I wrote an LDS official that we will call Bob, and 
brought this prophecy to his attention.  The following are copies of the letters that were 
exchanged between me, and him...
Dear Bob,
In Doctrine and Covenants Section 
84, Joseph Smith in September of 
1832 prophesied that a "temple 
shall be reared in this 
generation" in Jackson County Missouri.  
Joseph goes on to proclaim "this 
generation shall not all pass away 
until a house shall be built unto 
the Lord"   This day, 12/10/97; 
165 years after Josephs 
revelation, no temple is errected 
in Jackson County Missouri, nor 
has there ever been a Latter Day 
Saint temple errected there.  
Knowing that no one from that 
generation is still alive in 
the church, Joseph Smith's 
prophecy did not, and can no 
longer come to pass.  Why is a 
false prophecy included in LDS 
canonized scripture?
In search of Truth, Jerry Meyer
Dear Jerry, 
Your question has a number 
of sides with a couple of them 
facing south. It is a good 
question without the twist.   Many 
probably wonder why the 
Latter-day-Saints were required to 
build a temple in Missouri without 
being able to comply with this 
revelation given in section 84:4.  
The answer to this query was given 
in the year 1841 by revelation to 
Joseph Smith and recorded as
section 124 verse 49.   We have 
copied it in total for your 
connivance.   Simply put, when the 
Lord gives a commandment, as he 
did to the Israelites and others, and 
through no fault of their own they 
are unable to comply.   He will 
lay the consequences at the feet of 
the enemy and rescind his requirement 
of the just.   Relating to 
verse 5, using the parental sense 
of the word Generation and not the 
figurative sense there were at 
least four temples reared during 
Brigham Young’s life time.   Who 
of course was a contemporary  with 
Joseph Smith.   Verse 3 will yet 
to come to pass.   Jerry be careful 
with labeling any man before you 
know the facts.
D&C 124:49 "Verily, verily, I say unto you, 
that when I give a commandment to 
any of the sons of men to do a 
work unto my name, and those sons of 
men go with all their might and with 
all they have to perform that 
work, and cease not their diligence, and 
their enemies come upon them and 
hinder them from performing that 
work, behold, it behooveth me to 
require that work no more at the 
hands of those sons of men, but to 
accept of their offerings.
Sincerely, Bob
Dear Bob,
Thank you for responding to my question, 
however, the answer I received troubles me 
more than it comforts me.  My First concern 
is: I don’t see a direct correlation 
between D&C 124:49 and D&C 84.  Is the 
purpose of D&C 124:49 to be in response of 
D&C 84's unfulfillment?  D&C 84 is clearly 
a prophecy, Joseph Smith knew it was 
a prophecy as well as the other leaders 
in the church.  D&C 124:49 speaks of a 
commandment, however, God did not command 
there be a temple built in Jackson 
County in D&C 84.  It was a prophecy 
through Joseph Smith.  D&C 84 is very 
clear on that.  That is why the passage 
begins with "A revelation of Jesus 
Christ unto his servant Joseph Smith...  
Yea, the word of the Lord concerning his 
church" and again in verse 4 "Verily this 
is the word of the Lord", it is a prophecy, 
not a commandment.
My second point of concern is in D&C 
124:49 when it is stated "and their enemies 
come upon them and hinder them from performing 
that work".  If this passage is directed 
to D&C 84, it tells me that God’s enemies are 
stronger than He is because it was *prophecied* 
that it *will* happen in *this* generation living 
in 1832.  
2Peter 1:20-21 says "Above all, you 
must understand that no prophecy of Scripture 
came about by the prophet’s own interpretation.  
For prophecy never had it’s origin in the will of 
man, but men spoke from God as they were carried 
along by the Holy Spirit."  In other words, God 
*promised* the CJCLDS that a temple *will* be built 
in *this generation*  Orson Pratt agrees, and sums it 
up nicely in Journal of 
Discourses Vol. 13 page 362 "God 
Promised in the year 1832 that we should before 
the generation then living had passed away, 
return and build up the City of Zion in Jackson 
County; that we should return and build up the 
temple of the Most High where we formerly laid 
the corner stone...  We believe in these promises 
as much as we believe in any promise ever uttered 
by the mouth of Jehovah.  The Latter-day Saints just 
as much expect to receive a fulfilment of that 
promise during the generation that was in existence 
in 1832 as they expect that the sun will 
rise and set to-morrow.  Why?  Because God cannot 
lie.  He will fulfil all His promises.  He 
has spoken , it must come to pass.  This is our 
faith."  Looking back to D&C 124:49, Are Gods 
enemies really going to hinder Him from His work?  
