Gen. Doniphan and Disobedience and Integrity
Posted: Tue Oct 05, 2021 2:14 pm
I found this remarkable statement while reading through old "Dialogue." magazines. It is worth repeating. (Thanks W.L.Williamson)
In the Church I have never heard talks about personal conscience, about the risks of abdicating personal conscience to those in authority, about the dangers of Dachau, Jonestown, the Inquisition, My Lai, or Mountain Meadows. Juanita Brooks in The Mountain Meadows Massacre (Norman, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 1962) suggests that there were dissenters at Mountain Meadows who fired their guns in the air (p. 74). How many lives would have been saved if only one man had stood up and said as did General Alexander W. Doniphan when ordered to shoot Joseph Smith, "It is cold-blooded murder. I will not obey your order.... if you execute these men, I will hold you responsible before an earthly tribunal, so help me God" (Comprehensive History of the Church 1: 490.) Integrity does not count the personal cost; it is the ultimate value to which we owe our obedience, and all else must give way before it. (W.L. Williamson, "Dialogue," 1987, v. 4, 'Letters.')
In the Church I have never heard talks about personal conscience, about the risks of abdicating personal conscience to those in authority, about the dangers of Dachau, Jonestown, the Inquisition, My Lai, or Mountain Meadows. Juanita Brooks in The Mountain Meadows Massacre (Norman, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 1962) suggests that there were dissenters at Mountain Meadows who fired their guns in the air (p. 74). How many lives would have been saved if only one man had stood up and said as did General Alexander W. Doniphan when ordered to shoot Joseph Smith, "It is cold-blooded murder. I will not obey your order.... if you execute these men, I will hold you responsible before an earthly tribunal, so help me God" (Comprehensive History of the Church 1: 490.) Integrity does not count the personal cost; it is the ultimate value to which we owe our obedience, and all else must give way before it. (W.L. Williamson, "Dialogue," 1987, v. 4, 'Letters.')