We now look
as far as history allows into the lives and doings of three largely forgotten men
(and their associates), to tell a story of strange doctrine, misplaced loyalty,
and exasperated concern.
In 1881,
Bishop Orson F. Whitney was called on a mission to England, where his assignment
was to preach the gospel as a proselyting missionary for several months, and
then move into the main mission office in Liverpool, where he would become the
sub-editor of the Millennial Star. In
this capacity he would take over for the departing sub-editor, Charles W.
Stayner. Unbeknownst to most in his day and ours, Charles Stayner was a
self-proclaimed prophet and seer, who evidently had a very magnetic
personality, enabling him to persuade Bishop/Elder Whitney, and also many of
the other missionaries serving there, that he was a prophet of God that would
someday lead the Church.
The below
diary entries and historical sources unfold as much as I know of Stayner’s (and
his disciples) beliefs and actions in life. Bishop Whitney was the most
prominent among them and had the best contacts with the senior leadership of
the Church. For those who have not read my biography
of Elder Whitney, after thorough study of his diaries, I came to realize
that because of a susceptibility to flattery, difficulty coping with serious
depression, and a hungry mind that thirsted for heavenly knowledge almost to a
fault, Whitney was particularly vulnerable to Stayner’s claims. Beyond that, I
cannot say why one as gifted and brilliant as Bishop Whitney would be so
gullible as to accept Stayner’s strange doctrines and revelations. Stayner was
not the only man to have a beguiling effect on Whitney during his lifetime, but
he did have the most worrisome influence for the longest time—almost two
decades.
I present
this material now for several reasons. Some of it (the entries from President
George Q. Cannon’s diaries) has just recently become available after
languishing in the First Presidencies vault for a hundred plus years. Further,
most of the entries quoted below from Whitney’s diary are already published in
my biography
of his extraordinary life and are therefore not really new. But the main
reason to narrate this unusual chronicle is because it tells a story that is
repeating itself today in tragic ways. False prophets have arisen among us and
should be recognized for what they are.
In a
similar manner to how Charles W. Stayner gathered disciples about him with the
promise of great revelations and visitations and receiving high church
positions, along with imparting special divine knowledge not had by others,
Denver Snuffer is doing the same thing today. Whether we call them
“Snufferites” or “the remnant” or some other label, this man is operating
similarly (except in a digital internet age) to how Stayner worked, and is
ensnaring some good faithful church members.
This kind
of movement has happened before, is happening now (in greater numbers because
of the internet) and may well happen again with another new false prophet (besides
Stayner and Snuffer) as the decades pass before the second coming arrives.
After all the prophets and apostles have taught and warned for decades, some
members still turn aside and follow others into mists of darkness.
Our story,
of how Stayner was able to capture the minds, hearts, and money, of wonderful Latter-day
Saints whom one would suppose would never be so foolish/gullible, needs
exposure; needs to be known by Snufferites and anyone else thinking to join a religious
movement or group that operates outside the keys and authority of the First
Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles today.
The saga
that unfolds below is told largely through diary entries made by Orson F.
Whitney (OFWD) and to a lesser extent by President George Q. Cannon (GQCD), and
a few others. By no means does this material tell the complete story. Orson
held back the full truth from the senior Brethren when they interviewed him, as
did his circle of associates. Orson also censored his diary and removed and
destroyed many pages bearing on the subject, as well as some related personal
correspondence. President Cannon and his apostolic associates came to know much
of what was transpiring, but they didn’t know how deep down the rabbit hole this
group had gone with their secret meetings and claims of divine manifestations.
So, we don’t know everything. (Perhaps someday someone will publish or make
available other records/diaries that will tell more of the story. Certainly, if
Stayner or his brother Arthur kept a diary, such might be filled with further
and better descriptions into what was going on and why.)
Also worth
noting: in 1882, the Liverpool, England, mission was presided over by Elder
Albert Carrington, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve. Normally this would be
a marvelous boon; a member of the Twelve directing the missions of Europe. But
Elder Carrington had succumbed to the lusts of the flesh and become a serial
adulterer with mission office staff. He was later excommunicated, but at the time
Elder Whitney served, and for some years afterword, he was still hiding the
truth. This created a spiritual atmosphere in the mission office that was far
less than desirable and therefore spawned fertile ground for doctrinal
deviations.
Of the
reasons for sending Bishop Whitney to the mission field, President Cannon
wrote:
It was decided to send Bro. O. F.
Whitney to England with the expectation that he should write for the “Star”,
after he shall have had some months experience in the missionary field, to take
the place of Elder C. W. Stayner. Bro. Stayner has been
professing to receive revelations in which the intimation is conveyed though not
expressly stated, that he is the great prophet to whom reference had been made
in the revelations. He claims that a prophet will be raised up who will be of
the seed of the Savior and of Ephriam, having the blood of Ephriam and of
Joseph intermingled in his veins; and that he himself is the personage referred
to by Isaiah and by Moses and by Joseph where he speaks of one “mighty and
strong”. And he states that the Church will receive his mission, and Prest
Taylor and Bro. Pratt especially. I gather the idea that he wishes them to be
his counselors. He is very anxious to know how the presidency of the Church
feel in regard to his revelations. This I gather from a letter that his brother
Arthur has received from him, and in this letter he conveys the idea that
before he can go ahead exercising his gifts he must be recognized by the First
Presidency. There is evidently a trick of the devil to lead this soul astray.
He has been very self-righteous for sometime, I understand, and has been
seeking earnestly for more power; and he is, it is stated, very ambitious, and
the adversary has taken advantage of him. He will not stop where he is if he
retains this spirit. Today we may be willing to have the First Presidency
decide upon these pretensions, but if they fail to go according to the
revelations which he has received, of course it will seem like a natural
consequence for him to proclaim his revelations as of greater importance and
more binding than the action or decisions of the First Presidency, and as a
result of their non-action it will be easy for him to conclude that they are in
transgression. (GQCD, Sept. 13, 1881)
Meanwhile,
when Orson F. Whitney was being trained by Charles W. Stayner to edit the Millennial Star, the mission periodical,
he came under Stayner’s persuasive influence and first learned of the alleged revelations:
“Spent most of the day indoors, writing. In the evening had a long conversation
with Bro. C. W. Stayner. He told me many things about himself; how he became
possessed of the gift of revelation, etc.” (OFWD, March 23, 1882). During their
conversations Orson learned that Stayner believed in reincarnation and thought
himself a prophet and seer, possessing many of his own written revelations. Orson
became intrigued: “In the evening spent some time with Bro. Stayner in his room
where he read me several of his revelations. I am praying for a testimony of
their truth” (OFWD, March 24, 1882). Soon thereafter Whitney learned that a
number of the other missionaries believed Stayner’s revelations and doctrines,
among them John Donaldson, George C. Parkinson, and Joseph A. West. Orson
formed fast friendships with several of these men, lasting much of their lives.
Having heard Stayner’s claims, Orson wrote: “I will now cite some of the
reasons I had for investigating and crediting so far as I did, the doctrines
advanced by Brother C. W. Stayner.”—but then he did not, instead scribbling
it out.[1]
After
Stayner sailed from Liverpool for home in Utah, Orson, George C. Parkinson,
John Donaldson, and others, continued investigating their own peculiar conception
of reincarnation: “Talking to Parkinson. Gave him list of names given me by
Brother Donaldson nearly a year ago, of persons who have lived in this and
former dispensations” (OFWD, March 22, 1883). This was no dispassionate
intellectual philosophizing, but sustained pursuit. There is no evidence reincarnation
was ever taught to local members or investigators.
Having
returned to Salt Lake City, Charles W. Stayner continued sharing his
revelations with others, bringing trouble upon himself. Orson wrote:
We . . . received word from Salt
Lake [City] that Brother Stayner had been tried by the High Council of the Salt
Lake Stake of Zion, for disseminating false doctrines, and that the High
Council, presided over by Angus M. Cannon [George Q. Cannon’s brother], David
O. Calder and Joseph E. Taylor, had sat in judgment upon him and his teachings
and decided that he had been led astray by the evil one. They required that he
renounce his belief in the reincarnation of spirits, in his own calling as the
“One mighty and strong,” and in short everything connected with his
revelations; to call in his writings, revoke his teachings, to get rebaptized
and “sin no more.” This, Brother Stayner agreed to do, and did so to the best
of my belief and knowledge. On learning of the decision I kept my word in
regard to setting them aside if the Priesthood should decide against them,
plighted to Brother Stayner on his leaving England.”[2]
When Elder
John Henry Smith, the new European mission president, arrived and took Albert
Carrington’s place, Orson spoke with him at length about Stayner: “The arrival
of Apostle [John Henry] Smith, who had attended the trial of Brother Stayner,
confirmed previous reports, and after several conversations with him upon the
subject, I reiterated my position and took his counsel in regard to Brother
Stayner’s doctrines, which was to lay them aside as incorrect and banish them from
my mind as far as possible.”[3]
It would be good to know more about Stayner’s trial (known as a Disciplinary
Council today). Heber J. Grant wrote in his own diary that Elder John Henry
Smith was not impressed with what he observed about how stake president Angus
Cannon conducted the meeting: “John Henry Smith related . . . being present
with F. M. Lyman and Brigham Young Jr. at the trial of Chas W. Stayner before
the High Council of Salt Lake Stake. The acts of Angus M. Cannon on that
occasion were a farce in his opinion. The trial was the supremest humbug he had
ever witnessed.” I don’t think Elder John Henry Smith was condoning or
vindicating Stayner by saying this, as other records show, but he was not
impressed by the stake president and his methods. But as noted above, he let Whitney
know in no uncertain terms what had happened to Stayner.
