Footnotes
JS, Journal, 12 Jan. 1836.
JS, Journal, 13 Jan. 1836; for more on the various quorums and presidencies of the church, see “General Church Officers, October 1835–January 1838,” “Church Officers in the Kirtland Stake, October 1835–January 1838,” and “Church Officers in Zion (Missouri), October 1835–January 1838.”
JS, Journal, 13 Jan. 1836.
JS, Journal, 13 Jan. 1836.
See JS, Journal, 13 Jan. 1836.
A week earlier, a council at Kirtland permanently replaced five other members of the Missouri high council, four of whom had been called to the Quorum of the Twelve. (Minute Book 2, 6 Jan. 1836; JS, Journal, 13 Jan. 1836.)
Carrico moved to Kirtland in August 1835. The day after this meeting, he married Elizabeth Baker in a ceremony performed by JS. (Nauvoo Ninth Ward High Priests Quorum, Minutes, [14]; JS, Journal, 14 Jan. 1836.)
Nauvoo Ninth Ward. High Priests Minutes, Nov. 1844–Feb. 1845. CHL. LR 3501 21.
JS’s journal expands upon this point: “The question was agitate[d] whether whispering, should be allowed in our councils and assemblys a vote was called from the whole assembly and carried in the negative, that no whispering shall be allowed nor any one allowed, (except he is called upon or asks permission,) to speak loud in our councils or assemblies, upon any concideration whatever, and no man shall be interupted while speaking unless he is speaking out of place, and every man, shall be allowed to speak in his turn.” The vote and decision made here were in harmony with a December 1832 revelation that gave instructions for the School of the Prophets and for the “house of God.” The revelation stated: “Lit [let] not all be spokesmen at once, but let one speak at a time, and lit [let] all listen, unto his sayings, that when all have spoken, that all may be edified, of all, and that evry man, may have an equal privelege.” (JS, Journal, 13 Jan. 1836; Revelation, 27–28 Dec. 1832 [D&C 88:122]; for more on conduct in church councils, see Minutes, 12 Feb. 1834.)
According to JS’s journal, Rigdon “made some verry appropriate remarks touching the enduement.” (JS, Journal, 13 Jan. 1836.)
The building referred to here is the House of the Lord in Kirtland, also sometimes called the “stone meeting house,” “chapel,” or “chapel house.” (See Minutes, 15 Jan. 1836; Geauga Co., OH, Deed Records, 1795–1921, vol. 24, p. 353, 10 Apr. 1837, microfilm 20,240, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.)
U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.