An Open Letter To the Clergy ....
Elbert A. Smith
Office of
FIRST PRESIDENCY
LAMONI, IOWA.
Dear Sir:
Understanding that you are interested in the nation-wide campaign against Mormonism, I
desire to approach you with a request that I believe you will concede to be only fair and
just.
The request is this: that in your lectures, and articles written for publication, you will
make a clear distinction between the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints, and the Latter Day Saint Church of Utah, commonly called the Mormon Church.
We have suffered much from misunderstanding and misrepresentation, owing to the popular
tendency to confuse us with the dominant church in Utah, and we ask your help to clear up
this misunderstanding, to the extent demanded by common justice.
As a representative of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and in
behalf of the highest presiding council of that body, I crave your indulgence for a moment
while I set forth some facts that you should clearly understand before you reach a
conclusion or express yourself upon Mormonism.
No study of Mormonism is complete that ignores that body of believers in the Book of
Mormon and the prophetic mission of Joseph Smith that is sometimes called "The
nonpolygamous branch of the Mormon Church," a title that is not wholly correct, but
is perfectly true so far as the nonpolygamous clause is concerned. (The term
"Mormonism" is used in this letter as a matter of convenience and is not
accepted by us as a proper church title.)
First of all let me state that we do not teach, practice, or believe the doctrine of
polygamy, nor have we ever done so. We regard it as unscriptural, unscientific, and
contrary to the nobler sentiments of manhood. We look upon it with unmixed abhorrence, as
a menace to that great corner stone of civilization, the home. We believe that a man
should have but one wife, and her he should love and cherish with all his heart, keeping
himself sexually for her and from all others.
We reject the doctrine advanced by Brigham Young, that "Adam is our God,, and the
only God with whom we have to do." We believe in God the Father, Jesus Christ the
Son, and in the brotherhood of man, just " those great facts are set forth in the
Bible.
We reject the idea of "blood atonement" taught by Brigham Young, and recognize
excommunication from the church as the extreme penalty within the power of the church to
inflict here on earth. The State alone may deprive a man of life, liberty, or property.
We do not believe in political interference. Our members are free to support any political
party, without dictation or interference from the priesthood.
We do not believe in commercialism within the church as exhibited in Utah. While we hold
to the law of tithing as a scriptural doctrine, the paying of tithes is optional with the
membership, and the spiritual authorities are not permitted to enrich themselves from the
tithes gathered. A strict account of all money received and expended is published
annually, and the account is audited by auditors elected and sustained by the membership
of the church.
We are democratic in principle, to this extent -- that in the general conference,
legislation may originate with any delegate, whether of the priesthood or the laity, male
or female; and that all proposed legislation is freely debated on the floor of the
assembly, and is decided by majority vote.
We believe that the laws of the land should be strictly obeyed, and hold to the principle
laid down by Joseph Smith during his life: "He that keepeth the laws of God hath no
need to break the laws of the land."
Here permit me to state briefly a few items -of history: Joseph Smith organized the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints April 6, 1830. He was assassinated in June, 1844.
During the period, of his life and presidency both he and the church taught strict
monogamy and denounced polygamy and similar evils as evidence abundantly shows; despite
the statements of certain encyclopedias and sensational exposes of Mormonism.
After the death of Joseph Smith, Brigham Young led a part of the membership of the church
to Utah, where he later introduced the doctrines that we have mentioned; and these
doctrines have become so notorious that many now suppose that they were a part of
so-called "Mormonism" from the first.
Those who could not conscientiously follow Brigham Young and could not accept his
doctrines, came together and reorganized under the leadership of Joseph Smith, the oldest
son of Joseph Smith, the founder of the church. The Reorganized Church has headquarters at
Lamoni, Iowa, and Independence, Missouri.
To avoid confusion, I will here state that Joseph F. Smith, for many years president of
the Utah Mormon Church, notorious for his polygamous views and practices, was the son of
Hyrum Smith; while the first president of the Reorganized Church, Joseph Smith, was the
son of Joseph Smith, the founder of the church, and in turn was succeeded by his son,
Frederick M. Smith. The descendants of the Joseph Smith who founded the church have a
regularly-organized association, with constitution and by-laws, and a membership of over
one hundred, including direct descendants and those who have married into the family. Not
one of these descendants holds membership in the Utah Mormon Church or gives allegiance in
any way to the erroneous doctrines of that body of people.
