1978
A Hero to Follow: A Promise Fulfilled
December 1978


“A Hero to Follow: A Promise Fulfilled,” Friend, Dec. 1978, 44

A Hero to Follow:
A Promise Fulfilled

“Do you get to see the golden plates very often, Joseph?” seven-year-old Carlos asked as they chopped kindling in the woodlot. Carlos had been wondering about the Lamanites Joseph had spoken of during their family time.

Joseph stopped in the middle of an upswing and let his axe fall among the dry November leaves. His warm smile rested on the youngest brother. “I’ve only seen them once, Carlos, but the angel Moroni said I was to go to the Hill Cumorah every year on exactly the same date—the twenty-second day of September—until the time comes for me to translate them.” Then Joseph grew thoughtful. Until I can keep all the requirements of the Lord, he reminded himself.

Carlos pulled on his sleeve. “What will you be doing on all the regular days in between, Joseph?”

“Working on the farm with Father and our brothers. And you, too, Carlos,” he assured him, patting the younger boy’s woolen cap. “Sometimes, though, I’ll need to hire out to help earn money for payments on the farm.”

Carlos’s eyes widened as an awesome thought struck him. “What if … what if you were far away from the hill on that special day in September?” He sucked in his breath, until Joseph answered firmly, “If I had to cross an ocean, Carlos, I’d keep that appointment with the angel Moroni.”

Joseph knew his life had been changed beyond the telling by his call from the Lord. What he couldn’t know was all that lay ahead in the next four years.

Just a few days after Joseph’s talk with Carlos in the woodlot, Alvin lay desperately ill. At the sound of a door opening, Joseph’s glance flew in the direction of the sleeping room where his oldest brother had lain for three days in pain and distress. “How is he, Mother?” he inquired anxiously as Lucy emerged from the sickroom.

“Not good, Joseph. Not good at all.” She pushed back a wisp of hair from her pale face and studied the strings of herbs hanging from the rafters as though to find a remedy that would heal her beloved firstborn. “The doctors have tried everything they know. But nothing helps, Joseph. Nothing!” She shook her head hopelessly, and for a moment hid her face in her apron. When she looked up, an ashen calm had settled over her. “Alvin has called for each of you to come to his bedside.” Her voice trailed away to a whisper. “He wants to say good-bye.”

Joseph thought he couldn’t bear to see Alvin so white and still. Alvin, whom they all looked to, whose great strong arms had felled huge trees and had gently lifted Baby Lucy high up to the rafters. Now his eyes burned feverishly, and his tired voice rose and fell in a last farewell to each loved one.

He asked Hyrum to see that the new house was finished for their parents and admonished Sophronia to take care of them in their old age. He talked to each one in turn—Sam and William, then Catherine and Carlos. Each brother and sister listened with tear-filled eyes and heavy heart.

Then, calling Joseph to his bedside, Alvin leaned forward. “My time is short, Joseph. Be a good boy and do everything in your power to obtain the record.” His voice became stronger, urgent. “Be faithful to every instruction and keep every commandment given you.” There were a few more words and then Alvin, sinking back upon the pillow, asked for Baby Lucy, his little playmate sister.

“Oh, Amby, Amby!” she cried again and again, her wet cheek against his and her tiny arms wrapped tightly around his neck as though to rouse his once-strong body.

But as quietly as a clock stops ticking, Alvin’s great heart stopped beating. Outside a star fell and the night was darker than before.

Everyone in the neighborhood grieved over Alvin’s death. “A noble young man,” they said. And in the family there was an emptiness that didn’t ease.

Joseph shivered in the December wind as he helped pile earth and straw against the foundations of their log house to keep out the winter blasts. Less than three months had passed since Joseph’s visit with the angel Moroni, but the world about him had changed from burnished leaf to barren bough, and soon a cold whiteness would cover the ground.

His world had changed too. Where before he had felt vibrantly alive, every sense sharpened and intensified, there was now an actual physical ache as though part of him had been amputated. If I had lost my leg long ago, it couldn’t hurt worse, he thought numbly.

Then one evening Father Smith ignored the tightening in his throat. “Maybe we should talk about it—about Alvin,” he said gently. “He was taken from us in the bloom of youth, but the Lord was good when he sent Alvin to our family.” He dabbed the moisture from his eyes. “Life does take up after trial and tribulation.”

“Alvin was the one who started the new house,” Sam began.

“He told me to be a good girl and to help Mother and Father,” added Catherine.

Joseph didn’t know if it were proper to tell about the time he and Alvin were in a crowd watching two Irishmen fight. He remembered that when one was about to gouge out the other’s eyes, Alvin took him by his collar and breeches and threw him over the ring. But aloud, he only said: “Alvin stood for the right. He was the strongest and bravest of all.”

Winter melted into spring. It was time to mend the fences and stone walls that marked the boundaries of the Smith farm. In the grinding labor of plowing, sowing, and cultivating, there was no time for Joseph to rest. But there was time for pondering the things the angel had taught him. He would resolve with every fiber of his being to become worthy of such a trust.

Joseph still longed to share his thoughts with Alvin. But gradually he discovered that though his yearning need to talk with him didn’t diminish, his grief subsided. As the shoots of pale green pushed up through the black earth, Joseph took comfort in a new closeness to God and his creations. Never had the violets seemed so velvety, the leaves so tender, the birdsongs so poignant. Laboring with his hands day after day, he felt himself growing in strength and power. And always there was the awareness of the high hill and the records and the angel Moroni. Four years seemed forever. Even one September to another was a lifetime.

