Joseph Smith — "I am the only prophet that has ever been able to keep a church together since th…"
I am the only prophet that has ever been able to keep a church together since the days of Adam.
I am the only prophet that has ever been able to keep a church together since the days of Adam.
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"I told them I was a good boy, and if I had done anything wrong, I was willing to be corrected."
"I am a Lover of the Constitution of the United States."
"I have learned for myself that God is a being of great condescension, and that he will reveal himself to man."
"I will not be bought, nor sold, nor flattered, nor threatened."
"I am tired of the traditions of men, and the doctrines of devils."
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Smith claims singular prophetic achievement: that he alone, across all of human history, has successfully built and maintained a unified religious institution. He frames organizational continuity as divine proof of legitimacy. The statement asserts that other prophets — biblical and otherwise — ultimately failed to preserve their movements intact, while his church endured persecution, schisms, and displacement and kept growing as a coherent body.
Smith founded the LDS Church in 1830 and grew it to roughly 35,000 members by his 1844 death despite expulsions from Ohio and Missouri, financial crises, and internal apostasies. He served simultaneously as prophet, mayor of Nauvoo, and presidential candidate. His centralized theological authority and this confident self-assessment reflect a man who had, against real odds, held a fractious frontier movement together — and knew it.
The Second Great Awakening (1790s–1840s) spawned dozens of new American sects, most of which collapsed or splintered within years. Shakers, Millerites, and communal utopian movements rose and dissolved. Smith spoke these words around 1844, during the Nauvoo period, amid internal dissent over polygamy and his presidential run. Against that backdrop of religious churn, the LDS Church's survival and cohesion genuinely stood out as a sociological anomaly.
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