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Joseph Smith
Born:
December
23, 1805 Sharon, Vermont
Died: Jun
27, 1844
Baptism:
May 15, 1829 Re-baptized Apr 6, 1830
Married: Jan
18, 1827
Father:
Joseph
Smith, Sr.
Mother: Lucy
Mack
Brothers: Alvin,
Hyrum, Samuel, Ephraim, William, Don Carlos
Sisters:
Sophronia, Catherine, Lucy
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"Seek
knowledge by study and by faith"
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Positions
held:
Stake President, first elder, president, apostle
Tenure
as Prophet:
14
yr 3 mo
Apr 6, 1830 - Jun 27, 1844
Tenure as Apostle:
14 yr 1 mo
Ordination: May
1829
Temples Dedicated: One
Temples Total: Two
Apostles Called: 22
Missionaries: 16
Members: 16,864
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- Joseph Smith was born on
December 23, 1805 in Sharon, Windsor County, Vermont to Joseph
Smith, Sr. and Lucy Mack Smith. He was the fifth of eleven
children, and the third son. Two of the 11 children died as
infants.
- Joseph spent less than a year
in formal schooling.
- When 6 years old, Joseph
contracted typhus which eventually caused a life-threatening
infection in one of the bones in his leg. This required
surgical removal of the infected bone. Joseph refused to take
alcohol as an anesthetic.
- Joseph was a farmer and
laborer before devoting most of his adult life to the work of
the Lord.
- In 1820 (age 14) Joseph was
visited in person by God the Eternal Father and his son, Jesus
Christ, in a grove of trees near Palmyra, New York. This
visitation was in response to Joseph's sincere plea to know
which church was correct, and thus began the ushering in of
the Dispensation of the Fulness of Times.
- Joseph was visited by and
instructed by the angel Moroni (a resurrected Book of Mormon
prophet) at least 5 times during the years 1823-1827.
- Joseph married Emma Hale on
January 18, 1827 (age 21).
- Joseph received the plates
from which the Book of Mormon was translated on September 22,
1827, and he began the inspired translation of the plates
shortly thereafter. Joseph translated the Book of Mormon at
the rate of about 10 pages per day, completing the task in 85
days. Expert translators today do well if they can translate
scripture at the rate of one page per day.
- On May 15, 1829, Joseph was
baptized by Oliver Cowdery, as directed by John the Baptist,
in the Susquehanna River near Harmony, Pennsylvania. He and
Oliver were also ordained to the Aaronic Priesthood by John
the Baptist at this time. Later in 1829, Joseph was ordained
to the Melchizedek Priesthood by Peter, James, and John.
- In 1830, Joseph directed the
publication of the Book of Mormon, and he initiated the
official organization of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints on April 6, 1830.
- In 1832 (age 26), Joseph was
sustained as President of the High Priesthood. This occured in
Amherst, Ohio.
- In 1834, Joseph organized and
marched with "Zion's Camp", a group of 205 faithful
brethren who trekked from Kirtland, Ohio to Independence,
Missouri to help restore the displaced Latter-day Saints in
the Jackson County area.
- In 1835, Joseph published the
Doctrine and Covenants, and began work on the translation of
the Book of Abraham.
- On March 27, 1836 (age 30),
Joseph dedicated the Kirtland Temple. He was later visited by
Jesus Christ, Moses, Elias, and Elijah in that temple.
- Joseph's hobbies as an adult
included wrestling, games of strength, and public speaking.
- States in which Joseph resided
were Vermont, New York, Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois.
- In 1839, Joseph founded
Nauvoo, Illinois, and in 1840 he announced that the saints
would erect another temple in Nauvoo.
- In 1842 (age 31), Joseph
introduced the full temple endowment to selected individuals
in Nauvoo.
- In March of 1842, Joseph
organized "The Female Relief Society".
- In August of 1842 he predicted
that the saints would continue to be persecuted and would
eventually be driven to the Rocky Mountains.
- In 1843 and 1844, Joseph was a
candidate for the office of President of the United States.
- Joseph served many missions
during his life, including the Eastern States in 1836, Canada
in 1837, and Washington, D.C. in 1839 and 1840.
- Some of the major trials
Joseph faced include (1) the loss of the 116 pages of
manuscript during the translation of the Book of Mormon, (2)
being dragged from his home and tarred & feathered in
1832, (3) the failure of the Kirtland Safety Society Bank and
the ensuing apostacy and bitterness of some of the leading
brethren of the church, (4) expulsion of the saints from Ohio
and Missouri, (5) his 5-month incarceration in Liberty Jail
during a Missouri winter, (6) the apostacy and subsequent
invective of John C. Bennett, (7) repeated arrests on
groundless charges, (8) and his martyrdom.
- On June 27, 1844, Joseph and
his beloved brother Hyrum were brutally martyred in the
Carthage Jail, Carthage, Illinois
- The crucial and important role
that Joseph would play in the latter days was known even to
prophets of old. In 2 Nephi 3:6&14-15 it states: "A
seer shall the Lord my God raise up, who shall be a choice
seer unto the fruit of my loins... Behold, that seer will the
Lord bless; and they that seek to destroy him shall be
confounded;...And his name shall be called after me [Joseph of
old]; and it shall be after the name of his father."
- John Taylor, who was with
Joseph in the Carthage Jail at the time of his death, paid
this fitting tribute: "Joseph Smith, the Prophet and Seer
of the Lord, has done more, save Jesus only, for the salvation
of men in this world, than any other man that ever lived in
it. ...He lived great, and he died great in the eyes of God
and his people; and like most of the Lord's anointed in
ancient times, has sealed his mission and his works with his
own blood."
- Joseph is affectionately
referred to as "Joseph, the Seer" and "The
Prophet of the Restoration."
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