Joseph Smith married a 14-year-old??? Ep. 108

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Hey guys, so despite the fact that members  of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day   Saints stopped practicing plural marriage  over a hundred years ago, the fact that   it was once a thing is still understandably  hard for people to digest, myself included.   As I mentioned in the last episode we did about  polygamy, I don’t like this subject. I’d bet MOST   Latter-day Saints today don’t like it. That said,  it’s part of our history, so we’ve got to own it. But while I still have lots of questions  about plural marriage, there are also lots   of rumors and misconceptions about  the practice that we can address.   One subject of considerable controversy  is Joseph Smith’s plural marriage to   14-year-old Helen Mar Kimball. So that is what  we’re going to talk about in this episode. [Intro] Alright guys, so here’s where the rubber meets the  road. People are uncomfortable with the fact that   Joseph Smith married a 14-year-old mainly because  marriage usually implies a sexual relationship,   and Joseph Smith having a sexual relationship  with 14-year-old sounds super inappropriate. So,   for the record: While there’s not enough  evidence to prove anything, what we do know   suggests that the relationship between  Joseph and Helen was very likely not sexual. Helen was sealed to Joseph about 13 months  before Joseph was killed. During that time,   Helen continued to live at home with her parents.  Brian Hales, who we’ve had on the show, said, “Helen wrote more about plural  marriage than any other female   author in the nineteenth century, defending  it and Joseph Smith. … Through those pages,   Helen never describes even one time being  alone with the Prophet without a chaperone.” Helen herself defended Joseph’s motives, saying,  “If Joseph had had any impure desires he could   have gratified them in the style of the world  with less danger of his life or his character,   than to do as he did.” And for more information  suggesting that their relationship was likely   not sexual, check out the notes in  the YouTube description of this video. It’s also important to recognize that  Joseph was not “courting” Helen. In fact,   marrying Helen was not even Joseph’s idea. It was  her father’s idea, Heber C. Kimball. “He taught   me the principle of Celestial marriage and having  a great desire to be connected with the Prophet,   Joseph, he offered me to him … my father  introduced to me this principle and asked   me if I would be sealed to Joseph,  who came next morning & with my   parents I heard him teach & explain the  principle of Celestial marriage. ...” And forming an eternal family connection  really was the purpose of this marriage.   Helen’s son, Orson Whitney, described  Helen’s marriage to Joseph as   “a golden link ... whereby the houses of Heber  and Joseph were indissolubly and forever joined.”  Some of Joseph’s plural marriages were for time  (or mortal life) only, some were for time and   eternity, and some were for eternity only. Helen’s  marriage was probably meant for time and eternity,   but due to her young age, it seems that for all  intents and purposes the marriage was largely   treated as an eternity-only marriage, similar to  some of his marriages to women on the opposite   end of the age spectrum, like 56-year-old  Fanny Young or 58-year-old Rhoda Richards. Now, clearly Helen’s father wanted the best  for Helen and believed that this was it,   but that understandably  didn’t make it easy for Helen,   and in her writing she talks about how she  “thought [her]self a much abused child” because   after her marriage to Joseph she wasn’t allowed  to be as socially involved as her peers,   suggesting that she may not have fully  understood the social implications of the   marriage at the time. And later in life, Helen did  acknowledge that at the time, she “was too young   or too ‘foolish’ to comprehend and appreciate  all that [she] heard [Joseph Smith] teach.” Latter-day Saints consider eternal marriage  to be an ordinance necessary for exaltation,   assuming the parties involved stay true to the  covenants they make. But there is some controversy   surrounding Helen’s understanding of what her  sealing to Joseph meant for her in the eternities.   She remembers Joseph saying at the time,  “‘If you will take this step, it will ensure   your eternal salvation and exaltation & that of  your father’s household & all of your kindred.’   This promise was so great that I willingly  gave myself to purchase so glorious a reward.” Now obviously, Helen was under some pressure from  her father to accept the marriage, and Joseph’s   status as the prophet surely added pressure.  But some people point to this quote as evidence   that Joseph coerced Helen into the marriage  with the promise of unconditional exaltation.   I find that conclusion unlikely because on  the very next page of Helen’s recollection,   she references the promises Joseph made  to her and says that “with the help of   our Heavenly Father I am determined to  so live that I can claim those promises,”   suggesting that she was aware that those  promises were not without conditions. Also, Helen’s parents were present when  Joseph made these promises. Helen was   sealed to Joseph in May 1843, and we have a  June letter from her mother and a July letter   from her father that pretty clearly show that  they also did not consider anyone’s exaltation   to be guaranteed through marriage. But you’re  certainly free to come to your own conclusions. My personal conclusion is that while this  marriage was understandably hard for Helen,   it wasn’t the product of  Joseph Smith being creepy,   but was rather a way for the Kimball family and  the Smith family to be connected after this life. After Joseph died, Helen was remarried to Horace  Whitney, who also later practiced polygamy.   While it was oftentimes a heart-wrenching  practice, she defended it. She wrote,   “I did not try to conceal the fact of [plural  marriage] having been a trial, but confessed   that it had been one of the severest of  my life; but that it had also proven one   of the greatest of blessings.” She died as  a believing member of the faith in 1896.   Check out the resources in the YouTube description  for more info on this topic, and have a great day!
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Channel: Saints Unscripted
Views: 15,199
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Keywords: Saints Unscripted, 3 Mormons, LDS, latter-day saints, mormon, mormons, saintsunscripted, mormonism, understanding mormonism, mormon church, mormon lds, lds church, Jesus Christ, Jesus, Christ, christian, religious, religion, christianity, Bible, faith, is god real, belief, reason, logic, doubt, polygamy, mormon polygamy, lds polygamy, joseph smith, joseph smith wives, joseph smith polygamy, polygamy and mormonism, mormon leaders, mormon founder, mormon myths
Id: gyl-5-01DDA
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 5min 54sec (354 seconds)
Published: Thu Feb 11 2021
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