But even
with such counsel and good intentions, even verbal commitment, Whitney was not so
easily able to forsake Stayner and reincarnation as his autobiographical
writings might indicate. He returned from his second mission in 1883, and on
the very day he arrived home (July 7) he was again investigating the subject:
“[I] walked up City Creek with Bro. [John] Nicholson and had a long talk
concerning Stayner and his revelations.” Instead of casting them from his mind
he sought more: “I called on C. W. Stayner. Had a long talk with him on
religious matters. Returned home. . . . Then spent the evening at Stayners. Had
a long talk with him” (OFWD, July 11, 1883). Charles W. Stayner had a brother,
Arthur, who had also accepted his revelations. Between the Stayner brothers,
Orson F. Whitney, John Donaldson, George C. Parkinson, and their wives, they
soon had a sizeable group of believers in reincarnation and Charles Stayner’s alleged
revelations and prophetic destiny.[4]
Eventually something resembling a secret prayer group coalesced and enlarged as
members were added, with goals of getting revelations, seeing visions, and seeking
the mysteries.
Orson soon visited
John Donaldson, who lived in Teton, Idaho. It was here that Orson summarized in
his diary his doctrinal theory about Elias; a theory he used to propound that
Elias had several mortal bodies and probations:
Called at Donaldson’s [and talked
about] the following from the Doc[trine] & Cov[enants]. Section 27. Verses
6 and 7. “And also with Elias, to whom I have committed the keys of bringing to
pass the restoration of all things spoken by the mouth of all the holy prophets
since the world began, concerning the last days.” “And also John, the son of
Zacharias, which Zacharias he (Elias) visited. (Luke says Gabriel hence Gabriel
and Elias are one; and as Joseph Smith says Gabriel and Noah are one, then
there are three in one) and gave promise that he should have a son, and his
name should be John, and he should be filled with the spirit of Elias” (hence
4).
Section
110. Verse 12. “After this Elias appeared, and committed the dispensation of
the gospel of Abraham (as Abraham stood at the head of his own dispensation and
none but he had the right to deliver the keys thereof to another, then it
follows that Abraham and Elias are one) saying that in us and our seed
(Abraham’s promise) all generations after us should be blessed” (OFWD, August
30, 1883).[5]
Orson also
prepared a list of family and friends and church leaders he believed were
reincarnated. At the left he wrote their initials, backwards, and then listed
each person, generally from the Old and New Testaments or the Book of Mormon,
that he thought they had previously been. The following is a sampling:
D. J. – [John Donaldson] – [illegible],
Bartholemew, Nephi, Mormon, Jared
S. A. – [Arthur Stayner] – Paul,
Moses, Solomon, Columbus, Eli, Elisha
Y. B. – [Brigham Young] – Peter
S. W. C. – [Charles W. Stayner] -
Abel, Noah, Abraham, Joshua, [illegible], Samuel, Gabriel, Elias, Cyrus, Washington, Mannassah
W. S. Z. – [Zina Smoot
Whitney] – Esther
W. K. H. – [Horace K. Whitney] – Benjamin
W. M. H. – [Helen Mar Whitney] –
Sariah
S. F. J. – [Joseph F. Smith] –
Jonas, Timothy(?)
(The brackets contain an educated
guess as to whom the initials identify. Others Whitney listed are not included
above since they are more difficult or impossible to verify.)
In 1886
Whitney’s diary begins including entries where he used codenames (or codename
initials) when referring to people in the secret prayer group. These codenames
seem to represent their main
reincarnated name (of a figure from the past), since many were supposedly reincarnated
more than once. Due to the censoring of the diary this usage is not immediately
apparent, but becomes reasonably convincing after careful examination. The list
of initials and names was of significant help in identifying some reincarnated
codenames. It is fairly certain that Charles W. Stayner is referenced as Joshua
and also as Elias, or “E,” and that Arthur Stayner is “Moses.” John Donaldson
is probably “Nephi”. Orson F. Whitney himself is probably “M. M.” (Mahonri
Moriancumer or the brother or Jared).
One of Orson’s
first diary entries to use mysterious initials is that of June 10, 1886: “Have
recently heard some interesting things about my life, past and future. Also
about the First Councilor to the President of the Church [George Q. Cannon],
and the mission of the ones like unto M. & A. [Moses & Aaron?].” Then
on October 6, 1886: “At Joshua’s [C. W. Stayner] in the evening, he saw [in
alleged vision] a woman’s hand pointing to me. The hand was beautiful and
shapely and the sleeve was black. The interpretation was that I was ‘a marked
man,’ in the Church, and the Church, typified by the woman, who was in
mourning, was pointing at me and looking with favor toward me—and that ere long
I was to be the recipient of favor at its hands.” The element of flattery
directed toward Whitney may have been one reason he believed Stayner so easily—he
relished compliments and constantly noted them in his diary.[6]
Whitney also
recorded his own, similar, revelations. For example, on November 15, 1887, he
wrote: “Last night, in a dream, a beautiful woman, angelic in appearance, was
shown to me as in a vision. She told me she was my wife, that she lived in
heaven and that I left her in charge of my home there when I came down upon the
earth. Her face was entirely new to me, so far as recollection went, and she
was very beautiful. This dream illustrates a doctrine I have believed for
several years.”
The prayer
group expended considerable effort seeking divine knowledge, including extended
fasts, sometimes of three to seven days duration. As time passed others were
added to the group, such as the new LDS convert and University of Utah music
teacher Maude May Babcock, and John Beck, Bid S. Young (son of Apostle Brigham
Young Jr.), Alfred W. McCune, Lyman R. Martineau, and their wives (though John
Beck’s wife would have none of it).
Although
Whitney enjoyed the most prominence of anyone in the group within the Church at
large, the Stayner brothers, especially Charles, continued to be at its center.
Somehow Stayner had managed to completely convince both Orson and the others
that he would one day be the President of the Church and Prophet of God on
earth. In one diary entry in early 1888, after reading comments of praise in
the newspaper for one of his public sermons, Orson wrote, “All I am I owe to my
Heavenly Father, and without Him I am nothing. That I have a mission I believe;
I know; but it is not to lead Israel. I am only a forerunner and the humble
representative of a cause. There cometh one after me mightier than I, the
latchet of whose shoe I am barely worthy to unloose, as he the Master’s.”
In fact, a definite
long-term strategy had been formulated whereby Orson would seek to convince
President Lorenzo Snow to call Charles Stayner as an apostle, so that one day
he could preside over the Church. Orson even believed he knew when that day
would come: “It occurred to me today that Elias [C. W. Stayner] would be the 7th
President of the Church in this dispensation. Therefore, that [the Church] having
had three already and Pres. Woodruff being the 4th, there are two
more to intervene before Elias takes the seat of Presidency” (OFWD, February 8,
1889). Again, the plan could only work if Stayner entered the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles, from where church presidents are naturally selected by
seniority. Heber J. Grant eventually became the seventh President of the Church—he
rejected reincarnation, disliked the Stayner brothers, and worried about
Whitney.[7]
The
meetings continued: “Met at Joshua’s [C. W. Stayner] and began another series
of prayer meetings, this time with two objects in [excised text] received word
from the Lord. The Church and Kingdom is to be universal before Christ comes,
etc. Thursday and Friday continued the prayer meetings” (OFWD, April 24, 1889).
A week later he wrote: “At Joshua’s this afternoon I exercised the g[ift] of
r[evelation], pure and simple, for the first time. It came in fulfillment of Joshua’s
words at a previous meeting. Moses [Arthur Stayner] already had it and exercised
it at the former meeting” (OFWD, March 1, 1889). The details of these meetings
are mostly lost because they were removed from the diaries or never included in
it.
Evidently
the group was unable to keep their meetings completely secret, and word began
to reach various ears, both on a local and general Church level. In mid-May of
1889, Whitney had a lengthy conversation with one of the Brethren, but those
pages are removed from the diary so most of the conversation is lost, as is the
name of the authority he spoke with. The remaining portion states: “We parted
very kindly and he told me he loved me and only spoke as he did on account of
his interest in my welfare. He asked me about [text excised, probably C. W.
Stayner] and his belief in [text excised] things, and I answered that I knew
[text excised, unquestionably C. W. Stayner’s] position was that he honored the
decision of the Priesthood in his case, and that he never expected to take up
those things unless the Priesthood commanded it.”
When
conversing with the senior Brethren, Orson seemed to downplay the activities of
the prayer group, and soft-pedal their aspirations for Charles Stayner. Orson
never publicly taught or wrote about reincarnation. He was strictly circumspect
in following counsel to keep his private opinions and beliefs out of the larger
public eye (the exception being among close friends that he occasionally
recruited or discussed spiritual experiences with). This careful course saved
him from serious trouble later in his life. Yet he continued to tenaciously
cling to his views, occasionally stating that they had been revealed to him, or
that he had been shown things in vision about himself and others, in regards to
reincarnation or multiple probations for the same spirit. Sometimes he
explained his reasoning in his diary:
Today I picked up a copy of the [Deseret] News containing a discourse by Pres. George Q. Cannon at the last
General Conference, Sunday am April 7, 1889, in which the following passages
occur: Speaking of Jesus Christ, the son of God, he says, “Who is this divine Son?
