Joseph Smith — "I have learned for myself that there is no power in man that can do anything for…"
I have learned for myself that there is no power in man that can do anything for him unless God helps him.
I have learned for myself that there is no power in man that can do anything for him unless God helps him.
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"I have the oldest Bible in the world; I have examined it, and there is nothing in it that conflicts with the revelations of God."
"I am a man of love, and I will love God and all men to the end."
"I am a man of good will, and I will do good to all men."
"I am a prophet of God, and I am not afraid of man."
"I have seen many things that no eye has seen, and heard many things that no ear has heard."
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The quote expresses absolute dependence on God — that human strength, intelligence, and effort are fundamentally insufficient alone. No person, regardless of talent or determination, can accomplish anything meaningful without divine assistance. It rejects self-reliance as a foundation and positions God as the necessary source of all effective human action. Individual achievement, in this view, is ultimately an illusion; only what God enables actually succeeds or holds lasting value.
Joseph Smith built his entire prophetic identity on divine authorization — claiming God and Jesus Christ appeared to him personally, that angels delivered scripture, and that he was commissioned to restore the true church. Facing imprisonment, mob expulsions, and eventual martyrdom in 1844, he repeatedly attributed his survival and mission to God's power rather than his own. This quote directly mirrors his conviction that his controversial, embattled ministry could only exist through constant divine enablement, not personal capability.
Smith lived during the Second Great Awakening (1790s–1840s), a sweeping American religious revival where ordinary people claimed direct encounters with God and dozens of new denominations emerged. This era celebrated personal revelation but also brought violent religious conflict — Smith's followers were expelled from Missouri and Illinois by armed mobs. Asserting that only God's power ultimately matters was both a theological position and a response to an era when human institutions had repeatedly failed to protect his community.
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