Letter of appointment

Letter of appointment

The Letter of Appointment was a controversial three-page document used by James J. Strang and his adherents, in their efforts to prove that he was the designated successor to Joseph Smith, Jr. as prophet and president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Sent from Nauvoo, Illinois on June 19, 1844 to Strang in Burlington, Wisconsin, this missive served as the cornerstone of all of his prophetic claims. It is owned today by Yale University, forming a part of its Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.fn|a

James J. Strang

James J. Strang was a lawyer and newspaper editor from New York who converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1844. Shortly after his baptism, Joseph Smith, Jr., founding prophet of the church, was murdered by an anti-Mormon mob. Upon Smith's demise, a number of individuals would come forward claiming a divine mandate to lead his church, including Strang. As a recent convert, Strang did not yet possess the name recognition among rank-and-file Mormons fn|b that was enjoyed by Brigham Young and Sidney Rigdon (two other contenders for LDS leadership). Hence, he faced an "uphill" battle in his quest to be recognized as the heir to Joseph Smith's prophetic mantle.

The letter

To advance his cause, Strang asserted that unlike Rigdon and Young, he had physical "proof" of his prophetic calling. He produced a document, purportedly authored by Smith and mailed one week before his murder, prophesying his impending demise and allegedly naming Strang as his successor. The wording of this letter is somewhat ambiguous; while some interpreted it as appointing Strang solely to the presidency of the newly-created Voree Stake, [Strang's own son, Charles Strang, took this position. See Smith, Heman, [http://www.centerplace.org/history/ch/v3ch02.htm "History of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,"] vol. 3, chapter 2, pp. 52-53.] Strangites insist that it appoints him to Smith's prophetic office. The complete text of Strang's "Letter of Appointment" is located at [http://www.strangite.org/Reveal.htm#SECTION-1 Strangite.org] .

In his tract "The Diamond", Strang relates this version of events:

"This letter was received at Burlington by regular course of mail, coming through the distributing office at Chicago, and bears the Nauvoo postmark of June 19th, the day following its date. It arrived at Burlington July 9th, and was immediately taken from the office by C. P. Barnes, Esq., a distinguished lawyer. at that place, who, in con­sequence of the rumors of persecution and civil war against the Mormons, and a general anxiety to hear the latest news, immediately carried it to Mr. Strang, with the request to be informed of any news of public interest which it might contain. It therefore became public the same evening." [Strang, James J. (1848): [http://www.mormonbeliefs.com/diamond.htm "The Diamond: Being the Law of Prophetic Succession."] Voree, Wisconsin, pp. 3-4. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.]

Strang offered the following witnesses in Nauvoo to corroborate his story:

"Mrs. Emma Smith recollects well of her husband receiving a letter from Mr. Strang, and holding a council on the subject, and names Hyrum Smith, Willard Richards and John P. Green as present at that council, and also that a letter was sent to Mr. Strang in answer, but of the import of the answer she was not informed." [Strang (1848), pg. 4.]

Next, Strang accused Smith's Twelve Apostles of conspiring together to suppress evidence of his appointment to the prophetic office–and even the possibility of murder:

“Immediately after the martyrdom of Joseph, John Taylor, Willard Richards and William W. Phelps took a kind of temporary direction of the affairs of the church, instructing the saints to wait patiently the hand of the Lord; assuring them that he had not left them without a shepherd, and that all things would be made known in due season. To every question of the saints, Who is the prophet? replies were made, in substance, that the saints would know in due season, but that nothing could be done until the Twelve got home, because the appoint­ment of a prophet and the directions for salvation of the church from the perils they were in, was contained in sealed packages directed to them. Orson Hyde and others of the Twelve, who were then in the east, stated in public congregations in New York, Philadelphia and other cities, that Willard Richards had written to them that the appointment of a prophet was left with him, under seal, to be opened on the return of the Twelve. This assertion was so often made that the whole church were daily expecting to hear a new prophet pro­claimed. On the 8th day of August, 1844, when Sidney Rigdon en­deavored to obtain authority to lead the church, John P. Green, marshal of the city of Nauvoo, told them, 'They need not trouble themselves about it, for Joseph had appointed one James J. Strang, who lived up north, to stand in his stead.' The sudden death of John P. Green immediately after this declaration (under very extra­ordinary circumstances) left Willard Richards and John Taylor sole repositors of all documents on this subject, except this letter." [Strang (1848), pg. 4.] After the return of the Twelve, the promise of the "sealed packages" naming Smith's successor appears to have been dropped.