Jesus Christ. Was He, the Son of God, born of a woman? Yes. Well, then, if one
God be born of a woman why not other Gods be born of women? Is He the exception
to the entire race?” In another part he says, in relation to the power that
full grown spirits have of being compressed within infant bodies: “It is a
strange thing to state; but because we do not understand all things, shall we
reject truths?”
Now
if Bro. Cannon had gone a step farther he would have said right out “Brethren
and Sisters; we are not all equal, as sons and daughters of God. Some are Gods
who are undergoing reincarnation, and some perhaps are only children of God,
incarnate for the first or second time or such a matter. Some belong only to
this planet, others have lived on other planets and been glorified therefrom to
the celestial worlds.” And yet Bro. Lyman and other Apostles declare this to be
a false doctrine. I declare it to be true, for God has shown it to me as being
true and Pres. Cannon touched on things in that sermon that I have believed for
the last seven years. The Church will yet accept reincarnation, of Gods and
sons of God, in this and other worlds as true. (May 27, 1889).
Whitney occasionally
evidenced a streak of pride in his diary, usually when he was recording others’
compliments about his speaking, but also when something he believed was being refuted.
President Woodruff, who had undoubtedly heard of the Stayner-Whitney group, had
spoken in a public meeting in Manti, Utah, about it:
There is another thing I wish to refer to here. I have heard that in
Zion there are some men who entertain the idea that they inherit the body and
spirit of Moses, or Abraham, or David, or Noah, or somebody other than
themselves. I hope none of you here indulge in anything of this kind, because
it is a most foolish, nonsensical and false doctrine. You gaze upon a man who
professes to have inherited the body or spirit of Moses, or any of those I have
named, and I think you will conclude that his appearance does not indicate that
such is the case; at any rate, it certainly has not improved him. Brother
Woodruff, Brother Cannon, Brother Smith, Brother Lorenzo Snow, or any of the
brethren, will never inherit anyone's body or spirit but their own, in time or
in eternity, unless the devil gets into them. It is Satan who inspires men to
believe in such absurd things. He delights in having any of the brethren
entertain false ideas, no matter what they are. I tell you that whoever sees me
in time or eternity will see Wilford Woodruff, not Noah, nor Abraham, nor
Enoch. Every man has his own identity, and he never will lose that identity.
Therefore, when you hear such doctrine as that advanced, do not believe it.
There are a good many things Satan would like us to believe; but we must guard
against these.[8]
Word of
these public comments soon reached Bishop Whitney’s ears. On June 3, 1889, he
noted that “At 4 pm. met at Joshua’s with Moses and Matthias. Had a precious
time,” but then referenced something else—“This evening I heard that Pres.
Woodruff, in a meeting at Manti, a few days ago, publicly declared that the
doctrine of reincarnation, that is, one spirit having several bodies, to be
false; that he was Wilford Woodruff and no one else, etc. All right, Bro. Woodruff,
if you really said it, it is between you and the Lord. I believe it to be a
true doctrine, and have for the last seven years [text excised].”
During the
meetings in Manti, Utah, both President Woodruff and Elder Francis M. Lyman of
the Quorum of the Twelve had firmly refuted reincarnation doctrine, and warned
members against it. This was the first of many such occasions wherein members
of the Quorum of the Twelve and the First Presidency denounced reincarnation,
and Whitney’s group deserved most of the blame for the public rebukes.[9]
The groups actions and views continued to leak out and reach the ears of the
presiding authorities, usually in garbled form. The larger a secret group
becomes, the harder it is to keep secret. Whitney even had to cope with friends
and acquaintances that agitated the issue: “Bro. W. A. King took me on to
Springville from Provo, and on the way we amicably adjusted a little difficulty
arising from the report that I had heard that he said the reason I was not
chosen an Apostle last conference was because I had been ‘preaching false
doctrine.’ He denied saying so, but admitted he had spoken to Apostle Lyman
about my views and his own (King’s) on the principle of reincarnation. He said
he had been indiscreet but not malicious and asked my forgiveness, which I
granted” (OFWD, December 7, 1889).
Orson and
the Stayners continued with their strategy to elevate Charles to the apostleship.
Another hope they entertained was that they could convince the Church—from the
top down—to accept reincarnation as true doctrine. When President Lorenzo Snow
wrote Orson a kind letter of friendship, Orson “Read the letter from Bro. Snow
to Joshua and Moses at the latter’s home today. They rejoiced. Joshua said that
L[?]. had told him I would soon have an interview with L[orenzo]. S[now]. and
that it would lead to one between L[orenzo]. S[now]. and him [C. W. Stayner]” (OFWD,
March 27, 1890). Patience continued to be in order for the group’s scheme.
Whitney’s
knowledge that his reincarnation views had reached President Woodruff and Elder
Lyman worried him, and when opportunity arose he discussed it with President
Lorenzo Snow. Since their first acquaintance, President Snow had become a close
friend and mentor, and also a doctrinal protector. President Snow knew that
Whitney loved deep doctrine and trusted him enough to speculate in private.
After one discussion Orson recorded: “Bro. [Lorenzo] Snow was much pleased with
our visit. He seems to think a great deal of me and takes much interest in my welfare.
He warmly commended and endorsed my remarks yesterday . . . and in a private interview told me several
things of great interest. One of the things he said he had kept [confidential] for
50 years. It pertained to the lineage of my grandparents N[ewel]. K. Whitney
and wife and H[eber]. C. Kimball, who, he said, the Prophet Joseph told his
sister Eliza, were descendants of the Savior” (OFWD, November 26, 1888).
Lorenzo and
Orson enjoyed a close personal affinity. President Snow gave Bishop Whitney a priesthood
blessing in which, among other unrecorded things, he hinted at a future call to
the Apostleship:
[Several pages missing] hands were
upon my head he predicted that I would be “lifted up and occupy places high and
glorious in this life,” and when he sat down he said that the Lord had shown
him some things concerning me that he did not dare tell, “But,” he added, “they
will all come along in due time.”[10]
During
our talks he told me that his sister, the late Eliza R. Snow Smith was a firm
believer in the principle of reincarnation and that she claimed to have
received it from Joseph the Prophet, her husband. He [Lorenzo] said he saw
nothing unreasonable in it, and could believe it, if it came to him from the
Lord or His oracle. He said [scissor snipped excision for two lines], that I
had a revealing mind, and was wonderfully gifted in the power to reach after
and grasp the mysteries. He said he loved to talk with me, but that I must be
careful to whom I talked for most men did not care anything for these
principles, being “darkened in mind,” that as I grew and increased in the
knowledge of God men would become jealous of me and seek to injure me. But I
will befriend you, he said, and I want you to feel perfectly free with me. He
told me that he heard Joseph Smith tell a man once that he would become a God
and reign in glory, but that before that he would have to be crucified as
Christ was. That man is still living [one line missing, mid-November 1887].[11]
Two years
later, they again conversed upon deep doctrine: “Left Salt Lake for Brigham
City on a visit to Pres. Lorenzo Snow. . . . We had a very interesting
conversation this day and the three days following, on ‘the mysteries.’ He told
me he had never unbossomed himself to mortal man as he had to me, considered me
a close friend and a brother. He blessed me the day before [text excised] set
[text excised] his history” (OFWD, June 8, 1889).[12]
(Of course, Lorenzo and Orson’s private doctrinal discussions do not constitute
church doctrine then or today.)
A year
later, as Orson’s worries about his reputation with the senior brethren—meaning
Presidents Woodruff, Cannon, and Elder Lyman—intensified, he wrote:
At Brigham City on my last visit,
Apostle Snow told me that Pres. Woodruff thought as much of me today as he ever
did, and that all prejudice occasioned by Bro. Lyman’s talk had passed away. I
asked him if I had done anything to cause him to lose confidence in me. “No,
indeed, my dear brother,” said Lorenzo; “I regard it as a great blessing that
the Lord has thrown us together. I have defended you to the Brethren
repeatedly, when these things have come up, and told them that I knew your
views and your spirit, and that no man could lay his finger on a line of false
doctrine that you had ever written or spoken, and that there was no cause to
condemn you whatever. But you must be wise and not express your opinion, even
in private,” etc. I asked him if he remembered the blessing he gave me a year
ago. “Yes,” said he, “I remember it, and I may yet have it in my power to help
fulfill my prediction.”
I
told him the story of Elias, etc. with which he was much interested and
surprised—did not put credence in it exactly, but said it might be true, etc. (OFWD,
May 21, 1890).
President
Snow continued protecting Orson amid all the rumors. That he kept his
reincarnation theories to himself (or within the prayer group) helped—but that
Whitney had to be defended to the other Brethren portended that matters were becoming
problematic and complicated. And even with this strain in play, their
conversation still contained further hint of a possible future apostolic call
from President Snow.
President
George Q. Cannon did not share President Snow’s unbridled goodwill for Bishop
Whitney’s unorthodox views or for Stayner’s uncanny influence over others, and
his own concerns magnified. He received word from his son, Elder Abraham H.
Cannon (of the Quorum of the Twelve), that contributed to his worries:
As my letters from my son Abraham
will explain some things worth preserving I append copies of them:
My Dear Father. . . .
