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Criticism of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) has been subject to criticism and sometimes discrimination since its early years in New York and Pennsylvania. In the late 1820s, criticism centered around the claim by Joseph Smith to have been led to a set of golden plates from which the Book of Mormon was reputedly translated.

In the 1830s, one of several criticisms was for Smith's handling of a banking failure in Kirtland, Ohio. After the Mormons migrated west, there was fear and suspicion about the LDS Church's political and military power in Missouri, culminating in the 1838 Mormon War and the infamous Mormon Extermination Order by Governor Lilburn Boggs. In the 1840s, criticism of the church centered on its theocratic aspirations in Nauvoo, Illinois. Criticism of the practice of plural marriage and other doctrines taught by Smith were published in the Nauvoo Expositor. Opposition led to a series of events culminating in the death of Smith and his brother while jailed in 1844.

As the church began openly practicing plural marriage under Brigham Young during the second half of the 19th century, the church became the target of nationwide criticism for that practice, as well as for the church's theocratic aspirations in Utah Territory. Young introduced policies in 1852 that discriminated against black men and women of African descent which were not reversed until 1978.[1] Beginning in 1857, the church also came under significant media criticism after the Mountain Meadows Massacre in southern Utah.

Academic critics have questioned the legitimacy of Smith as a prophet as well as the historical authenticity of the Book of Mormon and the Book of Abraham. Criticism has expanded to include claims of historical revisionism, homophobia, racism, and sexist policies. Notable 20th-century critics include Jerald and Sandra Tanner and historian Fawn Brodie. Evangelical Christians continue to argue that Smith was either fraudulent or delusional.

Mormon apologetics organizations, such as the Foundation for Apologetic Information & Research (FAIR) and the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS), have been founded to counter these criticisms. Most of the apologetic work focuses on providing and discussing evidence supporting the claims of Smith and the Book of Mormon. Scholars and authors such as Hugh Nibley, Daniel C. Peterson, Orson Scott Card, and James E. Talmage are well-known apologists within the church.

Critics

The LDS Church and Mormonism have attracted criticism from their inception to the present day. Notable early critics of Mormonism included Lucy Harris, Abner Cole, Eber D. Howe, and Thomas C. Sharp. Notable modern critics of the LDS Church include Jerald and Sandra Tanner, Richard Abanes, Richard and Joan Ostling, historian Fawn M. Brodie, Jeremy Runnells and John Dehlin. In recent years, the Internet has provided a new forum for critics.[2]

The church's 2008 support of California's Proposition 8 sparked heated debate and protests by gay-rights organizations.[3][4] Affirmation is a group of current and former members of the LDS Church who have criticized the church's policies on homosexuality. Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry is a Christian organization that has criticized the church's theology. The Institute for Religious Research is an organization that has criticized the church, in particular the Book of Abraham. Numerous other organizations maintain web sites that criticize the church.

Joseph Smith and the early church (1820–1844)

Polygamy

Polygamy is perhaps the most controversial early LDS practice, and was a key contributing factor for Smith's murder. Under heavy pressure — Utah would not be accepted as a state if polygamy was practiced — the church formally and publicly renounced the practice in 1890. Utah's statehood soon followed. However, plural marriage remains a divisive issue, as despite the official renunciation of 1890, it still has sympathizers, defenders, and semi-secret practitioners.

Sarah Pratt, first wife of Apostle Orson Pratt, in an outspoken critique of Mormon polygamy, said that polygamy:[5]

completely demoralizes good men and makes bad men correspondingly worse. As for the women—well, God help them! First wives it renders desperate, or else heart-broken, mean-spirited creatures.

Pratt ended her marriage to husband Orson Pratt in 1868 because of his "obsession with marrying younger women" (at age 57, Orson Pratt married a sixteen-year-old girl, his tenth wife, younger than his daughter Celestia).[6] Sarah Pratt lashed out at Orson in an 1877 interview, stating:[7]

Here was my husband, gray headed, taking to his bed young girls in mockery of marriage. Of course there could be no joy for him in such an intercourse except for the indulgence of his fanaticism and of something else, perhaps, which I hesitate to mention.

