Like A Fiery Meteor: The Life Of Joseph F. Smith W/ Stephen Taysom

Stephen Betts | Collection: Podcasts

This episode of the podcast, Scholars & Saints, features a Cleveland State University religious studies professor, Dr. Stephen C. Taysom. The podcast focuses on "former Latter-day Saint president Joseph F. Smith. The nephew of church founder, Joseph Smith, Jr., Joseph F. Smith witnessed many of the most striking events of early Mormonism from his childhood in Nauvoo, to his adolescence on the Midwestern plains, to the settlement of the Great Basin in Utah, and more. A complex figure, Smith was known as much for his courage as for his temper. He was supremely confident and privately insecure. He was a committed polygamist, and yet he was responsible for transitioning the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints into a new era of exclusive monogamy. In this episode we’ll discuss Smith’s complicated life and reflect on what it means to apply the methods of religious studies to biography.”

Dublin Core

Title

Like A Fiery Meteor: The Life Of Joseph F. Smith W/ Stephen Taysom

Date

2021-05-27

Language

Date Created

2020-12-30

Audience Education Level

Spatial Coverage

United States [n-us]
Utah [n-us-ut]

Abstract

This episode of the podcast, Scholars & Saints, features a Cleveland State University religious studies professor, Dr. Stephen C. Taysom. The podcast focuses on "former Latter-day Saint president Joseph F. Smith. The nephew of church founder, Joseph Smith, Jr., Joseph F. Smith witnessed many of the most striking events of early Mormonism from his childhood in Nauvoo, to his adolescence on the Midwestern plains, to the settlement of the Great Basin in Utah, and more. A complex figure, Smith was known as much for his courage as for his temper. He was supremely confident and privately insecure. He was a committed polygamist, and yet he was responsible for transitioning the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints into a new era of exclusive monogamy. In this episode we’ll discuss Smith’s complicated life and reflect on what it means to apply the methods of religious studies to biography.”

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