I have been informed since you left
that John Beck has fallen into the hands of Charles and Arthur Stayner,
who are “milking” him to advance some of their “wild cat” schemes. John Beck’s
wife says they have induced him to put up money on a so-called gold property in
Idaho. He is also encouraged by them to believe that he is a great spiritual
leader and should occupy a prominent ecclesiastical position. Mrs. Beck is very
much worried over his condition, as he spends almost his whole time with
the Stayners to the neglect of his business and family. With
the Stayners, Orson Whitney and B. S. Young seem to be operating, and Orson
has been engaged to write John Beck’s biography. I am told that
Charley Staynerhas made John Beck believe that he (Stayner) is to be the
next leader of the Church, for he is a spirit of a great personage who has
lived upon the earth and has now come again to lead the people out of trouble.
In this case, John Beck is to be made an Apostle. The Stayners have
expressed considerable feeling against the Cannons, and say that when this
change occurs the Cannons will be left entirely out of consideration. Brother
Beck’s wife seems to be quite worried about his present condition and desires
to know what she should do to get John Beck away from these associates. I told
her that if she could produce evidence to show that the Stayners were
teaching false doctrine they could be tried for their fellowship, but unless
she and others were willing to testify against them, no Church court would
entertain a case. Mr. Bamberger says that your statement to him that John Beck
could not be trusted has been fully verified for he has deserted Bamberger
entirely, and does not accept his counsel in many matters which would be
to his interest. Nevertheless, I think he can be controlled in a proper manner.
Accept my love for yourself and Aunt Carlie, and remember me kindly to the
brethren.
Your Affectionate Son,
Abraham H. Cannon
Salt Lake City, Utah, July 2nd,
1895.
(GQCD, July 9, 1895)
As far as
is known, President Cannon never formally moved against Orson with church
disciplinary measures, but did publicly and forcefully speak against reincarnation
when opportunity arose, including at the October 1893 general conference. Orson
recorded: “Attended all day. pm. Pres. George Q. Cannon followed Pres. Woodruff
in speaking. He denounced as false the doctrine of reincarnation” (OFWD, October
8, 1893). So also the next day—“At a Priesthood Meeting . . . the First
Presidency, I am told, all three condemned the reincarnation doctrine as false”
(OFWD, October 9, 1893).
President Cannon’s
diary also mentions someone else that was teaching reincarnation, who seems to
have no connection to Stayner’s group: “A case was appealed to the First
Presidency by John Wilkinson, counselor to Bishop McMullin of Leeds, St. George
Stake. He had been tried by the Bishop, and afterwards by the High Council and
in both cases they had decided against him. We sustained the decision of the
High Council in this case. He has been teaching the doctrine
of reincarnation and other follies, and adheres to this, despite all
that the brethren have said to him. We wrote to him that we could not
fellowship anyone who taught that doctrine, and that we would sustain the
decision of the High Council.” (GQCD, March 29, 1894.) One reason Bishop
Whitney escaped such censure is that he did not teach reincarnation outside the
secret prayer group and a few specially selected friends.
During May,
1895, one of the most mysterious entries is found in Whitney’s diary. It was
scribbled out instead of being removed with scissors, and is legible: “Thursday,
May [?], 1895: Began a seven days fast with Joshua, Moses, David, and
others, and revealed great things. Nephi came down from the North during
our meetings. There was now seven more of our mystical number, viz: Joshua,
Moses, Nephi, David, Ishmael, Mormon, and Gideon.”
In August
and September of 1895, Whitney’s involvement with the Stayner’s and his views
regarding reincarnation were deliberated in meetings by the Quorum of the
Twelve and Elder Heber J. Grant was assigned to “warn Bishop O. F. Whitney
against carelessness in regard to attending meetings, as also to urge him not
to become too intimate with Miss [Maude May] Babcock, or the Stayner brothers.
. . .”[13]
President Cannon recorded:
The First Presidency spent a
considerable portion of the day in conversation with Brother Geo. C. Parkinson.
. . . Afterwards the conversation turned on a subject that had been mentioned
to him by Brother F. M. Lyman. It was concerning his being unsound in the
entertaining of certain doctrine said to have been taught by Brother Charles
W. Stayner in England. It is the doctrine of reincarnation.
Brother Stayner had taught at that time that various personages who
had lived in olden times were again on the earth, and there has been some
suspicion in the minds of the brethren, some of them, that there was an intimacy
between Brother Parkinson, Bishop O. F. Whitney and Charles W. Stayner,
and that the two former sympathized with the latter in some of his views. It
was to determine this that Brother Lyman spoke to Brother Parkinson. A meeting
had been held at Franklin in which Brother Whitney had laid his hands on
Brother Parkinson and blessed him, and promised him great things, among others,
that he should be one of the Twelve Apostles; and Brother Parkinson had in turn
laid his hands upon Bishop Whitney and promised him great things; and the rumor
that reached us was that Brother Charles W. Stayner had been reviving
some of his old teachings which he had abjured in the days of President Taylor,
and was holding meetings secretly with some of his sympathizers. Brother
Parkinson explained concerning the meeting, and according to his explanation it
was a very innocent affair. Upon being asked if he had believed that he was to
be one of the Twelve Apostles, he said, yes; he had been promised that, and he
believed that the Spirit of the Lord would not deceive anyone, though he did
not claim that it would be fulfilled in this life. He entered a general denial
concerning believing in reincarnation. He said he did not believe the doctrine,
although he had heard and thought a great deal about it. He related a very
curious incident. When he first went to Liverpool, having been appointed to
take charge of the Liverpool Conference, he found the Elders who were laboring
there traveling from one saint’s house to another, and not attempting to preach
the Gospel outside and to make converts, and he was much exercised over this.
On one occasion he retired to his room and knelt down by the bedside to pray,
and he said, while in this position a map was spread out before him, covering
about half the bed, in which he saw the houses which the Elders visited and a
deep rut in which the Elders traveled. Its depth was about up to their armpits,
and this rut or roadway touched at these different houses. He said he wondered
why the rest of the people and of the houses were not on the map; but it was
suggested to him that efforts should be made to spread out and hold meetings in
the various cities and create some stir by preaching the Gospel. He had
followed this suggestion with excellent results, being able at the end of three
months to make a very good report as to the number of baptisms. After seeing
this map, he said he appeared to be lying on the bed on his back, and a very
large man came and stood at the corner of the bedpost at his head. He said he was
a man dressed in light clothing. He addressed some questions to this man, two
of which he could not remember, but the third question he had a distinct
recollection of, and it was concerning Peter. This man told him that the person
who was Peter in the days of Jesus was Brigham Young now; and when he asked the
question, where was Brigham Young when Peter came with James and John and laid
his hands upon Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery? this person said that Brigham
Young was asleep at that time - the inference being that his spirit had left
his body and taken possession of the old body that was occupied by Peter. We
did not ask Brother Parkinson what he thought of this - whether he believed it
or not. I regretted afterwards that we did not, because having had in the
seeing of the map something that was literally fulfilled and the other being a
part of the same manifestation, it might give him ground to think that it was
true also. He said when he came to himself, instead of laying on the bed he was
kneeling where he had been. If he had any such manifestation, it undoubtedly
was from the devil. We had a long conversation concerning these matters; and
being interrogated by President Smith concerning the belief of those people who
entertained the idea that reincarnation was right, he said that their belief
was that they had different probations, and for every probation had a body, and
it was said that the Savior had appeared many times, and had a body every time
He had appeared. This extraordinary doctrine would convey the idea that men had
bodies like suits of clothes - to be put on and off at will; or like actors,
appearing in one part dressed in one garb and in another scene in another garb.
Whether there is any lingering feeling in Brother Parkinson’s mind as to the
truth of this doctrine we were not able to perceive; but he certainly denied
quite strongly that he had any faith in it.
We
have been somewhat desirous to have this matter investigated in his case and
Brother Whitney’s, because it will not do for influential men like they are to
imbibe false doctrine and to go unquestioned concerning it. (GQCD, December 11,
1895)
The Quorum
of the Twelve knew they had a rare asset in Bishop Whitney, and they wanted to
keep him free of problems and use his influence for untold good in the Church.
Despite the small secret portion of his life, Whitney ministered to his flock
as bishop; preached by the power of the Holy Ghost to large and captivated
audiences everywhere, spoke comforting words to congregations at countless
funerals, wrote and published uplifting poetry, blessed the sick, and worked
hard to feed and clothe his large family. His fame was so ubiquitous that a Mormon
settlement in Idaho asked for and received permission to name their newly organized
ward after him. Even with his busy and stressful life, he managed to navigate
the many challenges that confronted him.
As the
years passed, President George Q. Cannon continued to be anxious about Whitney’s
reincarnation doctrinal side. During his year-long tenure as a teacher at Utah
State University (in Logan, Utah) in 1896, Orson noticed a Salt Lake City
newspaper article that vexed him:
Under date of the above, the Salt Lake Herald reported remarks made
by President George Q. Cannon at the S. L. Stake Conference in which he stated
that Theosophists believed in reincarnation and that it was “a damnable
doctrine.” Some, he said, held that Brigham Young was St. Peter reincarnate and
Joseph Smith someone else reincarnated. He condemned it all as false, and confounded
or identified reincarnation and Theosophy. The following, in reply, appeared in
the Herald of March 11th: [Whitney then gives unattributed newspaper
clipping containing rebuttal or explanation, likely written by himself,
regarding Theosophy and reincarnation.]
I
suppose my friend George C. Parkinson, is partly responsible for Pres. Cannon’s
assault. He informed me a short time ago that he related to F. M. Lyman his
dream or rather vision at Liverpool in which Brigham Young appeared to him and
told him he was St. Peter. Apostle Lyman doubtless told the Presidency about
it; also of Arthur Stayner’s having admitted to him (Lyman) a belief in
reincarnation.
