Mormon History
Ezra Booth Letter #7 - 1831
The Ohio Star - November 24, 1831
MORMONISM.
The letter of Mr. Booth, on the first page of this paper, notwithstanding its probity, will be found very interesting. We have reason to believe that these letters are exerting an important influence in opening the eyes of many of the really deluded subjects of Mormonism. Hence, in its exposure, the writer discharges an important though painful duty. They will soon be closed,
MORMONISM -- No. VII.
Nelson, Portage Co. Nov. 21, 1831.
EV. & DEAR SIR --R
SEPT. 20, 1831.
MR. PARTRIDGE
--
SIR: -- From a sense of duty, I take up my pen, to
communicate to you the present impressions of my mind, which originated from
facts, which occurred during my stay there, and while returning home. I
arrived safely at my home on the 1st inst. after having passed through a
variety of scenes, some of which, I design to disclose to you in this letter.
You will probably be surprised, when you learn, that I am no longer a member
of the Mormonite Church. The circumstances which led to this are numerous, and
of such a character, that I should have been compelled to sacrifice every
principle of honesty, or cease to support a system, which I conceive to be
grossly inconsistent, and in opposition to the best interests of human
society. The first thing that materially affected my mind, so as to weaken my
confidence, was the falsehood of Joseph's vision. You know perfectly well,
that Joseph had, or said he had, a vision, or revelation, in which it was made
known to him by the spirit, that Oliver had raised up a great church in
Missouri. This was so confidently believed, previous to our leaving Ohio, that
while calculating the number in the Church, several hundred were added,
supposed to be in Missouri. The great Church was found to consist of three or
four females. The night we took lodgings in the school-house, and the morning
which succeeded it, presented circumstances which I had not anticipated. When
you intimated to Joseph that the land which he and Oliver had selected, was
inferior in point of quality to other lands adjoining, had you seen the same
spirit manifested in me, which you saw in him, would you not have concluded me
to be under the influence of violent passion, bordering on madness, rather
than the meek and gentle spirit which the Gospel inculcates? When you
complained that he had abused you, and you observed to him, "I wish you not to
tell us any more, that you know these by the spirit when you do not; you told
us, that Oliver had raised up a large Church here, and there is no such
thing;" he replied, "I see it, and it will be so." This appeared to me, to be
a shift, better suited to an impostor, than a true Prophet of the Lord. And
from that time I resolved, to weigh well every circumstance; and I can assure
you, that no one that has any bearing on the subject, escaped my notice. But
the spirit considered your insolence to Joseph, too intolerable, [to] be
passed over unnoticed. Hence the commandment: "if he repent not of his sins,
which is unbelief and blindness of heart, let him take heed lest he fall.
Behold his mission is given unto him, and it shall not be given again." You
are to be careful, to submit patiently to all the abuse which Joseph sees fit
to pour upon you; and to swallow passively, all the spurious visions, and
false prophecies, that he in his clemency thinks proper to bestow upon you,
lest you fall from your Bishoprick, never to regain it. These men, under whose
influence you act, were entire strangers to you, until you embraced this new
system of faith. Now, permit me to inquire; have you not frequently observed
in Joseph, a want of that sobriety, prudence, and stability, which are some of
the most prominent traits in the christian character? Have you not often
discovered in him, a spirit of lightness and levity, a temper of mind easily
irritated, and an habitual proneness to jesting and joking? Have you not
repeatedly proved to your own satisfaction, that he says he knows things to be
so by the spirit, when they are not so? You most certainly have. Have you not
reason then to believe, or at least to suspect, that the revelations which
come from him, are something short of infallible, and instead of being the
production of divine wisdom, emanate from his own weak mind? Some suppose his
weakness, nay, his wickedness, can form no reasonable objection to his
revelations; and "were he to get another man's wife, and seek to kill her
