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Terrible Revolution: Latter-day Saints and the American Apocalypse

Online ISBN:
9780190080310
Print ISBN:
9780190080280
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

Terrible Revolution: Latter-day Saints and the American Apocalypse

Christopher James Blythe
Christopher James Blythe
Research Associate, Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, Brigham Young University
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Published online:
23 July 2020
Published in print:
3 September 2020
Online ISBN:
9780190080310
Print ISBN:
9780190080280
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

The relationship between Mormons and the United States was marked by anxiety and hostility. Nineteenth-century Latter-day Saints looked forward to apocalyptic events that would unseat corrupt governments across the globe but would particularly decimate the tyrannical government of the United States. Mormons turned to prophecies of divine deliverance by way of plagues, natural disasters, foreign invasions, American Indian raids, slave uprisings, or civil war unleashed on American cities and American people. For the Saints, these violent images promised an end to their oppression. It also promised a national rebirth as part of the millennial Kingdom of God that would vouchsafe the protections of the U.S. Constitution. Blythe examines apocalypticism across the history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, particularly as it would take shape in localized and personalized forms in the writings and visions of ordinary Latter-day Saints outside of the church’s leadership. By following the official response of church leaders to lay prophecy, Blythe shows how the hierarchy, committed to a form of separatist nationalism of their own, encouraged apocalypticism during the nineteenth century. Yet, after Utah obtained statehood, as the church sought to accommodate to national norms for religious denominations, leaders sought to lessen the tensions between themselves and American political and cultural powers. As a result, visions of a violent end to the nation became a liability, and leaders began to disavow and regulate these apocalyptic narratives especially as they showed up among the laity.

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