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9781572333123

Images Of The New Jerusalem: Latter Day Saint Faction Interpretations Of Independence, Missouri

by
  • ISBN13:

    9781572333123

  • ISBN10:

    157233312X

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2005-01-28
  • Publisher: Univ of Tennessee Pr
  • Purchase Benefits
List Price: $42.00

Summary

The Kansas City suburb of Independence, Missouri, is associated primarily with its most famous son, President Harry Truman. Yet Independence is also home to a unique and complex religious landscape regarded as sacred space by hundreds of thousands of people associated with the Latter Day Saint family of churches. In 1831 Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint (LDS) movement, declared Independence the site of the New Jerusalem, where followers would build a sacred city, the center of Zion. Smith prophesied that Jesus Christ would return in millennial and glorious advent to Independence, an act that would make the city an American counterpart to old world Jerusalem. Smith's plan would have mixed the best qualities of the nineteenth-century American pastoral and urban psyche. However, the great splintering among returning Latter Day Saint groups has led to divergent beliefs and multiple interpretations of millennial place. Images of the New Jerusalem culls viewpoints from publications and interviews and contrasts them with official church doctrines and mapped land holdings. For example, with a desire to attract mainstream America, the Western LDS Church, which holds the largest amount of land in northwestern Missouri, keeps fairly silent on the New Jerusalem, while the RLDS Church (now the Community of Christ) has dropped millennial claims gradually, adopting a liberal secular style of pseudo-Protestantism. Smaller groups, independent of these two, see sacred space in more spatially and doctrinally limited ways. The religious ecology among Latter Day Saint churches allows each group its place in the public spotlight, and a number of sociopolitical mechanisms reduce conflictamong them. Nonetheless, Independence has developed many traits of the world's most seasoned and conflicted sacred places over a relatively short time. This book opens the field of scholarship on this region, where profound spatial and doctrinal variation continues.

Author Biography

Craig S. Campbell is professor of geography at Youngstown State University.

Table of Contents

Preface : the paradoxes of Independence, Missouri
Origins of the American New Jerusalem : from edenic to industrialp. 1
The Missourians and the Saintsp. 23
The displacement of Zionp. 63
A splintering and a returnp. 91
Views of Jackson County from Utah, 1845-1900p. 125
LDS views since 1900 : Millenarian Taciturnityp. 153
The community of Christ : ideological transitionp. 205
Narrow views of Zion and anti-Zion spacep. 239
Independence classified : world precedentsp. 293
In a coming day : amelioration and pseudo-ecumenicalismp. 329
The main splinters of the early churchp. 361
Other early splinters and their descendentsp. 362
Splinters of the reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saintsp. 363
Splinters of the Church of Christ (temple lot)p. 364
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

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