The Tanners argue that early church leaders established the practice of polygamy in order to justify behavior that would otherwise be regarded as immoral.[8] The Ostlings criticize Joseph Smith for marrying at least 32 women during his lifetime, including several under the age of 16, a fact acknowledged by Mormon historian Todd Compton.[9][10] Compton also acknowledges that Smith entered into polyandrous marriages (that is, he married women who were already married to other men)[10] and that he warned some potential spouses of eternal damnation if they did not consent to be his wife;[11] in at least two cases, Smith married orphan girls who had come to live at his home.[12]

However, Bushman notes that evidence of sexual relations between Smith and any wives of his followers is sparse or unreliable.[13] Compton argues that some marriages were likely dynastic in nature, to link families.[citation needed]

 
Bar chart showing age differences at the time of polygamous marriage between teenage brides and early Latter Day Saint church leaders.[14][15][16][17] The average age of first marriage for white US women from 1850 to 1880 was 23, with those marrying at ages from 15 to 19 ranging from 6.5 to 27.5 percent of the population depending on region and year.[18]

Historical authenticity of the Book of Mormon

Discussion regarding the historicity of the Book of Mormon often focuses on archaeological issues, some of which relate to the large size and the long time span of the civilizations mentioned in the book. Joseph Smith founded the movement in upstate New York in the 1820s. The faith drew its first converts while Smith was dictating the text of the Book of Mormon from golden plates which had reformed Egyptian writing on them which he said he found buried after being directed to their location by the Angel Moroni. The book described itself as a chronicle of early indigenous peoples of the Americas, known as the Nephites, portraying them as believing Israelites who had a belief in Christ many hundred years before his birth. According to the book, the Nephites are one of four groups (the others being the Lamanites, Jaredites, and Mulekites) which settled in the ancient Americas. The Nephites are described as a group of people that descended from or were associated with Nephi, the son of the prophet Lehi, who left Jerusalem at the urging of God c. 600 BC and traveled with his family to the Western Hemisphere, arriving in the Americas c. 589 BC. After the translation was complete, Smith said he returned the golden plates to the Angel Moroni.

A contemporary Mormon view is that these Israelite civilizations rose and fell in Mesoamerica.[19] Civilizations of their magnitude and duration would be expected to leave extensive archaeological records.[20] Several Mesoamerican civilizations did exist in the time period covered by the Book of Mormon, including the Olmec, Zapotec and Maya. The Olmec and Zapotec civilizations developed a writing system that may have served as the model for the later Mayan writing system, which became highly developed. The Maya developed a complex calendar and were advanced in astronomy and mathematics.[21][22]

The Book of Mormon mentions several animals, plants, and technologies for which there is no evidence in Book of Mormon time frames in pre-Columbian America. These include asses, cattle, horses, oxen, sheep, swine, goats, elephants, wheat, barley,[23] silk,[24] steel,[25] brass, breast plates, chains, plows, swords, scimitars, and chariots.[26] The Smithsonian Institution stated in 1997 that "none of the principal food plants and domestic animals of the Old World (except the dog) were present in the New World before Columbus."[27]

Adherents of the Latter Day Saint movement give varied responses to these criticisms. Some point to what they claim is evidence for the presence of these items and locations.[clarification needed][28] Others invoke the limited geography model, regarding the events of the Book of Mormon as taking place in such a geographically limited area that no evidence should be expected. Some counter that the words used in the Book of Mormon refer not to the animals, plants and technologies that they do presently but to other similar items that did exist at the time.[29][unreliable source?][30] These views are not directly supported by the LDS Church, but they do support archaeological efforts to further understand these situations, including research being performed by Brigham Young University (BYU) professors.[30]

Brigham Young and the pioneer church (1844–1951)

Adam–God doctrine

The Ostlings criticize Brigham Young's teachings that God and Adam are the same being.[31][32] One apostle, Franklin D. Richards, also accepted the doctrine as taught by Young, stating in a conference held in June 1854 that "the Prophet and Apostle Brigham has declared it, and that it is the word of the Lord".[33] But, when the concept was first introduced, several LDS leaders disagreed with the doctrine, including apostle Orson Pratt, who expressed that disagreement publicly.[34] The church never formally adopted the doctrine, and has since officially repudiated it.[35][36]

Blood atonement

Brigham Young introduced a doctrine known as "blood atonement", regarding the unpardonable sin, or sin for which Jesus Christ's atonement does not apply.[37][38] He taught that a person could atone for such sins only by giving up his or her life.[39] Various church leaders in the 19th century taught likewise,[40][41][42] but more recently church leaders have taught that the atonement of Jesus Christ is all-encompassing and that there is no sin so severe that it cannot be forgiven (with the exception of the "unpardonable sin" of denying the Holy Ghost).[43]

