Everything about Joseph Smith Sr totally explained
Joseph Smith, Sr. (
1771–
1840) was the father of
Joseph Smith, Jr., the founder of the
Latter Day Saint movement. Joseph Sr., was also one of the
Eight Witnesses of the
Book of Mormon which is believed to have been translated by Joseph Jr. from the
Golden Plates. In addition, Joseph Sr. was the first
Presiding Patriarch of the Latter Day Saint church, a member of the
First Presidency of the church, and a Master
Freemason of the Ontario Lodge No. 23 of
Canandaigua, New York.
Early life
Joseph Smith, Sr. was born on
July 12,
1771 in
Topsfield, Massachusetts,
USA to Asael Smith and Mary Duty. He married
Lucy Mack in
Tunbridge, Vermont on
January 24,
1795, and had eleven children with her.
Smith tried his hands at several professions, including farmer, teacher, shop-keeper, none of which proved very successful. He moved his family to
Palmyra, New York in 1816 and began to make payments on a farm located on the edge of neighboring
Manchester Township. He was raised to the degree of Master
Freemason on May 7, 1818 in Ontario Lodge No. 23 of Canandaigua, New York. Work on a frame house at the farm was halted by the unexpected death of Smith's eldest son, Alvin, in 1823. Smith subsequently failed to make payments on the farm. Lemuel Durfee purchased it as a favor to the family and allowed the Smiths to continue there as renters through 1830.
In 1824, rumors began circulating that the body of Smith's son Alvin had been exhumed from his grave and dissected. To dispel the rumors, from September to November 1824, he published a notice in a local newspaper that he and his neighbors had themselves exhumed the grave, and found Alvin's body undisturbed. (
Wayne Sentinel,
September 25,
1824).
Smith showed little interest in religion and was content to allow his wife control over the religious upbringing of their children. This indifference bothered
Lucy very much. After much prayer, she said she'd received a divine witness that her husband would some day accept "the pure and undefiled Gospel of the Son of God." (Smith, 56)
Smith professed that he'd visionary dreams with highly symbolic content, obviously related to his ambivalence about religious faith and sometimes presaging events to come. These dreams continued after the family's move to Palmyra, New York, until he'd had seven in all; Lucy remembered five well enough to quote in detail. (Smith)
Book of Mormon
In the late
1820s, Smith's son,
Joseph Jr., began to tell the family about
Golden Plates, which he said contained a record of the ancient inhabitants of the Americas. In September 1827, Joseph Jr. said he obtained the plates, which Joseph Sr. testified he felt and lifted while wrapped in cloth. In the following years, Joseph Jr. claimed to translate the plates into English through the use of the
Urim and Thummim, a sacred device given to him by an angel of God. When the work was near completion, at the end of June 1829, Joseph Sr., and seven other men signed a joint statement, testifying that they'd both lifted the plates and seen the engravings on the plates. Known as the "
Testimony of the Eight Witnesses
", this statement was published with the first edition of the
Book of Mormon and has been a part of nearly all subsequent editions.
Joseph Smith Sr. was
baptised as one of six founding members, when the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints was first known) was organized on
April 6,
1830. When Joseph Jr. saw Joseph Sr. come up out of the water, he's reported to have cried, "Oh! My God I've lived to see my own father baptized into the true church of
Jesus Christ!" (Bushman, 110).
Presiding Patriarch
In January 1831, Joseph Smith, Sr. and his family moved to the church's new headquarters in
Kirtland, Ohio. He was ordained to be the church's first
Presiding Patriarch on
December 18,
1833.
Likening his father to
Adam,
Joseph Smith, Jr. said, "So shall it be with my father; he'll be called a prince over his posterity, holding the keys of the patriarchal priesthood over the kingdom of God on earth, even the Church of the Latter Day Saints" (quoted in Bates and Smith, page 34).
As part of his new role, Joseph Smith Sr. presided in council meetings, ordained other
patriarchs and administered
patriarchal blessings.
On
September 3,
1837, Smith was also made an Assistant Counselor in the
First Presidency of the church.
Deathbed blessings
Smith moved with his family to
Far West, Missouri in 1838 and from there to the church's new headquarters at
Nauvoo, Illinois in 1839. Old age and illnesses had taken their toll and by the end of summer 1840, Smith realized he was dying. He called his family around him to administer patriarchal blessings.
Through the exquisite, he blessed his wife: "Mother, do you not know that you're the mother of as great a family as ever lived upon the earth. . . . They are raised up to do the Lord's work" (Smith, chap. 52). He blessed and ordained his eldest surviving son,
Hyrum to succeed to the office of
Presiding Patriarch by right of
lineage.
Joseph Smith, Sr. died on
September 14,
1840.
Descendants
Further Information
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