husband, it could be no reason why we should not believe revelations through
him, for David did the same." So Sidney asserted, and many others concur with
him in sentiment. The commandment we received to purchase, or make a water
craft, directed us to proceed down the river in it as far as St. Louis, and
from thence, with the exception of Joseph and his two scribes, we were to
proceed on our journey home two by two. The means of conveyance being
procured, we embarked for St. Louis, but unpropitious events rolled on,
superseded the commandment, frustrated our plans, and we had separated before
we had accomplished one half of the voyage. The cause which produced this
disastrous result, was a spirit of animosity and discord, which made its
appearance on board, the morning after we left Independence. The conduct of
some of the Elders became highly displeasing to Oliver, who, in the greatness
of his power, uttered this malediction; "as the Lord God liveth, if you do not
behave better, some accident will befal you." The manner in which this was
handed out, evinced it to be the ebullition of a spirit, similar to that which
influenced Joseph in the school-house. No accident however befel them, until
Joseph in the afternoon of the third day, assumed the direction of affairs on
board of that canoe, which, with other matters of difference, together with
Oliver's curse, increased the irritation of the crew, who, in time of danger,
refused to exert their physical powers, in consequence of which, they ran foul
of a sawyer, and were in danger of upsetting . This was sufficient to flutter
the timid spirit of the Prophet and his scribe, who had accompanied him on
board that canoe, and like the sea-tossed mariner, when threatened with the
horrors of a watery grave, they unanimously desired, to set their feet once
more upon something more firm than a liquid surface: therefore, by the
persuasion of Joseph, we landed before sunset, intending to pass the night
upon the bank of the river. Preparations were made to spend the night as
comfortably as existing circumstances would admit, and then an attempt was
made, to affect a reconciliation betwixt the contending parties. The business
of settlement commenced, which elicited much conversation, and excited
considerable feeling on both sides. Oliver's denunciation was brought into
view; his conduct and equipage, were compared to "a fop of a sportsman;" he
and Joseph were represented, as highly imperious and quite dictatorial; and
Joseph and Sidney, were reprimanded for their excessive cowardice. Joseph
seemed inclined to arm himself according to his usual custom, in case of
opposition, with the judgments of God, for the purpose of pouring them, like a
thunder bolt upon the rebellious Elders; but one or two retorted, "none of
your threats:" which completely disarmed him, and he reserved his judgment for
a more suitable occasion. Finding myself but little interested in the
settlement, believing the principles of discord too deeply rooted to be easily
eradicated, I laid myself down upon the ground, and in silence, contemplated
awhile the events of the evening, as they passed before me. These are the men
to whom the Lord has intrusted the mysteries, and the keys of his kingdom;
whom he has authorized to bind or loose on earth, and their decision shall be
ratified in Heaven. These are the men sent forth, to promulgate a new
revelation, and to usher in a new dispensation -- at whose presence the
"Heavens are to shake, the hills tremble, the mountains quake, and the earth
open and swallow up their enemies." -- These are the leaders of the Church,
and the only Church on earth the Lord beholds with approbation. Surely, I
never witnessed so much confusion and discord, among the Elders of any other
Church; nevertheless they are all doomed to a perpetual curse, except they
receive the doctrines and precepts which Mormonism inculcates, and place
themselves under the tuition of men, more ignorant and unholy than themselves.
In the midst of meditations like these, I sunk into the arms of sleep, but was
awakened at a late hour, to witness and consent to a reconciliation, between
the parties. The next morning, Joseph manifested an aversion to risk his
person any more, upon the rough and rapid current of the Missouri, and in
fact, upon any other river; and he again had recourse to his usual method, of
freeing himself from the embarrassments of [a former commandment, by]
obtaining another in opposition to it. He succeeded according to his desires.
