Fred at the door of the Whitmer Farm |
But these 11 men, impressive as they are, were not the only
people besides Joseph Smith who had direct encounters with the gold plates.
David Whitmer, for example, one of the Three Witnesses, related that his
mother, Mary Musselman Whitmer, also saw the plates, quite independently of
anybody else and under the most matter-of-fact circumstances.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was organized in this room |
During that period, the place was a hive of activity; Joseph Smith and his wife, Emma, and Oliver Cowdery were boarding with the Whitmers, and other people (including curiosity-seekers) were constantly coming and going. Much of the burden of coping with them fell upon Peter’s wife, Mary.
“My father and mother had a large family of their own,” David
later explained. “The addition to it therefore of Joseph, his wife, Emma, and
Oliver very greatly increased the toil and anxiety of my mother. And although
she had never complained, she had sometimes felt that her labor was too much,
or at least she was perhaps beginning to feel so.”
One day, though, probably in June 1829, when she was going out
to milk the cows in the family barn — where, David happened to know, the plates
were concealed at the time — she met an “old man,” as she described him, who
said to her, in David’s account of the story, “You have been very faithful and
diligent in your labors, but you are tired because of the increase of your
toil; it is proper therefore that you should receive a witness that your faith
may be strengthened.”
The three special witnesses of the Book of Mormon as older men |
Thereupon,” David said, “he showed her the plates.” And this unexpected encounter “completely removed” her feeling of being overwhelmed, said her son, “and nerved her up for her increased responsibilities.”
Afterwards, Mary was able to describe the plates in detail. John
C. Whitmer, her grandson, reported that he himself had heard his grandmother
tell of this event several times. He summarized her experience as follows:
“She met a stranger carrying something on his back that looked
like a knapsack. At first she was a little afraid of him, but when he spoke to
her in a kind, friendly tone and began to explain to her the nature of the work
which was going on in her house (that is, the translation of the Book of Mormon),
she was filled with unexpressible (sic) joy and satisfaction. He then untied
his knapsack and showed her a bundle of plates, which in size and appearance
corresponded with the description subsequently given by the witnesses to the
Book of Mormon.
This strange person turned the leaves of the book of plates over, leaf after leaf, and also showed her the engravings upon them; after which he told her to be patient and faithful in bearing her burden a little longer, promising that if she would do so, she should be blessed; and her reward would be sure, if she proved faithful to the end. The personage then suddenly vanished with the plates, and where he went, she could not tell.”
This strange person turned the leaves of the book of plates over, leaf after leaf, and also showed her the engravings upon them; after which he told her to be patient and faithful in bearing her burden a little longer, promising that if she would do so, she should be blessed; and her reward would be sure, if she proved faithful to the end. The personage then suddenly vanished with the plates, and where he went, she could not tell.”
Five of Mary Whitmer’s sons became official witnesses of the
Book of Mormon. (as part of the experience depicted below)
Oliver Cowdery, one of the Three Witnesses and the principal
scribe during its dictation, baptized her into The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints in Seneca Lake on April 18, 1830, when the church was less
than two weeks old, and he married her daughter, Elizabeth Ann, in December
1832.
The Whitmers gathered to Missouri with the Latter-day Saints, and there Mary died at 78 years of age in 1856, still a faithful believer in the divine origin of the gold plates and the book that had been translated from them.
The prophet Joseph Smith shows the golden plates to the eight witnesses |
The Whitmers gathered to Missouri with the Latter-day Saints, and there Mary died at 78 years of age in 1856, still a faithful believer in the divine origin of the gold plates and the book that had been translated from them.
According to Jesus, “In the mouth of two or three witnesses
every word may be established” (Matthew 18:16). Plainly, the Lord still follows
this pattern, and Mary Whitmer can justly be counted the 12th witness to the
Book of Mormon.
The Whitmer Farm Chapel |
- Taken from an article by Daniel Peterson, Professor of Islamic Studies and Arabic
For more information click: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/danpeterson/
and https://www.lds.org/locations/peter-whitmer-log-home
and https://www.lds.org/locations/peter-whitmer-log-home
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