When Strang's supporters attempted to use local postal records to prove that Smith had mailed the letter, they found that portion of the files had mysteriously disappeared. However, the records remained intact in the Chicago and Burlington post offices, showing that this letter was indeed mailed from Smith to Strang. [Strang, James (1854): [http://www.mormonbeliefs.com/prophetic_controversyB.htm "The Prophetic Controversy: A Letter from James J. Strang to Mrs. Corey."] St. James, Beaver Island, pp. 29-31. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.] Although Brigham Young quickly denounced Strang's missive as a "wicked forgery," [Letter of Brigham Young, 24 January 1846. Original at Beinecke Library, Yale University. http://beinecke.library.yale.edu/utopia/uc09b.html. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.] this did not stop two of his associates in the Quorum of Twelve from defecting to Strang, fn|c together with William Marks (Nauvoo Stake president), members of Smith's family (including his sisters, mother and widow), and other prominent Saints. Later, most of these would renounce Strang and join the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, led by Joseph Smith's son, Joseph Smith III.

Strang also claimed to have received an angelic appointment at a time coincident with Smith's death, [Strang (1848), pp. 5-6.] and, like Smith, claimed the ability to translate ancient documents on metal plates into modern English. This helped Strang continue to gain converts until his assassination at the hands of disgruntled followers twelve years later.

Questions of authenticity

Experts agree that the postmark on the letter is genuine.fn|d [Jensen, Robin Scott (2005). [http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd956.pdf "Gleaning the Harvest: Strangite Missionary Work 1846-50"] . Provo, Utah, BYU Press, pg. 6, note 17. Retrieved on 2007-10-30.] Strang's opponents challenged this during his lifetime by pointing to a tiny dot on the postmark, just before the "j" in "June"–one that they claimed should never have been there. Strang, however, produced several letters mailed from Nauvoo on June 19, all of which had this same dot. [Strang, James J. (1854), [http://www.mormonbeliefs.com/Strang,_The_Prophet.htm# Delivery%20of%20the%20Letter%20of%20Appointment. The Prophetic Controversy: A Letter from James Strang to Mrs. Corey] , St. James, pp. 32-34.] Here, said he, was proof that the postmark on his "Letter" was indeed authentic.

Other critics, however, have denounced the letter as fraudulent, largely because the two sheets of paper used in creating it (making three pages for writing, and one page for the address and postmark) are from different stocks–yet analysis indicates that the handwriting on all three pages is the same. References to Strang's alleged appointment appear throughout. Page one: "The faith which thou hast in the Shepherd, the stone of Israel (Joseph Smith), hath been repaid to thee a thousand fold, and thou shalt be like unto him; but the flock shall find rest with thee, and God shall reveal to thee his will concerning them". Page two continues: "...he (Strang) had faith in thee (Joseph), the Shepherd and Stone of Israel, and to him shall the gathering of the people be...." Page three: "Thy duty is made plain...if evil befall me, thou shalt lead the flock to pleasant pastures."

Some modern analysts have asserted that Joseph Smith's signature on the letter's third page is a forgery. [*Quinn, D. Michael (1994). "The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power". Salt Lake City: Signature Books, pg. 210. See also Eberstadt, Charles, “A Letter That Founded a Kingdom,” "Autograph Collectors’ Journal" (October, 1950): 3–8.] [Jensen, pg. 6, note 17.] One former Strangite insisted that Strang's law partner–the same "C. P. Barnes, Esq." mentioned by Strang in "The Diamond"–helped Strang fabricate this letter and the Voree Plates, though no proof of this was ever produced. [Nelson-Seawright, J. (27 October 2006). " [http://www.bycommonconsent.com/2006/10/the-prophet-jesse-james/ The Prophet Jesse James] ". "ByCommonConsent.com". Retrieved on 2007-10-28.]