Finally it was September 22, 1824, and Joseph gazed again on the wonderful gold record. By now he felt certain he could keep all the requirements of God. Maybe this time I can bring the plates back with me, he thought hopefully. As he lifted up the record, it darted through his mind that there might be something else of value in the stone box and that he should cover it. He very carefully laid the plates down upon the ground, and after covering the box, he turned again to pick up the record. It was gone! Cold fear gripped him. Frantically he knelt and began to pray. As he did so, the angel Moroni appeared and reminded Joseph he had forgotten the instructions and had been careless with the plates. After talking further with Joseph, the angel again permitted him to raise the stone top and view the plates. But this time as Joseph reached in to take them, he was hurled violently to the ground. When he picked himself up, the angel was gone.

Tears streamed down Joseph’s face. He was bitterly disappointed with himself. How could he have been so careless, to have forgotten for a single instant the angel’s instructions!

As he sorrowfully made his way home along the Canandaigua Road, his toe hit a sharp rock. He bent over and picked it up. “I am like that stone,” he cried aloud in the thickening dusk, “a rough stone in need of the hammer and chisel.” He clenched his fists in despair. “The Lord needs a polished shaft to serve him and I have so much to learn,” he acknowledged humbly. Now he knew he must wait patiently for the beginning of the great work assigned to him.

The new home was just about ready for the Smith family in October, 1825, when Joseph went to work in Harmony, Pennsylvania. It was there he met Emma Hale, oldest daughter of Isaac and Elizabeth Hale. The tilt of her head and her sweet singing voice entranced Joseph. Unexpectedly he found himself more lighthearted than he had been for some time.

Their friendship deepened into love. A sweet peace filled Joseph. “You know how lonely I have been since Alvin died,” he confided to his parents. “Emma has lifted that loneliness. She is my choice above all others.”

Father Smith put his arm around Joseph’s shoulder. “We are happy for you, Joseph!” he exclaimed sincerely.

“You must bring her here to live in our new home with us,” Lucy added warmly.

They were married in January, 1827, a little over a year from their first meeting, and the year in which Joseph would receive the record. Their life together was to be one of great contrasts—Emma, with her gentle dignity and bewitching dark eyes, and Joseph, tall like his father, with his compelling blue eyes enfolding her in warmth and tenderness.

It was a proud Joseph who took his bride home to his family. The pathway to the big house was swept of snow and the window panes sparkled in the bright winter sunshine. Inside, every chair and table and floor was scrubbed and shining, and savory smells hinted at delicious food prepared and waiting.

“She sure has pretty hair,” approved William as Father and Mother Smith opened their arms in welcome. The rest followed with affectionate hugs and handclasps while little Lucy, now over five years old, curtsied shyly. In response, Emma flashed a smile of appreciation to each one. The family circle widened to include Emma in its love and concern.

Emma kept busy at home and Joseph once again took up his labors on the farm. One early spring day Joseph went to Manchester on business for his father. Father Smith expected him back by six in the evening. The hour came and went, but no Joseph. Father Smith paced the floor and Lucy carded wool, a task that kept her hands busy but not her mind. She feared that Joseph might be in danger!

It was late at night when Joseph arrived home and fell into a chair exhausted. Father Smith couldn’t contain his anxiety. “Where have you been these last hours?”

Several minutes went by before Joseph explained that as he passed by the Hill Cumorah, the angel Moroni appeared and told him it was almost time for the record to be brought forth. “Father, I know what I must do, so all will be well.”

At length the final September arrived. The boy had become a man, almost twenty-two now. With both fear and joy Joseph climbed the familiar hill where the plates were buried—fear that he might fail the Lord, joy in the miracle that had come to him.

Joseph was not aware of the gold cover of leaves on the ground as he descended the hill. He thought only of the golden plates he carried in his arms and the heavenly messenger’s final warning as he delivered them up to him. It rang in his ears. He, Joseph, was now responsible for the plates and must guard them with his life if need be, for the angel Moroni had told him that wicked men would use every evil scheme possible to steal them.

The last part of Moroni’s instruction comforted Joseph—that if he were faithful to his trust the plates would be safe. But fearful that someone might have seen him, Joseph searched the woods for a temporary hiding place. He found it in a fallen birch log. Joseph cut out part of its decayed interior and hid the plates inside, covering the opening with bark and leaves.

Supposing that the plates were safe for the time being, the next day Joseph went to work in a neighboring town. But that very day Father Smith overheard some men plotting to steal the plates. Alarmed, he hurried home to tell Lucy and Emma.

Concealing her own fear, Emma was reassuring: “If Joseph is to keep the record, he will and no one can stop him.”

“Yes,” Father Smith answered solemnly, “he will, if he is watchful and obedient; but remember that for a small thing, Esau lost his birthright and his blessing. It may be so with Joseph.”

Emma went for her shawl and bonnet, her dark eyes flashing. “There’s no time to be lost. I’ll ride immediately and warn Joseph!”

By afternoon Joseph had retraced his way through the woods to the fallen log. Shadowy light filtered through the branches overhead and a lone birdcall accentuated the stillness as he took the plates from their hiding place. Carefully he wrapped them in his linen frock.

For a time he traveled the open road, but then thinking there might be danger, he returned to the woods. His pounding heart seemed to thunder from tree to tree.

And, indeed, as he hurried through the woods with his precious burden, his fears were realized. Three times Joseph was attacked on his way home. But each time, clutching the record tightly to him, he gathered all his strength and with powerful muscles threw off his enemies. He wasn’t even aware he had broken his thumb in the struggles until he sank down, panting and utterly exhausted, in his own front yard. But the plates were safe.

Joseph had been called to translate the plates, to establish the gospel of Jesus Christ once again on the earth. He was to be a prophet. And Joseph knew, with a mighty surge of exultation, that no obstacle, no temptation, no persecution could keep him from his appointed destiny.

Illustrated by Jerry Thompson