Elias Higbee Explained

Elias Higbee
Birth Date:October 23, 1795
Birth Place:Galloway Township, New Jersey, United States
Death Place:Nauvoo, Illinois, United States
Death Cause:cholera
Resting Place:Old Nauvoo Burial Grounds
Spouse:Sarah Elizabeth Ward
Children:12
Parents:Isaac Higbee
Sophia Somers
Portals:movement
Position Or Quorum1:Church Recorder
Called By1:Joseph Smith
Predecessor1:George W. Robinson
Successor1:Willard Richards
Start Date1:October 1840
End Date1:December 1842
Position Or Quorum2:Church Historian
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Called By2:Joseph Smith
Predecessor2:John Corrill
Successor2:Robert B. Thompson
End Date2:October 1840

Elias Higbee (October 23, 1795 – June 8, 1843) was an associate of Joseph Smith, a prominent Danite, and an official historian and recorder in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

Biography

Born in Galloway Township, New Jersey, to Isaac Higbee and Sophia Somers, Higbee joined the Latter Day Saint church in 1832 in Ohio.[1] He and his family joined the gathering of Latter Day Saints in Kirtland, Ohio, later that year. In 1833 the Higbees and other Latter Day Saints attempted to settle in Jackson County, Missouri, but were forced to return to Kirtland in 1835. They again tried to settle in Missouri in 1836, this time in Clay County. While in Missouri, Higbee was a Caldwell County judge[2] and a leading officer of the county militia. He also served missions in Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. Eventually, the events of the 1838 Mormon War again forced the Higbees to leave Missouri and by 1839 they had settled with the majority of Latter-Day Saints in Commerce, Illinois, which would later be renamed Nauvoo.

In 1838, Higbee became the official historian of the church, and in 1840 he became the church's recorder. In 1839 and 1840, Higbee traveled with Joseph Smith to Washington, D.C., to submit a petition for redress to U.S. President Martin Van Buren.[3] On October 8, 1840, Higbee was appointed by Smith to the committee charged with organizing the construction of the Nauvoo Temple.[4]

Higbee unexpectedly died of cholera[4] on June 8, 1843, in Nauvoo. After his death, Smith stated that Higbee "will again come forth and strike hands with the faithful, and share the glory of the kingdom of God for ever and ever."[4] He was married to Sarah Ward and was the father of twelve children.

Higbee's questions in the Doctrine and Covenants

In the Doctrine and Covenants, part of the scriptural canon of several denominations of the Latter Day Saint movement, answers to several questions about the meaning of the Book of Isaiah posed by Higbee to Joseph Smith are reproduced and have been canonized:

Questions by Elias Higbee: What is meant by the command in Isaiah, 52d chapter, 1st verse, which saith: Put on thy strength, O Zion—and what people had Isaiah reference to? [Answer:] He had reference to those whom God should call in the last days, who should hold the power of priesthood to bring again Zion, and the redemption of Israel; and to put on her strength is to put on the authority of the priesthood, which she, Zion, has a right to by lineage; also to return to that power which she had lost. What are we to understand by Zion loosing herself from the bands of her neck; 2d verse? We are to understand that the scattered remnants are exhorted to return to the Lord from whence they have fallen; which if they do, the promise of the Lord is that he will speak to them, or give them revelation. See the 6th, 7th, and 8th verses. The bands of her neck are the curses of God upon her, or the remnants of Israel in their scattered condition among the Gentiles.[5]

External links

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Succeeded by
Willard Richards|-|-

Notes and References

  1. http://josephsmithpapers.org/person?name=Elias+Higbee "Elias Higbee"
  2. Book: McCune, George M.. Personalities in the Doctrine and Covenants and Joseph Smith–History. Hawkes Publishing. 1991. 9780890365182. 56.
  3. Gary James Bergera, "Buckeye's Laments: Two Early Insider Exposés of Mormon Polygamy and their Authorship", Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, Winter 2003.
  4. Joseph Smith (B.H. Roberts ed.) 1902. History of the Church 5:421 .
  5. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/scriptures/dc-testament/dc/113.7-10?lang=eng Doctrine and Covenants 113:7-10