MIPodcast #119—The end of the world (Latter-day Saint style), with Christopher James Blythe

Christopher Blythe’s new book focuses on Latter-day Saint views of the end of the world, which might seem like it’s a little on the nose, but here we are! Blythe goes back to the beginning of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to find out how early church members thought about the apocalypse—the cataclysmic end of the world which would usher in a new peaceful era under the reign of Jesus Christ. The more tension Latter-day Saints felt with the United States where the church began, the more intense their ideas about how it would all turn out became. But Blythe says violent visions of end times destruction began to fade as the church became more mainstream in American culture. CHRISTOPHER JAMES BLYTHE is a Research Associate at the Maxwell Institute’s Laura F. Willes Center for Book of Mormon Studies. In 2019 he was named co-editor of the 'Journal of Mormon History.' He also is co-president of the Folklore Society of Utah. His new book is 'Terrible Revolution: Latter Day Saints and the American Apocalypse.' He has coedited two volumes of the Joseph Smith Papers Documents series. See mi.byu.edu/mip-blythe. [FULL TRANSCRIPT AVAILABLE] Subscribe to the Maxwell Institute Podcast for free in Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify, or add the RSS feed to your preferred podcast app. Questions or comments about this and other episodes can be sent to [email protected].