The Past and Future of the Temple Lot in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri
Abstract: Fifteen months after the Church of Christ's inception in April 1830, Joseph Smith received a revelation indicating that Independence, Jackson County, Missouri, was to be the "center-place" of Zion and a "spot for a temple is lying westward, upon a lot that is not far from the court-house." Dedication of this spot for the millennial temple soon followed on August 3, 1831, by Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon. A building sketch was prepared in Kirtland, Ohio, and sent to church leaders in Independence in June 1833. Smith also forwarded his plat for the City of Zion, showing 24 temples at its center and giving an explanation for their use. Tragically, the church was driven en masse out of Jackson County only months later. Reclaiming the original Partridge purchase in December 1831, known as the Temple Lot, became an early driving force for the membership of the church. A physical effort to reclaim the saints' land and possessions in Jackson County was organized in 1834 by Joseph Smith and became known as "Zion's Camp." After traveling 900 miles and poised on the north bank of the Missouri River looking toward Jackson County, Smith's two hundred armed men were unable to proceed for various reasons. While contemplating what to do, given the reality of their situation, Smith received a revelation to "wait for a little season, for the redemption of Zion." That poignant phrase — "the redemption of Zion" — became a tenet of the church thereafter. In the years following the martyrdom and the subsequent "scattering of the saints," three independent expressions of the Restoration returned to Independence to reclaim or redeem the Temple Lot in fulfillment of latter-day scripture. This essay examines their historical efforts.
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The Past and Future of the Temple Lot in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri
Abstract: Fifteen months after the Church of Christ's inception in April 1830, Joseph Smith received a revelation indicating that Independence, Jackson County, Missouri, was to be the "center-place" of Zion and a "spot for a temple is lying westward, upon a lot that is not far from the court-house." Dedication of this spot for the millennial temple soon followed on August 3, 1831, by Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon. A building sketch was prepared in Kirtland, Ohio, and sent to church leaders in Independence in June 1833. Smith also forwarded his plat for the City of Zion, showing 24 temples at its center and giving an explanation for their use. Tragically, the church was driven en masse out of Jackson County only months later. Reclaiming the original Partridge purchase in December 1831, known as the Temple Lot, became an early driving force for the membership of the church. A physical effort to reclaim the saints' land and possessions in Jackson County was organized in 1834 by Joseph Smith and became known as "Zion's Camp." After traveling 900 miles and poised on the north bank of the Missouri River looking toward Jackson County, Smith's two hundred armed men were unable to proceed for various reasons. While contemplating what to do, given the reality of their situation, Smith received a revelation to "wait for a little season, for the redemption of Zion." That poignant phrase — "the redemption of Zion" — became a tenet of the church thereafter. In the years following the martyrdom and the subsequent "scattering of the saints," three independent expressions of the Restoration returned to Independence to reclaim or redeem the Temple Lot in fulfillment of latter-day scripture. This essay examines their historical efforts.
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The Past and Future of the Temple Lot in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri

The Past and Future of the Temple Lot in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri

by R. Jean Addams
The Past and Future of the Temple Lot in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri

The Past and Future of the Temple Lot in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri

by R. Jean Addams

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Overview

Abstract: Fifteen months after the Church of Christ's inception in April 1830, Joseph Smith received a revelation indicating that Independence, Jackson County, Missouri, was to be the "center-place" of Zion and a "spot for a temple is lying westward, upon a lot that is not far from the court-house." Dedication of this spot for the millennial temple soon followed on August 3, 1831, by Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon. A building sketch was prepared in Kirtland, Ohio, and sent to church leaders in Independence in June 1833. Smith also forwarded his plat for the City of Zion, showing 24 temples at its center and giving an explanation for their use. Tragically, the church was driven en masse out of Jackson County only months later. Reclaiming the original Partridge purchase in December 1831, known as the Temple Lot, became an early driving force for the membership of the church. A physical effort to reclaim the saints' land and possessions in Jackson County was organized in 1834 by Joseph Smith and became known as "Zion's Camp." After traveling 900 miles and poised on the north bank of the Missouri River looking toward Jackson County, Smith's two hundred armed men were unable to proceed for various reasons. While contemplating what to do, given the reality of their situation, Smith received a revelation to "wait for a little season, for the redemption of Zion." That poignant phrase — "the redemption of Zion" — became a tenet of the church thereafter. In the years following the martyrdom and the subsequent "scattering of the saints," three independent expressions of the Restoration returned to Independence to reclaim or redeem the Temple Lot in fulfillment of latter-day scripture. This essay examines their historical efforts.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940162280828
Publisher: Interpreter Foundation
Publication date: 04/02/2021
Series: Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship , #44
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 14 MB
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About the Author

R. Jean Addams is a lifetime Mormon History enthusiast, independent historian, and author. He and his wife Liz reside in Woodinville, Washington. He recently completed his twentieth year as a volunteer Institute of Religion instructor. He holds a BS in Accounting and an MBA from the University of Utah and is happily retired. Addams has presented and published several articles dealing with the “Redemption of Zion” and the “Church of Christ (Temple Lot).” His most recent articles include: “Zion’s Printing & Publishing Company: From the Redemption of Zion to Corporation,” (Journal of Mormon History, April 2020) ; “The Return of the LDS Church (1900-1907) to Jackson County and the Redemption of Zion,” (John Whitmer Historical Association Journal, Fall/Winter 2018); “The History and Acquisition of the Original Temple Lot Property in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri,” (Mormon Historical Studies, Spring 2019); and “A Contest for Sacred Space,” The Ancient Order of Things: Essays on the Mormon Temple (Signature Books, 2019). He is the author of Upon the Temple Lot: The Church of Christ’s Quest to Build the House of the Lord, (John Whitmer Books, 2010). Addams is a past president of the John Whitmer Historical Association, and a member of the Mormon History Association, the Sons of the Utah Pioneers, and the Missouri Mormon Frontier Foundation. His interests, besides family, include fishing and skiing.
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