{"id":16546,"date":"1978-08-22T17:31:49","date_gmt":"1978-08-22T23:31:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/?post_type=speech&p=16546"},"modified":"2021-03-15T10:48:44","modified_gmt":"2021-03-15T16:48:44","slug":"joseph-smiths-personality-and-character","status":"publish","type":"speech","link":"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/talks\/truman-g-madsen\/joseph-smiths-personality-and-character\/","title":{"rendered":"Joseph Smith Lecture 2: Joseph\u2019s Personality and Character"},"content":{"rendered":"
Lecture 1<\/a>Lecture 2<\/span>Lecture 3<\/a>Lecture 4<\/a>Lecture 5<\/a>Lecture 6<\/a>Lecture 7<\/a>Lecture 8<\/a><\/div>\n

 
\nLet us now do a close-up of the personality and character of the Prophet
Joseph Smith<\/a>.<\/p>\n

May I begin with the comment of the late Sidney B. Sperry, who was perhaps the Church\u2019s most knowledgeable Hebraist. He studied years ago with some of the world\u2019s renowned scholars at the University of Chicago and then came to Brigham Young University, where he remained for his entire career. One reason he studied ancient languages was to gain the advantage of reading in the earlier source materials. Because of his scholarly achievements, some of his colleagues spoke of him as \u201cthe accomplished SBS.\u201d1<\/sup> Early in his life, he said, he had aspired to know more about the scriptures than any man living. He told me, and this is the point, that he had become aware that no man in this generation could possibly know as much about the scriptures as did the Prophet Joseph Smith.<\/p>\n

I begin with that because a feeling constantly recurs as one studies the life of Joseph Smith. You never quite get to the bottom. There is always more. You can be so impressed and overcome with glimpses that you say, \u201cNothing good that I could learn of him would be surprising.\u201d And then you become surprised. There is always more. It takes deep to comprehend deep, and I often wonder if any of us have the depth to fully comprehend this man.2<\/sup><\/p>\n

I want to focus not so much on his prophetic character and gifts as on the characteristics observed by those who surrounded him\u2014on Joseph Smith the man.<\/p>\n

Consider for a moment his appearance. We know from the record that he was, in his prime, a little over six feet in height. He weighed over two hundred pounds.3<\/sup> One of his advantages all through life was an extremely vigorous and dynamic physical constitution. Without that, he might not have survived the first major crisis of his life\u2014at seven or eight years of age a bone infection, which in most instances required amputation. The doctor, under the pleading of Mother Smith, finally consented to perform less drastic surgery, of course without anesthetic. If you can imagine a section of your leg bone being bored into then broken off in pieces with forceps while you are fully conscious, you will understand what the boy endured. Doctor Wirthlin, in our generation, has shown that one physician from Dartmouth Medical College in New Hampshire was the only man in the United States who understood how to perform that operation and who had the compassion and the skill to do so.4<\/sup> That\u2019s only one glimpse of Joseph\u2019s hardy, enduring physical constitution. Even at that, he bore all he could bear and was prematurely old at age thirty-eight.5<\/sup><\/p>\n

The death mask applied by George Cannon, a convert from England, to the face of Joseph (as also one to Hyrum) after the Carthage assassination gives us the exact lineaments of the Prophet\u2019s forehead, his hairline, which was in 1844 receding some, partly as a result of poisoning.6<\/sup> His nose was, as the statue on Salt Lake City\u2019s Temple Square depicts, unusually large. And yet it is the comment of those visiting from the East and of his own convert friends that he was a magnificent man. The word handsome<\/i> recurs, and there are references, at least in the earlier years, to the color and abundance of his hair. It was an auburn cast.7<\/sup> There was something of a transparency about his countenance. He was beardless: he shaved, but he did not have a heavy or thick beard. Of the shape of his body, one writer says that there was \u201cno breakage\u201d about it. He had a strong and robust pair of shoulders and from there tapered down.8<\/sup> He had become a little portly in the late years at Nauvoo.<\/p>\n

