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Joseph Smith's Kingdom of God: The Council of Fifty and the Mormon Challenge to American Democratic Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2019

Abstract

This article contextualizes the origins and development of Joseph Smith's secretive Council of Fifty, a clandestine assembly whose minutes were sequestered from public access since their creation in 1844 and were only made available in September 2016. Organized by Smith, the founding prophet of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, only months before his death at the hands of a mob in June 1844, the council was destined to introduce a new form of world governance. Colloquially named the “Council of Fifty,” it blended democratic principles with theocratic rule. More than a significant moment in the development of America's largest home-grown religion, however, Joseph Smith's controversial organization and the ideals it represented hint at broader anxieties over the nation's cultural disunity and democratic excesses in the wake of disestablishment. While many embraced the democratization of religious authority, the Mormons and some of their contemporaries countered that it only introduced cultural and political chaos. Examining how groups such as the Mormons grappled with these implications—through orchestrated electoral participation, appeals to higher laws, and revisions to democratized authoritative structures—sheds light on this dynamic challenge of political self-rule during America's antebellum period.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 2019 

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Footnotes

The author would like to thank Matthew Bowman, Rachel Cope, Sally Gordon, Matthew Grow, Christopher C. Jones, Laurie Maffly-Kipp, Spencer McBride, Jennifer Reeder, Alex Smith, John Turner, and Jordan Watkins, as well as his colleagues at Sam Houston State University.

References

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3 Historians have previously noted Mormonism's quixotic position with American democracy but to different ends. Hill's, Marvin S. Quest for Refuge: The Mormon Flight from American Pluralism (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1989)Google Scholar argued that Mormonism was a distinct dissent from American democratic culture yet overstated the oppositional cohesion on either side. Winn's, Kenneth H. Exiles in a Land of Liberty: Mormons in America, 1830–1846 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989)Google Scholar focused on extralegal violence and competing perceptions of liberty. The most recent and persuasive examinations of early Mormonism's construction of power and authority are Mason, Patrick Q., “God and the People: Theodemocracy in Nineteenth-Century Mormonism,” Journal of Church and State 53, no. 3 (Summer 2011): 349375CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Flake's, KathleenOrdering Antinomy: An Analysis of Early Mormonism's Priestly Offices, Councils and Kinship,” Religion and American Culture 26, no. 2 (Summer 2016): 139183CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Where Mason focuses on the political theologies and theoretical models of religious and political sovereignties, and Flake addresses the tension through questions drawn from religious studies, this paper looks at the topic from the perspective of America's democratic and political traditions.

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46 C50 Minutes, March 11 and 14, 1844, in JSPC50:40, 42–44, 48.

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54 C50 Minutes, February 3, 1849, quoted in JSPC50:137, fn. 412. Willard Richards had earlier hinted at the evolving nature of constitutional interpretation when he wondered if the “kingdom of God” became perfect not as an adopted document, but “through the alterations of the constitution which may take place hereafter to suit the situation of the earth and kingdom.” C50 Minutes, April 15, 1844, in JSPC50:122. Pratt elsewhere said that he was happy to give up the written constitution because “he considered that if God gave us laws to govern us and we receive those laws God must also give us a constitution.” C50 Minutes, September 9, 1845, in JSPC50:467. This emphasis on councils as the mode for determining the will of God had been a dominant theme in Joseph Smith's leadership structure for over a decade. See Bushman, Richard L., “Joseph Smith and Power,” in Whittaker, David J. and Garr, Arnold K., eds., A Firm Foundation: Church Organization and Administration (Provo, UT: BYU Religious Studies Center, 2011), 113Google Scholar; Flake, “Ordering Antinomy,” 150–155.

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75 Willard Richards to Hugh Clark, May 24, 1844, copy in Willard Richards Papers, CHL. That same month another Mormon apostle, Parley Pratt, denounced the riots and proclaimed that while “The Catholics may be the sufferers to-day, [and] the Mormons to-morrow,” there was no telling who could be next. “Jeffersonian Meeting,” The Prophet (New York), June 15, 1844. For an overview of the relationship between Mormons and Catholics in the nineteenth century, see Cannon, Mark W., “The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate Waves of a Common Current,” BYU Studies 3, no. 2 (Winter 1961): 2340Google Scholar; Grow, Matthew J., “The Whore of Babylon and the Abomination of Abominations: Nineteenth-Century Catholic and Mormon Mutual Perceptions and Religious Identity,” Church History 73, no. 1 (March 2004): 139167CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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83 Anointing of Heber C. and Vilate Kimball, January 8, 1846, in Anderson, Devery S. and Bergera, Gary James, eds., The Nauvoo Endowment Companies, 1845–1846: A Documentary History (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 2005), 376377Google Scholar.

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93 Warsaw Signal (IL), June 12, 1844.

94 James Robbins to Mother and Friends, Adams County, June 16, 1844, CHL.

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98 C50 Minutes, March 18, 1845, in JSPC50:336.

99 Times & Seasons, August 15, 1845.

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101 C50 Minutes, March 4, 1844, in JSPC50:283.

102 Thomas Sharp, “Manuscript history of the Anti-Mormon Disturbances in Illinois,” 1845, in Sharp Papers. For this period of contest and discord, see Flanders, Kingdom on the Mississippi, 306–341; Leonard, A Place of Peace, a People of Promise, 508–550.

103 Smith had earlier declared the council should always include non-Mormons “to show that in the organization of this kingdom men are not consulted as to their religious opinions or notions in any shape or form whatever and that we act upon the broad, liberal principal that all men have equal rights, and ought to be respected.” C50 Minutes, April 11, 1844, in JSPC50:97. For Young's attempt to consolidate authority in the wake of Smith's death, see Turner, John, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2012), 110143CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Park, Benjamin E., “Early Mormon Patriarchy and the Paradoxes of Democratic Religiosity in Jacksonian America,” American Nineteenth Century History 14, no. 2 (Summer 2013): 183208CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

104 The non-Mormons were released from the council in C50 Minutes, February 4, 1845, in JSPC50:226–227.

105 C50 Minutes, March 11, 1845, in JSPC50:308.

106 C50 Minutes, April 11, 1845, in JSPC50:401 (emphasis added).

107 George J. Adams to A. R. Tewkesberry, June 14, 1845, CHL.

108 C50 Minutes, March 4, 1845, in JSPC50:285.

109 William Clayton, journal, March 10, 1845, in An Intimate Chronicle, 159.

110 C50 Minutes, May 10, 1845, in JSPC50:454.

111 C50 Minutes, March 18, 1845, in JSPC50:329–330.

112 William Clayton, “Events of June 1844,” in JSPC50:198.