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A Home of Prayer
By Pamela Price
The home of Joseph and Emma Smith was a home of prayer. In later
years, their son Joseph III spoke of the time previous to his
father’s death. He stated, “We always had family prayers
evening and morning, and the whole family would be present at
evening and morning prayers; yes,...always” (Temple
Lot Case, page 486).
The Homestead was built of logs and was one of the few houses
standing when the Saints arrived in Nauvoo in the spring of 1839.
When Joseph and Emma moved into the Homestead, it had only two
rooms—a small one on the main floor and an attic above.
In 1840 Joseph added to the north side of the building what became
a kitchen-living room combination—the room depicted in this
painting.
Joseph III had this to say about the new room,
It was one-story and but a single room, built of native lumber—oak
siding and studding, rived lath and shaven shingles—but
it gave us three rooms, the two in the old part being used for
sleeping rooms above and below, and the new one, a rather large
room as rooms were counted then, becoming the family living
room. It had a fireplace in its north end which, with a roaring
fire in cold weather, made it very comfortable’ (Saints’
Herald, December 18, 1934, page 1611).
Scenes such as the one depicted here occurred while Joseph and
Emma resided at the Homestead. Christmas carols and Restoration
hymns no doubt filled the air as the family sang praises to God
at worship time. At other times this north room overflowed with
visitors, who met for preaching services, business meetings, and
prayer meetings. At such times the room rang with hymns of praise
to God.
A number of writers who visited in the Smith home spoke of Emma’s
lovely hymn singing. She knew the hymns by heart and sang them
as she worked about the home. She also often led the singing in
church services. God had recognized her musical talents and called
her to make a “selection of sacred hymns, to be had in my
church” (Doctrine and Covenants 24:3). Emma’s first
selection was published in 1835, and an enlarged second edition
was published in 1841. Some years later she selected hymns for
the first hymnal which was published after Young Joseph became
Prophet-President at Amboy in 1860.
The Church’s music meant much to the entire Smith family.
The first prophet of the Church was poetic, and several of his
poems are still extant. Three of his sons—Joseph, Alexander,
and David—lived to join with the Reorganization and become
members of the First Presidency. All were gifted with beautiful
singing voices. David and Joseph III were prolific hymn writers.
The Saints’ Harp, the Church hymnal published in
1870, contains at least fifty hymns written by David and thirty-five
by Joseph III. Surely their love of the Church’s music was
enhanced by the worship settings provided jointly by their mother
and father in the few years that they lived in the Homestead (1839–1842).
And after Joseph’s martyrdom, Emma continued the practice
of singing and praying with the children.
The Christmas of 1841 was one of rejoicing for the Smith family,
for some of their earlier Christ-mases had been ones of sorrow
and hardship. During the Christmas season of 1837, they had lived
at Kirtland. The Church was divided, and mobs were threatening
Joseph’s life. A few days after Christmas Joseph and Emma
had to flee with their children to escape the mobs both within
and without the Church. They traveled eight hundred miles by covered
wagon in extremely cold weather during January, February, and
March, to find a new home with the Saints at Far West, Missouri.
The Christmas of 1838 found Joseph and other Church leaders
imprisoned at Liberty Jail in Liberty, Missouri. The governor
had issued a decree that the Saints were either to leave the State
of Missouri or be exterminated. Emma was struggling to get her
four children out of the state to safety. The oldest one was then
six and the youngest seven months. Emma and the children crossed
Missouri in a wagon in freezing rain and snow. Upon reaching the
frozen Mississippi River, it was feared that the heavy team and
wagon would break through the ice. So she walked ahead of the
team across the frozen river to Quincy, Illinois. She was carrying
two babies, while the two older children clung to her skirt.
The Christmas of 1839 was also trying for the family. They lived
at the Homestead in Nauvoo with its two small rooms, but Joseph
was away. He had gone to Washington, D. C., to appeal to the federal
government for the right to reclaim the Church properties in Missouri.
He did not return until March of 1840.
The Christmases of 1840 and 1841 were better for the Smiths.
They were together in comparative peace, able to laugh, to play,
to study the Word of God, to sing the Lord’s praises, and
to pray prayers of thankfulness for their Heavenly Father’s
protection and abundant blessings—both those already received
and those yet to come.

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