There were few manly sports that he didn\u2019t have a try at, and many in which he excelled. For example, he wrestled, and wrestled effectively.9<\/sup> He jumped at the mark. In this activity you simply drew a mark on the ground, then jumped and marked where you landed, then challenged someone else to match or exceed the jump.10<\/sup> He pulled up stakes: Here two men faced each other, placing feet against feet, and then pulled; the stronger one remained on the ground, the other came up. There\u2019s another version of that in which, face to face, you hold a pole, like a broomstick, and then pull down. The stronger of the two holds, and his hands don\u2019t slip. The weaker\u2019s hands slip.11<\/sup><\/p>\n

With the boys Joseph often played baseball and variations on quoits. He was known to create games with prizes, including booby prizes. On occasion, especially when he had beaten a challenger, he would say something like, \u201cYou must not mind this. When I am with the boys I make all the fun I can for them.\u201d12<\/sup><\/p>\n

So much for the athletic side.<\/p>\n

Turn for a moment to his mind. It was a remarkable mind. Mother Smith records that he was \u201cmuch less inclined to perusal of books than any of the rest of our children, but far more given to meditation and deep study.\u201d13<\/sup> Yet as he matured and as the weight of his calling came upon him he became an assiduous, hard-reading student, poring over the scriptures, even being appointed to go over them word by word, line by line, and make inspired changes. In addition to that he aspired to the ancient languages.14<\/sup> At Kirtland he set up a school in Hebrew with Joshua Seixas as the teacher. Six of the students had not even mastered English in its rudiments. The minutes say that the two outstanding students in that school were Joseph Smith and Orson Pratt, in that order.15<\/sup> The worst was Heber C. Kimball.16<\/sup> <\/span><\/p>\n

Intellectual gifts fall into many categories. For convenience, let us consider four. First of all there is imagination, the ability to picture the concrete pictorially, vividly, in its possibilities and variations. This is the fund of creativity. Joseph Smith had a vivid ability to picture and, some would add, a dramatic propensity. He counseled that we should avoid, as he put it, \u201ca fanciful and flowery and heated imagination.\u201d17<\/sup> He had the gift. But he did not abuse it.<\/p>\n

Next is the ability to conceptualize; to understand principles, information, truth, and then (which isn\u2019t quite the same) to express them accurately, clearly, and, as need be, briefly. Joseph Smith, whatever his early tendencies and however he may or may not have shown up in school, had a brilliant conceptual ability both to see and to understand, to go to the heart of an issue and then to express it so that others would understand. Related to that is the admonition he wrote while he was for many months in isolation in Liberty. He wrote a letter, parts of which are in our Doctrine and Covenants (but the part that is not included is equally profound).18<\/sup> He says: \u201cThe things of God are of deep import; and time, and experience, and careful and ponderous and solemn thoughts can only find them out. Thy mind, O man! if thou wilt lead a soul unto salvation, must stretch as high as the utmost heavens, and search into and contemplate the darkest abyss, and the broad expanse of eternity\u2014thou must commune with God.\u201d19<\/sup><\/p>\n

That remarkable passage is in the context of his saying that often in our most important council meetings, classes, and gatherings we have been light-minded, \u201cvain and trifling,\u201d and too often unconcentrated in our direction.20<\/sup><\/p>\n

Third is memory, the ability to retain what one learns and summon it at will for further use, implication, or application. Apparently Joseph had to learn by repetition, just as the rest of us do, for in 1823 Moroni came and repeated the same message four times, including quotations from scripture. Thus the Prophet heard them often enough and clearly enough to recognize differences from the King James version of the Bible.21<\/sup> Four times he had to hear the message. Many might suppose that one visit from such a heavenly visitor would be sufficient. On the contrary. Joseph listened. He remembered.22<\/sup><\/p>\n

