Pregunta: ¿Fue William McClellin decepcionado con la dotación en el Templo de Kirtland?

Tabla de Contenidos

Pregunta: ¿Fue William McClellin decepcionado con la dotación en el Templo de Kirtland?

  NEEDS TRANSLATION  


William McLellin was disappointed in the endowment, because McLellin did not receive what he sought

McLellin was among the first apostles called in this dispensation, on 14 February 1835.[1] McLellin was present for the dedication, but was disappointed with it. He wrote, "We passed through it [the Kirtland endowment]; but I, in all candor say, we were most egregiosly mistaken or disappointed!"[2] McLellin went on to describe the reason for his disappointment:

In a few days I said to Joseph: "I am disappointed! I supposed—yet, I believed that during the endowment, I should get knowledge but I have not."

He said to me, "What do you want?"

I said, "I want to know for myself Plantilla:Io."[3]

There is no mention here of those who claim to receive knowledge being drunk—we learn only that McLellin did not receive what he sought. This was a recurring theme of McLellin's—he often mentioned the endowment and the fact that it was a disappointment, or did not achieve what was anticipated. For example:

Feb 1847
McLellin forms "Church of Christ" with Martin Harris and others. The new Church faults Joseph Smith for "Engineering the 'endowment' at the Kirtland Temple in March and April 1836, which failed to meet expectation because the Lord would not endow His spirit in those who had drifted so far from divine purpose."[4]
1870
"disappointed" because he did not know for himself.[5]
December 1878
"I told him [Joseph] I wanted knowledge and power from God; that as an Apostle I might go forth to the nationis of the earth, and preach to them in their own lip the pure gospel of the Lord."[6]
1880
"I don't believe, in the attempted endowment in the Temple in Kirtland in 1836. It was an entire failure."[7]
1880
"I do not believe in the authority that dedicated Zion or the Temple in Kirtland. There was no power from God shown forth in those pretended dedications; as was seen and known when Solomon's Temple was dedicated in Jerusalem. If ceremony and nothing but form was seen in Joseph's dedications then we are prepared to say they were not of God; but only manism and nothing more.[8]

Notas

  1. Larry C. Porter, "The Odyssey of William Earl McLellin: Man of Diversity, 1806–86," in Plantilla:McLellinJournal1
  2. William E. McLellin in Saints' Herald 17 (15 September 1870): 554; cited in Porter, "Man of Diversity," 320.
  3. McLellin, Saints Herald (15 September 1870): 554.
  4. Richard P. Howard, "Mormonism's Stormy Petrel," in Plantilla:McLellinPapers1 Also available in Plantilla:DifferingVisions1
  5. McLellin, Saints Herald (15 September 1870): 554.
  6. McLellin to John L. Traughber, 14 December 1878, in Plantilla:McLellinPapers1
  7. McLellin, "Reasons Why I am Not A Mormon, ca. 1880 Plantilla:Io; cited in Plantilla:McLellinPapers1
  8. McLellin, "Reasons Why I am Not A Mormon, ca. 1880 Plantilla:Io; cited in McLellin Papers, 390.