The civil courts have twice sustained our contention that we are the true successors-and
that after long and exhaustive investigation. You will see the deep significance of that
fact at a glance. It means that all that we stand for now in the way of morality and
religion, the church stood for under the administration of Joseph Smith, prior to 1844;
and the conditions in Utah to-day are not a true criterion by which to judge the church in
its beginning.
Behind the evil mask of Utah Mormonism is seen the face of Brigham Young, not that of
Joseph Smith. The so-called revelation sanctioning polygamy -- found in Utah editions of
the Book of Doctrine and Covenants -- while it bears the name of Joseph Smith, was never
published until eight years after his death, and was then produced by Brigham Young. It is
a fraudulent document.
At this juncture you may well ask for some proofs to support my statements. Space will not
permit me to produce one tenth of all that might be furnished; yet I will cite you to a
few evidences.
The following is an extract from a decision rendered by Judge L. S. Sherman ' in the Court
of Common Pleas, Lake County, Ohio. (See Journal entry, February term, 1880) :
That the said Plaintiff, the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, is a
Religious Society, founded and organized upon the same doctrines and tenets, and having
the same church organization, as the original Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
organized in 1830, by Joseph Smith, and was organized pursuant to the constitution, laws
and usages of said original Church, and has branches located in Illinois, Ohio and other
States.
That the church in Utah, the Defendant of which John Taylor is president, has materially
and largely departed from the faith, doctrines, laws, ordinances and usages of said
original Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and has incorporated into its system
of faith the doctrines of celestial marriage and a plurality of wives, and the doctrine of
Adam-god worship, contrary to the laws and constitution of said original Church.
And the Court do further find that the Plaintiff, the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints, is the True and Lawful continuation of, and successor to the said
original Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, organized in 1830, and is entitled
in law to all its rights and property.
March 16, 1894, Judge John F. Philips, in the Circuit Court of the United States, for the
Western District of Missouri, Western Division, rendered a decision in the famous
"Temple Lot Case," from which I quote:
The Book of Mormon itself inveighed against the sin of polygamy. ... Conformably to the
Book of Mormon, the Book of Doctrine and Covenants expressly declared "that we
believe that one man should have but one wife, and one woman but one husband." And
this declaration of the church on this subject reappeared in the Book of Doctrine and
Covenants, editions of 1846 and 1856. Its first appearance as a dogma of the church [the
dogma of polygamy] was in the Utah Church in 1852.
Claim is made by the Utah Church that this doctrine is predicated on a revelation made to
Joseph Smith in July, 1843. No such revelation was ever made public during the life of
Joseph Smith, and under the law of the church it could not become an article of faith and
belief until submitted to and adopted by the church. This was never done....
The Utah Church further departed from the principles and doctrines of the Original Church
by changing in their teaching the first statement in the Article of Faith which was,
"We believe in God, the Eternal Father, and in his Son, Jesus Christ, and in the Holy
Ghost," and in lieu thereof taught the doctrine of "Adam-god worship." ...
In 1852 the scattered fragments of the church, the remnants of those who held to the
fortunes of the present Joseph Smith, son of the so-called
"Martyr," gathered together sufficiently for a nucleus of organization. They
took the name of "The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,"
and avowed their allegiance to the teachings of the ancient church; and their epitome of
faith adopted, while containing differences in phraseology, in its essentials is but a
reproduction of that of the church as it existed from 1830 to 1844. -- Decision of Judge
John F. Philips in Temple Lot Case.
These court decisions must stand until reversed by some higher tribunal, and they should
outweigh sensational statements of careless and uninformed writers.
United States Senator Julius C. Burrows was chairman of the Committee on Privileges and
Elections during the long drawn out Reed Smoot Case. Great masses of evidence were
examined, and scores of witnesses summoned. No man ever had a better opportunity to study
the subject from the standpoint of an unprejudiced student. And at the close of this
well-remembered case, Mr. Burrows made a speech in the United States Senate, from which I
present two extracts for your consideration:
In order to induce his followers more readily to accept this infamous doctrine, Brigham
Young himself invoked the name of Joseph Smith, the Martyr, whom many sincerely believed
to be a true prophet, and ascribed to him the reception of a revelation from the Almighty
in 1843, commanding the Saints to take unto themselves a multiplicity of wives, limited in
number only by the measures of their desires. ... Such the mythical story palmed off on a
deluded people. -- Congressional Record, December 13, 1906.
