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{{Short description|Sect of the Latter Day Saint movement}} The '''Church of the Firstborn''' was a sect of the [[Latter Day Saint movement]] that formed as an offshoot of [[the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] (LDS Church) in 1861 and was involved in the [[Morrisite War]]. Its adherents were known as '''Morrisites''', and schismatic sects have been defunct since 1969, excepting the [[James Brighouse|Order of Enoch]]. ==History== ===Origins=== In 1857, Joseph Morris, an English convert to the LDS Church, reported receiving revelations naming him the Seventh Angel from the [[Book of Revelation]]. He wrote [[President of the Church (LDS Church)|church president]] [[Brigham Young]] to seek recognition of his calling from the church. Young did not respond to the request from Morris, or any of his subsequent letters through 1860.<ref name=Anderson>''[http://library.usu.edu/specol/manuscript/caine10.html C. LeRoy Anderson Morrisite Collection] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060902002855/http://library.usu.edu/Specol/manuscript/caine10.html |date=2006-09-02 }}''. Marie Eccles-Caine Archive of Intermountain Americana. Utah State University Libraries: Special Collections and Archives.</ref><ref name="Davis History">{{cite book |title=A History of Davis County |last=Leonard |first=Glen M. |authorlink=Glen M. Leonard |year=1999 |publisher=Utah State Historical Society |location=Salt Lake City, UT |isbn=978-0-913738-43-6 |oclc=41987756}}</ref>{{rp|81}} In 1860, Morris began to collect followers to a group that became known as the Morrisites. In February 1861, [[Apostle (LDS Church)|apostles]] [[John Taylor (Mormon)|John Taylor]] and [[Wilford Woodruff]] excommunicated Morris from the LDS Church.<ref name=UHE>{{Citation |first= Kenneth |last= Godfrey |contribution= The Morrisites |contribution-url= http://www.uen.org/utah_history_encyclopedia/m/MORRISITES.html |page= 674 |editor-last= Powell |editor-first= Allan Kent |year= 1994 |title= Utah History Encyclopedia |location= Salt Lake City, Utah |publisher= [[University of Utah Press]] |isbn= 0874804256 |oclc= 30473917 |access-date= 2013-02-18 |archive-date= 2013-10-21 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131021165603/http://www.uen.org/utah_history_encyclopedia/m/MORRISITES.html |url-status= dead }}</ref> On April 6, 1861, Morris and his followers organized the Church of the Firstborn and called all of his followers to gather at Kingston (Kington) Fort, a {{convert|3|acre|m2|adj=on}} fort on the Weber River that had been abandoned in 1858.<ref name=OSE>Ruth Malan, "Three-day war focus of new monument", ''Standard-Examiner'' (Ogden, UT), 2006-11-02. Pluses section.</ref> By midsummer 1861, the group reached 300 followers.<ref name="Davis History"/>{{rp|82}} [[File:Joseph Morris (Latter Day Saints).jpg|thumb|left|130px|Joseph Morris, leader of the Church of the Firstborn]] Morris told his followers that the [[Second Coming]] was imminent and not to bother with planting crops. They may have trampled some of their crops into the ground as evidence of their faith.<ref name=UHE/> The group pooled available supplies and waited at Kingston Fort. ===Membership=== An eight-page ''Roll of Membership, Names of Persons Baptized into the Fulness of the Gospel'' was published in San Francisco in 1886.<ref>For more information on Dove see Richard Neitzel Holzapfel, "The Flight of the Doves from Utah Mormonism to California Morrisitism: The Saga of James and George Dove." in ''Differing Visions: Dissenters in Mormon History'' edited by [[Roger Launius]] and Linda Thatcher. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1994. 196-219.</ref> An introduction to the roll reads: "Names of persons baptized during the administration of Joseph Morris, at South Weber, Utah Territory, in the years of 1861 and 1862." The Roll of Membership then lists alphabetically the names of 430 individuals. At the conclusion of the list the publisher notes: "All the names that we found in the record book are in this list. We feel assured that there were many persons baptized whose names were not recorded."<ref>For a list of individuals see [http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/th/read/MORRISITES/2007-03/1174859637 Geo. Dove's Roll of Membership] RootsWeb, MORRISITES-L Archives</ref> ===Leadership=== A copy of the ''Roll of Membership'' housed in the Archives of the [[Community of Christ]] includes notations in pencil identifying those in positions of authority next to the following individuals: John Banks, Prescy.; John Cook, Apostle; Richard Cook, Presidency; James Cowan, Apostle; James Dove, apostle; John R. Eardley, Apostle; [[Mark Hill Forscutt]], Apostle; [[Gudmund Gudmundson]], Apostle; William Harris, Bishop; Niels Jacobson, Apostle; John E. Jones, Apostle; William Kendell, Apostle; R. J. Livingstone, Apostle; James Mather, Apostle; John Parson, Apostle; Abraham Taylor, Apostle; John Trolsen, Apostle. ===Morrisite War=== {{Main|Morrisite War}} [[File:Morrisite Monument at South Weber Utah.JPG|thumb|right|Monument describing the June 1862 "Morrisite War" in South Weber, Utah]] By spring 1862, food was scarce and some members were becoming discontented. Morris repeatedly designated certain days for the Second Coming, only to have those days pass uneventfully.<ref name=Howard>G.M. Howard, [http://www.gordonbanks.com/gordon/family/Morrisite.html "Men, Motives, and Misunderstandings: A New Look at the Morrisite War of 1862"].