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We Are Going to Do Something Extraordinary
Nauvoo Relief Society
Nauvoo, Illinois
1842–1844
[March 17, 1842]
President Emma Smith remarked we are going to do something extraordinary. When a boat is stuck on the rapids with a multitude of Mormons on board we shall consider that a loud call for relief.16 We expect extraordinary occasions and pressing calls. …
President E. Smith then arose and proceeded to make appropriate remarks on the object of the society, its duties to others, also its relative duties to each other, viz., to seek out and relieve the distressed, that each member should be ambitious to do good, that the members should deal frankly with each other, to watch over the morals and be very careful of the character and reputation of the members of the institution, etc. …
[March 24, 1842]
President E. Smith then rose and said that measures to promote union in this society must be carefully attended to. That every member should be held in full fellowship. As a society, hoped they would divest themselves of every jealousy and evil feeling toward each other, if any such existed. That we should bring our conduct into respectability, here and everywhere else. Said she rejoiced in the prospect before her. …
President E. Smith said, no one need feel delicate in reference to inquiries about this society. There is nothing private. Its objects are purely benevolent … , its objects are charitable: none can object to telling the good, the evil withhold. She hoped all would feel themselves bound to observe this rule. … She said it was the duty of every person to inquire into the condition of the poor and represent their true state. … We should assist each other in this way. …
[March 31, 1842]
President E. S. said we were going to learn new things. Our way was straight. Said we wanted none in this society but those who could and would walk straight and were determined to do good. …
[April 14, 1842]
President E. Smith arose and addressed the meeting. … Her desire was to do good. Wished all the members of this society to assist her. Said it was necessary to begin at home, to eradicate all evil from our own hearts, and warn those who wish to join with us to come calculating to divest themselves of everything wrong and unite to expose iniquity, to search it out and put it away. She said the society had other duties to attend to than seeing to the wants of the poor. Exhorted the members so to conduct as to have the honor of commencing a good work and of carrying it out. Enforced the necessity of walking in a manner that would be approbated of God. …
President Smith then called on those, if any present, who knew of cases of the poor to be represented.
[May 19, 1842]
Mrs. President continued by exhorting all who had erred to repent and forsake their sins. Said that Satan’s forces were against this church. That every saint should be at the post. …
[May 27, 1842]
President E. Smith arose and addressed the congregation. She said all must have grace for themselves, etc. … She impressed the necessity of being united in doing good to the poor. …
[June 23, 1842]
Mrs. President said she was rejoiced to see the increasing union of the society. Hoped we should live right before God, among ourselves, and before the world. … Said we had nothing to do but to fear God and keep the commandments, and in so doing we shall prosper.
[August 4, 1842]
Mrs. President arose and addressed the society upon the necessity of being united among ourselves. Said we shall have sufficient difficulty from abroad without stirring up strife among ourselves and hardness and evil feelings one towards another, etc. …
We could govern this generation in one way if not another. If not by the mighty arm of power, we can do it by faith and prayer.17 If we will try to live uprightly, said she believed we should not be driven.18
Mrs. President continued by saying God knows we have a work to do in this place. We have got to watch and pray and be careful not to excite feelings, not make enemies of one another, etc.
[March 16, 1844]
Mrs. President then arose and addressed the meeting upon the necessity of being united among ourselves and strengthening each other’s hands in order that we may be able to do much good among the poor. … We must throw the mantle of charity around to shield those who will repent and do so no more. … She advised all to abide the Book of Mormon and Doctrine and Covenants. … Also exhorted them to look after the poor.
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Footnotes
Footnotes
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[1]Richard Lyman Bushman, Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2005), 53.
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[2]Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1845, 190, CHL.
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[3]Mark L. Staker, “‘A Comfort unto My Servant, Joseph’: Emma Hale Smith (1804–1879),” in Women of Faith in the Latter Days, Volume One, 1775–1820, ed. Richard E. Turley Jr. and Brittany A. Chapman (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2011), 353–356.
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[4]Smith, History, 1845, 189–190; John S. Reed, “Some of the Remarks of John S. Reed, Esq., as Delivered before the State Convention,” Times and Seasons 5, no. 11 (June 1, 1844): 551.
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[5]Nauvoo Female Relief Society, Petition to Governor Thomas Carlin, ca. July 22, 1842, CHL, in Jill Mulvay Derr, Carol Cornwall Madsen, Kate Holbrook, and Matthew J. Grow, eds., The First Fifty Years of Relief Society: Key Documents in Latter-day Saint Women’s History (Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2016), 136–141.
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[6]Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1844–1845, 18 books, bk. 14, [5]; bk. 15, [12], CHL; Linda King Newell and Valeen Tippetts Avery, Mormon Enigma: Emma Hale Smith, 2nd ed. (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994), 84–90, 132.
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[7]Staker, “A Comfort unto My Servant, Joseph,” 345.
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[9]See 2 John 1:1.
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[10]Nauvoo Relief Society Minute Book, Mar. 17, 1842, 8–9, in Derr et al., First Fifty Years, 32–33. “Presidentess” was a nineteenth-century term for female president. For an explanation of the word ordain, see Derr et al., First Fifty Years, xxxi–xxxiv.
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[13]Mary P. Ryan, “The Power of Women’s Networks: A Case Study of Female Moral Reform in Antebellum America,” Feminist Studies 5, no. 1 (Spring 1979): 66–85; Lori D. Ginzberg, Women and the Work of Benevolence: Morality, Politics, and Class in the Nineteenth-Century United States (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1990), 113–114.
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[14]See Derr et al., First Fifty Years, 97–99, 142–144; Glen M. Leonard, Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, A People of Promise (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2002), 226; Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 460, 494–499; and Newell and Avery, Mormon Enigma, 96, 142–147, 151–156.
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[15]In that meeting, Emma Smith “exhorted them to cleanse their hearts and ears. … [She] also exhorted to look after the poor … and said if there ever was any authority on the earth, she had it, and had it yet.” (Nauvoo Relief Society Minute Book, Mar. 16, 1844, [125–126], in Derr et al., First Fifty Years, 130–131.)
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[16]The “rapids” refers to the Des Moines or Lower Rapids, an eleven-mile stretch of the Mississippi River just north of Keokuk, Iowa, where the river dropped about twenty-two feet. These rapids were impassable for steamboats during months of low water and were potentially treacherous during many other months. (Louis C. Hunter, Steamboats on the Western Rivers: An Economic and Technological History [New York: Dover, 1993], 188.)
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[18]This may be a reference to the Saints being driven from Missouri in 1839 and the hope that the Saints would not also be driven from their present location in Nauvoo.