One theory is that James Strang did indeed receive a letter of some sort from Joseph Smith, in which a blank sheet of paper was used for the envelope; Strang, according to this premise, discarded the contents of that letter and proceeded to author his "Letter of Appointment," using the blank outer sheet for the final page of its text. [Jensen, pg. 6, note 17.] Such a maneuver would have assured Strang of an authentic postmark for his letter, even if its contents were bogus.

The "Letter of Appointment" is still accepted and defended by members of Strang's diminutive church.

ee also

*Voree plates
*Book of the Law of the Lord

Footnotes

*fnb|a The James Jesse Strang Collection in the Beinecke Library is coded WA MSS 447. A complete description of this collection may be viewed at [http://webtext.library.yale.edu/xml2html/beinecke.STRANGCO.con.html Strang Collection] .
*fnb|b "Mormon," as used in this article, refers to adherents of the Latter Day Saint movement as a whole, and not just to its largest branch, the LDS church (as is usual among smaller Latter Day Saint sects, many of which dislike this term). Its use here is only for convenience, not in any derogatory sense.
*fnb|c William Smith and John E. Page, two members of the Quorum of Twelve under Joseph Smith, joined Strang briefly but left his movement by 1847.
*fnb|d The postmark appears on the back side of one of the pages, where Strang's name and address were written. The completed letter was folded and mailed to Strang without using an envelope.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • letter of appointment — ˌletter of apˈpointment noun letters of appointment PLURALFORM [countable] HUMAN RESOURCES a letter from an organization to someone to say that they have been given a job; = APPOINTMENT LETTER: • Your entitlement to pay will be as set out in your …   Financial and business terms

  • letter of appointment — certificate which confirms the position of a person, letter which states a person will hold a certain job …   English contemporary dictionary

  • letter of appointment — /ˌletər əv ə pɔɪntmənt/ noun a letter in which someone is appointed to a job …   Dictionary of banking and finance

  • letter — let‧ter [ˈletə ǁ ər] noun [countable] 1. a written or printed message that is usually put in an envelope and sent by mail: • Please sign the letter and mail it back within two weeks. alloˈcation ˌletter also alˈlotment ˌletter FINANCE a letter… …   Financial and business terms

  • appointment — ap‧point‧ment [əˈpɔɪntmənt] noun 1. [countable] an arrangement to meet someone at a particular time and place: • Erlich was 25 minutes early for his appointment. • He had an appointment with a union delegate at the Grand Hotel. • Were you able to …   Financial and business terms

  • appointment letter — ➔ letter * * * appointment letter UK US noun [C] (also letter of appointment) ► HR a letter that officially tells someone they have got a job with a company or organization: »Please return a signed copy of your appointment letter to the Human… …   Financial and business terms

  • Appointment to the Order of Canada — Appointment into the Order of Canada is the process by which Canadians citizens or certain foreign persons are inducted into Canada s highest civilian honour within the country s system of honours. Any living Canadian or foreign national may be… …   Wikipedia

  • letter — let·ter n 1: a direct written statement addressed to an individual or organization; broadly: an official communication see also counterletter determination letter: a letter from an administrative agency (as the Internal Revenue Service) usu. in… …   Law dictionary

  • Appointment of Catholic bishops — The appointment of bishops in the Catholic Church is a complicated process. Outgoing bishops, neighboring bishops, the faithful, the apostolic nuncio, various members of the Roman Curia, and the pope all have a role in the selection. The exact… …   Wikipedia

  • Letter of Administration — A certificate issued by the Court evidencing the appointment of the Administrator of an Estate. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary …   Financial and business terms

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”