April 9, 2026

3 thoughts on “Come Follow Me Week 7 – Doctrine and Covenants 12–13; Joseph Smith—History 1:66–75

  1. This is about the next week topic, but I wonder if you can help clarify these two stories:

    David wanted to go to Harmony immediately, but his father reminded him that he had two days of heavy work to do before he could leave. It was planting season, and David needed to plow twenty acres and enrich the soil with plaster of paris to help their wheat grow. His father said he ought to pray first to learn if it was absolutely necessary to leave now.

    David took his father’s advice, and as he prayed, he felt the Spirit tell him to finish his work at home before going to Harmony.

    The next morning, David walked out to the fields and saw rows of dark furrows in ground that had been unplowed the evening before. Exploring the fields further, he saw that about six acres had been plowed overnight, and the plow was waiting for him in the last furrow, ready for him to finish the job.

    David’s father was astonished when he learned what had happened. “There must be an overruling hand in this,” he said, “and I think you had better go down to Pennsylvania as soon as your plaster of paris is sown.”

    David worked hard to plow the remaining fields and prepare the soil for a successful planting. When he finished, he hitched his wagon to a strong team of horses and set out for Harmony earlier than expected.

    7 Fellow Servants
    Saints, Volume 1
    Restoration and Church History

    There are two different versions of what happened in the filed and where David received the divine help with.

  2. It looks like I did not include the second version:

    “David went to the field, and found that he had two heavy days’ work before him. … He then fastened his horses to the harrow, and instead of dividing the field into what is, by farmers, usually termed lands, drove around the whole of it, continuing thus till noon, when, on stopping for dinner, he looked around, and discovered to his surprise, that he had harrowed in full half the wheat. After dinner he went on as before, and by evening he finished the whole two days’ work.
    “His father, on going into the field the same evening, saw what had been done, and he exclaimed, ‘There must be an overruling hand in this, and I think you would better go down to Pennsylvania as soon as your plaster of paris is sown.’
    Lesson 20: Doctrine and Covenants 14–16
    Doctrine and Covenants and Church History Seminary Teacher Manual
    Seminary
    https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/manual/doctrine-and-covenants-and-church-history-seminary-teacher-manual-2014/section-0/lesson-20?lang=eng&verse=#p

  3. Varuzhan,

    On your question about different stories regarding David Whitmer, the second version is a quote from Lucy Mack Smith, and the first version is a summary from Lucy Mack Smith’s quote and a quote by David Whitmer. Although the two quotes differ in some details, they overall convey that David had divine help in accomplishing the work.

    I recommending reading the original quotes to learn more:

    Lucy Mack Smith quote: https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/lucy-mack-smith-history-1844-1845/100

    David Whitmer quote: https://catalog.churchofjesuschrist.org/assets/dca15baa-a0ac-4fc1-b2ec-7f3cd75e4906/0/43#churchofjesuschrist

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