The death of Joseph Smith in 1844, however, carried dismay and demoralization throughout
the entire membership of the Mormon Church, scattering its adherents in divers directions
and for the time being seemed to presage the complete overthrow and dissolution of the
organization. Recovering, however, from the shock, the scattered bands soon reappeared in
various parts ,of the country and promulgated their doctrines with increased zeal, and set
to work to reassemble and reorganize their scattered forces, resulting finally in the
formation of what is now known and recognized as the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints, with headquarters at Lamoni, Iowa, and presided over by Joseph Smith, a
son of the Prophet [at his death succeeded by his son, Frederick Madison Smith]. The
courts have repeatedly declared this organization to be the legitimate successor of the
original Mormon Church, and its adherents -- numbering some 50,000 [now over 60,000],
peaceable, patriotic, and law-abiding citizens scattered throughout the United States in
small church societies, conforming to the laws of their country wherever they may be, and
adhering to the faith of the founder of their creed, repudiating and denouncing the
doctrine of polygamy and its attendant crimes, without temple, endowment house, or secret
order -- worship in the open like other church organizations, unquestioned and unmolested.
-- Congressional Record, December 13,1906.
At the same time, Senator Fred T. Dubois, another member of the committee, made the
following statement:
It is only fair, I think, for me to say -- and I am glad the distinguished Senator from
Michigan (Mr. Burrows) treated upon it the other day -- that there is a branch of the
Mormons, called the "Josephites," who ought to be separated clearly in the minds
of all Senators from the Brighamite Mormons. The Josephites claim that they are custodians
of the church as it was founded. They claim that Brigham Young has interjected doctrines
into the church which the Mormons did not accept in the beginning. At any rate, however
that may be, the Josephite Mormons, with their headquarters at Lamoni, in the State of
Iowa, and wherever they are, no matter in what part of the country, are among the best of
our citizens in all respects -- Congressional Record, December 17, 1906.
At the death of our first president, Joseph Smith, in Independence, Missouri, December 10,
1914, the Kansas City Journal had the following editorial:
But in the death of the late venerable head of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints the country loses an interesting and useful citizen. ...
Those who ignorantly confounded the Reorganized Church with Mormonism, in the
objectionable acceptation of that term, will not appreciate the theological distinctions
between the two nor understand that nothing was more hateful to Joseph Smith than the
doctrines of Brigham Young, with their polygamous teachings and all the other features
which make Utah Mormonism obnoxious in the eyes of the average American. ...
He was the prophet, but first of all he was the Christian gentleman and tl~e good citizen.
As such he lived, as such he died, as such he will be remembered by all outside the
household of his faith. ...
Kindly, cheerful, loyal to his own creed, tolerant of those of others, standing for
modesty, simplicity, good citizenship, embodying in his private and public life all the
virtues which adorn a character worthy of emulation -- such is the revelation which Joseph
Smith leaves to the world, as the real interpretation of an ecclesiastical message
translated into terms of human character. -- Kansas City Journal, December 12, 1914.
The Kansas City Star-Times for November 10, 1915, had the following in reply to an
inquiry:
The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is the original church in
succession, and is in no way connected with the Utah Mormons. The Reorganized Church has
always been an active and vigorous opponent of polygamy, and its members have the
reputation of being law-abiding, peaceful citizens. The above facts are clearly set out in
the decision of Federal Judge John F. Philips in the famous "Temple Lot" case.
Both the Journal and the Star-Times are published in close proximity to Independence,
Missouri, the seat of our largest following.
So, in conclusion, I will repeat the statement, that no investigation of
"Mormonism," as it is termed, is complete that ignores the Reorganized Church.
Here is a great body of people who command respect because of their morality; and yet they
believe in the Book of Mormon and in the prophetic calling of Joseph Smith. They are good
citizens.
You must approach them from a different angle than that from which you approach the
Mormons of Utah.
You can not wean them from their faith by attacking polygamy, for it has never been part
of their creed.
You can not convert them by relating the old stories that prejudiced people told about
Joseph Smith, -- to the effect that he was ignorant, dishonest, drunken, etc.
They believe that these stories are not true; and know that just as evil stories were told
about Wesley and Luther in their time, and about the prophets of old, not even excepting
the pure and holy man of Galilee, Jesus, the Son of God.
Of course I do not expect you to accede to all of our views without further investigation.
Yet, I believe that you will concede the justice of the plea presented in the opening
paragraphs of this letter.
And as a man of honor and fairness -- as I assume you are -- and as one who holds to the
old idea of the "square deal," I trust that in your public and private
utterances on this question you will make a clear distinction between our people and the
dominant church of Utah, on those, fundamental questions of religion and morality outlined
in the opening paragraphs of this communication.
Sincerely yours,
ELBERT A. SMITH.
For the First Presidency of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
06/06/2009