We find evidence of his remarkable memory near the other end of his life, when he sat down with William Clayton and his brother Hyrum and dictated the revelation we now call section 132 of the Doctrine and Covenants. It is a long revelation\u2014sixty-six verses, many of which are themselves long. Verse 19, for example, is over two hundred words. Some of the verses describe the conditions of the everlasting covenant in such terms as an attorney might use who had spent days thinking up every possible synonym, nuance, and contingency so that no loophole would remain. For example: \u201cAll covenants, contracts, bonds, obligations, oaths, vows, performances, connections, associations, or expectations, that are not made and entered into and . . .\u201d That\u2019s the subject of the sentence. Then there\u2019s the verb. Then a very long predicate.23<\/sup> To have written that after patient winnowing of the dictionary would be an achievement. Joseph Smith dictated it straight and, apparently, without a change. That is amazing enough. But then we learn from William Clayton that the Prophet declared that \u201che knew the revelation perfectly, and could rewrite it at any time if necessary.\u201d24<\/sup> Now, that is staggering! He had the essential core of that involved revelation so clearly in mind that he had full confidence he could restate it. He may have meant that he could dictate it in the exact words, and if this is so he was indeed gifted in that respect beyond normal mortal ability. But I think he meant only that the content was clear to him and it would not be lost if the written version were lost. That shows a remarkable memory.<\/p>\n

Fourth is the ability to be simplicity-minded, and that\u2019s a gift. Not \u201csimpleminded,\u201d but \u201c\u00adsimplicity-minded,\u201d having the ability to reduce elaborate ideas to a core center or essence. At the same time it is a gift to be able to see what other minds do not; to recognize implications, nuances, extensions of ideas that go beyond ordinary perception. Here again Joseph Smith was an original, for on the one hand in administrative and \u00addecision-making enterprises he went quickly to the heart of the matter with ingenuity and skill. But on the other hand, if required and asked to elaborate on a given doctrine or teaching he could do so and then would stretch the minds of all present.25<\/sup><\/p>\n

As to the overall quality of the written work of Joseph Smith, Arthur Henry King, a convert to the Church and a renowned English professor, has said that in his judgment the Prophet\u2019s account in Joseph Smith\u2014History (see the Pearl of Great Price), which includes his account of the First Vision and the visits of Moroni, is among the sublime prose in world literature. The same scholar has also said that one may contrast that writing favorably with the more ornate but in many respects more shallow writing of Oliver Cowdery, whose description of his feelings during the translation process and during John the Baptist\u2019s appearance is given at the end of Joseph\u2019s account in the Pearl of Great Price. Compare the two prose styles. In every way, Arthur Henry King observes, Joseph Smith\u2019s is superior.26<\/sup><\/p>\n

We need not apologize at all for the language or structure or form of the Book of Mormon. It is among the great books of the world. It is to be placed side by side with those books which are called canonical. There is a transparency, a brilliance, a white light about its most spiritual elements that I do not find anywhere else. It is a masterwork. Joseph Smith did not produce it and could not have produced it.<\/p>\n

For years it has been said that anybody who had lived in Western New York or anybody who would take the time could grind out such \u201cimitation scripture\u201d himself. Hugh Nibley, becoming a little impatient with that sort of nonsense, once had a class of Middle East students, all of them from the Palestine area or farther East. At the opening of his class he said: \u201cI am making a term paper assignment. By the end of the semester I would like each of you to write 522 pages having the following characteristics.\u201d And then he outlined what the Book of Mormon has and is. So far he has not received the assignment back. No man and no combination of men could have written that book except under divine inspiration.<\/p>\n

I offer one other point, this from my own perspective. Take section 93 of the Doctrine and Covenants\u2014I leave out many other sections of which the same could be said. In my considered judgment (and I have read a little in the philosophers of the world) this section is superior in content to Plato\u2019s Timaeus.<\/i> Plato may or may not deserve the reputation of being the greatest philosopher of the western world, which has been reiterated through many generations, but I say that Joseph Smith, as an instrument for receiving and transmitting God\u2019s word, was more profound than Plato.27<\/sup> He had the added advantage of the Holy Ghost.<\/p>\n