A new commandment was issued, in which a great curse was pronounced against
the waters; navigating them, was to be attended with extreme danger; and all
the saints in general, were prohibited journeying upon them to the promised
land. From this circumstance, the Missouri river was named the river of
Destruction. It was decreed, that we should proceed on our journey by land,
and preach by the way as we passed along. Joseph, Sidney and Oliver, were to
press their way forward with all possible speed, and to preach only in
Cincinnati; and there they were to lift up their voices, and proclaim against
the whole of that wicked City. The method by which Joseph and Co. designed to
proceed home, it was discovered, would be very expensive. "The Lord don't care
how much money it takes to get us home," said Sidney. Not satisfied
with the money they received from you, they used their best endeavors to exact
money from others, who had but little, compared with what they had; telling
them in substance, "you can beg your passage, on foot, but as we are to travel
in the stage, we must have money." You will find, sir, that the expense of
these three men, was one hundred dollars more than three of our company
expended, while on our journey home; and for the sake of truth and honesty,
let these men never again open their mouths, to insult the common-sense of
mankind, by contending for equality, and the community of goods in society,
until there is a thorough alteration in their method of proceeding. It seems,
however, they had drained their pockets, when they arrived at Cincinnati, for
they were there under the necessity of pawning their trunk, in order to
continue their journey home. Here they violated the commandment, by not
preaching; and when an inquiry was made respecting the cause of that neglect,
at one time they said, they could get no house to preach in; at another time
they stated, that they could have had the courthouse, had they staid a day or
two longer, but the Lord made it known to them, that they should go on; and
other similar excuses, involving like contradictions. Thus they turn and twist
the commandments, to suit their whims, and they violate them when they please
with perfect impunity. They can at any time obtain a commandment suited to
their desires, and as their desires fluctuate and become reversed, they get a
new one to supersede the other, and hence the contradictions which abound in
this species of revelation. The next day after we were cast upon the shore,
and had commenced our journey by land, myself and three others went on board
of a canoe, and re-commenced our voyage down the river. From this time a
constant gale of prosperity wafted us forward, and not an event transpired,
but what tended to our advance, until we arrived at our much-desired homes. At
St. Louis we took passage in a steamboat, and came to Wellsville; and from
thence in the stage home. We travelled about eight hundred miles farther than
the three who took their passage in the stage, and arrived at our homes but a
few days later. It is true we violated the commandment by not preaching by the
way, and so did they by not preaching in Cincinnati. But it seems that none of
us considered the commandment worthy of much notice.
In this voyage upon the waters, we demonstrated that the great dangers existed
only in imagination, and the commandment to be the offspring of a
pusillanimous spirit. The spirit also revealed to Joseph, that "on the
steam-boats, plots were already laid for our destruction." This too we proved
to be false. While descending the Missouri river, Peter and Frederick, two of
my company, divulged a secret respecting Oliver, which placed his conduct on a
parallel with Ziba's; for which Ziba was deprived of his Elder and
Apostleship: "Let that which was bestowed upon Ziba, be taken from him, and
let him stand as a member in the Church, and let him labor with his own hands
with the brethren." And thus by commandment, poor Ziba, one of the twelve
Apostles, is thrust down; while Oliver the scribe, also an Apostle, who had
been guilty of similar conduct, is set on high, to prepare work for the press;
and no commandment touches him, only to exalt him higher. -- These two persons
stated, that had they known previous to their journey to Missouri, what they
then knew, they never should have accompanied Oliver thither.
Sidney, since his return, has written a description of the land of Zion. But
it differs essentially from that which you wrote; so much so, that either
yours or his must be false. Knowing him to be constitutionally inclined to
exaggerate, and suspecting that this habit would be as likely to preponderate,
in his written, as in his oral communications, you cautioned him against it.
"What I write will be written by the most infallible inspiration of the Holy
spirit," said he with an air of contempt. You must be careful sir, or it will
again sound in your ears, "if he repent not" for giving a false description of
the land of Zion, let him take heed lest he fall from his office. This,
Sidney said, was one reason why you were not permitted to return to the State
of Ohio. The want of time and paper notify me to bring this letter to a close.
And now permit me to intreat you, to candidly view the whole subject, from the
commencement unto the present time. Look at it with your eyes, and no longer
suffer these strangers to blind you, and daub you with their [untempered]
mortar. Think how often you have been stumbled by those discordant
revelations, false visions, and lying prophecies. Put into practice the
resolutions you expressed to me the morning after the collision in the
school-house, that you would go home, and attend to your own business.
Transfer the lands you hold in your hands, to the persons whose money paid for
it. Place yourself from under the influence of the men who have deceived you;
burst the bands of delusion; and fly for your life, fly from the habitations
haunted by impostors; and having done this, you most surely will be glad and
rejoice, and prove to your own satisfaction, as I have done, the falsity of
Joseph's prophetic declaration, "if you turn against us you will enjoy no more
satisfaction in the world." E. B.
Yours affectionately,
EZRA BOOTH.
REV. I. EDDY.