I've been impressed that many of the isolated sisters I've been studying have been blessed with spiritual gifts that have guided them. Marie Cardon Giuld's conversion demonstrates this.
Marie was born in the rural Alps in 1834. When she was roughly five years old, she had a dream. She saw herself as a young woman, sitting in a meadow and reading a Sunday school book. Three men came to her, and they told her not to be afraid: they were servants of God, come from far away, to preach about the restoration of the gospel. They told her about Joseph Smith, and that the gospel he restored would never be taken from the earth. They told her she'd bring her parents into the gathering of Saints, and they would cross the ocean to go to Zion.
She told her father about the dream, and 10 years later, her father heard about three missionaries in the area preaching the same ideas her daughter had told him about. He left immediately to find them, and when the elders came to her house, she was sitting in a meadow, reading her Sunday School book. They spoke the same words to her as she had heard in her dream. Marie and her parents were baptized. She assisted the missionaries in translating their sermons (her people, Waldensians, spoke their own dialect).
On one Sunday, she was interpreting a sermon during a Sunday service, when a mob came and demanded that she and the missionaries be sent out. She marched out, bible in hand. The minister that had confirmed her into his church when she younger accused her of disloyalty to her oaths; she replied that she was still loyal to truth, but she had more of it now. When everyone started shouting for the elders again, she held up her bible in her right hand and commanded them to depart – the Elders were under her protection. The ministers asked the mob to leave, and they did.
Just as her dream outlined, she immigrated to Utah in 1854. None of the Italian saints she traveled with spoke English. When they arrived in Liverpool, Marie studied so their party could be understood. Their party joined others from a variety of European locations. When they stopped in New Orleans, cholera was spread throughout the party, and Marie helped nurse the ill, including her father. She had an eventful crossing of the plains, including more outbreaks of cholera, running for her life from some men that tried to kidnap her, and several encounters with Native Americans. She married Charles Guild, and they had eleven children, eventually settling in Wyoming.
Sources:
Maki, Elizabeth. 'Suddenly the Thought Came to Me': Child's Vision Prepares her Family for the Gospel. 3 June 2013.
An Autobiography of Marie Madeline Cardon Guild, excerpts compiled by Susan Thomas Tippets 1995.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Rosa Clara Friedlander Logie
Rosa Clara moved from the English
Channel Islands to Sydney, Australia in 1849, when she was eleven
years old. Two years later, LDS missionaries arrived, and her family
were among their earliest converts. When her mom and stepfather
decided to move to Melbourne to assist in the missionary efforts in
that part of the country, 15 year old Rosa Clara stayed in Sydney,
living first under the care of the mission president, and then with a
married friend. She walked to church every Sunday, despite having to
walk 12 miles to do so. She sang in the choir and distributed
missionary tracts.
She married sailor Charles Logie, who
joined the church a month before they married, when she was 16, and
the following year they had their first child. With their baby in
tow, Rosa Clara (then 17) and Charles set off by boat for the US to
join the saints. Four weeks into their journey, on a dark night,
their boat struck a coral reef. The captain ordered a sailor to swim
to the coral reef and fasten a rope. He rigged a sling to slide over
the rope, and decided to ferry the passengers to the reef until they
had a better feel for their options, women first. Others were
terrified, but Rosa Clara bravely volunteered to go first. She tied
her baby to her husband and went to the captain. At that moment, her
husband and baby were swept overboard, but fortunately, a sailor
rescued them. She then climbed onto the captain's lap, and he pulled
her over to the reef. She waited there for more passengers to arrive,
in the pitch black, standing on sharp coral, chest-deep in the sea.
All but five of the passengers survived the night.
In the morning, the sailors took the
survivors to a small island. They waited for rescue for eight weeks,
surviving on some salvaged ship provisions, turtle meat and eggs, and
coconuts. Rosa Clara spent most of her time on the island very ill.
When they finally made it to San Francisco, Elder George Q. Cannon
presented her with a teapot to honor her bravery. After stints in
different Nevada and Utah settlements, the Logies settled in Amercian
Fork, Utah and raised twelve children. She stayed committed to the
gospel throughout her life.
I love Rosa Clara's bravery in facing down the storm, but I also love that she stayed committed to the gospel through the every-day trials that her life presented in the coming decades.
