Modern-Day LDS Pioneers - Growth of the Mormon Church - 1/8

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Uploaded by on Jun 5, 2008

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3Zsvml57PE is a video describing how to learn more about the Mormon Church.

In every generation, there are pioneers around the world who have sacrificed greatly to join the Mormon Church. This video tells the stories of some of these Latter-day Saint pioneers and the growth of the Mormon Church throughout the world.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints came to the British Isles when seven LDS missionaries landed at Liverpool, England, on July 19, 1837. The success of this first mission (more than 1,500 converts by April 1839) set the stage for the even more successful apostolic mission of 1839-1841, which saw nine of the eleven apostles (the twelfth place was vacant at the time) serving as missionaries in England under the direction of Brigham Young. The Church grew rapidly in Great Britain among the working classes of the Northwest, the Midlands, and, especially, Wales. Membership counts at the end of 1851 showed 33,000 members of the Church in the United Kingdom and Ireland and 12,000 in Utah. Although total membership in the British Isles declined after the mid-1850s due to emigration and attrition, substantial additions through baptisms continued through the 1860s. From 1870 to the mid-1950s, the Church did not experience sustained growth in the United Kingdom and Ireland. But the dedication of the London Temple (in Lingfield, Surrey) in September 1958 and the creation of the Manchester England Stake on March 27, 1970, initiated a second growth phase of membership; by 1990 the Church had more than 160,000 members in 9 missions, 40 stakes, and more than 330 wards and branches in the British Isles. The strength of the Church in the United Kingdom and Ireland in 1990 is indicated by the number of stakes: thirty-two in England, five in Scotland, two in Wales, and one in Northern Ireland. Branches (congregations) in the Republic of Ireland, whose members are not as numerous as in other areas, are under the jurisdiction of mission districts rather than a stake.
When the missionaries first arrived in the British Isles, they went to Preston, England, where Joseph Fielding's brother, Rev. James Fielding, had invited him and his missionary companions to preach at his Vauxhall Chapel. James's enthusiasm waned when it became apparent that he risked losing his congregation, and he promptly closed the chapel to the missionaries. They then taught in private homes, and a week later baptized the first nine British converts in the river Ribble, at Preston. By Sunday, August 6, there were nearly fifty converts in Preston, and Elder Heber C. Kimball organized the Preston Branch. In two months, membership had reached 140, and the original branch was divided into five separate branches in October. Missionary work was extended to Bedford, and to Alston, near the Scottish border, where the missionaries had relatives. Elder Kimball preached in the villages of the Ribble Valley.
On Christmas Day of 1837, the members met for the first conference in Britain, and on Sunday, April 8, 1838, another conference held in the Cockpit, Preston, drew down the curtain on the first phase of Mormon missionary work in Britain. There were 1,500-2,000 British members of the Church, and the leadership was transferred to Joseph Fielding as elders Kimball and Orson Hyde set sail for America.
The second major LDS missionary thrust in the British Isles began on July 8, 1838, at Far West, Missouri, when the Prophet Joseph Smith received a revelation instructing the Twelve Apostles to prepare to serve a mission in Great Britain. Brigham Young and six other apostles left from New York for Britain between December 1839 and March 1840. Willard Richards, who had remained there after the 1837 mission, was ordained an apostle in Britain on April 14, 1840, by Brigham Young. The missionaries baptized thousands of converts (Wilford Woodruff personally baptized more than a thousand), organized branches and conferences, and directed the work of the Church, including printing scriptures and tracts, and began publishing the millennial star, the British Church periodical that would have a continuous run from 1840 through 1970. In 1841, shortly before he returned to America, Brigham Young arranged for richly bound copies of the Book of Mormon to be presented to Queen Victoria.

The Britain of those days was ripe for a message of hope, and the preaching of a restored gospel of Jesus Christ was timely. By June 1842 there were 8,245 members of the Church in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Six years later there were 18,000, and by the end of 1851 England had 24,199 Latter-day Saints, Wales had 5,244, Scotland had 3,291, and Ireland had 160—a total of almost 33,000—and an additional 11,000 had already emigrated to America. In 1851 there were more members of the Church in the United Kingdom and Ireland than there were in Utah (12,000).

Information from http://www.lightplanet.com

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Uploader Comments (lds9999)

  • Yes, I am--where in the New Testament do you find the plurality of gods, celestial marriage, polygamy, a divine curse on black people, manadatory 10% tithing, baptism for the dead (in contrast to Luke 16:19-31), Jesus having wives and children. None of these are scriptural; so your claim to Christ is invalid.

  • Some of the things you listed are NOT tenets of the LDS faith. Take for example "Jesus having wives and children". This is not taught in the LDS Church, nor is a "divine curse".

    Additionally, there is Biblical scripture that supports tithing (Malachi), baptism for the dead (1 Corinthians 15), Jesus, God and the Holy Ghost as three separate beings (John 17), polygamy being practiced by prophets of the Lord (Abraham, Isaac, etc.) though polygamy is no longer practiced in the LDS Church, etc.

Top Comments

  • where are the modern British Saints ? Besides me lol

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This video is a response to Mormon beliefs God speaks today
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All Comments (90)

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  • RE: Hinckley practiced what he believed...

    ...because Hinckley REALLY believed in what he said, in one of those interviews (please review them, for yourself, instead of waiting to be spoon-fed):

    "You can think anything you want: you just can't SAY anything you want." --Hinckley

    Hinckley really BELIEVED that! He so strongly feared being derailed from his fast-track-to-success, in the LDS Crutch, that he kept his mouth shut, about not believing that God was once a man, until he became pro$it...

  • I strongly suggest that LDS members review all of the interviews that Gordon B. Hinckley had, with the various media: including the Mike Wallace; Larry King, & T. Brokaw interviews. (also a Swiss guy who interviewed Hinckley, in 2002...during the Olympics).

    Joseph Smith, Jr., believed in the Lorenzo Snow couplet...& preached it up, at the funeral of a man named Follett. Hinckley who "held his breath until he become prophit" said, "It's just a couplet".

    Hinckley practiced what he believed...

  • @lds9999 I will debate you anywhere. Your false doctrines are still false. The church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is restored, and you cannot do anything about it.

    Your trinitarian three headed morphing goo jesus is False and not biblical.

    FAIRLDS.org

    for the truth

  • @lds9999 get him!

  • Its easy to see who the Mormon haters are on here. Christlike , very sad

  • Mormons are stupid deluded self righteous American cunts. I wish they'd all fuck off to another planet, like kolob. Ha ha ha, lol, lmfao!!!

  • As Latter-Day Saints we believe that Christ is our Redeemer, worship Him as our Saviour, sing songs about Him, belong to a church w/ His name in it, teach our children to follow Him, read the Book of Mormon which testifies of Him, personally testify of the power of His grace, contribute millions of dollars and man hours to bless His children, invite our friends to come unto Him, and yet... we aren't "Christian"? How does that follow?

  • black people can't be mormon because they're black haha no asians either the church only let them in because they would get in trouble human rights blah blah blah you have to be white to be human bening by the way get out of the temple non whites

  • Oh, you guys are so crazy.

  • lol mormonism = creationism + an extra spoonfull of crazy

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