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Oliver Cowdery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photograph of Oliver Cowdery recently found in the Library of Congress, taken in the 1840s
Photograph of Oliver Cowdery recently found in the Library of Congress, taken in the 1840s

Oliver Cowdery (3 October 18063 March 1850) was the primary participant with Joseph Smith, Jr. in the formative period of the Latter Day Saint movement from 1829 through 1836. He was one of the Three Witnesses of the Book of Mormon's Golden Plates. After the organization of the Church of Christ — as the early Latter Day Saint church was known — he became the church's Second Elder.

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[edit] Life

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Oliver Cowdery was born October 3, 1806 in Wells, Vermont. His family were members of the Congregational Church of Poultney, Vermont, where the Rev. Ethan Smith was pastor. At the time, Smith was writing View of the Hebrews (1823), a book speculating that Native Americans were of Hebrew origin.

[edit] Book of Mormon Scribe and Witness

An acquaintance of Joseph Smith, Jr.'s father, Joseph Smith, Sr., Cowdery met Joseph Smith on April 5, 1829, (one year and a day before the official founding of the church) after the Smith family told him that the younger Smith had received Golden Plates containing ancient Native American writings.[1] Like Smith, who was a distant relative, Cowdery was also a treasure hunter who had used a divining rod in his youth. Cowdery asked questions of his rod; if it moved, the answer was yes, if not, no. Cowdery also told Smith that he had seen the Golden Plates in a vision before the two ever met.[2]

From April 7 to June 1829, Cowdery acted as Smith's scribe for the translation of the plates into what would later become the Book of Mormon. Cowdery also attempted to translate part of the Book of Mormon, but was unsuccessful. [3] During the translation of the Golden Plates, Cowdery and Smith claimed they were present together on May 15, 1829 when he and Smith had received the Aaronic Priesthood from John the Baptist, after which they had baptized each other in the Susquehanna River.[4] Cowdery also said that he and Smith had later gone into the forest and prayed "until a glorious light encircled us, and as we arose on account of the light, three persons stood before us dressed in white, their faces beaming with glory." One of the three announced that he was the Apostle Peter and named the others as the Apostles James and John.[5]

Later that year, Cowdery reported experiencing a vision along with Smith and David Whitmer in which an angel showed him the Golden Plates. Martin Harris said he saw a similar vision later that day, and Cowdery, Whitmer and Harris signed a statement to that effect. They became known as the Three Witnesses, and their testimony has been published with nearly every edition of the Book of Mormon. Also in 1829, Cowdery received a revelation entitled "Articles of the Church of Christ", which directed the formation of the Church of Christ, as The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or Mormon church was originally known.

[edit] Second Elder of the Church

When the Church was organized on April 6, 1830, Joseph Smith, Jr. was named "First Elder" and Cowdery "Second Elder." Cowdery was technically second in authority to Smith in the church from its organization through 1836, though in practice Sidney Rigdon, Smith's "spokesman" and counselor in the First Presidency, began to supplant Cowdery as early as 1831.

On December 18, 1832, Cowdery married Elizabeth Ann Whitmer, the daughter of Peter Whitmer, Sr. and sister of David, John, Jacob and Peter Whitmer, Jr.. They had five children, only one of whom lived to maturity.[6]

Cowdery helped Smith revise and publish a series of Smith's revelations first called the Book of Commandments and later, when revised and expanded, the Doctrine and Covenants, to which Cowdery had significant objections. Cowdery was also the editor on the editorial board of several early church publications including: The Evening and Morning Star, the Messenger and Advocate, and The Northern Times.

When the Church created a bank known as the Kirtland Safety Society in 1837, Cowdery obtained the money-printing plates. He later was sent to Monroe, Michigan where he became President of the Bank of Monroe, which the Church had purchased. By 1837, both banks failed. Later that year, Oliver moved to the newly founded Latter Day Saint settlement in Far West, Missouri and suffered ill health through the winter of 1837-38.

[edit] Early History of the Church

In 1834 and 1835, Cowdery, with Smith's aid, published a "history" of the Church as a series of articles in the Church's "Messenger and Advocate." The history, written in close proximity to the events it described, does not always line up perfectly with the "official" history of the Church. For instance, Cowdery does not mention the First Vision in his narrative or the restoration of the Church. He associates instead Smith's first spiritual manifestation with a visitation of the angel Moroni, who Cowdery said appeared to Smith in September 1823. Although not acquainted with the Smith family at the time of the events, Cowdery places the religious revival that is alleged to have caused Smith to question which church he should join in 1823, not 1820, and corrected himself when he claimed that it occurred in the year 1821, when Smith was 15. In this correction, Cowdery stated that the revival occurred after Smith's brother Alvin had died in 1823.[7]

[edit] Excommunication

By early 1838 conflicts had arisen between Smith and Cowdery.

  • Leadership. Cowdery competed with Smith for leadership of the new church and "disagreed with the Prophet's economic and political program and sought a personal financial independence [from the] Zion society that Joseph Smith envisioned."[8]
  • Church and state. In March 1838, Smith and Rigdon moved to Far West, which had been under the presidency of Cowdery's brothers-in-law, David and John Whitmer. There they took charge of the Missouri church and initiated a number of policies that Cowdery and the Whitmers believed violated separation of church and state.
  • Personal Behavior. In January 1838, Cowdery wrote his brother Warren that he and Joseph Smith had "had some conversation in which in every instance I did not fail to affirm that which I had said was strictly true. A dirty, nastly, filthy affair of his and Fanny Alger's was talked over in which I strictly declared that I had never deserted from the truth in the matter, and as I supposed was admitted by himself." Alger, a teenage maid living with the Smiths, may have been Joseph Smith's first plural wife, a practice that Cowdery opposed. [9]

On April 12, 1838, a church court excommunicated Cowdery after he failed to appear at a hearing on his membership and sent a letter resigning from the Church instead.[10] The Whitmers, William Wines Phelps and Book of Mormon witness Hiram Page were also excommunicated from the church at the same time. [11].

