Thursday, July 19, 2018

Leaving Kirtland: How Deep is Our Commitment to the Gospel?


In my last post I wrote about my great great great grandfather Frederick G. Williams, who joined the church in Kirtland, Ohio, and traveled with Oliver Cowdery, Peter Whitmer Jr., Parley P. Pratt and Ziba Peterson on their mission to the native Americans living in the Indian territories.

Williams was later called to be the second counselor in the First Presidency, he donated land to the church for the construction of buildings to further the work of kingdom, and he saw an angel at the dedication of the Kirtland temple -- the angel was also identified as the Savior. But there were also trials; there were disagreements regarding his role as a justice of the peace, an argument with the prophet Joseph Smith regarding business affairs of the Kirtland Safety Society, and his daughter married a man who would be less than faithful to the church.

The saints had experienced difficulties in building up the Kingdom of God in Ohio and in Jackson Country, Missouri. Yet this was followed by the Pentecostal experience at the dedication of the Kirtland temple. Such a marvelous experience as this, however, failed to provide protection in the troubles that followed, and some fell away, like many of those Lehi saw in his dream, to wander off in forbidden paths. Others went through the same experiences, but remained faithful through still more trials in Missouri and Illinois.

Despite the trials he experienced, it could be said that President Williams had success, prominence and spritual fulfillment in Kirtland. When he left Kirtland, he would lose almost everything. At a conference in Missouri, members refused to sustain him as second counselor in the First Presidency and he lost this position. An invalid son, whose healing had been promised if he and his wife remained faithful, passed away. His son-in-law became involved with other members turning against the church and collaborating with its enemies. Finally, Williams would be excommunicated from the church as the saints departed for Illinois.

A descendant of Frederick G Williams would speculate that he suffered guilt by association as he tried to mediate with his son-in-law and others who were turning against the church, trying to persuade them to return to the fold. Additionally, Williams was absent when the saints were making the trek to Illinois, and many who were absent at that time were excommunicated.

Williams may, however, have been absent because of his work in settling an estate belonging to a member of the church, for which he spent three days in court in Far West in March 1839. The business of settling the estate allowed Williams to visit Joseph Smith who was then in Liberty Jail.

In later years, Brigham Young appeared to admit a mistake had been made when he would teasingly ask Frederick's wife Rebecca if she had forgiven him yet -- she would teasingly answer that she had not.

It is certainly possible that Williams had committed an offense worthy of being excommunicated, but no documentation can be found regarding what that offense might have been. Even so, when Joseph Smith arrived in Illinois, he counseled Frederick G. Williams to submit himself before the church and ask for forgiveness. Williams did so in April 1840, and was received back into the fellowship of the church.

There may have been some hard feelings following this episode, however, as Dr. Williams chose to set up his medical practice in the town of Quincy, rather than in Nauvoo. Still, Williams remained faithful until his death in October 1842, at the age of fifty-four.

Not long before his passing, he and his wife paid a visit to the Prophet Joseph in Nauvoo. On a carriage ride, Joseph took a turn too quickly and overturned the carriage. As they parted, the prophet said that he hated to see Frederick leave, for he was going home to die.

Frederick's wife, Rebecca, and his son, Ezra, would cross the plains to settle in the valley of the Great Salt Lake. Ezra Williams would establish the first hospital west of the Mississippi in 1852, when the Williamses converted their spacious two-story, seven room adobe home, which stood at 44 East North Temple in Salt Lake City.

Despite everything he had lost, despite the difficulties he had experienced, Frederick G. Williams remained faithful to the end. Whatever disagreements he may have had, even emotional scars, what mattered to him was that Joseph Smith was a prophet of God and that the Book of Mormon was the word of God. His commitment to the gospel was deep enough that he died full in the faith.

His wife, Rebecca, experienced her own trials, on top of those she shared with Frederick. When she joined the church she was rejected by her parents, who refused to answer her attempts to communicate with them by letter. As noted, she would cross the plains with her son to gather with the saints in Zion. She then endured slanderous statements against her late husband -- some charged that he had been part of the mob at Carthage, despite proceeding his friend Joseph in death by almost two years. Like her husband, and many of their descendants, she stayed true to the faith.

Will we be able to say the same thing?  We live in a world, it seems, where personal attacks are okay, but standing up for your beliefs is not. In the church, "he said/she said" disagreements or other actions by imperfect people drive others from the church because they are offended. Others, despite such wounds, choose to remain faithful, to continue holding fast to the rod of iron.

Others find the price of enduring to the end to be too high. Some may sacrifice their principles to avoid a life of loneliness. Some may decide that the standards are too exacting.

"People have never failed to follow Jesus Christ because His standards were imprecise or insufficiently high," said President Russell M. Nelson in 1995. "Quite to the contrary. Some have disregarded His teachings because they were viewed as being too precise or impractically high! Yet such lofty standards, when earnestly pursued, produce great inner peace and incomparable joy."

What will we do? Will we hold to the iron rod and endure what trials may come, or will we lose heart and let go? Will we become dismayed or discontent? Will we wander off in the darkness? How deep is our commitment to the gospel of Jesus Christ?


Sources:

Williams, F. G. (2012). The Life of Dr. Frederick G. Williams: Counselor to the Prophet Joseph Smith. Provo, Utah: BYU Studies.

Nelson, R. M. (1995) "Perfection Pending." Ensign, November, accessed at: https://www.lds.org/ensign/1995/11/perfection-pending?lang=eng&_r=1

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