Amasa M. Lyman
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Amasa Mason Lyman (pronounced /ˈæməsə/, March 30, 1813—February 4, 1877) was an early leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was an Apostle and a Counselor in the First Presidency to founder and President of the Church Joseph Smith, Jr.
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[edit] Early life and conversion
Lyman was born in Lyman, Grafton County, New Hampshire, the third son of Roswell Lyman and Martha Mason. In the spring of 1832, Lyman met two traveling Latter Day Saint missionaries, Orson Pratt and Lyman E. Johnson. He was baptized a member of the Church on 27 April 1832 by Johnson. On 28 April, Lyman was confirmed by Pratt.
After becoming a Latter Day Saint, Lyman traveled 700 miles to Palmyra, New York, where he hoped to meet Joseph Smith and Martin Harris. (Smith and Harris had lived in the Palmyra area when the Book of Mormon was published and the Church was organized in 1830). When Lyman arrived in Palmyra, he discovered that Smith had moved to Ohio the previous year, and that he was currently away from his Ohio home on a visit to Missouri.
Determined to join the Latter Day Saints in Ohio, Lyman found temporary employment on the farm of Thomas Lackey, who had bought Harris' farm when Harris sold it to raise money for the publication of the Book of Mormon. After working for two weeks, Lyman had earned enough money to take a ship from Buffalo, New York to Cleveland, Ohio. From Cleveland, Lyman walked the forty-five miles to Hiram, the town that he had been told Smith and his family were then living in. Upon meeting John Johnson, the owner of the home where the Smiths were living, Lyman discovered that Johnson was the father of the missionary who had baptized Lyman just weeks before. Excited to meet one of his son's converts to the Church, John Johnson invited Lyman to live at his house and work on his farm. Lyman did so from 5 June until August 1832. Lyman met Joseph Smith on 1 July, when Smith returned to Hiram from his Missouri visit.
[edit] Missionary service and church leadership
In August 1832, Joseph Smith told Lyman that "the Lord requires your labors in the vineyard."[1]. Lyman immediately agreed to serve a mission for the Church. On 23 August, Lyman was ordained an Elder of the Church by Smith and Frederick G. Williams. On the following day, Lyman and Zerubbabel Snow departed together as missionaries for the church. Lyman served with Snow and William F. Cahoon in the Eastern States, preaching as far east as Cabell County, Virginia, in present-day West Virginia. During his missionary labors, on 11 December 1833, Lyman was ordained a High Priest in the Church by Lyman Johnson and Orson Pratt, the same elders who had taught and baptized him in 1832
Lyman returned to Church headquarters in Kirtland, Ohio in May 1835. At a Conference of the Church in June, Lyman was called by Joseph Smith to be a member of the newly-organized First Quorum of the Seventy; he was ordained a Seventy of the Church by Smith, Oliver Cowdery and Sidney Rigdon. In 1836, Lyman received the so-called "Kirtland Endowment" in the Latter Day Saints' Kirtland Temple. Lyman married Maria Louisa Tanner in Kirtland in 1835.
Lyman served several additional missions for the Church, preaching in Vermont, New Hampshire, New York, Wisconsin, Illinois, and Tennessee. In 1838, Lyman followed Smith to Far West, Missouri when Smith decided to relocate the headquarters of the Church there. Lyman was a participant in the Battle of Crooked River, a skirmish between Latter Day Saints and a Missouri state militia unit from Ray County, which occurred on 25 October 1838
In 1839, Lyman again traveled with the Latter Day Saints to their new headquarters, this time to Nauvoo, Illinois. On 20 August 1842, Joseph Smith called Lyman to serve as an Apostle of the Church. Lyman filled a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles that was created by the excommunication of Apostle Orson Pratt. Just five months later, on 20 January 1843, Pratt was rebaptized and restored to his former position in the Quorum of the Twelve. As the most junior and "thirteenth" Apostle, Lyman was excluded from the Quorum. On 4 February, Joseph Smith called Lyman to serve as an additional Counselor in the First Presidency. Due to the turbulence of the years 1843 and 1844 for the Latter Day Saints, Lyman was never sustained at a Conference of the Church to this position.
