Item Detail
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4356
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19
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2
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English
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The Joseph/Hyrum Smith Funeral Sermon
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BYU Studies
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Winter 1983
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23
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3-18
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"As the hearse bearing the "bodies" of Joseph and Hyrum Smith (actually sandbagged coffins) passed the Nauvoo meeting ground the afternoon of Saturday, 29 June 1844, "William W. Phelps was preaching the funeral sermon." The choice of Phelps as eulogist to the Prophet and the Patriarch is strange, the content of his sermon stranger, the tone of that sermon strangest of all." [Publisher's abstract]
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"A Continuation of the Seeds" : Joseph Smith and Spirit Birth
Early Mormon Patriarchy and the Paradoxes of Democratic Religiosity in Jacksonian America
Glorious in Persecution : Joseph Smith, American Prophet, 1839–1844
In Heaven as It Is on Earth : Joseph Smith and the Early Mormon Conquest of Death
"It Seems That All Nature Mourns": Sally Randall's Response to the Murder of Joseph and Hyrum Smith
John Taylor's June 27, 1854, Account of the Martyrdom
Joseph Smith III : Pragmatic Prophet
Joseph Smith's Polygamy
Joseph Smith, W. W. Phelps, and the Poetic Paraphrase of 'The Vision'
Junius and Joseph : Presidential Politics and the Assassination of the First Mormon Prophet
Knowing Brother Joseph Again : Perceptions and Perspectives
Modern Polygamy and Mormon Fundamentalism : The Generations After the Manifesto
Old Mormon Nauvoo and Southeastern Iowa
Remembering the Deaths of Joseph and Hyrum Smith
Terrible Revolution : Latter-day Saints and the American Apocalypse
Vernacular Mormonism : The Development of Latter-Day Saint Apocalyptic (1830-1930)
"We'll Sing and We'll Shout!" : Who is the Real W. W. Phelps?
William W. Phelps's Service in Nauvoo as Joseph Smith's Political Clerk
“Would to God, Brethren, I Could Tell You Who I Am” : Nineteenth Century Mormonisms and the Apotheosis of Joseph Smith