Footnotes
Ehat and Cook, Words of Joseph Smith, 419n2.
Ehat, Andrew F., and Lyndon W. Cook, eds. The Words of Joseph Smith: The Contemporary Accounts of the Nauvoo Discourses of the Prophet Joseph Smith. Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1980.
Jessee, “Joseph Smith’s 19 July 1840 Discourse,” 390n1.
Jessee, Dean C. “Joseph Smith’s 19 July 1840 Discourse.” BYU Studies 19, no. 3 (Spring 1979): 390–394.
See Revelation, 16–17 Dec. 1833 [D&C 101:45–48].
See Revelation, 16–17 Dec. 1833 [D&C 101:51].
The federal government’s refusal to help the Saints led many church members to conclude that the United States was ripe for destruction. In the July 1840 issue of the Times and Seasons, for example, Alanson Ripley declared that if the Saints could not obtain redress, God would “hear the cries of innocent blood, and will let loose his indignation upon the rulers of this government, and vexation, and astonishment shall be the cry of this nation.” (Alanson Ripley, “To All the Saints,” Times and Seasons, July 1840, 1:137–138; see also Letter from Elias Higbee, 9 Mar. 1840.)
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.