a mouthful of something to eat, and to wash them, and nurse them up.... Prayer is good, but when (as on this occasion) baked potatoes, and pudding, and milk are needed, prayer will not supply their place. Give every duty its proper time and place.... I want you to understand that I desire this people to nurse them up; we want you to receive them as your own children, and to have the same feelings for them.... Now that the most of them are here, we will continue our labors of love until they are able to take care of themselves, and we will receive the blessing. You need not be distrustful about that, for the Lord will bless this people." (CHC, 4:100-101)
7.      Aftermath of the Rescue
a)      Nearly 20% of the people in the Willie and Martin Companies died.
b)      Reading 8 - Rebecca Bartholomew and Leonard Arrington recorded: "A lesser-known aspect of the handcart immigration, however, provides one of the most satisfying episodes in Mormon history. The rescue effort mounted by Brigham Young before anyone in Utah suspected the critical situation of the companies, the munificent response of the communities throughout the territory, and the courage and endurance of the rescue parties make a heartening story. In many immigrant journals, memory of the rescue and the welcome in Salt Lake City dominates other experience; the drama and the timelines of the deliverance is dwelt on far more often than grief and disillusionment over the predicament. Those embittered were in the minority; and even these, decades later, wrote emotionally, gratefully, of the heroic men who saved them from starvation and death" (Rebecca Bartholomew and Leonard Arrington, Rescue of the 1856 Handcart Companies, 3).
c)      The Willie and Martin Companies were not the only pioneers to be caught in bad weather.  The stories of non-LDS responses to such trials is not good.
i)        Donner Party Winter 1846-47 – Sierra Nevada Mountains, California – 87 people, 39 died and 48 survived - cannibalism
ii)      Fremont Party – Winter 1848-49 – San Juan Mountains, Colorado – 80 explorers, 11 died – cannibalism

d)      READ – The famous author, Wallace Stegner, not a member of the Church, who was known for both his non-fiction and fiction writing about the American West, wrote: "Perhaps their suffering seems less dramatic because the handcart pioneers bore it meekly, praising God, instead of fighting for life with the ferocity of animals and eating their dead to keep their own life beating, as both the Fremont and Donner parties did. But if courage and endurance make a story, if human kindness and helpfulness and brotherly love in the midst of raw horror are worth recording, this half-forgotten episode of the Mormon migration is one of the great tales of the West and of America." (Faith In Every Footstep)

8.      The Atonement
a)      Reading 9 -  President Gordon B. Hinckley said :  "It is because of the sacrificial redemption wrought by the Savior of the world that the great plan of the eternal gospel is made available to us, under which those who die in the Lord shall not taste of death but shall have the opportunity of going on to a celestial and eternal glory.
    "In our own helplessness, He becomes our rescuer, saving us from damnation and bringing us to eternal life.
    "In times of despair, in seasons of loneliness and fear, He is there on the horizon to bring succor and comfort and assurance and faith. He is our King, our Savior, our Deliverer, our Lord and our God." (Ensign, Nov 1991, p54).

b)      Reading 10 – Alma 7:11-13
  11 And he shall go forth, suffering pains and afflictions and temptations of every kind; and this that the word might be fulfilled which saith he will take upon him the pains and the sicknesses of his people.
  12 And he will take upon him death, that he may loose the bands of death which bind his people; and he will take upon him their infirmities, that his bowels may be filled with mercy, according to the flesh, that he may know according to the flesh how to succor his people according to their infirmities.
  13 Now the Spirit knoweth all things; nevertheless the Son of God suffereth according to the flesh that he might take upon him the sins of his people, that he might blot out their transgressions according to the power of his deliverance; and now behold, this is the testimony which is in me.

