- Rigdonite
-
Rigdonite is a name given to members of the Latter Day Saint movement who accept Sidney Rigdon as the successor in the church presidency to movement founder, Joseph Smith, Jr. The early history of the Rigdonite movement is shared with the history of the Latter Day Saint movement, but as of the 1844 succession crisis becomes distinct. Sidney Rigdon and other church leaders, including Brigham Young and James J. Strang, presented themselves as leaders of the movement and established rival church organizations. Rigdon's group was initially headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It was known at one point as the Church of Jesus Christ of the Children of Zion, and its adherents are referred to as Rigdonites, or sometimes "Pennsylvania Latter Day Saints" or "Pennsylvania Mormons." The only surviving organization that traces its succession back to Rigdon's organization is The Church of Jesus Christ, founded by a group of Rigdon's followers led by William Bickerton.
Contents
History
Sidney Rigdon, who had been the first counselor in the first presidency under Joseph Smith, claimed to have received a vision, after the death of Joseph Smith, sustaining him as the leader of the Church. Although Joseph Smith taught that after the president in a presidency is released or dies the presidency no longer exists, Rigdon overlooked this teaching and returned to attempt to convince the other saints that he was to be the leader of the church. Unconvinced, because the other members were familiar with Smith's teachings, Brigham Young presented the doctrine taught by Smith that aside from the first presidency, the quorum of the twelve apostles was the governing body of the church. Most Latter-Day Saints followed Young as a result.
After the death of Joseph Smith in 1844, the history of the Rigdonites becomes independent from the other Latter Day Saint organizations. There was a large amount of confusion about who should succeed their fallen prophet. After the martyrdom, Sidney Rigdon claimed the right to lead the church as the senior surviving member of the church's highest ruling body, the First Presidency. The Quorum of Twelve Apostles, led by Brigham Young, also claimed the right to lead the church. The Quorum of the Twelve's claim was derived from a revelation of Joseph Smith allowing them to stand equal to the First Presidency in attending to natural matters of the church.[1]
Prior to the death of Joseph Smith, the First Presidency had made nearly all the major decisions and led the Church of Christ both naturally and spiritually. On June 1, 1841, Sidney Rigdon had been ordained by Joseph Smith as a "Prophet, Seer and Revelator"[2]—which was one of the same ecclesiastical titles held by Smith. The Church of Jesus Christ maintains that as First Counselor to Smith, Rigdon should naturally have been the leader of the church after Smith's death.[3] With this understanding, The Church of Jesus Christ actively opposes the opinion that the Quorum of Twelve had the right to lead the church. The Church of Jesus Christ argues that Rigdon should have been allowed to be what he claimed to be — a "guardian" over the church until proper proceedings could decide the next president — and that proceedings which resulted in Brigham Young leading the church constituted a procedural violation.
On December 27, 1847, when Young organized a new First Presidency, the Quorum of the Twelve only had seven of its twelve members present to represent a council to decide the Presidency.[4] William Smith, John E. Page, and Lyman Wight had previously denounced the proceedings and were not present. John Taylor and Parley P. Pratt were in the Salt Lake Valley and could not have known of the proceedings. This left just seven present, a majority of one meaning Young would have to vote for himself in order to gain a majority quorum vote in favor of his leadership. Young chose two of the other apostles, Heber C. Kimball and Willard Richards, as his counselors in the First Presidency. This left only four members of the Quorum of the Twelve present to vote in favor of creation of the new First Presidency: Orson Hyde, Wilford Woodruff, George A. Smith, and Orson Pratt. The Church of Jesus Christ views this action as a violation of church law compromising the authority of Sidney Rigdon without a majority quorum vote. The LDS Church actively opposes this view of the proceedings.[5]
Undaunted, Rigdon relocated to Pittsburgh and established a rival organization of the church. Ebenezer Robinson, founding publisher of the Times and Seasons, became publisher of a new church periodical, the Latter Day Saints' Messenger and Advocate, (later the Messenger and Advocate of the Church of Christ.) The Rigdonite paper, like the reformist Mormon paper before it, the Nauvoo Expositor sought to expose and condemn the practice of plural marriage. Church elder Benjamin Winchester commented that Young and the Quorum of the Twelve had:
- "Excited a certain portion of the Church to reject Elder Rigdon (which is a most horrid outrage upon the laws of the same) from a fear that he would bring them to...justice for teaching and practicing the doctrine of polygamy."
The Rigdonites came to believe that Joseph Smith had become a fallen prophet when he began to practice polygamy and that, as a result the "Lord smote him for this thing — cut him off from the earth." (Messenger and Advocate, Jan. 1, 1845)
Rigdon toured the eastern branches of the church in late 1844 and early 1845, gathering leaders to his cause. He was joined by former members of the First Presidency, John C. Bennett and William Law and also by former Apostle William E. M'Lellin.
