Amasa Mason Lyman, Mormon Apostle and Apostate
A Study in Dedication
//=$meta['subtitle'][0]?>Having spent more than thirty years in the service of his church, Lyman began to move away from its teachings after a series of conflicts with its second leader, Brigham Young. Lyman was one of the first Mormons to criticize the Mountain Meadows Massacre, which led to his dismissal as an apostle. He was excommunicated in 1870 and became one of the foremost spokesmen of the Godbeite Church of Zion movement before his death in 1877. Author Edward Leo Lyman chronicles Amasa Lyman’s life and interactions with Mormon history with an honesty true to his ancestor’s freethinking spirit.
Table of Contents:
Preface
1. Development of a Disciple, 1832–1837
2. The Emergence of a Young Church Leader—and Friend of the Prophet
3. Loss of the Prophet and Transition to New Leadership in Nauvoo
4. Travel and Settlement Planting in the West, amid Further Adaptations in Church Governance
5. Supporting Leadership on the Plains, at Salt Lake City, and Missions to California, 1848–1851
6. San Bernadino: A Tribute to Amasa's Leadership
7. The Utah War and Lyman's Ministry in Southern Utah, 1857–1860
8. European Mission and Doctrinal Developments
9. Sidelined: Lyman's Gradually Diminished Apostolic Role, 1863–1867
10. Years of Alienation, 1867–1870
11. Era of Rebellion, 1870–1872
12. Last Years, 1872–1877
Appendices
1. The Amasa M. Lyman and John Tanner Families
2. Early Lyman Study Notes
3. Additional Atonement
4. Lyman Poem
Notes
Bibliographic Essay
Bibliography
Index