c)      Reading 11 – Mosiah 4:16-21
 16 And also, ye yourselves will succor those that stand in need of your succor; ye will administer of your substance unto him that standeth in need; and ye will not suffer that the beggar putteth up his petition to you in vain, and turn him out to perish.
  17 Perhaps thou shalt say: The man has brought upon himself his misery; therefore I will stay my hand, and will not give unto him of my food, nor impart unto him of my substance that he may not suffer, for his punishments are just—
  18 But I say unto you, O man, whosoever doeth this the same hath great cause to repent; and except he repenteth of that which he hath done he perisheth forever, and hath no interest in the kingdom of God.
  19 For behold, are we not all beggars? Do we not all depend upon the same Being, even God, for all the substance which we have, for both food and raiment, and for gold, and for silver, and for all the riches which we have of every kind?
  20 And behold, even at this time, ye have been calling on his name, and begging for a remission of your sins. And has he suffered that ye have begged in vain? Nay; he has poured out his Spirit upon you, and has caused that your hearts should be filled with joy, and has caused that your mouths should be stopped that ye could not find utterance, so exceedingly great was your joy.
  21 And now, if God, who has created you, on whom you are dependent for your lives and for all that ye have and are, doth grant unto you whatsoever ye ask that is right, in faith, believing that ye shall receive, O then, how ye ought to impart of the substance that ye have one to another.

d)      READ – Mosiah 27:28-29
 28 Nevertheless, after wading through much tribulation, repenting nigh unto death, the Lord in mercy hath seen fit to snatch me out of an everlasting burning, and I am born of God.
  29 My soul hath been redeemed from the gall of bitterness and bonds of iniquity. I was in the darkest abyss; but now I behold the marvelous light of God. My soul was racked with eternal torment; but I am snatched, and my soul is pained no more.
e)      READ – 2 Nephi 25:23 - "For we know that it is by grace that we are saved, after all we can do"

9.      Conclusion
a)      READ - President Gordon B. Hinckley, speaking about the pioneers, said: "I will never get over being thankful to them; I hope you never get over being thankful to them. I hope that we will always remember them. … Let us read again and again, and read to our children or our children’s children, the accounts of those who suffered so much." (Church News, 31 July 1999, p5)
    President Hinckley further stated:  "Stories of the beleaguered Saints and of their suffering and death will be repeated again and again. … Stories of their rescue need to be repeated again and again. They speak of the very essence of the gospel of Jesus Christ." (Ensign, Nov. 1996, p86)
Testimony






Saturday, September 28, 2013

Lesson 35: “A Mission of Saving” - Scriptures and Quotes


Reading 1 - Franklin D. Richards, president of the European Mission, wrote to Brigham Young in the fall of 1855: "We cannot afford to purchase wagons and teams as in times past, I am consequently thrown back upon my old plan ― to make hand-carts, and let the emigration foot it, and draw upon them the necessary supplies, having a cow or two for every ten. They can come just as quick, if not quicker, and much cheaper ― can start earlier and escape the prevailing sickness which annually lays so many of our brethren in the dust" ("Foreign Correspondence," Millennial Star, 22 Dec. 1855, 813; cited in Church History in the Fulness of Times, 358)

Reading 2 - The chief opponent to continuing the journey in 1856 was Levi Savage, who had been a member of the Mormon Battalion and was returning from a mission in Burma and India. He argued that the handcart pioneers could not cross the mountains so late in the season without much suffering, sickness, and death. After the vote was taken to continue Brother Savage said:  "What I have said I know to be true; but seeing you are to go forward, I will go with you; will help you, all I can; will work with you, will rest with you, will suffer with you, and if necessary, will die with you. May God in mercy bless and preserve us" (CHC, 4:89-91).

Reading 3 - Elizabeth Sermon, Martin Company - November 1856:  "My husband's health began to fail and his heart almost broken to see me falling in shafts. Myself and children hungry, almost naked, footsore and himself nearly done for. Many trials came after this. My oldest boy had the mountain fever, we had to haul him in the cart, there was not room in the wagon. One day we started him out before the carts in the morning to walk with the aged and sick, but we had not gone far on our journey before we found him lying by the roadside, unable to go any farther. I picked him up and put him on my back and drew my cart as well, but could not manage far, so put him in the cart, which made three children and my luggage. My husband failing more each day, the Captain put a young man to help me for a short time. My other son Henry walked at 7 years old, 1300 miles with the exception of a few miles.....
    "My husband's sufferings have always pained me and I can never forget them. Poor Rob's (age 5) feet began to freeze. I cannot remember the place's; it was after wading a very deep river (Platte?) the freezing commenced. We had no wood but sagebrush. I went out and cut the sage to keep the fire all night. Covered them up with their feet to the fire and cut some more and kept the fire as well as I could. My clothes froze stiff. Well, we got through that night. Your father would not walk now. He would get into wagon after wagon, only to be turned out. The cattle were giving out and everyone had their friends, but the friend death, would soon end his sufferings. John (age 9) and Rob had to ride, Henry (age 7) walked, your father would take my arm and walk a little distance, fall on his knees with weakness. We moved from Devil's Gate. I believe it was brother David Kimball who carried us over a river (Sweetwater) and a great many more besides us. My poor husband blessed him for so doing." (Faith In Every Footstep)

