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After the death of her husband in 1882, Jane Paterson Brough and
her daughter, Emily were called to serve a temple mission in Logan. After this
mission was completed, Jane enrolled in school. What school did she enroll in?
a.
Deseret University
b.
Brigham Young Academy
c.
Joseph Smith school of Nursing
d.
LDS Business College
Yesterday’s answer:
B Hiding them under the hoops of their skirts
The autobiography of Cordelia Calista Morley Cox also demonstrates
the manner in which LDS women used visions to gain authority. Cox converted to
Mormonism with her family in 1831 in Kirtland, Ohio. More than a decade later,
while living in Nauvoo, Illinois, Cox and her community experienced persecution
from non-Mormons. In about 1846, she privately sought refuge in prayer when non-Mormons
told her that her religion “was false” and that she “had been deceived.” She
wrote, “I began to worry and to wonder if I had in these ears been so deceived,
I longed for a testimony from my Father in Heaven, to know for myself whether I
was right or wrong.” Cox described the dream that she had one night after
praying for such a testimony: “I thought I was in the midst of a multitude of
people. President Young arose and spoke to the people. He then said there would
be [a] spirit go around to whisper comfort in the ear of everyone. All was
silent as death as I sat. Then the spirit came to me and whispered in my ear
these words, ‘Don’t ever change your condition or wish it otherwise,’ for I was
better off than thousands and thousands of others.” Cox thus came to peace with
this issue. She wrote, “The Lord has been my guide; in Him I put my trust.”
Cox’s dream demonstrates the importance these women placed on seeking answers
to problems for themselves and their belief in the power of religious mechanisms,
like the dreams and visions used by LDS leaders. These women may not have had
powerful positions within the LDS Church; but to help them understand the
faith, they used the same methods as the male leadership. In Cox’s dream, her
certitude came as she listened in faith to Brigham Young’s promise that a
spirit would speak comfort to her.
Katherine Sarah Massoth, “Writing An Honorable Remembrance:
Nineteenth-Century LDS Women’s Autobiography,” Journal of Mormon History, Spring
2013, 132-133.
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