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Nauvoo City of Our God

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Title: Slide 1 Author: Kevin Hinckley Last modified by: Kevin Hinckley Created Date: 7/28/2005 2:38:53 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nauvoo City of Our God


1
NauvooCity of Our God
  • Khinckley1_at_yahoo.com

2
November 1838
  • Israel Barlow
  • Des Moines River to Mississippi
  • Isaac Galland
  • Eastern land speculators
  • Nothing Down, 20 years to pay!
  • Joseph Smith given offer in March
  • Joseph and brethren escape April 16th
  • Commerce purchased April 30th

3
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4
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5
First Summer
  • Illness
  • Malaria (Ague)
  • Funerals limited to Tues and Thursdays
  • Families pre-fitted for their coffins

6
Heber C. Kimball
  • Charles Hubbard sent his boy with a wagon and
    span of horses to my house our trunks were put
    into the wagon by some brethren I went to my
    bed and shook hands with my wife who was then
    shaking with a chill, having two children lying
    sick by her side I embraced her and my children,
    and bade them farewell. My only well child was
    little Heber P., and it was with difficulty he
    could carry a couple of quarts of water at a
    time, to assist in quenching their thirst.    
  • "It was with difficulty we got into the wagon,
    and started down the hill about ten rods it
    appeared to me as though my very inmost parts
    would melt within me at leaving my family in such
    a condition, as it were almost in the arms of
    death. I felt as though I could not endure it. I
    asked the teamster to stop, and said to Brother
    Brigham, 'This is pretty tough, isn't it let's
    rise up and give them a cheer.'
  • We arose, and swinging our hats three times over
    our heads, shouted 'Hurrah, hurrah for Israel.'
    Vilate, hearing the noise, arose from her bed and
    came to the door. She had a smile on her face.
    Vilate and Mary Ann Young cried out to us
    'Goodbye, God bless you.' We returned the
    compliment, and then told the driver to go ahead.
  • After this I felt a spirit of joy and gratitude,
    having had the satisfaction of seeing my wife
    standing upon her feet, instead of leaving her in
    bed, knowing well that I should not see them
    again for two or three years."

7
More Heber C. Kimball
  • Brother Brigham had one York shilling left, and
    on looking over our expenses we found we had paid
    out over 87.00 out of the 13.50 we had at
    Pleasant Garden, which is all the money we had to
    pay our passages with.
  • We had traveled over 400 miles by stage, for
    which we paid from 8 to 10 cents a mile, and had
    eaten three meals a day, for each of which we
    were charged fifty cents, also fifty cents for
    our lodgings.
  • Brother Brigham often suspected that I put the
    money in his trunk, or clothes thinking that I
    had a purse of money which I had not acquainted
    him with, but this was not so the money could
    only have been put in his trunk by some heavenly
    messenger, who thus administered to our
    necessities daily as he knew we needed." (Life of
    Heber C. Kimball, p273)

8
Missionary work Expands
  • Germany (1843)
  • Ireland (1840)
  • Israel (1841)
  • Jamaica (1841)
  • Russia (1843)
  • Scotland (1839)
  • Tahiti (1843)
  • Wales (1844)

9
Section 124
124 2this stake which I have planted to be a
cornerstone of Zion, which shall be polished with
the refinement which is after the similitude of a
palace
  • 22 Let my servant George, and my
    servant Lyman, and
    my servant
    John Snider, and others, build a

    house unto my name, such a one
    as my servant
    Joseph shall show
    unto them, upon the place which
    he shall show unto them also.
  • 23 And it shall be for a house for boarding, a
    house that strangers may come from afar to lodge
    therein therefore let it be a good house, worthy
    of all acceptation, that the weary traveler may
    find health and safety while he shall contemplate
    the word of the Lord and the corner-stone I have
    appointed for Zion.
  • 24 This house shall be a healthful habitation if
    it be built unto my name

10
1841 The City of our God
  • Psalm 48
  • 1 Great is the LORD, and greatly to be praised in
    the city of our God, in the mountain of his
    holiness.
  • 2 Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole
    earth, is mount Zion, on the sides of the north,
    the city of the great King.
  • Joseph Smith
  • The name of our city (Nauvoo) is of Hebrew
    origin, and signifies a beautiful situation, or
    place,

11
Jerusalem/Nauvoo
  • 3 God is known in her palaces for a refuge
  • 4 For, lo, the kings were assembled, they passed
    by together
  • 5 They saw it, and so they marveled they were
    troubled, and hastened away
  • 11let the daughters of Judah be glad
  • DC 12410 and where shall be the safety of my
    people, and refuge for those who shall be left of
    them?
  • 11 Awake, O kings of the earth! Come ye, O, come
    ye, with your gold and your silver, to the help
    of my people,
  • to the house of the daughters of Zion.

12
Jerusalem/Nauvoo
  • Psalm 48 8 As we have heard, so have we seen in
    the city of the LORD of hosts, in the city of our
    God God will establish it for ever...
  • 9 We have thought of thy loving kindness, O God,
    in the midst of thy temple.
  • 12 Walk about Zion, and go round about her tell
    the towers thereof.
  • 13 Mark ye well her bulwarks, consider her
    palaces that ye may tell it to the generation
    following.

13
Question
  • What should the world and our children know about
    Nauvoo?

14
Elder Gordon B. Hinckley1964 General Conference
  • In imagination I saw my own grandfather-a
    young man who had been orphaned by a plague
    of smallpox With his brother and
    grandparents he had gone to Springfield,
    Illinois-Abraham Lincoln's town-and then on to
    Nauvoo. There as a boy he met Joseph
    Smith- the man who changed his life and the
    lives of all the generations to follow him.
  • He witnessed in Nauvoo the resurgence of the old,
    ugly hatred, culminating in the murder of the
    Prophet Joseph Smith. He saw Nauvoo threatened,
    then attacked, burned, and emptied of those who
    owned it.
  • He, with his young bride, started across Iowa,
    then followed the long trail up the Elkhorn and
    the North Platte in the direction of Fort
    Laramie. His wife grew pale and sick and died.
    With his own hands he chopped a tree beside the
    trail, made a coffin, dug a grave, left his
    sweetheart in a place he never again visited, and
    carried a three-month-old baby to the Salt Lake
    Valley.

15
Elder Hinckley Continues
  • I thought of him last night as we flew smoothly
    more than seven miles over Nebraska and Wyoming,
    and reached in my case, took out my Bible, and
    turned to Joshua, chapter 24, and read these
    words of the Lord given to an ungrateful Israel
  • And I have given you a land for which ye did not
    labour, and cities which ye built not, and ye
    dwell in them of the vineyards and oliveyards
    which ye planted not do ye eat. (Josh. 2413.)
  • I thought of how appropriately that might be
    applied to our own generation. You and I live in
    a marvelous land for which we have not labored,
    and we dwell in cities which we built not and eat
    of vineyards which we have not planted. How
    thankful we ought to be for the magnificent
    blessings we enjoy. Our society is afflicted by a
    spirit of thoughtless arrogance unbecoming those
    who have been blessed so generously.
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