Reading 4 - Elizabeth Horrocks Jackson Kingsford in the Martin Company recorded the following on October 19, 1856:  "Some of the men carried some of the women on their back or in their arms, but others of the women tied up their skirts and waded through, like the heroines that they were, and as they had gone through many other rivers and creeks. My husband (Aaron Jackson) attempted to ford the stream. He had only gone a short distance when he reached a sandbar in the river, on which he sank down through weakness and exhaustion. My sister, Mary Horrocks Leavitt, waded through the water to his assistance. She raised him up to his feet. Shortly afterward, a man came along on horseback and conveyed him to the other side. My sister then helped me to pull my cart with my three children and other matters on it. We had scarcely crossed the river when we were visited with a tremendous storm of snow, hail, sand, and fierce winds. . . .
"About nine o'clock I retired. Bedding had become very scarce so I did not disrobe. I slept until, as it appeared to me, about midnight. I was extremely cold. The weather was bitter. I listened to hear if my husband breathed, he lay so still. I could not hear him. I became alarmed. I put my hand on his body, when to my horror I discovered that my worst fears were confirmed. My husband was dead. I called for help to the other inmates of the tent. They could render me no aid; and there was no alternative but to remain alone by the side of the corpse till morning. Oh, how the dreary hours drew their tedious length along. When daylight came, some of the male part of the company prepared the body for burial. And oh, such a burial and funeral service. They did not remove his clothing—he had but little. They wrapped him in a blanket and placed him in a pile with thirteen others who had died, and then covered him up with snow. The ground was frozen so hard that they could not dig a grave. He was left there to sleep in peace until the trump of God shall sound, and the dead in Christ shall awake and come forth in the morning of the first resurrection. We shall then again unite our hearts and lives, and eternity will furnish us with life forever more.
"I will not attempt to describe my feelings at finding myself thus left a widow with three children, under such excruciating circumstances. I cannot do it. But I believe the Recording Angel has inscribed in the archives above, and that my suffering for the Gospel's sake will be sanctified unto me for my good." (Elizabeth Jackson, as quoted in LeRoy and Ann Hafen, Handcarts to Zion, 110-13.)

Reading 5 – President Young said, “ ‘I will now give this people the subject and the text for the Elders who may speak. … It is this. … Many of our brethren and sisters are on the plains with handcarts, and probably many are now seven hundred miles from this place, and they must be brought here, we must send assistance to them. The text will be, “to get them here.” …
“ ‘That is my religion; that is the dictation of the Holy Ghost that I possess. It is to save the people. …
“ ‘I shall call upon the Bishops this day. I shall not wait until tomorrow, nor until the next day, for 60 good mule teams and 12 or 15 wagons. I do not want to send oxen. I want good horses and mules. They are in this Territory, and we must have them. Also 12 tons of flour and 40 good teamsters, besides those that drive the teams. …
“ ‘I will tell you all that your faith, religion, and profession of religion, will never save one soul of you in the Celestial Kingdom of our God, unless you carry out just such principles as I am now teaching you. Go and bring in those people now on the plains’ (in LeRoy R. Hafen and Ann W. Hafen, Handcarts to Zion [1960], 120–21).  (Quoted by President Gordon B. Hinckley, Conference Report, Oct. 1996, 117–18; or Ensign, Nov. 1996, 85–86).

"The response was impressive. Sixteen wagonloads of food and supplies were quickly assembled; and on the morning of 7 October, sixteen good four-mule teams and twenty-seven hardy young men (known as Brigham Young's 'Minute Men') headed eastward with the first provisions. More help was solicited and obtained from all parts of the territory. By the end of October, two hundred and fifty teams were on the road to give relief" (details from Hafen and Hafen, Handcarts to Zion, 124-25; quoted from Church History in the Fulness of Times, 360).