Lyman
R. Martineou told me today (March 11) that M[athias] F. Cowley, Parkinson’s counselor
in the Oneida Stake, Idaho, said today that F. M. Lyman told him there were
some in Logan, who believed in reincarnation, and that when it took hold of one
as it had of C. W. Stayner, that he never got over it.
I
guess he’s right. I would like to hear some of Pres. Cannon’s “strong reasons”
myself. “Damnable Theory” doesn’t dispose of the matter at all. They will kick
the mustard plant and scatter its seed the wider” (OFWD, March 7, 1896).
Whitney’s
pride here neared rebellion. No matter how President Snow might defend Whitney
in private deliberations of the First Presidency and Twelve, and even though
Whitney did not teach reincarnation publicly, President Cannon and others still
condemned reincarnation doctrines (without naming names) at the pulpit, with
President Woodruff’s full support: “Conference closed today. Heard that
President George Q. Cannon denounced reincarnation, secret meetings, etc., this
afternoon and Pres. Woodruff endorsed his remarks” (OFWD, April 6, 1897).
It was
during these same months that further information came to President Cannon
regarding the group’s activities: “As we were returning on the car to Salt Lake
City I was somewhat surprised, in response to a question which I asked Brother
B. S. Young, (who with his wife, Isaac Clayton & wife, Sister May Babcock
and Brother John Donaldson, was on the car) to learn that they had not
attended conference, and one of them remarked that they did not know there was
a conference. They had been at Bountiful, they said, visiting. We have heard
that there are secret meetings held there at Brother Chas. W. Stayner’s, and by
these individuals (excepting Brother & Sister Clayton), and it struck me
very unfavorably to know that they were in Bountiful and yet they apparently
not be aware that there was a conference being held there, so absorbed were
they in visiting somebody.” (GQCD, March 14, 1897.) And then four days later:
I related to the brethren what I
had noticed last Sunday on the car coming from Bountiful, concerning Brother B.
S. Young and his companions. This led to a recital by President Lorenzo Snow of
a conversation that was had between himself and Bishop Orson F. Whitney. It
seems that Miss Babcock intends to be married to Brother C. W. Stayner, and
expected to be able to have the ceremony performed in the temple. Brother Snow
had suggested to John Nicholson to have conversation with her, which he had for
upwards of half an hour; but she was determined in her conclusion to be married
to him and surprised that she could not be married in the temple. Brother Whitney afterwards came
and saw President Snow, who supposed at first, from the questions asked, that Brother
Whitney wished to have some lady (Sister Babcock, he thought) sealed perhaps to
himself (there has been a great deal of talk at one time and another concerning
her attachment to Bishop Whitney); but after conversing some time he
learned that Bishop Whitney did not consider that it was the will of
the Lord that he should take May Babcock, and he was speaking for Brother
Stayner. He also had the idea that the marriage could be solemnized in the
temple. Brother Snow told him, no, there was nothing of that kind done in the
temple, and said further to Brother Whitney, that Brother Stayner was a
bad man, which appeared to startle Brother Whitney, and which he did not
seem to accept, for on parting with Brother Snow he remarked that he hoped he
would change his views concerning Brother Stayner, as he was a very good man.
There is a feeling in the Council that there is something wrong in that
quarter, and this suspicion arises from hearing there are secret meetings being
held by them. (GQCD, March 18, 1897.)
President
Cannon feared for others besides these named individuals and Bishop Whitney:
I stated to the Council that I had
heard that Brother C. W. Stayner had invited Brother Siebert, a new convert who
had come on from Switzerland, to meet with him on Friday and listen to
revelations that he had received. This led to a number of expressions of
suspicion from the brethren concerning the meetings that were being held under
the influence of C. W. Stayner. It is feared that
Bishop Orson F. Whitney is impregnated with false ideas and
doctrines derived perhaps from Brother Stayner, and a number of brethren show a
disposition to be very intimate with him and to have secret meetings with him.
The question of how to obtain information concerning these revelations was talked
over, but no conclusion was reached. I myself have feared the effect of Brother
Siebert going to hear these revelations, because he is a new convert, and such
a man as Brother Stayner, having already great influence over men of
experience, might obtain a wrong influence over him. (GQCD, June 24, 1897.)
John Beck’s
wife, who had attended a couple of the secret meetings, was having none of it,
and sought out President Cannon to express her anxiety for her husband:
Came to the office and had an
interview with Sister John Beck, whose name, I think, is Bertha. She appears to
be a superior woman, intelligent, and evidently well educated, and ladylike in
her manner. She has grown almost hysterical with grief at her situation. Her
husband has made no provision for her, nor, as I gathered from her, for any of
his wives, in the event of any disaster overtaking him or of his death, and she
is very much concerned about it, because from all human appearance at present
he is likely to be very seriously involved and become bankrupt and all his
property be taken; still there may something open before him, for he has been
exceedingly blessed in these matters. But that which she deplores most, and
which she feels most concerned about, is his association with the Stayners
- C. W. & Arthur Stayner - and O. F. Whitney, B. S. Young and
John Donaldson. She says she has been twice in company with these men, and has
seen the bottles of wine from which they have been drinking. She has known them
to have as many as six bottles of champagne and drink their contents. She has
heard them speak in the most disrespectful manner of the Church, and she has
heard that they were particularly down on the Cannons. They expect, when
President Woodruff dies, there will be a great change. C. W. Stayner has
told her husband that he is the son of Richard III of England, and that he is
to be an Apostle, and he has told her that he was the second son of our Lord
Jesus. A description of their conversation and the influence they have over her
husband is, if true, certainly very startling. I do not question the truth of
what she says, because we have heard from different sources statements
corroborative of her’s. She has a very deep feeling against C. W. Stayner.
He has told her what he could do for her if she would work with him, and her
husband has tried to have her arrange for him to live at her house; but she
says she has such a thorough disgust for him, in consequences of his
utterances concerning the Church, that she looks upon him as a man that she could
not tolerate in the least. He draws heavily from her husband, who, instead of
giving money to his family, gives it freely to the Stayners and to this
party of men. I am not altogether surprised at hearing these statements, though
it is exceedingly painful to think that such men as B. S. Young and Orson F.
Whitney could be drawn into the meshes of such a man as C.
W. Stayner and accept him as some sort of a revelator. I promised her
that I would see her husband and see what I could do with him to have him do
something for his wives, so that in the event of anything happening they would
have some provision made for them. I fear, however, that his affairs are now in
such a condition that it will be almost out of his power to do anything,
especially as he is so infatuated with these people of whom she speaks. (GQCD,
September 20, 1897.)
This entry
represents the last one found in President Cannon’s diary in relation to
Stayner, Whitney, or others of the secret group. While diary entries may have
ceased, concern did not. The late 1890s saw Whitney become as enamored with
Charles W. Stayner, or Elias—“E”—as he ever would, even to the point of giving
him half his income and offering more. He believed this temporal sacrifice would
increase his own prosperity. In October of 1897 he sold his home, and after
paying off the mortgage, “The residue [$291.90] I laid before E. as an offering
and it was divided as follows: E. - $144. M. M [Orson?]. - $120. M[oses]. -
$12. N[ephi]. – $12. The balance of $3.90 was returned to me. This was given as
an example of such things.” These donations that he could ill afford meant
Whitney’s family lived in a rental home for several years until his brother
Horace gave him a house.
Possibly as
a reward for Orson’s monetary contributions, Arthur Stayner received a vision
commending him: “H[eber]. C. K[imball]. was seen by Moses to lay his right hand
on my left shoulder, standing to my left and a little in the rear, and say: ‘Orson,
this is a good thing that you have done.’”[14]
Whitney explained: “I had said some days before that if the Lord would give me
a blessing in money I would lay every dollar of it before E. and let the Lord
[decide] how it should be disposed of. I had simply kept my word. [line
missing] The other day at B. I gave my last ten dollars to E. as an
offering—$10 of $15 that he had given me. Two or three days later $10 was given
to me by Dan Spencer. I regarded it as my offering returned. I have made
offerings to E. at different times aggregating hundreds of dollars, and that
when I was in great need myself. Zina and I gave our house to him (this same
house) but it was returned. She joined with me in this offering also.” The same
evening that Whitney sold his home he reported that “we all met at 717 and
received each a blessing from the Lord in the following order: Keturah, myself,
Esther, Ishmael, Moses, Nephi, Tamar. It was a grand meeting. The Angel
Raphael appeared and delivered a message” (OFWD, October 16, 1897). Since
Joshua, or Charles Stayner (also “E”), is not listed, it is likely that he was voicing
the blessings given to the others.
As rumor of
the group’s activities reached the Church Offices, a friend clued him in: “Had
an interview with Brother Dan Collett at the Historian’s Office. He showed
himself my friend. He told me of reports that had reached the President’s
Office about me and others and of a remark made by President George Q. Cannon,
asking ‘Why the Presidency of the Stake did not ferret out these secret
meetings, oath-bound organizations, etc.’” (OFWD, January 5, 1898).[15]
Then a few weeks later Whitney “Had another interview with Bro. Collett. He
told me more of the rumors that had reached the President’s Office” (OFWD, January
24, 1898). These rumors sometimes spread in a distorted condition, as would be
expected.[16] Matters became more
difficult for Orson to navigate and control.[17]
President Snow knew Whitney believed in reincarnation and had heard some of his
theories and explanations, but exactly how much, if anything, he may have known
about the group’s secret prayer meetings is uncertain, beyond what he said to
the other Brethren, as reported above. The situation was deteriorating;
secretive efforts were undertaken to expose Orson and the group and have him removed
from office as bishop.[18]
Then in
late April of 1898, as matters were coming to a head, an opportunity arose for
Whitney to discuss the whole matter in-depth with some key church authorities,
and for him to try to persuade them to accept reincarnation as church doctrine.
