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Cumorah
Stories
Cave Stories
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I have recently come across a well researched article by Cameron J. Packer of
FARMS, which basically compiles all the accounts of the cave inside Hill
Cumorah. I originally was only aware of one account from the Journal of
Discourses.These accounts further give relevance to my own visions, in which I was taken inside a cavern in the Hill Cumorah, numerous times. The last time was upon a trip to New York, having earlier that day explored a mound off the church property that I had seen on the satellite images. That evening I was taken away in spirit by Joseph Smith, and found myself again at the same mound I was at that day. We walked up a path close to the top where the hill opened up and we went inside. There I saw a table with the gold plates on top, and several piles of plates around the room, armor and swords, and other relics. On the floor I saw a sarcophagus, where Joseph told me Mormon was buried. He then instructed me that I may testify that I had seen these things. Over the years I had several dreams of going inside the cave. Cumorah's Cave The Hill Cumorah's significance in the restoration of the gospel goes beyond its being the ancient repository of the metal plates known as the Book of Mormon. In the second half of the 19th century, a certain teaching about a cave in the hill began surfacing in the writings and teachings of several leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In their view, the hill was not only the place where Joseph Smith received the plates but also their final repository, along with other sacred treasures, after the translation was finished. According to some of those leaders, Joseph Smith and others returned the plates to a cave in the Hill Cumorah after he finished translating them. At least 10 different accounts,1 all secondhand, refer to this cave and what was found there. With these reports of a cave in the Hill Cumorah comes the question, Was this a real cave that Joseph and others actually walked into, or was it a visionary, or "virtual," experience? The wording of the accounts leaves the issue open. While this question cannot be answered unless we find firsthand information regarding the cave, what can be learned from these accounts captures our interest. A closer look at them shows that at times they have been used to teach certain gospel principles in a memorable way. Following is a chronological synopsis of the cave accounts (with original spelling and punctuation preserved) and an examination of four associated gospel principles.
2. Heber C. Kimball, Journal of Discourses, 28 September 1856 In response to a Brother Mills's statement about the handcart pioneers, Heber C. Kimball said:
3. Manuscript History of Brigham Young, 5 May 1867
4. Wilford Woodruff Journal, 11 December 1869 In his journal, Wilford Woodruff recounted what he had heard Brigham Young say about the cave:
5. Elizabeth Kane Journal, 15 January 1873 Although not a member of the church, Elizabeth Kane lived in St. George, Utah, and entertained the company of Brigham Young. She recorded the following discussion:
6. Jesse Nathaniel Smith Journal, February 1874 A southern Utah Saint, Jesse Nathaniel Smith, heard Brigham Young speak in Cedar City, Utah, and recorded:
7. Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, 17 June 1877
8. Edward Stevenson, Reminiscences of Joseph, the Prophet, 1877 In his book Reminiscences of Joseph, the Prophet, and the Coming Forth of the Book of Mormon, Edward Stevenson relates an interview with David Whitmer in 1877:
9. David Whitmer, Deseret Evening News, 16 August 1878 In an interview with P. Wilhelm Poulson, David Whitmer gave another account of the cave:
10. Orson Pratt, The Contributor, September 1882
Gospel Principles and the Cave Accounts Future Records Yet to Come Forth While there are variations in each of the cave accounts, one of the most obvious consistencies concerns the additional records present in the cave. All of the accounts except 1 and 6 refer to additional records, whether the sealed "portion of the gold plates not yet translated" or additional "piles" of plates that were around the sides of the cave or under the table. While the number and perhaps identity of the additional records may vary in the different accounts, the message is the same: there are records we do not yet have.4 This is in harmony with the Latter-day Saint doctrine that God "will yet reveal many great and important things pertaining to the Kingdom of God" (Articles of Faith 1:9). One apostle in particular expounded on the future coming forth of these records and what he thought they would contain. In a discourse delivered at the tabernacle in Ogden on 18 May 1873, Orson Pratt said: "Will these things be brought to light? Yes. The records, now slumbering in the hill Cumorah, will be brought forth by the power of God, to fulfill the words of our text, that 'the knowledge of God shall cover the earth, as the waters cover the great deep.'"5 Regarding what these records might contain, Elder Pratt taught, "When these plates, now hidden in the hill Cumorah, are brought to light we shall have the history of the Old Testament much more fully, with the addition of a great many prophecies that are not now contained in the record." These additional prophecies are, according to Elder Pratt, "the prophecies of Joseph in Egypt . . . [and of] Neum, a great Prophet who prophesied concerning Christ; also those of Zenos and Zenock, and others of which only bare reference is given."6 Thus we are to understand that such records will yet serve an important role in the future of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. God's Dominion over Earthly Treasures Another obvious theme in many of the cave accounts is that of wealth or treasure. Accounts 4, 5, 6, and 8 all mention treasures or wealth being inside the cave. It appears that this is an aspect of the cave experience that Brigham Young employed to teach the principle that God has dominion over earthly treasures and that the Saints should therefore avoid prospecting for silver and gold. For example, in his 17 June 1877 discourse, President Young told the congregation, "You will find just enough [gold and silver] to allure you and to destroy you."7 Just before sharing the cave story, Brigham Young recounted how Porter Rockwell and others had searched for treasure. According to Rockwell, they found treasure but were unable to withdraw it because it kept sliding back into the earth.8 After sharing the cave experience, President Young said: "Now, you