Reading 6 - Elder Henry B. Eyring said:  There are few comforts so sweet as to know that we have been an instrument in the hands of God in leading someone else to safety. That blessing generally requires the faith to follow counsel when it is hard to do. An example from Church history is that of Reddick Newton Allred. He was one of the rescue party sent out by Brigham Young to bring in the Willie and Martin Handcart Companies. When a terrible storm hit, Captain Grant, captain of the rescue party, decided to leave some of the wagons by the Sweetwater River as he pressed ahead to find the handcart companies. With the blizzards howling and the weather becoming life threatening, two of the men left behind at the Sweetwater decided that it was foolish to stay. They thought that either the handcart companies had wintered over somewhere or had perished. They decided to return to the Salt Lake Valley and tried to persuade everyone else to do the same.
Reddick Allred refused to budge. Brigham had sent them out and his priesthood leader had told him to wait there. The others took several wagons, all filled with needed supplies, and started back. Even more tragic, each wagon they met coming out from Salt Lake they turned back as well. They turned back 77 wagons, returning all the way to Little Mountain, where President Young learned what was happening and turned them around again. When the Willie Company was finally found, and had made that heartrending pull up and over Rocky Ridge, it was Reddick Allred and his wagons that waited for them. (See Rebecca Bartholomew and Leonard J. Arrington, Rescue of the 1856 Handcart Companies [1992], 29, 33-34.)

Reading 7 - President Young was leading services in the old Tabernacle when he learned of the arrival of the Martin Company.  He said to the congregation, "The afternoon meeting will be omitted, for I wish the sisters to go home and prepare to give those who have just arrived a mouthful of something to eat, and to wash them, and nurse them up.... Prayer is good, but when (as on this occasion) baked potatoes, and pudding, and milk are needed, prayer will not supply their place. Give every duty its proper time and place.... I want you to understand that I desire this people to nurse them up; we want you to receive them as your own children, and to have the same feelings for them.... Now that the most of them are here, we will continue our labors of love until they are able to take care of themselves, and we will receive the blessing. You need not be distrustful about that, for the Lord will bless this people." (CHC, 4:100-101)

Reading 8 - Rebecca Bartholomew and Leonard Arrington recorded: "A lesser-known aspect of the handcart immigration, however, provides one of the most satisfying episodes in Mormon history. The rescue effort mounted by Brigham Young before anyone in Utah suspected the critical situation of the companies, the munificent response of the communities throughout the territory, and the courage and endurance of the rescue parties make a heartening story. In many immigrant journals, memory of the rescue and the welcome in Salt Lake City dominates other experience; the drama and the timelines of the deliverance is dwelt on far more often than grief and disillusionment over the predicament. Those embittered were in the minority; and even these, decades later, wrote emotionally, gratefully, of the heroic men who saved them from starvation and death" (Rebecca Bartholomew and Leonard Arrington, Rescue of the 1856 Handcart Companies, 3).

The famous author, Wallace Stegner, not a member of the Church, who was known for both his non-fiction and fiction writing about the American West, wrote: "Perhaps their suffering seems less dramatic because the handcart pioneers bore it meekly, praising God, instead of fighting for life with the ferocity of animals and eating their dead to keep their own life beating, as both the Fremont and Donner parties did. But if courage and endurance make a story, if human kindness and helpfulness and brotherly love in the midst of raw horror are worth recording, this half-forgotten episode of the Mormon migration is one of the great tales of the West and of America." (Faith In Every Footstep)

Reading 9 -  President Gordon B. Hinckley said :  "It is because of the sacrificial redemption wrought by the Savior of the world that the great plan of the eternal gospel is made available to us, under which those who die in the Lord shall not taste of death but shall have the opportunity of going on to a celestial and eternal glory.
  "In our own helplessness, He becomes our rescuer, saving us from damnation and bringing us to eternal life.
    "In times of despair, in seasons of loneliness and fear, He is there on the horizon to bring succor and comfort and assurance and faith. He is our King, our Savior, our Deliverer, our Lord and our God." (Ensign, Nov 1991, p54).

