Joseph Smith received divine
Priesthood authority from God. We are specifically warned, however, that there
“are many false spirits, which have gone forth in the earth deceiving the
world” (D&C 50:2; 1835 17:1) and that we must beware of “deceivers and
hypocrites” (D&C 50:6; 1835 17:2) who will at times profess gifts and
revelations “and yet be not of God” (D&C 46:27; 1835 16:7). Among the keys
which the Lord has given to avoid deception are the revelations and
commandments in the Doctrine and Covenants. “Thou shalt take the things which
thou hast received, which have been given unto thee in my scriptures for a law,
to be my law to govern my church; And he that doeth according to these things
shall be saved, and he that doeth them not shall be damned if he so continue”
(D&C 42:59-60; 1835 13:16). Like judges sitting on a hill the saints in the
church are to judge the nations and “the inhabitants of Zion shall judge all
things pertaining to Zion. And liars and hypocrites shall be proved by them,
and they who are not apostles and prophets shall be known” (D&C 64:37-39;
1835 21:7).
Joseph Smith wrote to a brother
in Missouri in 1833, “Respecting the vision you speak of we do not consider
ourselves bound to receive any revelation from any one man or woman without his
being legally constituted and ordained to that authority, and giving sufficient
proof of it. I will inform you that it is contrary to the economy of God for
any member of the Church, or any one, to receive instruction for those in
authority, higher than themselves; therefore you will see the impropriety of
giving heed to them; but if any person have a vision or a visitation from a
heavenly messenger, it must be for his own benefit and instruction; for the
fundamental principles, government, and doctrine of the Church are vested in
the keys of the kingdom” (Joseph Smith to Brother Carter, 13 April, 1833, TPJS
21. Emphasis added).
From time to time, some
individuals who make dubious prophetic claims cite one passage in support of their
claims. This passage reads, “For verily I say unto you, that he that is
ordained of me shall come in at the gate and be ordained as I have told you
before, to teach those revelations, which you have received and shall receive
through him whom I have appointed” (D&C 43:7; 1835 14:2). This is presented
by some false teachers to support the claim that any or all future leaders of
the Church must be personally selected by Joseph Smith again and ordained by
angels, but that is not what the revelations say. To be ordained “as I have
told you before” refers back to D&C 42:11, which the Lord had just given
previously.
“Again I say unto you, that it
shall not be given to any one to go forth to preach my gospel, or to build up
my church, except he be ordained by someone who has authority, and it is known
to the church that he has authority and has been regularly ordained by the
heads of the church” (D&C 42:11).
That is, they must be ordained,
not again at the hand of angels, but by “someone who has authority” and it must
be “known to the church that he has authority” and he must be “regularly
ordained by the heads of the church.”
James C. Brewster, was a young
man living in Kirtland who later claimed that when he was ten he was visited by
the angel Moroni who showed him a table full of ancient records that he was to
translate. In 1837, following this vision, Brewster and his followers
“presented to the High Council a plan for the better organization of the Church
in temporal affairs, stating that Moroni had appeared to Collins Brewster”
(History of the Church, 2:525). The High Council concluded that it “was a trick
of the devil” and that Brewster and those who supported him had followed “a
vain and delusive spirit.” Some of these followers that they “thought some put
to[o] much stress on the priesthood.” The High Council decided that Brewster
and his followers had acted “contrary to the order of the church” (Kirtland
High Council Minutes, 20 November, 1837).
This did not stop Brewster from putting forth additional claims to
revelation. Joseph Smith said that Brewster’s revelations were not of God.
“Brewster showed me the Manuscripts,” wrote the Prophet, “I enquired of the
Lord and the Lord told me the book was not true. It was not of him. If God ever
cal[l]ed me, or spoke by my mouth, or gave me a revelation, he never gave
revelations to the Brewster Boy or any of the Brewster race” (Joseph Smith
Journal, 31 December, 1842, Faulring, 265). Brewster claimed to have his own
seer stone and the gift of translation. After being cut off from the church he
claimed to translated many ancient records, not from Jeraneck, but from the
prophets Esdras, Nathan, Enoch, Alciba, Zenoch, and Neum and others, all of
which he said were a part of his lost “Book of Esdras. “ He also claimed to be
able to translate Mayan hieroglyphics, mid-western stone inscriptions and the
Kinderhook Plates, which he said contained a “History of the Altewanians” by
one “Varamenta, the last of the Altewanians” who were descendants of Japheth and
were destroyed in warfare. Although he had a small following for a time, his
followers eventually scattered and came to nothing.
Francis Gladden Bishop is
another notorious example from the early history of the Church. Shortly after
joining the Church in 1833, Bishop claimed he had a vision where an angel
ordained him a high priest or to the high priesthood and told that Joseph Smith
was a fallen prophet and that he, Bishop, should lead the Church. Through the
years he claimed to be “the Branch” or one of the two witnesses spoken of in
the book of Revelation. According to one complain, “Bishop frequently told of
women falling in love with him, that he observed frequently when passing people
that they felt his spirit” and that “he ought not to travel and preach on
account of the women so often falling in love with him” (Kirtland High Council
Minutes, 26 September, 1835). Later Bishop claimed that one of the three
Nephites appeared to him and showed him the plates and the sword of Laban, the
Urim and Thummim and the Liahona. When he excommunicated for the last and final
time in 1842, the High Council, Presided over by Joseph Smith carefully
reviewed his claims. Wilford Woodruff who was present at his trial wrote,
“Gladden had set himself up as some great thing for 8 or 9 years & the
church had been so much troubled with him by his foolish conduct that he had
been cut off a number of times from the Church & restored, & he had now
set himself up as a prophet & Revelator to the church & a number of his
revelations were brought forward & red before the congregations & it
was the greatest Bundle of Nonsens ever put together. It would have taken
Gladden Bishop ten thousand Years to have accomplished the work which he said
in his pretended revelations he should perform. He took the name of God in vain
& his crime was so great in his Blaspheming God in his pretended
revelations that Joseph the Seer said that nothing would excuse him in the
sight of God & angels in commiting the unpardonable sin ownly because he
was a fool & had not sens sufficient for the Holy Ghost to enlighten him”
(Wilford Woodruff Journal, 11 March, 1842).
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