Now let\u2019s turn to his temperament, to his emotional makeup, to his dispositions. Early in his own account of his life he said he had a \u201cnative cheery temperament.\u201d28<\/sup> Thank the Lord he did. It stood him in good stead. Many joined the Church, some from foreign lands and some from the United States, many out of New England with its conservative and sometimes rigid Puritanical traditions, others from movements such as the Quakers and the Baptists. They compared Joseph Smith with his brother Hyrum and remarked that Hyrum seemed more in the image of what they thought a prophet should look like and behave like. He was, they meant to say, more sedate, sober, serious.29<\/sup> The Prophet, for all his sobriety under proper circumstance, was a hail-fellow-well-met, easily inclined to laughter, sociable, animated, the life of the party, and colorful in his use of language. That was disquieting enough for some that they left the Church. For instance, a family visited the Prophet when he was upstairs for a time translating\u2014serious and tedious work. Then he came downstairs and began to roll on the floor and frolic with his little children. This family was indignant and left the Church.30<\/sup><\/p>\n

Not only did Joseph Smith have that temperament, but he found it difficult to abide opposite attitudes, especially when they arose from false traditions. On one occasion ministers came to him intent on tying him up in scriptural analysis, as they had bragged they would do. They kept trying to push him into a corner, but each time he not only had answers but also questions for them that they couldn\u2019t handle. Finally they became convinced it would be better if they left. As they went to the door, the Prophet preceded them. He went out, made a mark on the ground, and jumped. \u201cNow gentlemen,\u201d he said, \u201cyou haven\u2019t bested me at the scriptures. See if you can best me at that.\u201d They went away much incensed.31<\/sup><\/p>\n

A man who had developed a certain falsetto came to Joseph. In our generation we are not familiar with this phenomenon, but in preaching without public address systems in those days some Methodists\u2014for example, in the role of exhorter\u2014would pitch their voices high and shout so loudly that it could be heard a mile away. Sometimes they prayed that way. One man with exactly that tone came and said, with a kind of supercilious reverence, \u201cIs it possible that I now flash my optics upon a Prophet?\u201d \u201cYes,\u201d the Prophet replied, \u201cI don\u2019t know but you do; would not you like to wrestle with me?\u201d The man was shocked.32<\/sup><\/p>\n

On one occasion a man of that same stripe, Joshua Holman, a former Methodist exhorter, was out with some other men cutting firewood for the Prophet when they were all invited to lunch at Joseph\u2019s home. When the Prophet called on Joshua to ask a blessing on the food, he set about a lengthy and loud prayer that incorporated inappropriate expressions. The Prophet did not interrupt him, but when the man was through he said simply, \u201cBrother Joshua, don\u2019t let me ever hear you ask another such blessing.\u201d Then he explained the inconsistencies.33<\/sup><\/p>\n

\u201cI do many things to break down superstition,\u201d he said.34<\/sup> At another time, he said, \u201cAlthough I do wrong, I do not the wrongs that I am charged with doing.\u201d35<\/sup><\/p>\n

Joseph had a sense of humor. He sometimes joshed the brethren even in serious circumstances. An example is the time when a report spread that a man had sold his wife and the price was a bull-eye watch. Riding his horse, Joseph Smith came across Daniel McArthur chopping wood. The Prophet greeted him, then said, \u201cYou are not the young man who sold his wife for a bull-eye watch the other day, are you?\u201d36<\/sup><\/p>\n

On another occasion, with serious intent but humorous overtones, the Prophet dressed up in rough clothes, got on a horse, and rode down to meet a group of converts who had just arrived from England. He stopped one of them who was heading for the town.<\/p>\n

\u201cAre you a Mormon?\u201d the Prophet asked.<\/p>\n

\u201cYes sir,\u201d said Edwin Rushton.<\/p>\n

\u201cWhat do you know about old Joe Smith?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cI know that Joseph Smith is a prophet of God.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cI suppose you are looking for an old man with a long, gray beard. What would you think if I told you I was Joseph Smith?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cIf you are Joseph Smith, I know you are a prophet of God.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cI am Joseph Smith,\u201d the Prophet said, this time in gentle tones. \u201cI came to meet those people, dressed as I am in rough clothes and speaking in this manner, to see if their faith is strong enough to stand the things they must meet. If not, they should turn back right now.\u201d37<\/sup><\/p>\n