Reading 10 – Alma 7:11-13

Reading 11 – Mosiah 4:16-21

Mosiah 27:28-29

2 Nephi 25:23

President Gordon B. Hinckley, speaking about the pioneers, said: "I will never get over being thankful to them; I hope you never get over being thankful to them. I hope that we will always remember them. … Let us read again and again, and read to our children or our children’s children, the accounts of those who suffered so much." (Church News, 31 July 1999, p5)
    President Hinckley further stated:  "Stories of the beleaguered Saints and of their suffering and death will be repeated again and again. … Stories of their rescue need to be repeated again and again. They speak of the very essence of the gospel of Jesus Christ." (Ensign, Nov. 1996, p86)



Monday, September 23, 2013

Lesson 35: “A Mission of Saving” - Class Member Study Guide



Lesson 35: “A Mission of Saving” - Doctrine and Covenants and Church History Class Member Study Guide, (1999), 19

Reading assignment:

Doctrine and Covenants 4:4–7; 18:10–16; 52:40; 81:5–6; Moroni 7:45–48; Our Heritage, pages 77–80.

Read the account of the Martin and Willie handcart companies, on pages 77–78 of Our Heritage. When President Brigham Young heard of the condition of these handcart companies, he sent men to rescue them.

•What are some specific things you can do to help rescue those in need today? (See D&C 18:10–16; 52:40; 81:5–6; 3 Nephi 18:31–32.)

•What are some qualities we need in order to reach out to others? (See D&C 4:4–7; Moroni 7:45–48.)
Scripture Chain: Rescuing Those in Need

Luke 15:1–7

3 Nephi 18:31–32

D&C 18:10–16

D&C 81:5–6

D&C 123:12

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Lesson 33: President Brigham Young Leads the Saints – Scriptures and Quotes



Reading 1 – Wilford Woodruff wrote what Joseph said at the end of his instruction during the winter of 1843-44 – " Brethren, I have had great sorrow of heart for fear that I might be taken from the earth with the keys of the Kingdom of God upon me, without sealing them upon the heads of other men. God has sealed upon my head all the keys of the Kingdom of God necessary for organizing and building up of the Church, Zion, and Kingdom of God upon the earth, and to prepare the Saints for the coming of the Son of Man. Now, brethren, I thank God I have lived to see the day that I have been enabled to give you your endowments, and I have now sealed upon your heads all the powers of the Aaronic and Melchizedek Priesthoods and Apostleship, with all the keys and powers thereof, which God has sealed upon me; and I now roll off all the labor, burden and care of this Church and Kingdom of God upon your shoulders, and I now command you in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ to round up your shoulders, and bear off this Church and Kingdom of God before heaven and earth, and before God, angels and men; and if you don't do it you will be damned." (James R. Clark, Messages of the First Presidency, Vol.3, p.134)

Reading 2 – Doctrine and Covenants 107:22-24

Reading 3 - Brigham Young wrote of his thoughts after hearing that Joseph had been killed:  "The first thing I thought of was whether Joseph had taken the keys of the Kingdom with him from the earth. Brother Orson Pratt sat on my left; we were both leaning back in our chairs. Bringing my hand down on my knee, I said, 'The keys of the Kingdom are right here with the church'." (CHC, 2:413)

Sidney Rigdon said: "It was shown to me that this church must be built up to Joseph, and that all the blessings we receive must come through him. I have been ordained a spokesman to Joseph, and I must come to Nauvoo and see that the church is governed in a proper manner. Joseph sustains the same relationship to this church as he has always done. No man can be the successor of Joseph." (HC, 7:229)

Reading 4 - Brigham Young said:  "I do not care who leads the church, even though it were Ann Lee [founder of the Shakers]; but one thing I must know, and that is what God says about it. I have the keys and the means of obtaining the mind of God on the subject....
   "Joseph conferred upon our heads all the keys and powers belonging to the Apostleship which he himself held before he was taken away, and no man or set of men can get between Joseph and the Twelve in this world or in the world to come.
   "How often has Joseph said to the Twelve, 'I have laid the foundation and you must build thereon, for upon your shoulders the kingdom rests'....
   "My private feelings would be to let the affairs of men and women alone, only go and preach and baptize them into the kingdom of God; yet, whatever duty God places upon me, in his strength I intend to fulfill it." (HC, 7:230)

