The
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Shall
Never Be Moved
The Story of T.
T. Hinderks Who Was Given Divine Assurance that the RLDS Church
Would Not Fail
By Walter H. Cryer
Walter Cryer's introduction:
We all love to recount the angel's visit
to Brother Joseph, and so should we esteem of equal value the
rich experiences of those noble men of God who followed in his
footsteps.
The biography of Elder T. T. Hinderks will
undoubtedly be of inestimable value to many good souls within
the Church, and, I trust, the means of bringing many without
to a closer investigation of the latter-day message.
For this purpose is the ensuing sketch prepared,
and may God, in His benign way, add His blessing so that the
lesson portrayed in the life of our brother may indeed resound
to the glory of Zion.
It was my good fortune to become intimately
associated with a venerable old brother in Israel, Elder T.
T. Hinderks, father of the Maple Grove (Stewartsville) Branch.
As we sat talking together, my spiritual insight saw not the
age-worn frame of my brother, but a character likened unto the
Man of Galilee, who so loved the world that he gave his life
in service.
The modest demeanor
of the grand old man enamored me, when I stated the purpose
of my mission. A wistful look came into his eyes as he said,
"I have had some glorious experiences in the gospel, and
if you think they would help others, I will do my best to recount
them."
 |
High Priest Temme T. Hinderks, who was
assured that the Church would never fail. |
I was born in east Friesland, Germany, in the year 1855. My parents
were God-fearing people and members of the Baptist Church.
In the spring of 1866 we loaded up and emigrated to America.
Our objective was Burlington, Iowa. We located at Danville, about
twelve miles from Burlington, some time in March. At Danville
we settled down on a small farm. Our beginning was quite humble.
We were strangers among a strange people and could not speak the
English language.
In 1871, when I was sixteen years of age, I joined the Baptist
Church. Just at this time I had quite an unusual experience. The
Baptist people advocated that they believed God forgave sins and
all would be well. That puzzled me, and I could hardly believe
it. Although but a boy, I prayed much, so I asked the Lord to
send an angel to tell me if my sins were forgiven. I was then
a farmer boy, busy plowing in the field, and when I got to a place
where no one could see me but God, I would go on my knees and
plead for forgiveness and mercy.
One day after dinner I had a pleasant experience, and I have
reason to believe that it was the Spirit of God that came over
me in peace—heavenly peace—permeating the soul so
that I could not help but sing and rejoice in God and Christ,
for I really believed my sins were pardoned.
In 1872 I heard that Mormons (the term "Mormon" was
used generally in the early days to also include the RLDS Church
and its members) had come to Burlington, in charge of Elders J.
R. Lambert and John Lake, of the Quorum of Twelve.
One Sunday my brother Casper came over from Burlington and said
he had heard Elders Lambert and Lake preach, and they had given
him some tracts.
I could read English, so I took the tracts upstairs, and before
I began to investigate I, childlike, went to God upon my knees
and asked him for sufficient wisdom and light to discern between
truth and error, and I had a pencil and tablet and was going to
mark the errors. As I read, it just seemed as though the scales
fell from my eyes.... I was convinced that the gospel the Mormons
were advocating was true.
Something kept prompting me to go... There was an old Baptist
lady [Mrs. Hovenga] who was also interested ... and she asked
her husband to take her to hear them.
The Mormons were going to have a prayer meeting that afternoon
in a private house. We attended that meeting. Brother John Bauer
had charge. Next to me sat a young married man whom I knew, as
he had previously been a Baptist but had recently joined the [Reorganized]
Church of Latter Day Saints. His name was Otto, and he was considered
a fine fellow.
After the customary opening remarks had been made, the meeting
was given over to the Saints. A few prayers had been offered when
this man Otto arose. He was trembling all over, and I thought
that possibly he was worked up because I was there. Soon he started
to speak in an unknown tongue. This was the first time I had heard
anyone speak in an unknown tongue.
While this young man was speaking in this strange tongue, I
had a peculiar experience. I was seated directly against the wall,
and you may imagine how surprised I was to hear a voice at the
back of me say, 'This is my Spirit, and my servant is speaking
under the influence of my power."
This was all new to me. I was sitting against the wall, so I
could not see anyone [behind me], but the voice was very distinct
and plain. It came with such conviction that I had no room for
doubt.
On the twenty-fourth day of November 1872, Mrs. Hovenga and
I both went to Burlington and were baptized. A wonderful change
came into my life that day.
Prejudice was very high against the Mormons in this part of
the country at this time. Danville was populated mostly with Baptists,
and Sister Hovenga and I were the only Latter Day Saints there.