I certainly don’t believe that God’s enemies are 
stronger than He is.  God’s enemies are subject to the 
will of the Father, even today just as it is shown 
in the book of 
Job 1:6-12, 
2:1-7; and again 
in 
Luke 22:31-32.
In your response to my question you said:  
Jerry be careful with labeling any man 
before you know the facts.  In response to 
this, I ask you:  How many false prophecies is a 
prophet allowed before he is labled a false prophet?
In search of Truth, Jerry
Dear Jerry,
Do you have trouble with the fact that Moses came 
down off the mountain with a higher law, and 
when he saw the wickedness of the people, 
disappeared and came back with a Bober law? DId God 
make a mistake?  Was the devil stronger than God 
because his people, the HOuse of Israel, were 
so wicked? Is it really God's fault, or does it 
somehow show the weakness of God and his prophet 
Moses that the first idea did not come to pass?  
40 years in the wilderness as a result.
        inserted:  
This is from LDS scripture, not the Bible.
Do you have a problem with Jesus eventually 
fulfilling the law of Moses? Did God make a mistake?  
Was Moses wrong to have taught the law in the first 
place?  Does God change His mind?  Why the new 
gospel?  God truly can change things.
        inserted:  
This was Gods plan from the begining.
Can you accept the fact that Jesus did not go unto 
the Gentiles to preach His message, but Peter 
was commanded to do so later through his dream?  
Did God change His mind or make a mistake?  
Things can change.
When Adam and Eve were given commandments in the 
garden by God to take good care of it, and to 
eat of every tree except one, they partook of 
the wrong tree and were cast out. Now God commanded 
them to do different things like offer sacrifice, 
etc.  DId God make a mistake or change His mind?  
How come they now had to offer sacrifice?  Why 
and when did that start?
        inserted:  
What is the point of a sin offering when there is no sin? besides, this is 
a good example of a commandment, not a prophecy
When can God make a slight change in the plan 
according to you?  Is it ok if it is recorded in 
the Bible?  Is that the criteria?  Or is the 
real criteria that there is no such criteria, and 
that we need to always follow the Spirit rather 
than a rigid set of presumed rules?
This was the very thing that got the Scribes and 
Pharisees into trouble in the first place. They 
were rigid in their beliefs, and made no room for 
the possibility that Jesus was bringing them 
something greater.  They made no room for the 
possibility of change.
Was Jesus also a false prophet because he was unable 
to get the majority to do the right thing?  
Was Satan stronger than Jesus because the enemies 
"killed" the Savior?  was Jesus a false messiah 
because he was not temporally victorious in the 
short run?  Of course not.
If you would look at the big picture, there WILL 
eventually be that temple built in Jackson 
County, but the Lord altered the time-table 
by revelation.  Things can change, as I have shown 
you.
Dear Bob, 
Let us suppose for a moment that God did change 
his mind.  By revelation, for reasons known only 
by God, he decided to alter the time table, and 
change the original time frame of the prophecy.  
In September of 1832, the original prophecy is 
recorded.  In January of 1841, God revoked the 
time period of the original prophecy for a time 
that is better suit for His glory.  Apparently 
in 1870 God changed his mind a third time, this 
time to go back to the original time frame 
previously set.  Orson Pratt in 1870 states 
recorded in Journal of Discourses Vol. 13 page 362:  
"God Promised in the year 1832 that we should 
before the generation then living had passed away, 
return and build up the City of Zion in Jackson 
County; that we should return and build up the 
temple of the Most High where we formerly laid 
the corner stone...  We believe in these promises 
as much as we believe in any promise ever uttered 
by the mouth of Jehovah.  The Latter-day Saints 
just as much expect to receive a fulfillment of 
that promise during the generation that was in 
existence in 1832 as they expect that the sun 
will rise and set to-morrow.  Why?  Because God 
cannot lie.  He will fulfill all His promises.  
He has spoken , it must come to pass.  This is 
our faith."  J of D Vol. 14 p.275 recorded in 
1971, and J of C Vol. 17 p. 111 recorded in 1874.  
What D&C 124:49 did to erase the allotted time 
frame of the prophecy in D&C 84 Orsen Pratt undid 
in his teachings recorded in the Journal of 
Discourses.  Now you have a choice, either Joseph 
Smith, the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ 
of Latter Day Saints, is a false prophet, or 
Orson Pratt, an apostle of the Church of Jesus 
Christ of Latter Day Saints, is a false teacher.  
Either you keep in line of the most current 
teaching of your authorities, or you discount your 
authorities teaching, as a false teaching, and 
discount your authorities as false teachers.
