Church Organizations, April 1834–September 1835
General Officers
In 1834 and 1835, additional ecclesiastical positions were created and
filled in the church. The expanded in December 1834 to include , , and as assistant
presidents.
The was the overarching authority of the church,
overseeing the church’s other administrative bodies. The members are
listed in the table in the order gave in the
account of the meetings where he, , and were ordained. At times in 1835, this body
was referred to as the “.” After the three
members of the presidency of the
came to , Ohio, in 1834 and 1835, they were sometimes included in meetings of the church
presidency; these meetings were occasionally referred to as “a High
Council of the Presidency” or “the Council of the Presidency of the
Church.” Another general
office of the church was , a position held by
As part of this
appointment, Smith blessed his family, church members without fathers,
those whose fathers were not members of the church, and those whose
fathers were members but did not live in the same area.
| Presidency of the Church | Patriarch |
| JS, President | |
| , Assistant President | |
| , Assistant President | |
| , Assistant President | |
| , Assistant President | |
| , Assistant President |
Other Officers
In addition
to the general church leadership, specific officers led the church in
, or , Missouri, and in , Ohio, the other center of church membership, which
was designated as a “stake to Zion.” In 1834,
JS established a , consisting of a three-person presidency and twelve
, in both of these areas. The members
are listed in the table in the order provided at their organizational
meetings. These high councils were responsible for administrative
affairs and for “settleing important difficulties which might arise in
the church, which could not be settled by the Church, or the bishop’s
council to the satisfaction of the parties.” The high council was specifically responsible for
regulating “all the affairs of Zion” and for performing “the business of
Zion”; the
president of the high council——was also designated as the “President of the
Church in Zion.”
Both of
these high councils functioned according to a February 1834
constitution developed for the high council. According to this document, seven of
the twelve counselors had to be present in order for the council to act.
If a standing member was absent, the other counselors could “appoint
other high priests whom they may consider worthy and capable to act.”
When considering a matter, up to six counselors were designated to
speak, depending on the difficulty of the case. For the most difficult
disciplinary cases, three counselors spoke on behalf of the accused, and
three spoke on behalf of the church. The least difficult cases had one
counselor speak on each side. After the counselors had spoken, the
accused and the accuser had a chance to speak, after which the president
of the council issued the decision in the case. The counselors then
provided their assent to the decision.
It appears that the high councils sometimes used this format for
administrative matters as well.
In addition
to the high councils, the church in and the church in each had a
and two counselors who helped in church administration. The bishop
served as “a Judge in Israel” and was responsible for the church’s
temporal concerns and for taking care of the poor.
served as the bishop in , while
was the bishop in .
In February 1835, JS and other church
leaders appointed twelve men to serve as , as well as a number of men to serve as . The apostles
are listed in the table as they were organized at a 2 May 1835 meeting, and the seventies are listed in the
order provided in an 1836 broadsheet. The were
designated as “a travelling, presiding high council” assigned to
regulate the branches of the church outside of and
its stakes. The Seventy were to assist the Twelve Apostles in their
duties, and both groups were responsible for preaching “the gospel of
Jesus Christ; . . . first unto the Gentiles and then unto the Jews.” The
“Instruction on Priesthood” prepared by JS, likely with ’s
assistance, sometime around spring 1835 states that the Twelve Apostles
operated “under the direction of the presidency of the church” and that
the Seventy were “under the direction of the twelve.” “The standing high
councils, at the stakes of Zion” or in itself, were also “equal in
authority, in the affairs of the church, in all their decisions,” to the
Twelve. The Instruction on
Priesthood also states that if the need arose, the seven presidents of
the Seventy could call other men as seventies until there were “seven
times seventy.” By August 1835, individuals were being called to the “2d 70,” although that quorum as a whole was
not formed until February 1836.
, , , , and also served as officers in
the church, with each group, according to a November 1831
revelation, being led by a president. It is unclear who served
in those positions in , though appears to have been the
president of the elders for at least part of 1835. The minutes of a general assembly of the
church in 1835 listed presidents of the elders,
priests, teachers, and deacons in , but because so many church officers were absent
from at the time, it appears these were individuals
acting for an absent president. The chart that follows lists those
presidents.
| Presidency of the High Council in | High Council of Stake of Zion in | Bishop and Counselors in |
| JS | ||
| Presidency of the High Council of | High Council of | Bishop and Assistants of |
| Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
| Presidents of the Seventy | ||
| Seventy | ||
| Levi Gifford | ||
| Elias Hutchings | ||
| Henry Beaman | ||
| Henry Shibley | Jesse Huntsman | |
| Salmon Warner | ||
| Darwin Richardson | ||
| Michael Griffith | ||
| Libbeus T. Coons | ||
| Charles Kelly | ||
| Daniel Stevens | ||
| David Evans | ||
| Hiram Stratton | Joseph Winchester | |
| Sherman Gilbert | ||
| Elders in | Priests in | Teachers in | Deacons in |
| , president | , president | , president | , president |
In November 1831, six men—JS, , , , , and —were appointed “” over JS’s revelations, responsible for overseeing
the publication of the revelations “& the concerns thereof.” Any
profits resulting from the publication were to be used for the needs of
those men and their families; the surplus was to be placed in the
church’s storehouse. In
March 1832, a revelation directed JS and others to further
organize the church’s “Literary and Merchantile establishments,” and in
April 1832, JS proceeded to do so, creating the . One
component of the United Firm was known as the , which consisted of the six “stewards over the
revelations.” The Literary Firm was responsible for overseeing W. W.
Phelps & Co., which printed the church newspaper The Evening
and the Morning Star and was also publishing JS’s
revelations. Before
publication of the book of revelations could be completed, the printing
office in , Missouri, was destroyed by a mob in July
1833. In September 1833, church leaders created , which
began operating a printing press in , Ohio. Because was part
of this enterprise, he was likely added to the Literary Firm at that
time. In April 1834, a revelation reorganized the
United Firm, which, in large measure, ceased to function
thereafter. The
Literary Firm continued to operate, largely through F. G. Williams &
Co., publishing the Doctrine and Covenants in September 1835 and continuing to publish two newspapers: the
Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate and the
Northern Times. In September 1835, and were appointed agents
to the Literary Firm. The firm’s members are listed here in the order in
which they appear in the revelation that organized the group, adding
, Whitmer, and Smith
in the order they were appointed to the firm.
| JS |
| , agent |
| , agent |
Committee to Build the
In May 1833, , , and were
appointed as a committee to raise money for the construction of the in , Ohio. The three were responsible for traveling
to different branches of the church to solicit funds. By
June 1835, they were also operating a
store in They are presented here in the order in which
they appear in the minutes of the meeting at which they were
appointed.
| Committee to Build the |