Shortly after our baptism, Sister Hovenga's husband came into
the Church.
The folks made all kinds of fun of me because I went to the
two old people's home and held prayer meetings with them. Up to
this time I had never prayed in public, and as I considered my
makeup was not that way, I listened to their prayers.
One night we three met together after I had been in the Church
several months, and old Brother Hovenga says to me, "Brother
Temme, won't you pray for us tonight? We would like to hear you
utter a short prayer." The words of our Master came to me
then, "Wherever two or three meet in my name, there will
I deign to be." I thought I could not pray openly, but finally,
to please these old people whom I loved and respected, I made
an effort, and that is where I received one of my first endowments.
While upon my knees praying, it seemed as if the very heavens
opened, and light came upon me. My tongue was loosened. When I
had finished, the old folks said that it was the most wonderful
prayer they had ever listened to.
This gave me courage, and was quite a testimony to me that God
was, and that the Church I had joined was indeed His Church, because
His promise was that whosoever accepted His doctrine and obeyed
it should know for himself.
We went to Burlington on Sunday and did not miss a meeting.
On one of these occasions the spirit of prophecy rested upon Elder
John Bauer, and turning to me he said, "The Lord has called
you to the office of teacher, that you might hold prayer meetings
in the country for the benefit of the few."
 |
| Apostle John H. Lake, who taught the gospel
to T. T. Hinderks and ordained him. |
I was ordained to the office of teacher in the year 1874 by Elders
John H. Lake and John Bauer. I was somewhat reluctant to accept
this responsibility, as I did not feel worthy; but I thought,
Well, this is a small office, so maybe the Lord will give me strength.
As the elders placed their hands upon my head to ordain me, the
Spirit of God rested upon Brother Bauer so much that he trembled,
and he began to speak in prophecy, outlining my life's work. He
stated that I should hold places of much responsibility in the
Church before my work was finished. This rested heavily upon me,
and I thought, O Lord, is it possible that I, a poor worm of the
dust, can ever occupy along these lines? But the prophecy has
since been fulfilled to the very letter.
Prejudice grew more bitter among the Baptists, as more members
were taken from their church.
One weekday evening we had a prayer meeting at the home of old
Brother and Sister Hovenga. I opened the meeting. Sometimes I
would read a part of a chapter and then make a few comments on
it, and then we would sing and pray and testify. Now the Baptist
people had not, up to this time, attended any of our meetings;
but just as I got ready to open this meeting, there came rushing
in five or six of the Baptist people, and one stranger whom I
did not know.
I was wonderfully surprised to see them come into the prayer
meeting. They sat down; the stranger sat opposite me, and I noticed
he was watching my every movement. During the meeting we got upon
our knees, but the Baptist people kept their seats. After the
prayer we sang another hymn. Then Sister Hinderks arose and spoke
in an unknown tongue. I felt the power of the Spirit of God that
was there, so I prayed within myself and said, "Lord, give
her also the interpretation of that tongue." It was quite
a lengthy tongue, and when she got through the Spirit of God rested
upon me so that I gave the interpretation of that tongue in German
to the people present. This was my first experience in interpreting
an unknown tongue.
As soon as the meeting was over, I expected to shake hands with
the Baptist people and the stranger and invite them back, but
they rushed out as if possessed, and did not say a word.
(The reader should keep this particular experience
in mind, for later in the narrative important reference will be
made to it.)
In the early part of 1876, during one of our weeknight prayer
services at the home of old Brother and Sister Hovenga, I was
blessed with the spirit of prophecy, the Lord instructing the
few saints at Danville to sell their property and move to the
land of Zion.
After the meeting was over, the saints gathered around me, asking
me to explain the full meaning of the message that had been given.
Up to this time I had never seen a Book of Mormon or Doctrine
and Covenants and did not know where the land of Zion was located.
At first I thought the Lord intended that we should move to Palestine,
where the New Jerusalem was to be, and it worried me for awhile.
Then the thought came to me to write to Brother Joseph, the prophet,
who was at Plano, Illinois, at that time. This I did, setting
out the prophecy word for word, as near as I could recall. In
time I received a nice letter from him, stating that it was the
Lord's wish that we move towards the land of Zion. He suggested
that we move to Stewartsville, Missouri, as he had made a survey
of the land there and was anxious to see a number of saints locate
in that part of the country.
Acting in harmony with the advice given us by Brother Joseph,
we came out here [Stewartsville] in the fall of 1876 and purchased
property, as that part of Missouri suited us.