On April 6, 1845 — fifteen years after the original organization of the church — Rigdon presided over a General Conference of Rigdonite Latter Day Saints in Pittsburgh, establishing a new hierarchy. He himself was sustained as President of the Church. The new Quorum of the Twelve Apostles consisted of: William E. M'Lellin, George W. Robinson, Benjamin Winchester, James Blakeslee, Josiah Ells, Hugh Herringshaw, David L. Lathrop, Jeremiah Hatch, Jr., E.R. Swackhammer, William Small, Samuel Bennett. Carvel Rigdon became Presiding Patriarch, and a Standing High Council, Quorum of the Seventy, Presiding Bishopric, and other quorum presidencies were established. In addition, Rigdon called seventy-three men and boys to a "Grand Council," perhaps an adaptation of the Council of Fifty. Also at the conference, the new church organization formally returned its name to the 1830 church's original name, the "Church of Christ."
At a General Conference held that fall in Philadelphia, Rigdon announced that the church would re-establish a communitarian society on what was named "Adventure Farm" near Greencastle, Pennsylvania. Like many attempts to live the Law of Consecration in the Latter Day Saint movement, this experiment proved a failure. Rigdonite apostles William E. McLellin and Benjamin Winchester grew disgusted with Rigdon's leadership and found a new church president and organization in the person of David Whitmer and the Church of Christ (Whitmerite). One of the replacements in the Quorum was a certain William Bickerton. Bickerton, however, disagreed with Rigdon's proposed move to Greencastle and severed his ties to the Church. Bickerton remained in Monongahela, Pennsylvania, and never moved to Greencastle. By April 1847, the Adventure Farm community had collapsed and Rigdon had abandoned his flock, living out the rest of his life on the charity of relatives in New York state.
Bickerton continued to live in the Monongahela area and in 1849 began meeting informally with other believers whom he had converted to the faith, few of which had ever been associated with Rigdon. In 1862, he formally organized his Pennsylvania followers into The Church of Jesus Christ.
See also
- Primitive Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite) : defunct Rigdonite/Bickertonite church
- Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite) : defunct Rigdonite/Bickertonite church
References
- ^ Bushman, Richard Lyman (2006). Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling. New York, NY: Alfred A Knoff.
- ^ Earlier, on March 27, 1836, at the dedication of the Kirtland Temple, Joseph Smith had asked the members of the church to accept the members of the First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve as "prophets, seers, and revelators": see B.H. Roberts (ed), History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 2:417; see also Latter Day Saints' Messenger and Advocate 2:277.
- ^ The Church of Jesus Christ (2002). A History of The Church of Jesus Christ: Volume 2. Monongahela, PA: The Church of Jesus Christ.
- ^ Nine members of the Quorum were in attendance, but only seven of the individuals were members of the Quorum on June 27, 1844, when Joseph Smith had died. Two members of the Quorum—Amasa M. Lyman and Ezra T. Benson—had been added by Young since Smith's death.
- ^ The LDS Church maintains that Rigdon was validly excommunicated from the church by the Common Council of the Church on September 8, 1844: see History of the Church 7:268-69. The LDS Church further maintains that William Smith had been disfellowshipped and replaced in the Quorum by Amasa M. Lyman and that John E. Page had been excommunicated and replaced in the Quorum by Ezra T. Benson. Because Lyman and Benson were present at the 1847 reorganization, the LDS Church claims that nine of the nine present members of the Quorum voted in favor of reorganizing Young's First Presidency, which constituted a three-quarters majority vote of the Quorum.
Sources
- Van Wagoner, Richard S.: Sidney Rigdon: A Portrait of Religious Excess.
- Rigdon, Sidney, et al.: An Appeal to the Latter Day Saints (1863).
- William H. Cadman, A History of the Church of Jesus Christ, Monongahela, PA: The Church of Jesus Christ, 1945.
