“Lesson 31: The Extermination Order,” Primary 5: Doctrine and Covenants and Church History (1997), 174–79
“Lesson 31,” Primary 5, 174–79
Lesson 31
The Extermination Order
Purpose
To help the children appreciate some of the difficulties faced by early members of the Church, and to strengthen the children’s desire to listen to and obey the prophet.
Preparation
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Prayerfully study Doctrine and Covenants 105:6–10 and the historical accounts given in this lesson. Then study the lesson and decide how you want to teach the children the historical accounts. (See “Preparing Your Lessons,” pp. vi–vii, and “Teaching the Scriptural and Historical Accounts,” pp. vii–ix.)
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Select the discussion questions and enrichment activities that will involve the children and best help them achieve the purpose of the lesson.
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Materials needed:
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A Doctrine and Covenants for each child.
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Map of Missouri and Surrounding Area, found at the end of lesson 30.
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Picture 5-29, Haun’s Mill; picture of the living prophet (from the meetinghouse library or a Church magazine).
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Suggested Lesson Development
Invite a child to give the opening prayer.
Enrichment Activities
You may use one or more of the following activities any time during the lesson or as a review, summary, or challenge.
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Write the following statements on strips of paper:
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Jesus Christ reveals his will to the prophet.
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The prophet tells us what Jesus Christ wants us to do.
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We listen to the prophet.
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We do what the prophet says.
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We someday return to live with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ.
Make a chain by fastening the strips of paper together in interlocking links. Make sure the words are on the outside of the links. Attach the strips in numerical order, and fasten number 5 to both number 4 and number 1 so the chain forms a circle. Have the children read the strips in order and discuss the process by which we are guided by a prophet so we may return to live with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ. Help the children understand that if we skip step number 4, we will not reach step number 5. We must not only listen to our prophet but also do what he says.
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List on the chalkboard or on a large piece of paper several things that our prophet has told us to do, such as read the scriptures, keep a journal, love our families, and be worthy to attend the temple. Discuss with the children how they can follow the prophet in each of these things, and also discuss with the children what might happen if they do not follow the prophet and do these things.
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Explain that even amid great persecution and suffering, the Saints knew the Lord was watching over them. Some even experienced miracles. Read or tell in your own words the following story of Amanda Barnes Smith and her experience at Haun’s Mill:
When the mob came to Haun’s Mill, Amanda Barnes Smith ran away with her two daughters, and they were not injured. After the shooting stopped, Sister Smith came back to see what had happened to her husband and sons. She later wrote:
“Emerging from the blacksmith shop was my eldest son, bearing on his shoulders his little brother Alma. ‘Oh! my Alma is dead!’ I cried, in anguish. ‘No, Mother; I think Alma is not dead. But Father and brother Sardius are killed!’ …
“… The entire hip joint of my wounded boy had been shot away. Flesh, hip bone, joint, and all had been ploughed out from the muzzle of the gun which the ruffian placed to the child’s hip through the logs of the shop and deliberately fired. We laid little Alma on a bed in our tent and I examined the wound. It was a ghastly sight. I knew not what to do. It was night now. …
“… ‘Oh, my Heavenly Father,’ I cried, ‘what shall I do? Thou seest my poor wounded boy and knowest my inexperience. Oh, Heavenly Father direct me what to do!’ And then I was directed as by a voice speaking to me.
“The ashes of our fire was still smouldering. We had been burning the bark of the shag-bark hickory. I was directed to take those ashes and make a lye [a strong disinfectant] and put a cloth saturated with it right into the wound. It hurt, but little Alma was too near dead to heed it much. Again and again I saturated the cloth and put it into the hole from which the hip joint had been ploughed, and each time mashed flesh and splinters of bone came away with the cloth, and the wound became as white as chicken’s flesh. Having done as directed I again prayed to the Lord and was again instructed as distinctly as though a physician had been standing by speaking to me. Nearby was a slippery-elm tree. From this I was told to make a slippery-elm poultice and fill the wound with it. …
“I removed the wounded boy to a house, some distance off, the next day, and dressed his hip, the Lord directing me as before. I was reminded that in my husband’s trunk there was a bottle of balsam. This I poured into the wound, greatly soothing Alma’s pain. ‘Alma, my child,’ I said, ‘you believe that the Lord made your hip?’ ‘Yes, Mother.’ ‘Well, the Lord can make something there in the place of your hip, don’t you believe he can, Alma?’ ‘Do you think that the Lord can, Mother?’ inquired the child, in his simplicity. ‘Yes, my son,’ I replied, ‘he has shown it all to me in a vision.’ Then I laid him comfortably on his face, and said: ‘Now you lie like that, and don’t move, and the Lord will make you another hip.’
“So Alma lay on his face for five weeks, until he was entirely recovered—a flexible gristle having grown in place of the missing joint and socket. … On the day that he walked again I was out of the house fetching a bucket of water when I heard screams from the children. Running back, in affright, I entered, and there was Alma on the floor, dancing around, and the children screaming in astonishment and joy” (“A Living Miracle of the Power of God,” in Leon R. Hartshorn, comp., Remarkable Stories from the Lives of Latter-day Saint Women, 2 vols. [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1973–75], 1:164–67).
Help the children understand that not all those who pray for help in suffering or trials experience miracles. But the Lord is always watching over us, and he knows what is best for us. If he does not relieve our suffering, he will help us endure it.
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Remind the children that the Lord speaks to us through his living prophet. We need to listen to the prophet and do what he says.
Write the following words on the chalkboard: prophets, commandments, hear, listen, learn, do/does,obeyed/obedience. Tell the children that these words about listening to our prophets and doing what they say are in many scriptures.
Have each child look up one of the following scripture references:
Have the children read the scripture verses out loud and find the words listed on the chalkboard. You may want to have a child put a mark by each word whenever it is read.
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How can we listen to the voice of the Lord and his prophet?
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Why is it important to do what the prophet tells us?
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Sing or say the words to “Follow the Prophet” (Children’s Songbook, p. 110) or “Keep the Commandments” (Children’s Songbook, p. 146).
Conclusion
Invite a child to give the closing prayer.