There were a number of German saints located in this part of
the country when we moved here. They were holding services in
a little house at a little distance due east of the present location
of the Maple Grove Church.
In the spring of 1877 we organized the German DeKalb Branch.
The organization was effected on Wednesday, April 25, with six
members present, by Apostle T. W. Smith and Elder James Kemp.
At this meeting I was called and ordained to the office of priest,
and my brother Henry to the office of teacher. The Lord stated
through the Spirit of prophecy that if we lived faithfully, He
would bring in people from other directions, and that the branch
would grow and be greatly blessed.
Shortly after the branch was organized, a large number of Lutherans,
Methodists, and Baptists attended our services regularly, and
it was not long before they were baptized. So our numbers increased
steadily, in harmony with the prophecy given.
These meetings were conducted in German. One Sunday afternoon
I walked from my home to the schoolhouse, feeling very blue. My
mind was entirely blank, and I had no subject ready. When I got
there in time for the services to begin, I had no one to open
the meeting for me. There was no trouble in getting the American
brethren to assist, but everything had to be done in German that
day. So the whole burden fell upon me. In my discouragement I
prayed, "O Lord, you know my needs. I am here to represent
you, and I depend upon your mercy." While I was whispering
this prayer, the time came to open the meeting.
There was a large crowd present that day. After the opening
hymn I offered the prayer, and I prayed earnestly to God to bless
us that day. After singing another hymn, I arose to lay out the
line of thought I had decided to discuss, when all at once such
a pleasant, sweet feeling came over me that it seemed to lift
me from my feet for the time being. When I began to talk, new
thoughts came to my mind, and the Spirit of God rested upon me
in much power and liberty. Never before had I been blessed in
my preaching to such a degree.
A little after I had commenced preaching, I noticed that a middle-aged
lady came in and sat towards the rear of the congregation. After
the meeting this lady came to me and said, "I wonder who
that person was standing at your side in the stand? He was a stranger
to me, and as soon as you finished that wonderful sermon he disappeared."
With thankfulness in my heart I said, "Surely the Lord has
sent an angel to help me in my time of need." Tears came
into the lady's eyes, and she said, "Yes, that is true. I
want to be baptized." I baptized her that evening.
One Sunday afternoon, during a prayer meeting, a prophecy was
directed to me that I should go back to Danville and preach the
gospel, as there was a special work for me to do at that place.
To me that prophecy looked as dark as midnight. I could not
understand it, knowing that the people there were prejudiced.
I hurried out of the meeting and sought seclusion, saying to myself,
That cannot be just right. While I was thus meditating, the Spirit
of God said to me, "I, the Lord, have a people there, and
they will obey my gospel."
When I reached home my wife told me that she had received evidence
that the prophecy was true, and she appeared to have much confidence
in it.
So I decided to take the Lord at his word. I had no light myself,
and it looked dark to me, as the people would not come near us
while we were there before.
We were handicapped financially, and I had to borrow the money
for railroad fare. I took the midnight train to Danville, but
I did not sleep, as I was wondering where I would get an opportunity
to preach, as the people there had shunned us before.
When I got off the train, I started out on foot to a house some
five miles north of Danville to some people I knew, and where
I thought I could stay. When I had walked about three quarters
of a mile, I saw a man coming towards me. The closer I got to
him, the more I wondered who he could be. When we got near enough
to distinguish each other, he stopped and addressed me, saying,
"Well, are you just in fresh from Missouri?" After telling
him that I was, he asked if it was my intention to do any preaching
in Danville. I told him I would like to if I could find a suitable
place. "Well," he said, "you can use my house to
hold services in."
This man was one of the five Baptists who had
come to the prayer meeting we held some years before in the home
of old Brother and Sister Hovenga, and he was one of the most
bitterly prejudiced in Danville. He had threatened to drive the
"Mormons" into the Mississippi River if they made any
converts.
It was a shock to me when he told me I could use his house for
preaching purposes. He also offered to announce throughout the
neighborhood that services would be held the following night.
At half past seven I was greatly surprised to find the house
full of Baptists. I preached to them and made an appointment for
the following night.
The next day I had a visit with my host, a Mr. Hamann, and then
he told me about the prayer meeting we held several years before
when the five Baptists and a stranger came rushing in. I inquired
after the stranger, and he told me that he was a young man just
over from Hamburg, Germ any, who had been educated in many different
languages. The Baptists had taken him to the prayer meeting, as
they had heard that the Latter Day Saints spoke in unknown tongues
and they thought they would be able to prove by this educated
German that we were frauds.