Some day a temple may be built in Jackson County, 
but God knows all things.  
Moroni 7:22 says, 
"For behold, God knowing all things, being from 
everlasting to everlasting" In other words, God 
knows all time, from the beginning to the end, 
from everlasting to everlasting.  If God knew the 
enemy was going to Hinder the building of the 
temple why would God put a time line on it’s 
completion?  UnBob it would be built by the end 
of the appointed time.  God is not a liar, and 
God will not promise a bBobing to you before 
a set time, knowing full well that the bBobing 
will not arrive until after the promised time.  
God did not have a revelation, and decide to 
postpone the fulfillment of the prophecy.  
Isaiah 40:13   "Who has understood the mind of the 
Lord, or instructed him as a counselor?  Whom 
did the Lord consult to enlighten him, and who 
taught him the right way?  Who was it that 
taught him knowledge or showed him the path of 
understanding?"  The answer, of course, is no 
one but the Lord himself, he is all knowing, and 
all powerful.
In search of Truth, Jerry
Dear Jerry,
What is a "generation" and who says that Orson 
Pratt understood its meaning?  He was obviously 
zealous to build the temple.  Generation, as 
the Lord spoke the word (not Orson), could mean a 
dispensation of time, even these last days.  Orson 
was not speaking scripture for us, but he was 
speaking his personal understanding of it. It 
was not an official position for the Church.  He 
undoes nothing pertaining to the scriptures in 
so speaking his personal beliefs concerning them. 
This is my choice. Orson Pratt had it wrong.  
But you place yourself in his shoes. Imagine that 
you lived in a time when you were persecuted, 
driven, murdered, and you have lost your home 
three, four and five times, and even after 
fleeing to Utah for refuge, the US still coming 
against you.  Would you not think that the end 
was near? I would, and so they did.  But they 
were wrong if they thought that. Blame them if 
you will. But I wouldn’t.  A generation of time 
can be an exercise in semantics.  The only way 
we can know for sure what the LOrd meant when He 
used the word in the scripture, is by the Holy Ghost.
Sincerely, Bob
        That is the chain of letters, between me and 
Bob.  I didn't write him back, because I figured by this time, he was 
more than tired of hearing from me.  But more questions did come to mind 
after reading this. One question is; if only Orsen Pratt had this miss
interpretation of a generation, then why was he allowed to continue 
preaching on it without being rebuked.  He gave three discourses in four 
years on this topic, and every time specified generation as meaning: the 
people that lived during the time when the prophecy was given.  I would 
hope, and think that the First Presidency would step in and correct him.  
However, that never happened, and it leads to the question... is that 
because they all believed the same thing?  I have two more quotes from 
church leaders that I would like to share with you.  The first is found 
in the book: Doctrine And Covenants Commentary Containing Revelations 
Given to Joseph Smith Jr., the Prophet With an Introduction and Historical 
and Exegetical Notes by Hyrum M. Smith of the Council of the Twelve 
Apostles and Janne M. Sjodahl.  The commentary on D&C 84:5 says this, 
"This generation shall not all pass away, etc.] This is a promise that 
some living at the time when it was made, in 1832, would still be on 
Earth in the flesh... A generation does not all pass away in one hundred 
years, and every generation has a few who live over a hundred years." 
This was printed by The Deseret News Press; Salt Lake City, Utah in 
1923; 91 years after the original prophecy.  The church has since changed 
this passage in this book.  If you would like to read what it says, you 
can read it 
here.
        The second quote is found in Answers to 
Gospel Questions, page 112. "We read in another revelation given to 
the Church in January 1841, where the Lord absolves the members of the 
Church from the obligation of building the temple, in the following 
words:"... 
D&C 124:49-54 ... "This should be a sufficient answer to the question. 
The Lord accepted at the hands of the members of the Church their efforts 
and absolved them."
        In order to cover up the false prophecy, it 
seems Latter Day Saints need to take there own scripture out of context, 
change entire sections of books, and change the meanings of words in 
order to justify their interpretation.  What I fail to understand 
is how a prophecy was turned into a commandment.  God did not command them 
to build a temple, it was prophesied that a temple would be built.  Why also 
were so many so mistaken about the meaning of the word "generation" until 
150 years after the prophecy was given. 
        Finally, some Latter-day Saints say that if 
what I say above is true, then Jonah must have been a false prophet too.  
But Jonah never prophesied in the name of the Lord.  He served a warning 
to the Ninevites that God was not going to put up with their wickedness 
any longer.
 
 

                 
                  
                 
© 1998 Jerry Meyer