He jumped at the chance, though with care and caution:
From 5:45 pm to 6:45 pm this
evening I had a very interesting interview with President Joseph F. Smith, in
much of which Apostle Heber J. Grant and A. O. Woodruff took part. I was asked
about my connection with Bro. C[harles]. W. Stayner and if I sympathized with
his views; those formerly held by him at Liverpool, and which he was strongly
suspected of having revived.
This
gave me an opportunity of refuting the falsehoods put in circulation . . . that
Bro. Stayner, myself and others were founding a new Church, had an oath-bound
organization, a regalia, etc. I told the brethren that these were outrageous
falsehoods, that Bro. Stayner was one of the most loyal men I knew, that we
were Latter-day Saints firm in the faith, and that the Church of God was the
only Church we wanted anything to do with.
I
did admit, however, to having had faith in Reincarnation, or Rehabitment of
Spirits though I had never sought to spread it [line missing] private, that I
could believe it if the Church Authorities sanctioned it . . . because there
were evidences enough in the Church books to justify such a belief. “It is
thought,” remarked Bro. Grant, “that you and the brethren associated with you,
claim to have received advanced truth and we are behind the times.”
“I
never heard such a remark,” I replied. “If I or anyone else taught any
doctrine, true or false without authority, it would be [illegible] times, not
you behind them.”
President
Smith finally said “Well, if there is anything in our books that justifies a
belief in Reincarnation I would like to know it; for to me it seems opposed to
the fundamental principles of Mormonism. I answered that I would take great
pleasure in citing him to those passages in the books that contain the
doctrine, and he invited me to do so. This was a great point gained, as [line
missing] to listen to a statement of that kind.
[Six
lines here scribbled out] His [illegible] of God presented [illegible]
interview is superior to our [illegible] before and after this occasion.
The
brethren were all very kind, manifesting the deepest interest in my welfare,
anxious that I should not “get off” etc.
President
Smith told me that Heber Grant thought as much of me as one man could of
another, and assured me of his own warm personal friendship and brotherly love.
He said it was President George Q. Cannon and Apostle F. M. Lyman, who most
frequently brought this matter up about myself and Bro. Stayner, which did not
surprise me, as that is in fulfillment of a vision had by Bro. Donaldson in
Bro. Stayner’s house (20th Ward) years ago. The vision of the brick
throwing, Bro. L[yman] throwing them, and Bro. Cannon behind the shrubbery
watching or directing it. The effects of attack, myself and A[rthur[ S[tayner];
C[harles]. W. [Stayner] being in a house nearby and we going to him walking as
in the calmness of the gospel, in the [plasticity?] of truth and in the
self-possession of the Holy Spirit. Such was the language of the interpretation
by revelation through C[harles]. W. [Stayner]” (OFWD, April 27, 1898).
As had
happened before, Bishop Whitney had not been entirely forthcoming and held back
or soft-pedalled many things. Later entries indicate that Whitney “Began a
letter to President Joseph F. Smith, to accompany the statement regarding
Reincarnation” (OFWD, April 29, 1898), and that this long-sought opportunity to
convince President Joseph F. Smith that reincarnation was true doctrine that
should be accepted by the Church excited the group: “At Bountiful today read to
C. W. [Stayner], Arthur [Stayner], B. S. [Young], Sis. Stayner and Miss
B[abcock] my statement and letter to President Smith. It pleased them highly.
Only a few alterations were suggested. [I] Shall copy it and send it in as soon
as possible; reserving a duplicate” (OFWD, May 5, 1898). On May 11, 1898, Orson
F. Whitney turned in the letter: “At 20 minutes past 4 this afternoon I handed
to Secretary George F. Gibbs at the President’s Office the letter and statement
to President Joseph F. Smith. The latter was not in the Office, but Elder Gibbs
promised to lay the document on his desk. This day is historic with me; or will
be from this time” (OFWD, May 11, 1898). Whitney had high hopes his statement
would pave the way for multiple probations to become church doctrine, and gave
a copy to President Snow also:
Conversed with President Lorenzo
Snow, at the Salt Lake Temple, on the subject of the letter and statement to
President Smith, a copy of which I left with him (L[orenzo]. S[now].) for
perusal a few days ago. He said he had read it, but wanted to read it again.
The first part was perfectly clear to him; He fully believed that Christ had
two bodies; but what was the need of Elijah having more than one?” We talked
the matter over. I told him about himself and Ezekiel the Prophet, and bore
testimony to the worth and wisdom of Elias [Charles W. Stayner]. He said my
letter breathed a good Spirit and he did not believe that I could be led astray
by man, or that I would believe a doctrine without good reasons. He thought
“Bro. Joseph” [Joseph F. Smith] would have something to study over in the
Statement, for there were things in it that could not be contradicted. He
talked also of obedience to counsel, in which I acquiesced, and said I had no
thought, neither had Bro. Stayner, other than to honor the Priesthood. I had
not sought to spread this doctrine, and had made the Statement only at
President Smith’s request. He said he wanted to study the Statement, so that if
the subject came before the council of the Twelve and the Presidency he would
be prepared to speak a word for me, etc. (OFWD, June 3, 1898).
President
Snow still professed willingness to watch Bishop Whitney’s back, but seemed
less enthusiastic. The discussions with President Joseph F. Smith and President
Lorenzo Snow marked the beginning of a gradual turning point, or watershed period
in Whitney’s life.
With
President Woodruff’s death in early September 1898 and Lorenzo Snow
consequently becoming the new Prophet, the time finally arrived when Orson sought
to leverage his friendship with President Snow to obtain the apostleship for
Charles W. Stayner[19]:
“Had a very important interview with Pres. Snow, paving the way for one between
him and E., next day. Bore testimony that E. was a prophet of God and that I
had been sent of God in his behalf” (OFWD, October 1, 1898).[20]
Whitney had now asked the Prophet of the Lord to view Stayner as he did—as a prophet—indirectly
asking President Snow to call him as an Apostle. Three days later Whitney
returned for an answer: “Had another interview with the President in the
Temple. He was kind as usual, but has no faith in E.” (OFWD, October 4, 1898).
Stayner and
Whitney’s plan had not worked. President Snow, along with the other General
Authorities, knew about Stayner’s disciplinary trial nineteen years earlier,
and of the disciplinary action taken against him. They had also thoroughly
discussed Stayner’s false doctrines and his uncanny influence over Whitney and
the others. Despite his kindly feelings toward Whitney, President Snow was not
going to recognize Stayner as a prophet or call him as an apostle. Indeed,
President Snow’s eyes may have been opened at this point to a fuller
realization of Whitney’s obsession with reincarnation and Charles Stayner. It
was at this very time that President Snow could have called Orson F. Whitney as
a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles—but did not, instead naming his
other protégé, Rudger Clawson.
Over the
next two years the private and supposedly secret part of Orson’s life fell
apart: Neither he nor Charles Stayner were called as apostles by President
Snow. Then, his first wife Zina died, leaving him grief stricken and deeply
depressed, to the point of contemplating suicide. Next, in late 1899, within but
four months of each other, Arthur and Charles Stayner both died.[21]
Orson was completely devastated and humbled, and had to personally reevaluate
everything related to reincarnation and Charles Stayner. It had all been a
gigantic, useless, long-term fraud that had brought him much trouble and he was
beginning to realize that fact.
He had, in
fact, been considered for the apostleship a decade before, but the doctrinal
issues had disqualified him. Elder Heber J. Grant wrote in his diary of the
deliberations of the First Presidency and the Twelve regarding the selection of
three new apostles in 1889—Bishop Whitney the most desired among them:
This afternoon attended a meeting
of the apostles. . . . There was a long chat as to the parties that the
brethren would like to fill the three places in the Quorum of the Apostles.
Prest. Wilford Woodruff said that he would like all of the brethren to hand him
a list of the names that they would like for the vacancies. The matter had been
talked of at the last meeting and some of the brethren had handed him a list. I
was away and had had no knowledge on the matter and had therefore not handed
the list of those that I would like to the President. I said that the first man
of all those that I knew that I would like to see a member of the Quorum was
Orson F. Whitney if it was thought that he was sound in his doctrine and if
there were no fears as to his keeping the Word of Wisdom, but on account of my
having doubts in these regards I did not care to name him; at the same time if
the word of the Lord came through the President that he was the man I should be
very glad to accept him. . . . There were remarks made by a number of the
brethren as to their knowledge of some of the ideas of Bro. Whitney. I am sure
that he would have been the first choice of every man in the Apostles if there
were not doubts as to how he kept the Word of Wisdom and as to the position
that he took on a number of different doctrines. Jn. W. Taylor said that he had
been to his band of horses to get a team and he picked out the two horses that
he liked the best but he found that one of them had something the matter with
its gamble joint and he therefore was under the necessity of taking another
horse that did not please him so well. He said that in as much as there were
men that we could select for Apostles that there was no questions in our minds
as to their fitness that he did not think that we should think of taking a
person that we were in the least doubt about. He said that his first choice was
brother Whitney but he felt that he would prefer to take some one that he did
not need to ask any questions about. He had turned his defective horse out for
a year and hoped that he would be all right in that time, and in that case he
could have the team he wanted. He felt that we had better wait awhile before
selecting brother Whitney.