may think I am unwise in publicly telling these things, thinking perhaps I should preserve them in my own breast; but such is not my mind. I would like the people called Latter-day Saints to understand some little things with regard to the workings and dealings of the Lord with his people here upon the earth."9 Therefore, in reporting the cave story, Brigham Young seems to have been teaching that, as part of the "workings and dealings of the Lord,"10 the earth's treasures belong to God, who can either bless or curse them (see Helaman 13:31, 33, 36; Mormon 1:18). It must have encouraged the impoverished Saints in the Great Basin to know that God controls great wealth and can bless the Saints with it if it is in their best interest. As Brigham stated in the same sermon, "Are not the earth and the treasures the property of the Lord who created them?"11 Jesse Nathaniel Smith's account also shows Brigham Young highlighting the cave experience to illustrate God's dominion over earthly treasures. It appears his motive was to help convert church members to the idea of the united order. In Smith's account, Brigham Young was traveling in southern Utah to organize the united order, or the "Order of Enoch." Smith wrote:
Smith sandwiched the cave account (in italics) between President Young's teaching on the united order and Smith's record that he turned all his property over to local authorities. It is possible, of course, that Smith suddenly remembered the cave account and included it in his journal where he did, with the result that it misleadingly implies that Young used the story to illustrate a point he was making about consecration. However, if Smith's sequencing of events is correct, the question arises that if the purpose of Young's trip to Cedar City was to convert people to the united order and set it in motion, why did he talk about the cave? What makes this account of the cave stand out in a journal entry dedicated to consecration is that it pointedly focuses on wealth more than the other accounts do ("great wealth," "precious metals and precious stones"). Perhaps Brigham Young was using the cave experience to illustrate that God is in charge of his treasures and that he will measure them to the righteous and the unselfish who live the united order. Grander Principles of the Restored Gospel Heber C. Kimball appears to have shared the cave account in one instance to teach the early Saints about the miraculous dealings of God in establishing his church. Kimball was speaking to a group of people in the bowery in Salt Lake City when a man by the name of Mills expressed the opinion that "crossing the Plains with hand-carts was one of the greatest events that ever transpired in this Church."13 In response, Kimball admitted that the handcart treks were an important event but were not on the same plane as events such as "the visitation of the angel of God to the Prophet Joseph, and with the reception of the sacred records from the hand of Moroni at the hill Cumorah."14 He then cited the cave story as another example of the "greatest events that ever transpired in this Church."15 While Kimball did not want to demean the handcart pioneers, he did call attention to what he viewed as the grander dimensions of the restored gospel—visions, revelation, ministering of angels, and additional scripture. The Word of God Several accounts preserve the distinctive element of the sword of Laban being visible in the cave (see accounts 1, 4, 5, 7, and 8). At first reading, the sword seems even more mystical than the cave itself. But it too can reveal an important doctrinal teaching that may have been significant to early Saints. In scripture a sword is often a symbol of the word of God (see, for example, Ephesians 6:17).16 In the five cave accounts cited above, the sword's final resting place was either on the table with the plates or lying across them unsheathed, almost in an obvious attempt to equate the sword with the plates. A possible interpretation is that the word of God that had just been translated from the gold plates is "sharper than any two-edged sword" (Hebrews 4:12), an image that would have a powerful effect on the minds of people in this last dispensation (see Alma 31:5). Accounts 4, 5, and 7 include the detail of a message being associated with the sword. The accounts differ as to whether this message was written on the sword (as in Brigham Young's account) or was related by an angelic messenger (the Wilford Woodruff and Elizabeth Kane accounts).17 Regardless of the form of communication, the message was essentially the same: it was a message of conflict. Elder Woodruff's account states that "a Messenger who was the keeper of the room informed them that that sword would never be returned to its scabbard untill the Kingdom of God was Esstablished upon the Earth & untill it reigned triumphant over Evry Enemy."18 It is apparent that several of the early brethren viewed Joseph's receiving the plates at the hill as the beginning of a war between good and evil.19 The unsheathed sword may therefore have been a sign that the struggle that began at Cumorah was still going on and that with the completed translation of the plates, the side of righteousness had just gained a powerful weapon in the war against evil—the Book of Mormon. It seems very fitting that the Lord, also known as the "man of war" (Exodus 15:3), would want Joseph Smith and others to know that this mortal experience is indeed a war and that He will conquer the enemies of righteousness. This may have reassured the Saints that divine help was on their side. Within the context of then-current events, namely, severe persecution of the fledgling church, the sword served as an effective teaching tool to emphasize that the Lord's side would be victorious despite the apparent overwhelming odds against it.20 While the cave accounts may stir questions about the Hill Cumorah, perhaps the more important issue is what the firsthand witnesses may have learned from their encounters with the cave and, in turn, how their experiences were used to teach others. It is apparent from the existing records that many of the early church leaders viewed the cave experience as a legitimate event, whether an actual physical experience or a visionary one. By looking at the accounts and the context in which they were shared, one can see that regardless of the metaphysical nature of Cumorah's cave, it has served to teach important gospel principles—principles such as God's miraculous dealings with man, his dominion over all things, consecration, and continuing revelation. Footnotes:
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