Wilford Woodruff was different from his predecessors and successors in one particular way - he left an incredibly detailed handwritten record that spanned more than sixty years, of nearly everything he did and experienced. Reflecting on his personal effort to keep a regular journal, he remarked: When the Prophet Joseph organized the Quorum of the Twelve, he counseled them to keep a history of their lives. I made a record from the first sermon I heard, and from that day until now I have kept a daily journal. Whenever I heard Joseph Smith preach, teach, or prophesy, I always felt it my duty to write it. I would write the history of that Church and leave on record the works and teachings of the prophets, of the apostles and elders. I have recorded nearly all the sermons and teachings that I ever heard from the Prophet Joseph, I have in my journal many of the sermons of President Brigham Young, and such men as Orson Hyde, Parley P. Pratt and others. Through his skillful, inspired leadership and direction, he helped bring about accommodation and change, leading the Church into the social, cultural, and religious mainstream of American society. Thomas G. Alexander, one of Woodruff's biographers, observed: He is arguably the third most important figure in all of LDS church history after Joseph Smith, who began Mormonism, and Brigham Young, who led the Saints to Utah and supervised the early colonization of the intermountain west. . . Relatively well-educated, well-read, and well-traveled, Woodruff combined a creative mind, practical inventiveness, and physical vigor with a sense of personal piety unsurpassed by any nineteenth-century leader. Woodruff blended formally educated but rough-hewn intellectual gifts. . . [and] a firm dependence on inspiration. . . with a strong sense of personal destiny and Providential protection. This unique combination of temporal shrewdness and spiritual insight dwelled in a mind and body absolutely committed to Mormonism and unquestioningly loyal to his colleagues and to the Saints. This book is a selection of presentations from the annual BYU Church History Symposium hosted by BYU Religious Education to honor Wilford Woodruff and to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of his birth. Table of Contents: Preface - Alexander L. Baugh and Susan Easton Black Images of Wilford Woodruff's Life: A Photographic Journey - Alexander L. Baugh Wilford Woodruff and the Gathering of Modern-day Israel, 1834-50 - Fred E. Woods "The Lord Told Me to Go and I Went": Wilford Woodruff's Missions to the Fox Islands, 1837-38 - Jason E. Thompson Wilford Woodruff: Missionary in Herefordshire - Cynthia Doxey Green "To Every Man Is Given a Gift": The Spiritual Legacy of Wilford Woodruff - Alonzo L. Gaskill Wilford Woodruff: A Founding Father of the Mormon Academies - Scott C. Esplin Wilford Woodruff and the Rise of Temple Consciousness Among the Latter-day Saints, 1877-84 - Richard E. Bennett A Friendship Forged in Exile: Wilford Woodruff and the William Atkin Family - Reid L Neilson The Odyssey of a Latter-day Prophet: Wilford Woodruff and the Manifesto of 1890 - Thomas G. Alexander Wilford Woodruff's 1897 Testimony - Richard Neitzel Holzapfel and Stephen H. Smoot Wilford Woodruff Chronology - Alexander L. Baugh
show more...Just click on START button on Telegram Bot