Charles B. Thompson

Charles B. Thompson
Portrait of Charles B Thompson
Founder of the Congregation of Jehovah’s Presbytery of Zion
1848 – 1858
Personal details
BornCharles Blancher Thompson
(1814-01-27)January 27, 1814
Niskayuna, New York, United States
DiedFebruary 27, 1895(1895-02-27) (aged 81)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Resting placeGreenmount Cemetery
40°01′00″N 75°07′20″W / 40.0168°N 75.1223°W / 40.0168; -75.1223 (Greenmount Cemetery)
Spouse(s)Elizabeth Jencks
Catherine Ann Houck
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Charles Blancher Thompson (January 27, 1814 – February 27, 1895) was an American leader of a schismatic sect in the Latter Day Saint movement from 1848 to 1858. He claimed the title Baneemy and his followers were known as "Baneemyites".

Thompson was born in Niskayuna, New York to a Quaker family. Thompson converted to Mormonism in 1835. He became an elder in the church and was faithful to the church leadership until the death of founder Joseph Smith, Jr. In 1841, Thompson published Evidence in Proof of the Book of Mormon in Batavia, New York.

Among the several aspirants to be Smith's successor, Thompson initially accepted James J. Strang as the rightful leader of the Latter Day Saints. However, in January 1848, Thompson broke with Strang after Thompson reported to having received a revelation from God while he was living in St. Louis, Missouri. Thompson began to claim that he was the reincarnation of the biblical Ephraim and that he was to be known as "Baneemy, patriarch of Zion". Thompson claimed that a revelation received by Joseph Smith on June 22, 1834, referred to him:

And I will soften the hearts of the people, as I did the heart of Pharaoh, from time to time, until my servant Baurak Ale, and Baneemy, whom I have appointed, shall have time to gather up the strength of my house ...[1]

Thompson self-published a tract entitled The Voice of Him!! That Crieth in the Wilderness, Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord!!, and gathered fifty to sixty followers around him whom he instructed in his "School of Preparation". Thompson named his church the Congregation of Jehovah’s Presbytery of Zion, and his followers were often called Baneemyites because of Thompson's claim to the title. The group was also referred to as the Conjespresites.

In September 1853, Thompson moved his followers to Monona County, Iowa, north of Council Bluffs, where they established a communitarian commune called Preparation. Thompson enforced strict rules of behavior among his followers and published a variety of periodicals while in St. Louis and in Iowa, including Zion’s Harbinger and Baneemy’s Organ, Preparation News and Ephraim's Messenger. In 1858, Thompson published a 208-page tract entitled Law and Covenants of Israel; Written to Ephraim from Jehovah, the Mighty God of Jacob: Ephraim and Baneemy’s Proclamation.

In October 1858, Thompson's followers "ran him out of town".[2] The property owned by the commune was the subject of a lengthy court battle which was not resolved by the Iowa Supreme Court until 1867. Thompson ultimately moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where in 1892 a city directory listed him as "Reverend Charles B. Thompson". He died in Philadelphia in 1895. The 344-acre (1.39 km2) Preparation Canyon State Park in Iowa now occupies the space where Thompson's commune of Preparation once was.

Notes

  1. ^ Doctrine and Covenants 102:8b (Community of Christ ed.). In the LDS Church edition of the Doctrine and Covenants, the passage is found in 105:27; however, the modern LDS version has replaced the code names "Barauk Ale" with "Joseph Smith, Jun." and "Baneemy" with "mine elders" in harmony with early manuscript sources. It is thought that "Baneemy" may have originally had reference to Lyman Wight.
  2. ^ Gregory L. Hawley and William G. Hartley, "Before the Arabia Sank: Mormon Passengers up the Missouri in 1856", Nauvoo Journal, Fall 1998, p. 130, note 48.

References

  • C. R. Marks, “History of Monona County,” Annals of Iowa, vol. 7, no. 5, (3d series), Apr. 1906, 321–346
  • B.H. Roberts (1930). Comprehensive History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: Century I (Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book) 2:437–438
  • Steven L. Shields (1990, 4th ed.). Divergent Paths of the Restoration (Independence, Mo.: Herald House) pp. 51–53

External links

  • Charles Blancher Thompson : short biography focusing on Thompson's time in Monona County, Iowa
  • Charles Blancher Thompson : family biography
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Additional Latter Day Saint sects (usually headquartered in U.S. east of the Rocky Mountains)
Church of Christ
(later renamed "Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints")
Organized by: Joseph Smith
Joseph Smith's original
organization; multiple sects currently
claim to be true successor
1844 (trust reorganized)
1851[note 1](incorporated)
The Church of
Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints
Organized by: Brigham Young[note 1]
and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
14 million members
Additional Latter Day Saint sects
18441847 and 18711848
Church of Christ (Wightite)
Organized by: Lyman Wight
Status: defunct
Church of Christ (Whitmerite)
Organized by: William E. M'Lellin
and David Whitmer
Status: defunct
Church of Christ (Brewsterite)
Organized by: James C. Brewster
and Hazen Aldrich
Status: defunct
1848184818511994
The Bride, the Lamb's Wife
Organized by: Jacob Syfritt
Status: defunct
Congregation of Jehovah's
Presbytery of Zion
Organized by: Charles B. Thompson
Status: defunct
Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints (Gladdenite)
Organized by: Gladden Bishop
Status: defunct
Pentecostal Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints
Organized by: Mike Bethel
Status: unknown


  1. ^ a b Multiple sects currently claim to be true successor, however, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was officially reorganized in 1844 and incorporated in 1851, after the death of Joseph Smith."An Ordinance, incorporating the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints", Laws and Ordinances of the State of Deseret, Salt Lake City, Utah: Shepard Book Company, 1919 [February 4, 1851], p. 66, retrieved June 29, 2010
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