Reading 5 – Brigham Young began his afternoon address to the gathered Saints as follows: "Attention all! This congregation makes me think of the days of King Benjamin, the multitude being so great that all could not hear. I request the brethren not to have any feelings for being convened this afternoon, for it is necessary; we want you all to be still and give attention, that all may hear. Let none complain because of the situation of the congregation, we will do the best we can.
    "For the first time in my life, for the first time in your lives, for the first time in the kingdom of God in the 19th century, without a Prophet at our head, do I step forth to act in my calling in connection with the Quorum of the Twelve, as Apostles of Jesus Christ unto this generation--Apostles who God has called by revelation through the Prophet Joseph, who are ordained and anointed to bear off the keys of the kingdom of God in all the world....
   "There has been much said about President Rigdon being President of the Church, and leading the people, being the head, etc. Brother Rigdon has come 1,600 miles to tell you what he wants to do for you. If the people want President Rigdon to lead them they may have him; but I say unto you that Quorum of the Twelve have the keys of the kingdom of God in all the world." (HC, 7:232-233)

Reading 6 - Benjamin F. Johnson wrote:  "I sat in the assembly near to President Rigdon, closely attentive to his appeal to the conference to recognize and sustain his claim as 'guardian for the Church.' And I was, perhaps, to a degree, forgetful of what I knew to be the rights and duties of the apostleship. And as he closed his address and sat down, my back was partly turned to the seat occupied by Apostle Brigham Young and other Apostles, when suddenly, and as from heaven, I heard the voice of the Prophet Joseph. That thrilled my whole being, and quickly turning around, I saw in the transfiguration of Brigham Young, the tall, straight, and portly form of the Prophet Joseph Smith, clothed in a sheen of light covering him to his feet. And I heard the real and perfect voice of the Prophet, even to the whistle, as in years past caused by the loss of a tooth, said to have been broken out by the mob at Hiram. This view or vision, although but for seconds was to me as vivid and real as the glare of lightning or the voice of thunder from the heavens. And so deeply was I impressed with what I saw and heard in this transfiguration, that for years I dared not publicly tell what was given me of the Lord to see. But when in later years I did publicly bear this testimony, I found that others could testify to having seen and heard the same. But to what proportion of the congregation that were present, I could never know. But I do know that this, my testimony, is true." (quoted in BYU Studies, 32:188)

Reading 7 – Wilford Woodruff wrote:  Every man and every woman in that assembly, which perhaps might number thousands, could bear the same testimony. I was there, the Twelve were there, and a good many others, and all can bear the same testimony...just as quick as Brigham Young rose in that assembly, his face was that of Joseph Smith - the mantle of Joseph Smith had fallen on him, the power of God that was upon Joseph Smith was upon him, he had the voice of Joseph, and it was the voice of the shepherd. There was no person in that assembly, Rigdon, himself, not excepted, but was satisfied in his own mind that Brigham was the proper leader of the people... There was a reason for this in the mind of God; it convinced the people. They saw and heard for themselves, and it was by the power of God. (JD, 15:81)

Brigham then put the question to a vote: "If the church want the Twelve to stand as the head, the First Presidency of the Church, and at the head of this kingdom in all the world, stand next to Joseph, walk up into their calling, and hold the keys of this Kingdom, every man, every woman, every quorum is now put in order, and you are the sole controllers of it. All that are in favor of this, in all the congregation of the Saints, manifest it by holding up the right hand." (HC, 7:240)

Reading 8 - President Harold B. Lee said: “The Prophet Joseph Smith declared that ‘where the president is not, there is no First Presidency.’ Immediately following the death of a President, the next ranking body, the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, becomes the presiding authority, with the President of the Twelve automatically becoming the acting President of the Church until a President of the Church is officially ordained and sustained in his office” (in Conference Report, Apr. 1970, 123; or Improvement Era, June 1970, 28).

Reading 9 - President Joseph Fielding Smith said: “No man of himself can lead this church. It is the Church of the Lord Jesus Christ; he is at the head.…
“He chooses men and calls them to be instruments in his hands to accomplish his purposes, and he guides and directs them in their labors. But men are only instruments in the Lord’s hands, and the honor and glory for all that his servants accomplish is and should be ascribed unto him forever.
“If this were the work of man, it would fail, but it is the work of the Lord, and he does not fail” (in Conference Report, Apr. 1970, 113; or Improvement Era, June 1970, 26).