Main branches of the Latter Day Saint movementSidney Rigdon: "Rigdonites"Current denominations or sub-groups in the Latter Day Saint movement Primary — Secondary * The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
14 million (2011), about 98% of Latter Day Saint movement – Utah-basedJohn Taylor
presided 1877–1887Brigham Young
presided 1844–1877Joseph Smith, Jr.
presided 1830–1844[a]Community of Christ
250,000 (2011), about 2% of Latter Day Saint movement – Missouri-basedWallace B. Smith
presided 1978–1996Joseph Smith III
presided 1860–1914Smaller * The Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite)
12,136 members (2007) – Pennsylvania-basedWilliam Bickerton
presided 1862–1880Sidney Rigdon
presided 1844–1847[b]Church of Christ "With the Elijah Message"
over 12,000 members (1998) – Missouri-basedWilliam Draves
presided 1943–1994Apostolic United Brethren
approximately 10,000 members (1998)– Utah-basedJohn Woolley / Lorin Woolley
presided 1918–1928 / 1928–1934Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
approximately 10,000 members (2011) – Utah-based— Additional fundamentalist denominations — Blackmore/Bountiful Community
Organized by: Winston Blackmore – approx. 700 membersFundamentalist Church
of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints schismsJohn Woolley / Lorin Woolley
schismsChurch of the Lamb of God
Organized by: Ervil LeBaronChurch of the Firstborn of the Fulness of Times
Organized by: Joel F. LeBaron – under 1,000 membersApostolic United
Brethren schismsRighteous Branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Organized by: Gerald Peterson, Sr. – approx. 100 membersChurch of the New Covenant in Christ
Organized by: John W. BryantConfederate Nations of Israel
Organized by: Alex Joseph – approx. 400 membersChurch of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the Kingdom of God
Organized by:Frank Naylor and Ivan Neilsen – approx. 250Centennial Park
Organized by: Marion Hammon and Alma Timpson – approx. 1,500 membersLatter Day Church of Christ
Organized by: Elden Kingston – approx. 2,000 membersLDS Church schisms
(Non-Woolley)True and Living Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Last Days
Organized by: James D. Harmston – approx. 400 memberThe Church of the Firstborn and the General Assembly of Heaven
Organized by: Terrill R. DaltonSchool of the Prophets
Organized by: Robert C. CrossfieldRLDS/Restoration Branches which have created the
Joint Conference of Restoration Branches
6,000–7,000 members[c] (2010) – Missouri-based— Additional Restoration Branch groupings — Smaller, founded in the 20th century Remnant Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Organized by: Frederick Niels Larsen– 1,000–2,000 membersRestoration Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Organized by: Several RLDS entities– 8 congregationsMinuscule, founded in the 20th century Church of Jesus Christ (Toneyite)
Organized by: Forrest ToneyChurch of Jesus Christ Restored 1830
Organized by: Nolan W. GlaunerChurch of Christ
Organized by: David B. ClarkChurch of Jesus Christ (Zion's Branch)
Organized by: David B. ClarkChurch of Christ (Fettingite)
2,000 members (1988); Missouri-basedOtto Fetting
presided 1927–1933Church of Christ (Temple Lot)
2,400 members (1998) – Missouri-basedGranville Hedrick
presided 1863–1881— Additional Temple Lot – derived denominations — Church of Christ
(Leighton-Floyd/Burt)
Organized by: Howard Leighton-Floyd
and H. H. Burt
approx. 35 membersWilliam Draves
presided 1943–1994
Church of Christ with the
Elijah Message schismsOtto Fetting
presided 1927–1933
Church of Christ
(Fettingite) schismsGranville Hedrick
presided 1863–1881
Church of Christ (Temple Lot)
schismsChurch of Christ with
the Elijah Message
(The Assured Way
of the Lord)
Organized by:Leonard DravesChurch of Christ (Restored)
Organized by: A. C. DeWolf
approx. 450 members[note 1] Church of Israel
Organized by:Dan GaymanChurch of Christ
at Halley's Bluff
Organized by: Thomas B. Nerren
and E. E. Long
less than 100 members- ^ While not considered a schism of the Church of Christ (Fettingite) and it's founder Otto Fetting, the Church of Christ at Halley's Bluff accepted Fetting's revelations, but it did not immediately break with the Fettingites in 1929. Nerren and Long instead formed a separate sect in 1932, which was later joined by five other former Temple Lot congregations by 1941.
Minuscule, founded in the 19th century *† Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite)
300 members (1998) – Wisconsin-basedJames Strang
presided 1844–1856Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite)
approximately 12 members (2010) – Missouri-basedAlpheus Cutler
presided 1853–1864
*^ Membership worldwide; generally church-reported
†^ Once larger- ^ Organized the Church of Christ, the Latter Day Saint movement's original organization, of which multiple denominations currently believe themselves the true successor
- ^ See Rigdonite.
- ^ Members consider themselves as reamaining adherents of the (historical) Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. (As of 2011, litigation by the Community of Christ against Restoriation Branch individuals and entities generally established CofC's right to both the full and abbreviated RLDS name.)
Categories:- History of the Latter Day Saint movement
- Rigdonite–Bickertonite sects in the Latter Day Saint movement
- The Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite)
- Sidney Rigdon
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