It would seem that the Prophet spent half his time trying to convince the slow and sludgy people who had a little faith that God was indeed with him and with them;38<\/sup> and that he spent the other half alerting the Saints that a prophet is a prophet only when he is acting as such, which means when he is inspired of God.39<\/sup> The rest of the time he is a mere mortal\u2014has opinions, makes mistakes, and in a general way of speaking has to put his pants on one leg at a time as every other man does. It was difficult to strike that balance. Some thought he was too human, some thought he was too prophetic. Both were wrong.<\/p>\n

George A. Smith, a cousin of the Prophet Joseph Smith, was in girth, at least, a larger man. He weighed nearly three hundred pounds. One day they were discussing William W. Phelps as an editor. He had a gift as well as a curse for using language in an abrasive way, and in his editorials he managed to offend almost everyone. In his conversation with the Prophet, George A. Smith\u2019s evaluation was that Phelps had a certain literary zeal, and that as far as George A. was concerned he would be willing to pay Phelps for editing a paper so long as nobody else but George A. would be allowed to read it. At this, it is recorded, \u201cJoseph laughed heartily\u2014said I had the thing just right.\u201d And then he hugged him and said, \u201cGeorge A., I love you as I do my own life.\u201d George A. was moved almost to tears and said, \u201cI hope, Brother Joseph, that my whole life and actions will ever prove my feelings, and the depth of my affection towards you.\u201d40<\/sup> On another occasion he gave George A. this bit of serious counsel: \u201cNever be discouraged. If I were sunk in the lowest pit of Nova Scotia, with the Rocky Mountains piled on me, I would hang on, exercise faith, and keep up good courage, and I would come out on top.\u201d41<\/sup><\/p>\n

There is next the question of whether in all of his attitudes the Prophet demonstrated appropriate humility and the very thing he taught in word, namely, compassion and forbearance and forgiveness. He is reported as saying that he had \u201ca subtle devil to deal with, and could only curb him by being humble.\u201d42<\/sup> No braggadocio, no threats, no vainglorying. We do not have power over the adversary and his hosts except through the power of Christ, and we do not have such power save we are humble and receptive. What is humility? There are a thousand definitions, but it means at least acknowledging one\u2019s dependence on the Lord, acknowledging when and where one is not self-sufficient. Joseph, according to those who knew him best, was in that sense humble.<\/p>\n

Here we are not talking about boldness\u2014he had that; it is not the opposite of humility. We are not talking about willingness to endure in strength\u2014he had that, and that too is not the opposite of humility. We are saying that Joseph did not manifest the debilitating pride that destroys humility. That is the witness left by several who knew him best.<\/p>\n

Eliza R. Snow, who had heard of the Prophet and some very ugly things in that \u00adconnection, happened to be at home one day when the Prophet called and visited with her family. \u201cIn the winter of 1830 and \u201931, Joseph Smith called at my father\u2019s,\u201d she wrote of this visit, \u201cand as he sat warming himself, I scrutinized his face as closely as I could without attracting his attention, and decided that his was an honest face.\u201d43<\/sup> Later, after joining the Church, she was often in his home as a kind of babysitter and help for a time in Kirtland. She first admired him in his public ministry, saw him as a prophet, but not until she saw him in his own home, on his knees in prayer, and in his relationship with his children did her whole heart go out to him in admiration.44<\/sup> He was, she said, as humble as a little child.45<\/sup><\/p>\n

Was the Prophet an emotional man? In all the worthy senses of that word, the answer is yes. The tears sprang easily to his eyes, and this happened in varied situations. There is, for example, the occasion on which Parley P. Pratt returned to Nauvoo by boat, having been on a long mission, and the Prophet came down to greet him and just wept. When Parley could extricate himself he said, \u201cWhy Brother Joseph, if you feel so bad about our coming, I guess we will have to go back again.\u201d46<\/sup> He wept, too, at good-byes: the tears were flowing fast on the day he said good-bye to his family before he left for Richmond Jail. The Lord himself acknowledged this compassionate heart when he said in a revelation, speaking of Joseph, \u201cHis prayers I have heard. Yea, and his weeping for Zion I have seen, and I will cause that he shall mourn for her no longer.\u201d47<\/sup><\/p>\n