Brigham Young wrote - “This morning there was an immense crowd at the reception room waiting for admission. … One hundred twenty-one persons received ordinances” (History of the Church, 7:565).
“Such has been the anxiety manifested by the saints to receive the ordinances [of the Temple], and such the anxiety on our part to administer to them, that I have given myself up entirely to the work of the Lord in the Temple night and day, not taking more than four hours of sleep, upon an average, per day, and going home but once a week.
“Elder Heber C. Kimball and the others of the Twelve Apostles were in constant attendance but in consequence of close application some of them have had to leave the Temple to rest and recruit their health” (History of the Church, 7:567).

Brigham Young recorded the following on 3 February 1846: “Notwithstanding that I had announced that we would not attend to the administration of the ordinances, the House of the Lord was thronged all day, the anxiety being so great to receive, as if the brethren would have us stay here and continue the endowments until our way would be hedged up, and our enemies would intercept us. But I informed the brethren that this was not wise, and that we should build more Temples, and have further opportunities to receive the blessings of the Lord, as soon as the saints were prepared to receive them. In this Temple we have been abundantly rewarded, if we receive no more. I also informed the brethren that I was going to get my wagons started and be off. I walked some distance from the Temple supposing the crowd would disperse, but on returning I found the house filled to overflowing.
“Looking upon the multitude and knowing their anxiety, as they were thirsting and hungering for the word, we continued at work diligently in the House of the Lord. Two hundred and ninety-five persons received ordinances” (History of the Church, 7:579).

Reading 10 - Eliza R. Snow recorded: “Mothers gave birth to offspring under almost every variety of circumstances imaginable, except those to which they had been accustomed; some in tents, others in wagons—in rain-storms and in snow-storms. I heard of one birth which occurred under the rude shelter of a hut, the sides of which were formed of blankets fastened to poles stuck in the ground, with a bark roof through which the rain was dripping. Kind sisters stood holding dishes to catch the water as it fell, thus protecting the new-comer and its mother from a shower-bath. …
“Let it be remembered that the mothers of these wilderness-born babes were not … accustomed to roam the forest and brave the storm and tempest. … Most of them were born and educated in the Eastern States—had there embraced the gospel as taught by Jesus and his apostles, and, for the sake of their religion, had gathered with the saints, and under trying circumstances had assisted, by their faith, patience and energies, in making Nauvoo what its name indicates, ‘the beautiful.’ There they had lovely homes, decorated with flowers and enriched with choice fruit trees, just beginning to yield plentifully.
“To these homes … they had just bade a final adieu, and with what little of their substance could be packed into one, two, and in some instances, three wagons, had started out, desertward” (in Edward W. Tullidge, The Women of Mormondom [1877], 307–8).

Reading 11 - Refugee camps of five to six hundred homeless men, women, and children were scattered along two miles of the riverbank. Most had only blankets or brush for shelter and very little to eat. Many of them too sick to travel, and some died. Bishop Newel K. Whitney purchased some flour and distributed it as best he could, but this was not enough to sustain the people.
Then the Lord provided for them in a miraculous way:  On 9 October, when food was in especially short supply, several large flocks of quail flew into camp and landed on the ground and even on tables. Many of them were caught, cooked, and eaten by the hungry Saints. To the faithful it was a sign of God’s mercy to modern Israel as a similar incident had been to ancient Israel. (See B. H. Roberts, A Comprehensive History of the Church, 3:135–36.)

"It might be thought by the casual reader of the history of the Latter-day Saints, that their coming into these valleys when and as they did was merely a matter of necessity, without design so far as the purposes of the Lord were concerned. President George A. Smith, one of these pioneers, very frequently stated - speaking of Latter-day Saints - 'that we came here of our own free will and choice, because we had to." (Joseph Fielding Smith: Doctrines of Salvation, vol III, p. 347)

Elder Gerald Lund has said:  "The question was asked, how Brigham Young was able to colonize a desert. The answer came simply that by the time he said "this is the right place" most of the physically weak had died and all of the spiritually weak had been left behind... [the Lord] was out to forge steel so hard it could become an instrument for his purposes. And if the metal was flawed, sometimes it must go back into the fire." ("A Stone Cut Out," CES Symposium, August 1989"