In 1898 Orson
was hired as an Assistant Church Historian, positioning him to make a discovery
relating to Charles Stayner’s revelations:
Today Bro. Dan Collett, my
assistant in the office, turned over to me certain documents left by Bro.
Charles W. Penrose, my predecessor, in this department, and which he (Collett)
found some time ago under the cover of his typewriter on a shelf nearby. He did
not know what they were at first, but reading a few lines disclosed the fact
that they were the papers turned over by Bro. C. W. Stayner to President John
Taylor at the time he was called [tried] before the High Council in 1882. Those
papers are the revelations he claimed to have received in England. I sorted
them and put them under lock and key for safe keeping, holding them subject to
the demand of the General Authorities.
The
first of these papers is dated Nov. 15, 1880 at about 4 pm, at 42 Islington,
Liverpool [England]. 17 in all are dated in November; 9 in December; 16 in
January 1881, and 9 in February of that year—51 in all. The last one is dated
Feb. 17, 1881. A blessing by Elder C. W. Stayner upon Elder L. R. Martineau of
date July 19, 1881, and a blessing by the same Elder upon his brother
Arthur—the latter given at Salt Lake City June 6, 1882 (after C. Ws release
from England) also certain letters by C. W. to Arthur written in England are
likewise among these papers. Nothing mentioning reincarnation appears in the
first revelation, but many great promises are made to C. W. S[tayner]., the
recipient—one to the effect that he shall be a Prophet, Seer and Revelator to
the Lord’s people.
I
find that during this past year I have given to Bro. C. W. Stayner upwards of
$2,000, in different amounts. I gave his widow Sister Mary $30 the day of his
death. In all since my acquaintance with him, I have given him sums aggregating
about $5,700 or nearer $6,000. (OFWD, December 31, 1899).
With his
plans and strategies crumbling around him, Orson underwent serious
soul-searching and reformation, and within two years he had renounced
reincarnation and discontinued the prayer meetings. By the end of June, 1900,
he had repented of his former views. On his birthday, July 1, 1900, he made his
reformation official:
I also wrote this day the following
letter:
Salt
Lake City, Sunday July 1st, 1900
President Joseph F. Smith:
Dear
Brother Joseph:
This
is my birthday (I am forty-five years old); and I wish to signify it by turning
over a new leaf in the book of my life. I have pondered and prayed much over
the matter of the written statement that I made to you in May 1898, the subject
of which need not now be mentioned. That statement I wish to withdraw. I have
banished the subject from my mind. I no
longer believe as I did, and I wish that nothing shall remain to perpetuate
the matter either in my own memory or others. While I do not admit that my
faith in the Gospel and my loyalty to the Priesthood have ever wavered—for I
know that they have not—I do acknowledge that I have been mistaken, honestly
mistaken in certain things, and I desire to rectify that mistake. Will you help
me?
Believing
you to be my friend, and one of my best friends I have on earth, I feel that you
will do for me all that one dear brother would and should do for another.
Yours
Sincerely,
O.
F. Whitney
(OFWD,
July 1, 1900)
For a few
weeks Orson heard nothing in response and therefore sought out President Smith:
Today I met Pres. Joseph F. Smith
as he was driving away from the President’s Office. He leaves for Mexico
tonight. He apologized for not having answered my letter of July 1st
regarding the written statement of May 1898. He said he felt well about it and
glad to have me take that ground, and said he had read the statement as well as
the letter to Pres. Cannon. When I asked him what Pres. Cannon thought he
replied “I wish you would have a talk with him about it.” I asked if my
sincerity was doubted by Pres. Cannon. “No; only he seems to think it will be
difficult for you to overcome your impressions in relation to these things.” I
answered: “I think it will be difficult for Bro. Cannon to overcome his
feelings about me.” He half smiled and I added “This is my position. I have
come to the conclusion that it was impossible for me to be right and all the
Brethren (the Authorities) wrong upon any point, and this is the ground I
surrender upon. If this doesn’t satisfy Bro. Cannon I cannot help it; that’s
the best I can do.”
He
gave me “Goodbye and God bless you,” and we parted. He said he had not seen
Pres. Snow as he was sick. (OFWD, July 27, 1900).
Nothing
more is known for certain of what President Cannon thought about the matter of
Bishop Whitney’s repentance. Being in feeble health, he died less than a year
later in California in 1901. President Snow died six months after that in
October of 1901.[22] When President Joseph F.
Smith became the President of the Church, he called his son Hyrum M. Smith to
fill the open vacancy in the Twelve. Later, in April 1906, three vacancies opened
in the Quorum of the Twelve, resulting from the death of Elder Marriner W.
Merrill, and the resignations of John W. Taylor and Matthias F. Cowley over
plural marriage matters.
It was at
this time that Bishop Whitney received a telephone message asking him to meet with
President Lyman of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles: “I went down to the
President’s Office, on my way to the Tabernacle, and had a private interview
with President Lyman and Apostle John Henry Smith in the rear office. I was
asked about my health, my faith and feelings, and answered the questions
satisfactorily, I suppose, and was then told that I might be wanted tomorrow” (OFWD,
April 6, 1906). Passing an interview with President Francis M. Lyman was a
triumph for Whitney, since Lyman had long known of his former reincarnation views
and been an opponent of them. The next day, Whitney’s life changed: “Attended
the morning Conference Meeting; after which, met by appointment at the
Historian’s Office, with President F. M. Lyman and Apostles John Henry Smith
and George A. Smith (his son). Elders George F. Richards, of Tooele, and David
O. McKay, of Ogden, were also there (in President Lund’s room). We were told by
President Lyman that we three—Elders Richards, McKay and myself—had been chosen
to fill three vacancies in the Quorum of the Twelve. . . . He went on to tell
us what would be required of us; asked for and received from each of us our
views and feelings; and then enjoined us to strict secrecy regarding the whole
matter, until it should be made public in a proper way” (OFWD, April 7, 1906).
Two days
later Orson F. Whitney was ordained an Apostle and set apart as a member of the
Quorum of the Twelve. Later that evening, at a social gathering attended by the
General Authorities, President Joseph F. Smith spoke to those assembled: “Among
the good things said of me were from President Joseph F. Smith, who assured me
and all present that the Lord accepted of me; that past clouds were all dispelled, and I was wanted in the
position to which I had been called. (He had told the Priesthood Meeting that I
was one of the [illegible] and most faithful men in the Church, and had
rendered the cause valiant service as poet, orator and historian, as well as Bishop.)
He said at President Winder’s, that he had for years wanted me in the Quorum of
the Twelve” (OFWD, April 9, 1906; emphasis added). No further entries in Elder
Whitney’s diary after this date can be reasonably interpreted to refer to
reincarnation issues.
What can be
said of the claims to divine knowledge and rarified revelations, of angelic
visitations and seeric visions, made by Whitney, the Stayners, and others of
their secret prayer group? I must stand with President Cannon and conclude they
were not of God; such is how I (and today’s prophets and apostles) also view
the claims of the Snufferite movement—it is definitely not of God. Those who
join are in serious jeopardy of losing their membership in The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, and also their eternal life, or exaltation, in the
Celestial Kingdom of God.
Mormon
doctrine, as taught and approved by the First Presidency and Twelve during and
after Whitney’s lifetime, denounced and rejected reincarnation as completely
false. President Joseph F. Smith received a revelation shortly before his own death
in 1918, commonly called the “revelation on the redemption of the dead” that contained
wording antithetical to reincarnation or multiple probation theories. Speaking
of the resurrection, the revelation said: “Their sleeping dust was to be
restored unto its perfect frame, bone to his bone, and the sinews and the flesh
upon them, the spirit and the body to be
united never again to be divided, that they might receive a fulness of joy”
(D&C 138:17; emphasis added).
Elder
Whitney was present in Council with his Brethren of the Twelve when this
revelation was read to them and he, along with the others, sustained it fully.[23]
Then, in 1924, He prepared an article for the European LDS periodical that he
himself had edited decades before, The
Latter-Day Saints’ Millennial Star, in which he wrote:
The theory of reincarnation as held
by many speculative philosophers is repudiated by this Church. The doctrine of
the resurrection as taught by all the prophets of God, ancient and modern, is
against it. The revelations are definite and conclusive that to “every seed is
his own body” in the restoration. We are to receive the same body as that
possessed by each of us in this estate. “This mortal is to put on immortality;
to have one body quickened by spirit, not many bodies.” We are to subdue this
tabernacle under the celestial law that we may be “quickened by the celestial
glory and receive the same, even a fulness.” As Christ received His own body
again, made immortal, so we are to have our own bodies, made like unto His
glorious body, that we may be one with Him, and regain the Father's presence
and society.[24]
Some have
argued that in his doctrinal-poetry book Elias:
An Epic of the Ages, which he began writing about the same time that he
wrote his July 1, 1900 letter to Joseph F. Smith, Elder Whitney hinted that he
still entertained a belief in reincarnation.[25]
Such conclusions are based on poetically imprecise language found in Elias that is capable of more than one
interpretation. In light of the above private and public repudiations, such
interpretive gymnastics seem unjustifiably stretched and unwarranted.[26]
Elder Orson
F. Whitney served for twenty-six years as a distinguished and influential
Apostle of the Lord. During President Joseph F. Smith’s administration, he ghost-wrote
a number of articles and official statements signed and published by the First
Presidency; he enjoyed the complete confidence and loyalty of his friend and
prophet-leader.
