Joseph Smith — "I am a rough stone, and the sound of the hammer and chisel are continually upon …"
I am a rough stone, and the sound of the hammer and chisel are continually upon me.
I am a rough stone, and the sound of the hammer and chisel are continually upon me.
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"And cursed shall be the seed of him that mixeth with their seed; for they shall be cursed even with the same cursing."
"I am a man of economy, and I will be economical in all things."
"I am a bold, fearless, and independent man."
"I have been raised up by the power of God to establish His Kingdom on the earth."
"If I had forty wives in the United States, they did not know it, and could not substantiate it, neither did I ask any lawyer, judge, or magistrate for them. I live above the law, and so do this people…"
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The speaker acknowledges being imperfect and unfinished, likening himself to raw stone being shaped by a sculptor's tools. He embraces ongoing refinement through hardship, criticism, and challenge rather than claiming polished perfection. The image conveys humility about personal flaws while affirming that difficulty is not destruction but transformation — the process of becoming something intentional and complete through sustained, sometimes painful, pressure.
Smith founded a controversial new religion facing intense persecution, legal prosecution, mob violence, and imprisonment throughout his life. He was largely self-educated, rough-mannered, and frequently criticized even by early followers. This metaphor perfectly captures his self-awareness of personal limitations while framing the relentless opposition he faced — not as defeat — but as divine refinement shaping him into a prophet worthy of his calling.
Smith lived in 1820s–1840s America during intense religious revivalism known as the Second Great Awakening, when new denominations proliferated and theological authority was fiercely contested. Frontier settlers were deeply shaped by craft metaphors; stonecutting and masonry were familiar trades. Early Latter-day Saints faced mob expulsions from Missouri and Illinois, making the image of being forcibly hammered resonate as both spiritual truth and lived daily reality.
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