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Hannah
Tapfield King states that there were problems in the Tabernacle during early
Utah. What were the problems she saw?
a.
The acoustics
b.
The sermons
c.
Vanity and folly
d.
Lack of air flow
Yesterday’s
answer:
A.
The images of Joseph and
Hyrum Smith
The
missionaries descended the steep slopes, reaching Torre Pellice at dusk after a
physically exhausting but spiritually exhilarating day. A new chapter was
opening in the Italian Mission, and [Lorenzo] Snow took care to mark the
transition from a private to a public posture with a symbolic act: “As a sign
to all who might visit us, we nailed to the wall of my chamber the likenesses
of Joseph and Hyrum Smith. From that day opportunities began to occur for
proclaiming our message.” Over the next seventeen years, before the mission
closed in 1867, approximately 180 Waldensian converts joined the Church, and
about seventy of them emigrated to Utah in three separate companies during the
1850s. Among these Italian settlers were the Beus, Malan, Bertoch, Chatelain,
Cardon, Pons, Stalle, and Gaudin families, who became prominent on Utah life.
Terryl
L. Givens and Matthew J. Grow, Parley P. Pratt: The Apostle Paul of Mormonsim.,
BYU Studies, Vol. 51, Number 2, 2012,
90.
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