Ezra Booth

Ezra Booth (February 14, 1792 – January 1873) was an early member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who became an outspoken critic of Joseph Smith and the Church of Christ.

Booth was born in Newton, Connecticut. He had been a popular Methodist minister before going to Kirtland, Ohio with John and Elsa Johnson in 1831. After witnessing Joseph Smith heal Elsa's arm, Booth became a convert and was baptized and ordained an elder in May 1831 and was ordained to be a high priest by Lyman Wight on June 3, 1831.[1]

On June 6, 1831, Booth was called to go to Missouri with Isaac Morley and preach the word “by the way”.[2] Booth began his mission by preaching the Book of Mormon to a large audience in Bates Corners, Norton Township, Ohio in June 1831. On August 4, 1831, Booth was one of fourteen elders attending the "Special Conference" in Kaw township, Jackson County, Missouri called by Joseph Smith.[3]

On September 6, 1831, Booth was "silenced from preaching as an Elder" by Smith, Sidney Rigdon, Oliver Cowdery, and others. Smith stated that to be because of Booth's dissension towards the leaders of the church, and his apparent lack of humility.[4] Booth had apparently expected that he would convert people through the performance of miracles, as had been his experience with Smith. When no miracles were forthcoming, he became disillusioned.[5] A revelation came to Smith a few days later, and stated that

I, the Lord, was angry with him who was my servant Ezra Booth, and also my servant Isaac Morley, for they kept not the law, neither the commandment; they sought evil in their hearts.… They condemned for evil that thing in which there was no evil; nevertheless I have forgiven my servant Isaac Morley.[6]

Less than three days after being "silenced from preaching as an Elder" and after being a member for only five months, Booth renounced Mormonism in the first of nine letters to be published in the Ohio Star, beginning in November 1831.[5] Booth's letters focused on three main types of criticism:[5] (1) inconsistencies he saw in Smith's revelations, (2) the "despotic" behavior of the church itself, and (3) the personal weaknesses in Smith and other church leaders. In Norton Township (the area to which Booth was sent on his mission), the effect of Booth's letters is such that "the public feeling was, that 'Mormonism' was overthrown"[7] until Reynolds Cahoon, David Whitmer, and Lyman E. Johnson arrived on a mission. Booth's letters were reprinted by E. D. Howe in his 1834 book Mormonism Unvailed.[5]

Information about Booth after 1831 is scarce. However, he married a couple in Mentor, Ohio on January 16, 1832, and later created the "Church of Christ." His Church of Christ adopted many principles from Mormonism and Restoration Christianity but taught that Smith was a false prophet and that the Book of Mormon was not true. The church had several meetings and soon disbanded. In 1865, Booth moved to Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio.

Booth is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Cuyahoga Falls, not far from the Johnson home in Hiram. He was buried on January 12, 1873, but the precise date of his death is unknown.

Notes

  1. Johnson, Luke (1864), "The History of Luke Johnson (by himself)", in Wells, Daniel H. (ed.), Millennial Star, No. 53, 26, London: Latter-Day Saints' Book Depot, p. 834
  2. Doctrine and Covenants 52:23.
  3. Special Conference held by special commandment of the Lord. Archived October 19, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  4. Smith, Joseph (September 1, 2004), "XVI. The Founding of Zion", in Roberts, B. H. (ed.), History of Church, 1, Deseret Book, p. 216
  5. Dennis Rowley, "The Ezra Booth Letters", Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 16(3) (Autumn 1983): 133–39.
  6. Doctrine and Covenants 64:15–16.
  7. Van Wagoner, Richard S. (1994), "Tarred and Feathered", Sidney Rigdon: A Portrait of Religious Excess, Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, p. 110, ISBN 1-56085-030-2, retrieved July 28, 2010, [Cited from the] Journal History (31 Dec. 1831) -- multi-volume daily history of the church compiled by official church historians
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