Discourse, between circa 26 June and circa 4 August 1839–B, as Reported by Willard Richards
Source Note
JS, Discourse, [, Lee Co., Iowa Territory, or , Hancock Co., IL], [between ca. 26 June and ca. 4 Aug. 1839]. Featured version copied [between 13 Jan. 1840 and 20 Apr. 1841] in Willard Richards, “W. Richards Pocket Companion Written in England,” pp. 74–75; handwriting of ; Willard Richards, Journals and Papers, CHL. For more complete source information, see the source note for Discourse, between ca. 26 June and ca. 4 Aug. 1839–A, as Reported by Willard Richards.
Historical Introduction
Likely between late June and early August 1839, JS gave a discourse on Jesus’s parable of the sower, and between January 1840 and April 1841 copied an account of the discourse into his “Pocket Companion,” a notebook he kept during his 1837–1841 mission in . Although Richards did not identify this discourse as coming from JS, the majority of the entries in the pocket notebook are JS revelations and discourses that Richards copied without giving attribution. Richards was proselytizing in England in summer 1839 and thus was not present when JS gave this discourse to members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and Quorums of the . After the apostles and seventies joined Richards in England to proselytize, he presumably copied one of their accounts of the discourse.
This discourse explains several parables, including the parable of the sower, the parable of the treasure hidden in a field, and the parable of the wheat and tares, all of which are found in Matthew, chapter 13. As part of his explanation, JS discussed signs in these parables of the second coming of Christ. The notes for this discourse are more fragmentary than are accounts of other JS discourses that copied. Apparently, Richards or the missionary who took the original notes focused on capturing main points rather than on documenting the complete text of the discourse. In this account, the content of selected verses in Matthew, chapter 13, is briefly mentioned, followed by JS’s explanations of the verses.
Behold a sower went forth to Sow &c Our Savior is the sower; the people are the world; the harvest is the end of the world; the reapers are the angels The end of the world is not come, consequently the Harvest. The harvest cannot come without Angels; The Son of man is to send forth his Angels. The Son of Man Said that the Saints shall Judge the world & Angels.— God has revealed himself. when they come up before God they will be asked did this Angel perform this or that. that he was sent to do. if not they will be judged— The world judgd—
Some fell among thorns &c— God sows— The enemy comes & Sows parties divisions. heresies; Shall we kill them? NO. not till harvest— The end of the world. The Son of God will do as he ever has done from the beginning. Send forth his Angels. If the reapers do not come, the wheat cannot be Saved. Nothing but the Kingdom being restored, can save the world. Like unto a treasure [p. 74]