[edit] Plural marriage
In April 1844, Joseph Smith taught Lyman the principle of plural marriage. "As he warmly grasped my hand for the last time," Lyman later recalled, "[Joseph said] brother Amasa, go and practice on the principles I have taught you, and God bless you."[2]. Shortly thereafter, Lyman married his first and second plural wives, Diontha Walker and Caroline Partridge. Lyman eventually married a total of eight plural wives.[citation needed]
[edit] Follower of Brigham Young
Lyman was in Cincinnati, Ohio and on his way to Boston, Massachusetts in July 1844 when he learned that Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum had been killed by a mob at Carthage, Illinois. He arrived back at Nauvoo on 31 July. When Apostles Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, Wilford Woodruff, Orson Pratt, and Lyman Wight arrived in Nauvoo on 6 August, Lyman sided with the group of Latter Day Saints who supported the leadership of Young and the Quorum of the Twelve as opposed to that of Smith's First Counselor in the First Presidency, Sidney Rigdon.
Under the leadership of Brigham Young, Lyman was restored as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles on August 12 1844. In 1846, Lyman married four additional wives: Eliza Partridge (a 25-year-old sister to Lyman's wife Caroline who had been one of Joseph Smith's plural wives), Pauline Phelps, Pricilla Turley and Cornelia Leavitt. In 1847, Lyman and his seven wives and children traveled with the Saints who followed Young to the Salt Lake Valley in present-day Utah. In 1851, Lyman married his eighth and final wife, Lydia Partridge, a sister to his wives Caroline and Eliza.
[edit] Heresy and excommunication
In 1860, Church President Brigham Young appointed three of the twelve Apostles — Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon — to be the presidency of the Church's European Mission. On 16 March 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity of the Atonement of Jesus Christ, the central tenet of the LDS Church. This incident was apparently overlooked for a number of years, for it was not until 21 January 1867 that Lyman was brought before the Quorum of the Twelve to answer for his heretical speech. Lyman confessed his error and apologized to the Quorum personally and to the Latter-day Saints in a letter in the Deseret News. However, just months later, Lyman again began publicly preaching the substance of his 1862 Dundee speech. As a result of his failure to live up to his confession and apology, the Quorum of the Twelve excommunicated Lyman on May 6th, 1867; this action was ratified by the General Conference of the Church on 8 October of that year.
Ten years later, Lyman died at Fillmore, Millard County, Utah. He and seven of his eight wives were parents of 38 children. Although Lyman never returned to the Church, under the direction of Church President Joseph F. Smith, Lyman was posthumously reinstated as a Church member and an Apostle on January 12, 1909.
[edit] Notable descendants
Amasa M. Lyman's posterity includes his son Francis M. Lyman and grandson Richard R. Lyman, both of whom also became apostles in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. While Francis remained steadfast through his entire life, Richard — like his grandfather — was removed from the apostleship and excommunicated. James E. Faust, who served as an apostle for 29 years and as second counselor in the First Presidency of the church from 1995 until his death in 2007, is a great-great-grandson of Amasa M. Lyman.
[edit] Chart: the eight wives
| - # - | Year of Marriage | Name | Her Age | His Age | # of Children |
| - 1 - | 1835 | Maria Louisa Tanner | 17 | 22 | 8 |
| - 2 - | 1843 | Diontha Walker | 27 | 30 | 0 |
| - 3 - | 1844 | Caroline Partridge | 17 | 31 | 6 |
| - 4 - | 1846 | Eliza Partridge Smith | 15 | 33 | 5 |
| - 5 - | 1846 | Pauline Phelps | 19 | 33 | 7 |
| - 6 - | 1846 | Pricilla Turley | 17 | 33 | 6 |
| - 7 - | 1846 | Cornelia Leavitt | 21 | 33 | 2 |
| - 8 - | 1853 | Lydia Partridge | 23 | 40 | 4 |
[edit] Notes
- ^ Amasa M. Lyman, "Amasa Lyman's History", Millennial Star, vol. 27, no. 31 (Aug. 5, 1865), p 487
- ^ Amasa M. Lyman, "Amasa Lyman's History", Millennial Star, vol. 27 no. 35 (September 2, 1865), p. 553
[edit] References
- Loretta L. Hefner,"From Apostle to Apostate: The Personal Struggle of Amasa Mason Lyman," in Mormon Mavericks, John Sillito and Susan Staker (eds.), Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 2002.
