Minutes and Discourse, 9 June 1842
Minutes and Discourse, 9 June 1842
Source Note
Source Note
Female Relief Society of Nauvoo, Minutes, and JS, Discourse, , Hancock Co., IL, 9 June 1842. Featured version copied [ca. 9 June 1842] in Relief Society Minute Book, pp. [61]–[68], handwriting of ; CHL. For more complete source information, see the source note for Nauvoo Relief Society Minute Book.
Historical Introduction
Historical Introduction
On 9 June 1842, JS delivered a discourse on mercy to the . He opened the society’s eleventh meeting, held in the near the , with prayer and then addressed the assembled women. He began his discourse by reiterating counsel he had given them in March 1842, shortly after the Relief Society was organized. In that discourse, as well as in this 9 June sermon, he expressed concern that some who had been admitted may not have been worthy of membership. He continued his 9 June discourse by counseling the women to be charitable, humble, and merciful. JS briefly interrupted his discourse to give the Relief Society time to receive new members; he then continued his address. He emphasized that the purpose of the Relief Society was not only to relieve the poor, but also to reform the repentant and save souls. He concluded by offering to provide the society with a city lot and an unfinished house they could use to begin building homes for the poor.
As secretary of the Relief Society, recorded an account of JS’s discourse in her minutes for the 9 June 1842 meeting. Although the original loose minutes she took are no longer extant, Snow copied the minutes, including her account of JS’s discourse, into the Relief Society Minute Book, probably shortly after this meeting.
Footnotes
- [1]
Discourse, 31 Mar. 1842; see also Relief Society Minute Book, 31 Mar. 1842, in Derr et al., First Fifty Years of Relief Society, 42–46.
Derr, Jill Mulvay, 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.
| Lydia Edwards | Mary H. Hoyg |
| Eleanor Edwards | Mary Winterbotton |
| Phebe McNall | Mary Ann Allen |
| Araminta Vorth [North] | Eda Sweat |
| Eunice Cone | Mary Henderson |
| Sarah Rawlins | Naomi C. Price |
| Julia Owens | Mary Wilson |
| Nancy Stewart | Amanda Wilson |
| Agnes Wilson | Elizabeth Scott |
| Philinda Stanley | Lydia M. Luce |
| Elizabeth Hendricks | Esther Wood |
| Mahala Dudley | Sarah Meeks |
| Mary Ann Maxton | Susanna Adams |
| Catharina Wilson | Mary Thompson |
| Nancy Karr [Kerr] | Elizabeth Wilson |
| Tirzah Chase | Emily Wilson |
| Eliza Chase | Mary Wilson |
| Nancy Chase | Margaret Wilkinson |
| Diana Chase | [Nancy] Ann Smithies |
| Sarah Buthrick [Bathrick] | Sarah A. Murply [Murphy] |
| Polly Leach | Mary Owins |
| Diana Camp | Chara Owens [Owen] |
| Elizabeth Merrills | Mary Mitchell |
| Abigail Bradley | Abigail Burbank |
| Mary Hustin [Houston] | Susanna Wakefield |
| Lydia F. [Ann] Gibbs | Huldah Judd |
| Candace Evans | Susanna C. Boyce |
| Jane Judd | Elizabeth C. Allen |
| Mary Ives | Nancy M. Murphy |
| Mary Jane Morris | Talitha C. Garlick |
| Mahala Morris | Sarah K. Taylor |
| Mary Blake | Catharine Minnerly |
| Lodemia Barnet | Catharine Mulliner |
| Elizabeth Helm | Margaret Myers |
[p. [65]]
Source Note
Source Note
Document Transcript
Document Information
Document Information
Go to page