Cowdery and the Whitmers became known as "the dissenters," but they continued to live in and around Far West, where they owned a great deal of property. On June 17, 1838, President Sidney Rigdon announced to a large Mormon congregation that the dissenters were "as salt that had lost its savor" and that it was the duty of the faithful to cast the dissenters out "to be trodden beneath the feet of men." Cowdery and the Whitmers took this Salt Sermon, and its implicit endorsement of the "Danites, a secret vigilante group, as a threat against their lives and fled the county. Reports of their treatment was one factor that led to the Mormon War.

[edit] Life apart from the Church

From 1838 to 1848, Cowdery put the Latter Day Saint church behind him. He studied law and practiced at Tiffin, Ohio. There Cowdery became a civic and political leader. He edited the local Democratic newspaper until it was learned that he was one of the Book of Mormon witnesses. Rather than recant his testimony, he became assistant editor. In 1846, Cowdery was nominated as his district's Democratic party candidate for the state senate. However, when his Mormon background was discovered, he was defeated.

[edit] Later Latter Day Saint Contacts

After Joseph Smith was assassinated, Cowdery's brother Lyman recognized James J. Strang as Smith's successor to the church presidency, and in 1847, Oliver moved to Elkhorn, Wisconsin near Strang's headquarters in Voree and entered law practice with his brother. He became co-editor of the Walworth County Democrat and in 1848 he ran for state assemblyman. However, his Mormon ties were once again discovered and he was defeated.

In 1848, Cowdery traveled to meet with followers of Brigham Young and the Quorum of the Twelve who were encamped at Winter Quarters, Nebraska and asked to be reunited with the Church. [12] On November 12, 1848, Cowdery was rebaptized into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Elder Orson Hyde of the Quorum of the Twelve. He never again held high office in the church.

Cowdery developed a respiratory illness, and on March 3, 1850 he died in David Whitmer's home in Richmond, Missouri.[13]

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Joseph Smith--History 1:66.
  2. ^ Richard Bushman, Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2005), 73; Grant Palmer, An Insider's View of Mormon Origins (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 2002), 179.
  3. ^ History of the Church 1:36-38.
  4. ^ Messenger and Advocate (October 1834), 14-16; Bushman, 74-75.
  5. ^ Charles M. Nielsen to Heber Grant, February 10, 1898, in Dan Vogel, ed., Early Mormon Documents (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1998), 2: 476; History of the Church 1:39-42.
  6. ^ Maria Louise Cowdery, born August 11, 1835.
  7. ^ Cowdery also said that the final battle between the Nephites and the Lamanites had occurred in the vicinity of the Hill Cumorah, where Smith claimed he found the golden plates. There is little evidence for mass graves for tens of thousands of soldiers at the site and most modern Mormon apologists now argue that the events likely took place in Central America.
  8. ^ "Cowdery, Oliver". Encyclopedia of Mormonism 1. (1992). Macmillan Publishing Company. Retrieved on 2006-08-02.
  9. ^ Johnson, Benjamin (1903). Letter to George S. Gibbs. Retrieved on 2006-08-02
  10. ^ He summed up his objections in the following words:"...but the bare notice of these charges, over which you assume the right to decide, is, in my opinion, a direct attempt to make the secular power subservient to Church direction--to the correctness of which I cannot in conscience subscribe--I believe that principle never did fail to produce anarchy and confusion. This attempt to control me in my temporal interests, I conceive to be a disposition to take from me a portion of my Constitutional privileges and inherent right--I only, respectfully, ask leave, therefore, to withdraw from a society assuming they have such right."Cowdery concluded the letter with, "Take no view of the foregoing remarks, other than my belief on the outward government of this Church." Mehling, 181
  11. ^ Far West Record, 165-66
  12. ^ "Brethren, for a number of years, I have been separated from you. I now desire to come back. I wish to come humble and be one in your midst. I seek no station. I only wish to be identified with you. I am out of the Church, but I wish to become a member. I wish to come in at the door; I know the door, I have not come here to seek precedence. I come humbly and throw myself upon the decision of the body, knowing as I do, that its decisions are right." Stanley R. Gunn, "Oliver Cowdery Second Elder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Division of Religion, Brigham Young University," (1942), 166, as cited in The Improvement Era, 24, p.620.)
  13. ^ Of COwdery's death, David Whitmer said: "Oliver died the happiest man I ever saw. After shaking hands with the family and kissing his wife and daughter, he said ‘Now I lay down for the last time; I am going to my Saviour’; and he died immediately with a smile on his face." (Stanley R. Gunn, Oliver Cowdery Second Elder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Division of Religion, Brigham Young University. (Stanley R. Gunn: 1942), 170-71, as cited in Mill, Star, XII, p. 207.)

[edit] References

  1. Legg, Phillip R., Oliver Cowdery: The Elusive Second Elder of the Restoration, Herald House: Independence, Missouri, 1989.
  2. Mehling, Mary, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy p. 181, Frank Allaben: 1911.
  3. Morris, Larry E. (2000). ""Oliver Cowdery's Vermont Years and the Origins of Mormonism". BYU Studies 39(1): 105 – 129. 
  4. Welch, John W. and Morris, Larry E., eds., Oliver Cowdery: Scribe, Elder, Witness (Provo, UT: The Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2006); ISBN 0842526617.

[edit] External links

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