- Amasa M. Lyman, "Amasa Lyman's Story", Millennial Star, vol. 27, no. 30 (July 29, 1865), pp. 472–473; vol. 27, no. 31 (Aug. 5, 1865), pp. 487–489; vol. 27, no. 32 (Aug. 12, 1865), pp. 502–504; vol. 27, no. 33 (Aug. 19, 1865), pp. 519–521; vol. 27, no. 34 (Aug. 26, 1865), pp. 535–537; vol. 27 no. 35 (September 2, 1865), pp. 552–553.
[edit] External Resources
- Utah History Encyclopedia Entry
- Grampa Bill's G.A. Pages
- Text of Millennial Star 1863-1865 series "Amasa Lyman's History"
- Family Search at lds.org
- The Edward Partridge Family
- Autobiography of Eliza Partridge Smith Lyman
- Caroline Ely Patridge Lyman
| Preceded by Lyman Wight | Quorum of the Twelve Apostles August 20, 1842–20 January 1843 August 12, 1844–May 6, 1867 | Succeeded by Orson Pratt |
Members of the Council of Fifty of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints |
|---|
| Jos. Smith • Badlam • Bernhisel • Cahoon • Clayton • Cutler • A. Fielding • Haws • H.C. Kimball • Miller • Phelps • O. Pratt • P.P. Pratt, Sr. • L. Richards • W. Richards • G.A. Smith • H. Smith • E. Snow • J. Taylor • Wasson • Whitney • Woodworth • B. Young, Sr. • Emmett • Hyde • Woodruff • Adams • Babbitt • Bonney • Eaton • J. Fielding • Johnson • Lee • Lott • A.M. Lyman • C.C. Rich • E. Smith • John Smith • Thayre • Yearsley • Bent • Brown • James • Marks • Parker • Rigdon • Rockwell • O. Spencer • Greene • Coolidge • Hollister • W. Smith • Wight • J.M. Grant • Dunham • Foster • D. Fullmer • Morley • Pack • Page • Rockwood • Roundy • Turley • Jos. Young • Daniels • D. Spencer • P. Young • Carrington • Farnham • J.S. Fullmer • Shumway • G.D. Grant • Benson • Bullock • Heywood • P. Richards • W. Snow • D.H. Wells • John Young • L. Snow • F.D. Richards • G.Q. Cannon • B. Young, Jr. • J.A. Young • Burton • Clinton • Hunter • C.S. Kimball • D.P. Kimball • P.P. Pratt, Jr. • J.C. Rich • Sharp • J.F. Smith • Smoot • Stout • G.J. Taylor • H.P. Kimball • H.J. Richards • J.W. Young • Hooper • A.M. Cannon • Cluff • Jennings • F.M. Lyman • Nuttall • Preston • F.S. Richards • J.H. Smith • S.S. Smith • W.R. Smith • W.W. Taylor • Thatcher • J.F. Wells • Farr • Van Cott • Caine • Reynolds • Winder • Gibbs • Penrose • Clawson • H.J. Grant • Hardy • Teasdale • Peterson • Shurtliff • Budge • Murdock • Hatch • Layton • A.H. Cannon • J.Q. Cannon • J.W. Taylor • S.B. Young |
Counselors in the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints |
|---|
| Gause • Rigdon • Williams • Cowdery • H. Smith • John Smith • Joseph Smith • Law • Bennett • Lyman • Kimball • W. Richards • Grant • Wells • J.F. Smith, Sr. • G.A. Smith • J.W. Young • Cannon • B. Young • Snow • Carrington • Clawson • Winder • Lund • J.H. Smith • Penrose • Ivins • Nibley • Clark • McKay • S.L. Richards • Moyle • Brown • Tanner • Isaacson • J.F. Smith, Jr. • Dyer • Lee • Romney • Hinckley • Monson • Faust • Eyring |
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