He characterized himself as \u201clike a huge, rough stone rolling down from a high mountain; and the only polishing I get is when some corner gets rubbed off by coming in contact with something else.\u201d48<\/sup> He also called himself a \u201clone tree.\u201d49<\/sup> He had learned in Vermont that those maples that stood alone had to develop deep roots early; if they did not, the inevitable blast of winter storms would take them down. For all of his social sense, there were times when he felt deeply lonely. \u201cO that I had the language of the archangel to express my feeling once to my friends,\u201d he said. \u201cBut I never expect to.\u201d50<\/sup><\/p>\n

\u201cYou don\u2019t know me,\u201d he said in the King Follett discourse. \u201cYou never knew my heart.\u201d And then this remarkable phrase, \u201cI don\u2019t blame any one for not believing my history. If I had not experienced what I have, I could not have believed it myself.\u201d51<\/sup><\/p>\n

In that loneliness, he had to keep to his own bosom (those were his words)52<\/sup> certain deep understandings the Lord had vouchsafed to him with the command that he not share them. \u201cThe reason,\u201d he once said, \u201cwe do not have the secrets of the Lord revealed unto us is because we do not keep them but reveal them . . . even to our enemies.\u201d Then he added, \u201cI can keep a secret till Doomsday.\u201d53<\/sup> And so he did.<\/p>\n

As an emotional and loving man, what kind of a home life did the Prophet have? Under the \u00adbuffetings that relentlessly began with the Prophet\u2019s announcement of his first vision and continued until his death, it is miraculous that he had as much time at home as he did. He and Emma had nine children, of whom four died at birth and one at fourteen months. In the ache of her bosom at the loss of twins, Emma moved the Prophet to go and bring home twins, a boy and a girl, whose mother had died in that same week. Emma raised those children. The boy died at eleven months under the exposure he suffered the night the Prophet was mobbed in Hiram, Ohio\u2014beaten, tarred and feathered, and left. The girl lived to maturity but never responded to the message of the gospel. Only in one instance did Emma bear a child in a home she could call her own, and that was David Hyrum, born after the Prophet\u2019s death.<\/p>\n

And as for Emma in general, the certainty of the record is this simple: Joseph Smith loved her with his whole soul. And the corollary is, Emma loved him with her whole soul. She was \u201can elect lady.\u201d54<\/sup> She was not only a remarkable woman but, except for the difficulties that came with plural marriage, she was also a noble and glorious supporter of all the Prophet did, as Mother Smith indicated in her personal tribute.55<\/sup><\/p>\n

The Prophet\u2019s home life with Emma included prayers three times a day, morning, noon, and night.56<\/sup> It included her leading the family in singing. The \u201cfamily\u201d was always larger than Joseph\u2019s blood relatives\u2014visitors from different places, immigrants needing temporary accommodation, and so on. Some came for a week or so, and some, like John Bernhisel, for three years. Being so commanded as \u201can elect lady,\u201d she compiled a hymnal, some of whose contents are still in our present hymnbook.<\/p>\n

The Prophet Joseph helped Emma in taking care of the children and the domestic chores\u2014building fires, carrying out ashes, bringing in wood and water, and so on. He was criticized more than once for that, some men thinking that was beneath his dignity. With kindly reproof the Prophet set them straight and counseled that they go and do likewise. The Prophet was neat, too. His axe was always carefully sharpened and properly placed after he had used it. His store of wood was always neatly stacked, his yard was well kept, and until his death he was a farmer who earned much of what he was able to eat by plowing, planting, weeding, and harvesting.57<\/sup><\/p>\n

