
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
< Joseph Smith | Polygamy
Summary: Did another religious group from the 1830s--the "Cochranites"--act as the source for plural marriage in the LDS faith?
Jump to details:
There is no contemporaneous or late evidence that the Cochranites influenced LDS ideas about plural marriage. The little mention made of the Cochranites by Latter-day Saints was all negative.
Brain D. Hales has written an extensive essay on this claim. In it, he writes:
The interpretation that polygamy entered the Church in the 1830s through a Cochran connection is problematic because there is no contemporary evidence or even late recollections to support it. It appears that if polygamy was mentioned in Kirtland meetings, Church members undoubtedly would have condemned the practice and mentioned it in the journals and letters. The local press would have had a heyday exploiting such a controversial practice. Writers often point to the denials of polygamy from this period as evidence, but at that time, the Church was denying a lot of allegations. Oliver Cowdery wrote in the Messenger and Advocate in 1836: “It would be a Herculean task to point out the innumerable falsehoods and misrepresentations, sent out detrimental to this society. The tales of those days in which Witches were burnt, and the ridiculous inconsistencies of those who directed the building of the funeral pyre, could be no more absurd than the every-day tales, relative to the conduct and professions of the ‘Mormons.’” Proponents of Kirtland polygamy never quote the rumormongers because no such rumors have been found in private or published documents. Only the denials which they have distilled from longer lists of things Church leaders then denied are mentioned.[1]
Readers should consult the entire essay for further details.
The way this works is that
What makes this sound a little believable isn't the fact that there is any evidence for a connection, rather, the two practices largely come into existence for the same reasons. Cochranism seem to fit into the Restorationist movement which is a group of religious movements that shared the idea that a restoration of the gospel was necessary, a return to the practices of the Bible. As part of this, there is the idea that this (complete) restoration was necessary before the Second Coming, and that the adherents to these movements could speed up the advent by actively working to fulfill prophecy required before the second coming.
In this regard, both Cochranism and Mormonism engaged polygamy in the same way—as a restoration of something practiced earlier in the Bible. The same idea sits behind Mormonism's attempting to start the United Order and a number of other early teachings of the church (several of which were mirrored in other Cochranite teachings).
Because of its theology of restoration—coupled to real evidence of visions and priesthood (the Book of Mormon was considered one of these evidences)—Mormonism was quite popular among those who already participated in the Restorationist movement. Sidney Rigdon, for example, was a prominent preacher within the Stone-Campbell movement (another Restorationist church) when he joined Mormonism. One of his major disagreements with Campbell was over the extent to which modern Christians needed to follow the patterns that seemed to be laid out in the New Testament.
At any rate, the connection between Mormonism and the Cochranites seems to be first suggested in 1877 by a Samuel D. Greene. Greene was a Spalding theory advocate. His account makes a number of mistakes, including asserting that Solomon Spalding was still alive in 1827 and perhaps as late as 1829—the references which Greene had to Spalding refer not to the writer of the text that is sometimes suggested was a source for the Book of Mormon but rather to his cousin with the same name (the writer died in 1819). Among other things, Greene suggested in 1877 that:
McKingsbury was really named Oliver W. McKinstry, and his wife (Matilda) was the foster daughter of Spalding (the writer). Additionally, there was a preacher named James Cochran living in Batavia, New York between 1825 and 1830, who seems to be the source for the Cochrane mentioned here by Greene - but this Cochran had received his degree from the University of Glasgow in Scotland, and cannot possibly be the same Jacob Cochran from Maine who is the founder of the Cochranite movement. So, the source of this idea is very problematic. Despite historical problems, most of those who want to connect the two move forward with little concern for the details or plausibility of their reconstruction.
One thing we often forget is that Mormonism doesn't appear out of thin air. By 1840, there are more than 30,000 Mormons - and all of them had been something else prior to their becoming Mormon (we don't yet have any second generation Mormons). Many of the early converts came from this restorationist movement - they were looking for a church that was restored, and that claimed to be a restoration. When Cochran was arrested, most of his followers abandoned him. When many of these former Cochranites encountered Mormon missionaries years later, they joined the LDS church. But the same is also true of members of the Stone-Campbell movement (like Sidney Rigdon and much of his congregation) and others.
So on the one hand, we have some things in this claim that are accurate. We do have former Cochranites who join the church. Missionaries arrive in Maine first in June of 1832. And, in fact, between 1835 and 1847, more than 500 members of the church moved West from Maine (and it's likely that many of these were Cochranites—although it is hard for us to tell). The remaining members were asked to come to Utah by Brigham Young in 1850. But, against this backdrop, we also have the suggestion that Joseph first encounters biblical polygamy in his new translation of the Bible, and so starts to discuss this topic privately as early as 1831.
It appears that beginning in 1811, accusations of polygamy were levelled at the Church in general. Based upon assumptions that the law of consecration included a community of wives as one of its tenets, several of these charges were published. Understandably, Church leaders actively denied such allegations. |
Critical sources |
|
Notes
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
We are a volunteer organization. We invite you to give back.
Donate Now