The young man's name was Elbert Maine. After the meeting the
Baptists hurried out and surrounded him, asking, "Did you
understand anything that lady said who pretended to speak in an
unknown tongue?" Mr. Maine thought a little while; then he
said, "I do not know these people, nor do I believe there
is a God or a Devil, as I am an infidel of the worst kind. But
if this young lady who spoke in tongues, and the young man who
gave the interpretation in German, know nothing of the Hebrew
language, then there is a power present I cannot understand. The
interpretation was given word for word."
This impressed old Mr. Hamann, for he went on to say, 'That
set me studying, and I said to myself, 'Is it possible that we
are fighting against God and His truth?' From that time on I had
a desire, when you moved away, that you should come back so that
I might hear the gospel in its fullness."
The Lord fulfilled the prophecy to the letter, for I baptized
this man and his wife and many others from the congregation of
the Baptist Church.
 |
| Apostle Jason Briggs, whose adverse
statements caused Brother Hinderks to doubt and pray—which
resulted in this receiving the spiritual dream. |
In 1884 General Conference was held in Stewartsville. (Joseph
Smith III described this stormy conference in his memoirs, found
in The Saints' Herald, January 28,
1936, page 210.) Among other leading men of the Church present
at this conference was Apostle Jason W. Briggs. He came over to
my house several times and told me about some of the conditions
in Nauvoo.
He got me to doubting a little about some of the things of the
Reorganization, and I got to the point where I thought I would
make it a subject of prayer, for the Lord knew I wanted to do
right and be with the right people.
Sometime after the conference was over, I had the following
dream:
I was at the Maple Grove Church and was to preach there at
the eleven o'clock hour. While I was on the platform, getting
ready to open the meeting, the door on the east side opened,
and Brother Joseph [Smith III] came in accompanied by another
man, a stranger to me. This was a pleasant-looking man, about
middle age. I walked up to the prophet and said, "Well,
Brother Joseph, I am glad you have come; you are just in time
to give us a good sermon. We are all glad to see you."
I had been associated with Brother Joseph quite a good deal,
and knew he lost no time in introducing his friends to each
other, but this stranger stood behind him and Joseph did not
say a word about him. I thought this strange, and as the prophet
walked down the aisle, shaking hands with different ones, I
went up to the stranger and said, "I guess I will have
to make myself acquainted with you. T. T. Hinderks is my name."
The stranger looked at me and said pleasantly, "My name
is Wonderful."
This struck me very forcibly, and I mused, "Wonderful.
Who can this man be?" He followed Brother Joseph down the
aisle, and when they got to the front of the building He raised
His right hand and laid it on Joseph's shoulder. Then He turned
to me and said, "This is the true Prophet of God."
He continued, "Do you see that over there?" pointing
on the east side of our building, where there was a rock about
three quarters of a foot square. The rock was rough in places,
but in the center of the rock there was resting a piece of pure
white marble, a square piece placed in the solid rock. He asked,
"Do you see that?" I said, "Yes, sir." Then
He said, "That piece of white marble resting in that head
of rock is the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints. It shall never be moved."
I was then president of the branch, and this personage, "Wonderful,"
spoke to me regarding some duties He wanted me to attend to,
but I cannot remember them now.
When He finished speaking I awoke, but that dream or vision
is just as plain to me this morning as it was when I had it that
night. It was an answer to my prayer, and convinced me that I
was with the true Church.
Conclusion
For some fifteen years, in addition to his pastoral
responsibilities of the German DeKalb Branch, Brother Hinderks
was appointed and worked efficiently as president of the Far West
District. Later he was ordained to the office of high priest,
and still later he for many years served as a member of the Standing
High Council of the Church, a position calling for men of much
wisdom and high integrity.
Temme T. Hinderks passed from this earthly realm
on the 14th day of January 1928, at the age of seventy-two years.
"How beautiful it is for a man to die on
the walls of Zion! To be called like a watch-worn and weary sentinel,
to put his armor off and rest in heaven."
Thus we are permitted to see that throughout
the life of Elder T. T. Hinderks the Christ Spirit emanated. In
his ministrations as a disciple of our Lord and Savior, he was
ever humble and faithful. Though at times perplexed because of
existing conditions, not once did he forsake the path of duty,
the road which led to the beautiful city he had once seen in company
with a heavenly messenger.
[The above article is excerpted from the "Memoirs of T.
T. Hinderks," which were compiled by Walter H. Cryer. It
is taken from Zion's Ensign, February
2,1928, pp.67–72; February 9, 1928, pp. 87–91; and
February 16, 1928, pp. 105–109.] |