</ref> Each time that happened, a handful of members would recover their possessions from the community pool and leave the congregation. With the steady outflux of members, the question of property entitlement became contentious. Those who stayed behind felt those who left were taking better stock and other items than they had initially contributed to the community pool. Soon after three departing members—William Jones, one of Morris's first converts, John Jensen, and Lars C. Geertsen—vowed revenge after what they perceived as an unfair reckoning, they seized a load of wheat en route from Kingston to Kaysville for milling. The Morrisites sent a group of men after them, and the group soon captured the three and the wheat. The church held the men prisoner in a small cabin, to be "tried by the Lord when he came."<ref name=Anderson/> Eventually, the Utah territorial militia was ordered to arrest Morris and the other leaders of the church. In the resulting confrontation sometimes called the [[Morrisite War | "Morrisite War]]," Morris was killed in a skirmish on June 15, 1862, and other Morrisite leaders were taken prisoner. A monument commemorating the Morrisite War stands in South Weber, Utah. ===Scattering and regathering=== [[File:Race Track Church.jpg|right|thumb|A Morrisite meetinghouse in Race Track, [[Powell County, Montana]], with the inscription "The Lord's House"]] Although seven Morrisites were convicted of murder and 66 others were convicted of resisting arrest, Territorial Governor [[Stephen S. Harding]] pardoned them all three days after being convicted, and the Morrisites scattered across the Western [[United States]]. Ultimately, many of the members of the church began to regather in [[Deer Lodge County, Montana|Deer Lodge County]], [[Montana]], under the leadership of George Williams, who declared himself to be the "Prophet Cainan" and Morris's rightful successor.<ref name = Anderson/> In January 1879, Williams prophesied that Deer Lodge County would be the site of the [[Second Coming of Christ]]. Williams was frequently away from Montana, living mostly in [[Salt Lake City, Utah]] and [[England]]. Williams recorded many [[revelation]]s that he said he received from God and also authored ''St. Ann's Hill Record'', which he claimed was a record of ancient origin.<ref name = Anderson/> ===Schism and extinction=== After Williams died in 1882, the church divided into a number of schisms, each claiming to be led by Williams's rightful successor. The largest group, based in Montana, was led by John R. Eardley, who renamed the church the '''Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Most High'''. By the 1950s, most of the members of the church had died, and it was officially disbanded in 1969.<ref name = Anderson/> ==Teachings== Under the title ''The Spirit Prevails,'' a collection of Joseph Morris's "Revelations, Articles, and Letters" was published by George S. Dove & Company in 1886, twenty-four years after Morris's death. The revelations were recorded between 1857 and 1862 and were sacred scripture for Morris's followers.<ref>{{cite book|last=Morris|first=Joseph|title=The "spirit prevails"|year=1886|publisher=G.S. Dove; J.A. Dover & Co., printers|pages=[https://archive.org/details/spiritprevails00morrrich/page/684 684]|url=https://archive.org/details/spiritprevails00morrrich}}</ref> Like most Latter Day Saint denominations, the Church of the Firstborn taught that [[Joseph Smith]] was a [[prophet]] of God. The church taught that Smith's rightful successor [[death of Joseph Smith|after he died]] was [[James Strang]] and that Strang was succeeded by Joseph Morris. What set the Church of the Firstborn apart from the majority of Latter Day Saint sects was its belief in [[reincarnation]]. Called "baby resurrection" by the church, Morris and Williams taught that reincarnation was taught by Joseph Smith and that most other Latter Day Saint sects were in apostasy for rejecting those teachings. Each of the successive leaders of the church was believed to be the reincarnation of a significant prophet of old, with Joseph Smith being the reincarnation of [[Mormon (prophet)|Mormon]] and the [[Apostle Paul]], Joseph Morris the reincarnation of [[Moses]], and George Williams was the reincarnation of [[Kenan|Cainan]]. Morris prophesied that [[Jesus]] would be reincarnated and born to an [[Arab]] in [[Jerusalem]] in 1909, and some have identified [[Dr. Dahesh]] as the fulfilment of that prophecy.<ref>See, e.g., Darrick Evenson, [http://www.angelfire.com/mo3/dr.dahesh/history.html "An ''(sic)'' Brief History of THE CHURCH OF THE FIRSTBORN (The Morrisites): Founded by the Prophets Joseph Morris and George Williams] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071009185150/http://www.angelfire.com/mo3/dr.dahesh/history.html |date=2007-10-09}}.</ref> The Church of the Firstborn rejected other teachings of Brigham Young and the LDS Church, including [[plural marriage]] and the [[Temple (LDS Church)|temple]] [[ordinance (Latter Day Saints)|ordinances]]. ==Leland Jensen== One of Williams' prophesies was that [[Deer Lodge, Montana]], would be the site of the [[Second Coming of Christ]]. This prophecy was discovered by leaders of the small [[Baháʼí Faith]] apocalyptic cult founded by [[Leland Jensen]] and was considered a confirmation of Jensen's prophetic calling. Jensen taught that the [[Montana State Prison]] in Deer Lodge, where he had been incarcerated, was actually [[Ezekiel's Temple]].<ref>Anderson, C. LeRoy,'' Joseph Morris and the Saga of the Morrisites (revisited)'', (Logan, Utah: Utah State University Press, 2010), 214-218.</ref> ==See also== <!---♦♦♦ Please keep the list in alphabetical order ♦♦♦---> *[[James Brighouse]] *[[William W. Davies]] *[[Gudmund Gudmundson]] ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Commons category-inline}} [[Category:Church of the Firstborn (Morrisite)| ]] [[Category:Apocalyptic groups]] [[Category:Christian organizations established in 1861]] [[Category:Organizations disestablished in 1969]] [[Category:1861 establishments in Utah Territory]] [[Category:Defunct Latter Day Saint denominations]] [[Category:Christian denominations founded in the United States]]
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