Elders
Whitney and B. H. Roberts were similar in some ways. They were self-taught,
unusually talented, believing and faithful; giants of thought, oratory, and the
printed word—yet they also had to overcome serious personal issues that placed
them at odds with the First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve until they
repented. Both men were so gifted and influential that their leaders viewed
them as tremendous assets to the Church—not to be lost without a fight. Each
was rescued after a soul-trying struggle; each became powerful advocates for
good the rest of their lives. Neither Roberts’ political views nor Whitney’s
reincarnation views defined them.[27]
Instead they were and are known as literary and oratorical giants and thinkers of
their time, equal to any contemporary church leader in their influence for good
and reputation as faithful servants of God.
Elder Orson
F. Whitney died in 1931 of pneumonia, shortly after publishing his
autobiography Through Memory’s Halls, which
contains no mention of his former reincarnation odyssey or allegiance to
Charles W. Stayner.
[1]
Unpublished 1885-86 autobiography, 230. Whitney received his dream-vision of
the Savior during the early part of his first mission, well before he
encountered Charles W. Stayner and reincarnation.
[2]
Unpublished 1885-86 autobiography, 232.
[3]
Unpublished 1885-86 autobiography, 230.
[4]
Arthur Stayner was involved in the beginnings of the Utah sugar beet industry;
Charles was a lawyer and a judge; most male members of the group either had
been or would one day serve as a bishop, high counselor, stake president, or
mission president.
[5]
See the “Elias” entry in the LDS Bible dictionary for an approved doctrinal
explanation.
[6] Orson recorded some statements made by the Stayner’s
to his wife Zina: “June 10, 1897: C[harles] W. S[tayner] to Zina: ‘We are the
two best men on the earth’ (Joshua & M.M.) Joshua to Jepthah: ‘They don’t
make better men’ meaning M.M.’ ” This may be a clue indicating Orson and Zina
Whitney were codenamed M.M. and Jepthah.
[7]
“September 23, 1898: Had a conversation with H. J. Grant on the subject of the
Stayners, McCune, the Statement, etc. He told me he loved me, but did not like
some of my associates, and urged me no to injure my reputation by associating
with certain persons. I answered that I could not go back on a friend because
others were down on him, but thanked him for the good feeling he had for me.”
[8]
See Deseret News, June 15, 1889,
report of President Woodruff’s remarks at the San Pete Stake Conference, Manti,
Utah, May 19 and 20, 1889; see also Deseret
News, June 22, 1889, “Remarks of Apostle F. M. Lyman,” at Manti, May 19th.
[9]
See Horne, An Apostle’s Record; The
Journals of Abraham H. Cannon, 419, 421.
[10]
See Whitney, Through Memory’s Halls,
192.
[11]
This is one of a few entries in Whitney’s diary that contain a third-person hearsay
connection to Joseph Smith as a believer in reincarnation. Another originated
with Oliver B. Huntington in 1897: “This afternoon, at the residence of Aunt
Zina D. H. Young, 18th Ward, I had an interview with her brother,
Oliver Huntington, of Springville. It was at his solicitation. Bro.
H[untington] believes firmly in the principle of Reincarnation; said it was
revealed to him in the Temple 12 years ago. He said he heard Brigham Young
speak of it in such a way as to cause him to conclude that he believed it . . .
and he even thought the present Authorities believed it, but for prudential
reasons discountenanced it. I told him I did not think they believed it; one or
two might, but not the most of [text missing]” (September 27, 1897). Not long
after returning from his second mission, Orson recorded: “Ma [Helen Mar Smith
Kimball Whitney], who went to Farmington yesterday with Aunt Prescinda Kimball
[plural wife of Heber C. Kimball], told me this morning of something Prescinda
said to her in relation to plural probations. They were conversing upon the
subject rather indefinitely when Ma, after expressing her belief in it, asked
her companion her view of it. Aunt Prescinda confessed that she too held the
same idea and related in confirmation that Joseph Smith the” [two pages
illegible] (September 30, 1883).
President
Joseph F. Smith wrote about vague and unreliable doctrinal connections to
Joseph Smith in an Improvement Era
editorial: “We fear that many things that are reported as coming from the
Prophet Joseph, and other early elders in the church, by not being carefully
recorded or told with strict regard for accuracy, have lost something of their
value as historical data, and unwarranted additions have sometimes been made to
the original facts, until it is difficult to determine just how far some of the
traditions which have come to us may be accepted as reliable representations of
what was said or what was done. Let those who feel impressed to make a record
of facts, as they become acquainted with them, do so; but let them exercise the
greatest care in obtaining accuracy of statement and in giving the authority
for the statements they record” (“Shall We Record Testimony,” Improvement Era 1:5 [March 1898], 372).
The Prophet Joseph Smith is on record as having declared reincarnation, or the
transmigration of souls, as a doctrine of the devil. See History of the Church 2:304-07. It is not known whether Whitney
knew of this incident in Church history.
[12]
In Through Memory’s Halls, 192, in
speaking about being blessed and set apart to write Latter Leaves in the Life of Lorenzo Snow, Whitney conflates the
mid-November 1887 blessing with that of June 8, 1889, the actual date Whitney
was set apart by President Snow to write the book.
[13]
As quoted in Horne, An Apostle’s Record;
The Journals of Abraham H. Cannon, 419, 421.
[14]
Again, an element of flattery is present, and Orson loved compliments—his diary
records them constantly.
[15]
One of the reasons the stake president, George Q. Cannon’s brother Angus M.
Cannon, did not investigate Bishop Whitney is because they seemed to have had an
understanding in place: “July 31, 1897: Had an interesting interview with Pres.
A[ngus]. M. Cannon, who showed himself (not for the first time) my friend. Had
some good meetings with Joshua, Moses, and other friends.”
[16]
“January 31, 1898: Had an interesting interview with [line missing] some of the
lies that have been floating around about me and my friends.”
[17] “Last Sunday evening (May 1) M[oses] T[hatcher] told
me a man had asked him if we (the Stayner crowd) ought not to be ‘hauled up’
and made to stop our meetings. M[oses]. T[hatcher]. answered ‘No.’ Lon H. was
the man. Aunt Em denied to me the other
day that she has said to anyone that I talked like an apostate. J. Q. told it
in the President’s Office” (May 5, 1898). By 1998 Moses Thatcher had been
dropped from the Quorum of the Twelve.
[18]
“I heard a few days later that Bro. J. N. had been a secret enemy; that the
Ward had been canvassed for complaints against me, but none could be found upon
which to base an effort for my removal; that I had had a talk with President
Joseph F. Smith and all had been made right, etc.” (June 3, 1898). A month
earlier Bishop Whitney wrote: “April 29, 1898: My 1st Counselor in
the Bishopric acts very cold and distant. He is not friendly and has not been
for some time. He has heard the rumors about Bro. Stayner and myself and thinks
himself solid with the Authorities, treats me with positive unfriendliness at
times. I think he is jealous and I believe he wants my office. Will see.”
[19] The first interview for this purpose actually
occurred on September 26, 1898: “Had a pleasant interview with Pres. Lorenzo
Snow, at his house on Canyon Road, 18th Ward (Three Priesthoods).”
[20]
The rest of this entry reads: “(Mahonri—H. G.—Next planet.)” possibly
indicating that Orson believed that Mahonri Moriancomer, or the Brother of
Jared, would become a Holy Ghost on another, or next, planet.
[21]
September 4 and December 26, 1899.
[22]
Evidently Whitney did not equate reincarnation or Theosophy with the common
understanding of “spiritualism” of his day. A few months before President
Snow’s passing, he entertained a prominent national feminist lecturer named
Mrs. Sewall, answering her questions: “Attended with May a reception for Mrs.
Sewall at the home of Sister Emily S. Richards, and after Mrs. Sewall spoke was
called upon to respond and did so. In the evening May and I went to hear Mrs.
Sewall lecture in the Assembly Hall, and she and her hostess Sister Elizabeth
McCune then accompanied us home to my house. Mrs. Sewall having requested a
private interview. We talked for about an hour and she said she had been helped
by what I told her. One subject was Mormonism and Spiritualism. I advocated the
former and condemned the latter. ‘How may I obtain the spiritual gifts of which
you speak?’ the lady asked. ‘By embracing the gospel,’ I answered, ‘and
receiving the Holy Ghost’ ” (July 15, 1901).
[23]
See October 31, 1918: “A communication from President Joseph F. Smith,
embodying a revelation, was read to the Council while in regular session today.
It was interestingly discussed and we all united in accepting it as the word of
the Lord through our beloved President and leader, now in retirement [ill]. It
is to be published.”
[24]
Orson F. Whitney, Millennial Star,
“The Dispersion and the Gathering of Israel,” Vol. 82, no. 42, 662; accessible
here:
https://archive.org/details/millennialstar8642eng
[25]
See: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/faithpromotingrumor/2010/09/de-occultissimis/ (accessed 9/30/2014). See also http://www.sltrib.com/faith/ci_2900769
(accessed 9/30/2014), where the word “hint” is used—a true stretch for
interpretation.
[26]
I was unable to locate any connection of the Whitney-Stayner group with the
Morrisites or Amasa M. Lyman, both famous for dabbling in reincarnation
theories as they exited the Church.
[27]
Roberts refusal to sign the so-called political manifesto nearly cost him his
position as a member of the Presidency of the First Council of the Seventy (see
Horne, Latter Leaves in the Life of
Lorenzo Snow, 246-7).
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