We have a glimpse of his sleeping ability from Lorin Farr, who observed that even in the Missouri persecution days, even under pressure\u2014and of course he was then under the kind of pressure that leads to the worst fatigue\u2014he could sit down at the base of a tree and almost instantly fall into slumber, but almost as instantly snap back to full and alert activity. That may have something to do with a clear conscience and the assurance that God is with you.58<\/sup><\/p>\n

He avoided, but could not wholly avoid, the tedious trivia of life. He did not like the clerical functions. He was less than enthusiastic about the commandment which came on the very day the Church was organized that a record must be kept day by day and that in it all of the important events should be recorded.59<\/sup> But he complied. He had helpful scribes. He was patient with them, and they with him.<\/p>\n

In a relaxed moment one day the Prophet turned to his secretary, Howard Coray, and said, \u201cBrother Coray I wish you were a little larger. I would like to have some fun with you,\u201d meaning wrestling. Brother Coray said, \u201cPerhaps you can as it is.\u201d The Prophet reached and grappled him and twisted him over\u2014and broke his leg. All compassion, he carried him home, put him in bed, and splinted and bandaged his leg. Brother Coray later said, \u201cBrother Joseph, when Jacob wrestled with the angel and was lamed by him, the angel blessed him. Now I think I am also entitled to a blessing.\u201d Joseph had his father give him the blessing, and his leg healed with remarkable speed.60<\/sup><\/p>\n

To Robert B. Thompson, his secretary, the Prophet said, \u201cRobert, you have been so faithful and relentless in this work, you need to relax.\u201d He told him to go out and enjoy himself, to relax. But Thompson was a serious-minded man. He said, \u201cI can\u2019t do it.\u201d Joseph responded, \u201cYou must do it, if you don\u2019t do it, you will die.\u201d One of the sorrows of Joseph\u2019s life was that Robert B. Thompson had a premature death and that he had to speak at the funeral.61<\/sup><\/p>\n

He learned to relax, and when chided for it he commented that if a man has a bow and keeps it constantly strung tight, it will soon lose its spring. The bow must be unstrung.62<\/sup> Somebody who saw him with his head down, pensive and deep in thought, said to him, \u201cBrother Joseph, why don\u2019t you hold your head up and talk to us like a man?\u201d The Prophet\u2019s response was, \u201cLook at those heads of grain.\u201d The man looked out at the field of ripened wheat and saw that the heaviest sheaves, the ones full of grain, were bent down. The Prophet was implying that his mind was heavy laden.63<\/sup> But fortunately he could unleash.<\/p>\n

Two other glimpses of his home life: When mistreated, he was inclined to \u201cget even\u201d by offering the hospitality of his home. That involved Emma and her talents in cooking. Often he invited people with little warning\u2014\u201cIf ye will not embrace our religion, accept our hospitality.\u201d64<\/sup> There were times when the cupboard was bare. One day they had nothing to eat but a little corn meal. They made out of it a johnnycake, as it was called, and the Prophet offered the blessing as follows: \u201cLord, we thank thee for this johnnycake and ask thee to send us something better. Amen.\u201d Before the meal was over a knock came at the door, and there stood a man with a ham and some flour. The Prophet jumped to his feet and said to Emma, \u201cI knew the Lord would answer my prayer.\u201d65<\/sup> He shared and shared until he was utterly impoverished.<\/p>\n

Now a few comparisons: We have the testimony of Peter Burnett, one-time Governor of California, who had known Joseph Smith in the Missouri period, that he found him a man of great leadership gifts, a man who instinctively commanded admiration and respect.66<\/sup> Stephen A. Douglas, whose title, \u201cthe Little Giant,\u201d was, one source claims, applied to him by Joseph Smith\u2014the same Stephen A. Douglas who debated Lincoln and who aspired, as the Prophet predicted he would, to the Presidency of the United States\u2014had many admiring things to say of Joseph during the Illinois period. He said he had independence of mind.67<\/sup><\/p>\n