She didn't let her rough eight weeks jar her faith in God, and she didn't require more miraculous rescues to stay committed to her faith. She was faithful during trial and calm.
Sources:
Rosa
Clara: Bravery on the Pacific, by Marjorie B. Newton. Ensign,
August 1990.
Mormon Migration Index, Julia Ann,
at
http://mormonmigration.lib.byu.edu/Search/showDetails/db:MM_MII/t:voyage/id:204/keywords:rosa+clara+logie
The Life of Rosa Clara Friedlander
Logie,
http://lineagekeeper.blogspot.com/2009/12/life-of-rosa-clara-friedlander-logie.html
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Desideria Quintanar de Yanez
As I'd mentioned in last year's posts,
spiritual gifts in the contemporary Mormon church tend to look
differently than they did in the early church, whether in how we
practice them (i.e. speaking in tongues) or who administers them
(i.e. anointings and healings). But dreams are a different animal. As
early as Genesis 20, we have accounts of God communicating with men
and women through dreams, and the form hasn't really changed since
then.
I was drawn to Desideria Quintanar de
Yanez's account not only because her story takes place in Mexico
during a time when most of the stories involve gathering with the
main bodies of saints, but because of the role a dream plays in her
conversion.
In 1880, Desideria had a powerful dream
about men in Mexico City publishing a pamphlet called La Voz de
Amonestacion (in English, A
Voice of Warning). She knew God
had sent her this message, and that it was important that she find
this pamphlet, but she was a 66 year old widow and too frail to make
the 75 mile journey to Mexico City. When she confided in her son,
Jose, he agreed to make the trip for her.
He
asked around and met the first LDS convert in Mexico, Plotino
Rhodakanaty, on the street. Rhodakanaty had been involved in
translating Parley P. Pratt's pamphlet, A Voice of Warning,
into Spanish, and was able to direct him to the missionaries. One of
these missionaries was in the middle of reviewing the printer's
proofs when he connected with Jose, and although it was a month until
this pamphlet would be ready for publication, Jose was able to return
to his mother with news of its existence, as well as other missionary
tracts.
Desideria soon
received the pamphlet, and the missionaries' invitation to baptism,
and in 1880, she became the first Mexican woman baptized.
She would never
live with a large body of saints. She would live in the little branch
for her remaining 13 years. She had multiple meaningful contacts with
missionaries and apostles in her first six years of membership.
During this time, she received the first Spanish language copy of the
Book of Mormon (she was so eager to receive it that the mission
president traveled to her town to give her an unbound copy prior to
its wider publication), as well as a blessing of healing and comfort
from Elder Erastus Snow after robbers beat her and stole the equivalent of thousands of dollars from
her home.
Unfortunately, by
1890 her branch had lost contact with the Mormon missionaries. That
said, Desideria stayed true. When the missionaries found Jose in
1903, a decade after Desideria's death, he had given up hope on the
church resuming contact and renounced his priesthood. But he reported
that his mother had died “in full faith of Mormonism.”
I admire
Desideria's enthusiasm and commitment to the gospel. It would have
been easy to feel abandoned and isolated, but she stayed true to the
revelation God had given her and true to the covenants she made.
Source:
“Solitary
Saint in Mexico: Desideria Quintanar de Yanez (1814-1893),” by
Clinton D. Christensen, in Women of Faith in the Latter
Days, Volume 1, 1775-1820, eds.
Richard E. Turley jr. and Brittany A. Chapman.
Sunday, March 2, 2014
2014 Theme: Global
Most practicing
Mormons can give you a basic synopsis of life for the early US
converts to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints –
gathering to Nauvoo, handcart companies, etc. But this year, I was
interested the pioneers of other countries. I've been hunting down
stories of the early female converts around the globe. I've loved
learning about their unique and challenging journeys, and how they
found meaning in a faith community that they essentially had to build
themselves. Some eventually gathered to Utah; some lived their lives
in their native country. Some watched their faith community thrive;
others only met a handful of Mormons outside their families. But
all of them found comfort, purpose, and connection to God through
their decision to join this faraway and unfamiliar faith.
I'll definitely be posting on Tuesdays,
with the possibility of more posts depending on how well I make the
transition to being a mom of three (which explains why I forgot to
post this on the first of the month, despite having written it a
month ago).
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