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Joseph Smith hiding plural marriages from his first wife, Emma: Difference between revisions

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{{Resource Title|Joseph Smith hiding plural marriages from his first wife, Emma}}
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[[de:Joseph Smith und Polygamie/Die Wahrheit über die Vielehe verstecken]]
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[[es:José Smith/Poligamia/Ocultar la práctica de Emma]]
[[pt:Joseph Smith/Poligamia/Escondendo a prática de Emma]]

Revision as of 18:50, 3 May 2017

Joseph Smith hiding plural marriages from his first wife, Emma

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Template loop detected: Question: Did Joseph hide his plural marriages from Emma, his first wife? Template loop detected: Question: Was Emma aware of the possibility that Joseph could take additional wives even without her consent? Template loop detected: Question: What possible modern lessons can we learn from Emma and Joseph's struggle with plural marriage?

See also Brian Hales' discussion
Sometime in 1840 Joseph Smith first broached the topic of plural marriage privately to trusted friends. Most of the apostles were in England and thus were unavailable for an introduction to the practice.

Joseph's first foray into plural marriage was deeply painful for Emma, his first wife.

It is impossible to definitively determine when Emma learned of Joseph’s plural marriages. However, many historical clues help to create a possible timeline.

The earliest documentable date for Emma’s awareness of time-and-eternity plural marriage is May of 1843, when she participated in four of her husband’s polygamous sealings.

Emma’s resistance to plural marriage prompted Hyrum to encourage Joseph to dictate a written revelation on the subject.

Rather than generating Emma’s active support, the revelation [D&C 132] appears to have brought a smoldering crisis to flame. She and Joseph took serious counsel together with some sort of agreement being negotiated.

See also Brian Hales' discussion


Template loop detected: Question: Did Joseph hide his plural marriages from Emma, his first wife? Template loop detected: Question: Was Emma aware of the possibility that Joseph could take additional wives even without her consent? Template loop detected: Question: What possible modern lessons can we learn from Emma and Joseph's struggle with plural marriage?

See also Brian Hales' discussion
Sometime in 1840 Joseph Smith first broached the topic of plural marriage privately to trusted friends. Most of the apostles were in England and thus were unavailable for an introduction to the practice.

Joseph's first foray into plural marriage was deeply painful for Emma, his first wife.

It is impossible to definitively determine when Emma learned of Joseph’s plural marriages. However, many historical clues help to create a possible timeline.

The earliest documentable date for Emma’s awareness of time-and-eternity plural marriage is May of 1843, when she participated in four of her husband’s polygamous sealings.

Emma’s resistance to plural marriage prompted Hyrum to encourage Joseph to dictate a written revelation on the subject.

Rather than generating Emma’s active support, the revelation [D&C 132] appears to have brought a smoldering crisis to flame. She and Joseph took serious counsel together with some sort of agreement being negotiated.

See also Brian Hales' discussion


Template loop detected: Question: Did Joseph hide his plural marriages from Emma, his first wife? Template loop detected: Question: Was Emma aware of the possibility that Joseph could take additional wives even without her consent? Template loop detected: Question: What possible modern lessons can we learn from Emma and Joseph's struggle with plural marriage?

See also Brian Hales' discussion
Sometime in 1840 Joseph Smith first broached the topic of plural marriage privately to trusted friends. Most of the apostles were in England and thus were unavailable for an introduction to the practice.

Joseph's first foray into plural marriage was deeply painful for Emma, his first wife.

It is impossible to definitively determine when Emma learned of Joseph’s plural marriages. However, many historical clues help to create a possible timeline.

The earliest documentable date for Emma’s awareness of time-and-eternity plural marriage is May of 1843, when she participated in four of her husband’s polygamous sealings.

Emma’s resistance to plural marriage prompted Hyrum to encourage Joseph to dictate a written revelation on the subject.

Rather than generating Emma’s active support, the revelation [D&C 132] appears to have brought a smoldering crisis to flame. She and Joseph took serious counsel together with some sort of agreement being negotiated.

See also Brian Hales' discussion


See also Brian Hales' discussion
Sometime in 1840 Joseph Smith first broached the topic of plural marriage privately to trusted friends. Most of the apostles were in England and thus were unavailable for an introduction to the practice.

Joseph's first foray into plural marriage was deeply painful for Emma, his first wife.

It is impossible to definitively determine when Emma learned of Joseph’s plural marriages. However, many historical clues help to create a possible timeline.

The earliest documentable date for Emma’s awareness of time-and-eternity plural marriage is May of 1843, when she participated in four of her husband’s polygamous sealings.

Emma’s resistance to plural marriage prompted Hyrum to encourage Joseph to dictate a written revelation on the subject.

Rather than generating Emma’s active support, the revelation [D&C 132] appears to have brought a smoldering crisis to flame. She and Joseph took serious counsel together with some sort of agreement being negotiated.

See also Brian Hales' discussion


To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, [[../CriticalSources|click here]]

Notes