Alexander Doniphan was the general who refused to shoot the brothers Smith in the Far West square as ordered, and who wrote to General Lucas, \u201cI will hold you responsible before an earthly tribunal, so help me God.\u201d68<\/sup><\/p>\n

James W. Woods, the Prophet\u2019s last attorney, was with him on the morning of June 27, 1844. Never a Latter-day Saint, he observed that you could see the strength of Joseph Smith in his manner and dignity, but he added that you could see by his face alone that he was not a bad man.69<\/sup><\/p>\n

Daniel H. Wells, \u201cSquire Wells,\u201d who heard Joseph speak twice in Nauvoo, was a kind of nineteenth century justice of the peace. He heard him speak on the principle that every son and daughter of Adam, sooner or later, whether in this life or the next, will hear the gospel of Jesus Christ in its purity and in its fullness and will have adequate option to choose it; and that those who accept it and live it, including the disembodied spirits who would have done so if they had had opportunity in mortality, will have the right and access to all the ordinances that are performed only in this life. How? By proxy. This man, trained in law and impressed by the justice of the Prophet\u2019s teachings, said, \u201cI have known legal men all my life. Joseph Smith was the best lawyer that I have ever known in all my life.\u201d70<\/sup><\/p>\n

We have from Brigham Young a comment on Joseph\u2019s being different from Hyrum, and beyond the obvious comments is one to the effect that Joseph\u2019s ability, including his breadth of vision, was superior to Hyrum\u2019s.71<\/sup> An implication of this is that Joseph was more susceptible to the continuing impressions and revelations of God. That is, he did not become so rigidly bound to what had been given that he was unsusceptible to what yet had to be given. Yet that is a tendency. Claiming integrity, one can harden on past traditions and can thus become immune to living revelation. And the Prophet tended to judge men with that same openness: that is, not all cases are identical; each individual has his own special differences and must be brought into harmony with the Lord in ways that recognize these differences. Again, this shows a mind that is not only open but also receptive; and not only receptive, but also obedient, even when the required response seemed to run counter to former assumptions and traditions.72<\/sup> This was an essential element for the<\/i> revelator of our dispensation.<\/p>\n

To summarize, in Joseph Smith we have a man who physically, intellectually, emotionally, and spiritually was a living human multitude. He was many men in one, as it were. Many of his gifts were balanced with others, and all in all he was a superb instrument with whom the Lord could and did work in the dispensation of the fulness of times.<\/p>\n

\u00a9 1989 Truman G. Madsen. \u2117 2003 Deseret Book Company<\/a>. All rights reserved.<\/em><\/p>\n

For personal, educational use only. No part of this work may be reproduced in any form or by any means outside of your personal digital device without permission in writing from Deseret Book Company at permissions@deseretbook.com or PO Box 30178, Salt Lake City, Utah 84130.<\/i><\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

Lecture 1<\/a>Lecture 2<\/span>Lecture 3<\/a>Lecture 4<\/a>Lecture 5<\/a>Lecture 6<\/a>Lecture 7<\/a>Lecture 8<\/a><\/div>\n","protected":false},"template":"","tags":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nJoseph Smith Lecture 2: Joseph\u2019s Personality and Character | BYU Speeches<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Using quotes and stories from those who personally knew Joseph Smith, Truman Madsen describes the Prophet\u2019s personality and character.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/talks\/truman-g-madsen\/joseph-smiths-personality-and-character\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Joseph Smith Lecture 2: Joseph\u2019s Personality and Character\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Using quotes and stories from those who personally knew Joseph Smith, Truman Madsen describes the Prophet\u2019s personality and character.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/talks\/truman-g-madsen\/joseph-smiths-personality-and-character\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"BYU Speeches\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:publisher\" content=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/byuspeeches\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2021-03-15T16:48:44+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/wp-content\/uploads\/1978\/08\/Joseph-Smith-Lecture-2-Social-Media-Image-compressor.jpg\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:width\" content=\"640\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:height\" content=\"360\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:type\" content=\"image\/jpeg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:site\" content=\"@BYUSpeeches\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"29 minutes\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Written by\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"Truman G. 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