From Deseret News archives:

Joseph Smith celebration tonight

Published: Thursday, Dec. 22, 2005 11:54 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
SHARON, Vt. — President Gordon B. Hinckley says the first time he came to southern Vermont, he came to visit. Thursday was different.

"Today, I've come to celebrate," he said at a press conference inside the visitors center at the Joseph Smith Birthplace Memorial.

President Hinckley of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Elder M. Russell Ballard of the church's Quorum of the Twelve were in Vermont on a clear, cold day Thursday as part of the worldwide observance of the 200th anniversary of the birth of Joseph Smith. The LDS prophet and church founder was born Dec. 23, 1805.

The two church leaders will speak tonight in a satellite broadcast from the the site. President Thomas S. Monson, first counselor in the First Presidency, and President James E. Faust, second counselor, will speak from the Conference Center in Salt Lake City.

Proceedings will be carried to meetinghouses throughout the world via satellite and will be broadcast locally.

"This is a very significant event. It happens only every 100 years," President Hinckley said in reference to another church president, Joseph F. Smith, who came here on Dec. 23, 1905, to dedicate a monument that stands in honor of Joseph Smith.

Story continues below
"I'm within five years of being a part of that 100 years. I'm 95 years old and am glad I made it today," President Hinckley said.

"This is a very significant occasion," he said. "The boy who was born here became the prophet of the church and today that church has a membership of approximately 12 million in 160 nations. The growth of this work is an absolute miracle and to think it all came through a little boy who had a very common name and lived in a very remote area, and had very little education but his name has become known for good all over this world. It is for this reason that we're here to celebrate the 200th anniversary of his birth."

President Hinckley said the monument erected 100 years ago "is a tremendous thing in and of itself. Junius Wells was the man who engineered all of it. It was a tremendous thing to get it up here."

The monument is 38 1/2 feet tall, a foot for each year of Joseph Smith's life. "It is a beautiful and magnificent thing. The task getting it in place was tremendous. As we came up the road, I marveled at the ingenuity, the work, the faith of Junius Wells, who got it here and had it ready in time for the dedication by President Joseph F. Smith. It was a wonderful occasion."

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

President Gordon B. Hinckley, right, and Elder M. Russell Ballard stand at the obelisk marking the birthplace of Joseph Smith in Sharon, Vt.

previousnext

Latest comments

No Jesus in WOT? It seems to me like Rand is going to be a Christ-figure.

I am so glad he won..The one thing that impressed me, dancing aside, was he...

Interesting, but very predictable, that Hall waited a year, and only after a...

I went to Church today - just like you. I went to seminary - just like you....

I feel like Max just yanked me down by my ponytail. I consider Mr. Hall's...

Utahns back anti-bias laws

Try again. "So Then" is actually correct. The 23% of the U.S. population has...

Move over, Monopoly

It seems a little ironic that Monopoly editions should come at the end of a...

Deseret Dawg - BYU won the toss, if it was sudden-death they would have taken...

I agree, Brandon Sanderson's novels are amazing. I was totally caught by...

'This is another stomp on our rights and freedoms of choice.' - 3:56 a.m....

Advertisements