Racism

Restrictions on black members of African descent

From 1852 to 1978 church policy excluded men of black African descent from ordination to the priesthood. During the same period black men and women were not allowed to participate in temple endowment or sealing ordinances.[1] Richard and Joan Ostling point to the restrictions as evidence that past LDS Church policies were racist in nature. Before the change in policy, most other adult males in the LDS Church were given the priesthood.[44] Jerald and Sandra Tanner cite quotes from church leaders such as Brigham Young, who said, "You must not think, from what I say, that I am opposed to slavery. No! The negro is damned, and is to serve his master till God chooses to remove the curse of Ham".[45] The Tanners also illustrate church racism by quoting sections of the Book of Mormon which describe dark skin as a sign of a curse and a mark from God to distinguish a more righteous group of people from a less righteous group, and by citing passages describing white skin as "delightsome" while dark skin is portrayed as unenticing (2 Nephi 30:6). These references in the Book of Mormon refer to those presumed to be the ancestors of Native Americans, not people of African descent.[46] Joseph Fielding Smith, later president of the church, wrote in a 1963 letter that people with dark skin were less faithful in the pre-mortal life, and as such, did not warrant the blessings of the priesthood.[47][48] The Tanners also cite other church leaders, historical and modern, who have spoken in favor of segregation and restrictions on admission to the priesthood for men of African descent.[47][49]

Policy reversal

On 8 June 1978, church president Spencer W. Kimball, rescinded the restriction on priesthood ordination and extended temple worship to all worthy Latter-day Saint men and women.[50] Also in 1978, Apostle Bruce R. McConkie told members to "[f]orget everything that I have said, or what President Brigham Young or President George Q. Cannon or whomsoever has said [about Blacks and the priesthood] .... We spoke with a limited understanding."[51] Both the original policy and the reversal are criticized. The Tanners state that the church's 1978 policy change of allowing all worthy male members, including people of black African descent, to hold the priesthood was not divinely inspired as the church said, but simply a matter of convenience.[52] Richard and Joan Ostling point out that this reversal of policy occurred as the LDS Church began to expand outside the United States into countries such as Brazil that have large, ethnically mixed populations, and as the church prepared to open a new temple in São Paulo, Brazil.[53] The restriction on the priesthood was never formally established as church doctrine. The reasons for it have never been made clear, although some opinions were expressed over the years by various church leaders. A few black elders were ordained to the priesthood under Joseph Smith, who never expressed any opposition to having the priesthood available to all worthy men. The priesthood restriction originated under Brigham Young.[54]

Gregory Prince and William Robert Wright state that these leaders were a product of their time and locale. They say that many leaders, including Smith, David O. McKay, and initially Brigham Young, were not opposed to blacks receiving the priesthood.[55] They further state that the policy was a practice supported by Christian scripture and was not a doctrine of the church.[56] Despite several church leaders throughout the 1950s and 1960s supporting its reversal, the policy was kept in place through 1978 because the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles felt that a revelation to the president of the church was needed to change it.[57]

Calls for apology and transparency

Some black members and critics have called on the church to do more to apologize for the restrictions, while other black members have argued against that effort. In 2004 Darron Smith, a critical black church member, contends in his book, Black and Mormon, that the church "refuses to acknowledge and undo its racist past, and until it does that, members continue to suffer psychological damage from it" and that "the church has not done enough to rectify its racist past".[58] The large majority of black Mormons, however, say they are willing to look beyond the racist teachings and adhere to the church.[59] Church president Gordon B. Hinckley gave sermons against racism. In 2005 he taught that no one who utters denigrating remarks can consider himself a true disciple of Christ, and noted the irony of racial claims to the Melchizedek priesthood.[60]

In 2003 Richard Abanes contended that the church tries to hide past racial practices, citing the 1981 change in the Book of Mormon, which stated that the Lamanites had become "a white and a delightsome people" to "a pure and a delightsome people" (2 Nephi 30:6).[61] In 1840, the "white and delightsome" of the original Book of Mormon text was changed by Joseph Smith to "pure and delightsome" in the third edition;[62] it reverted to "white and delightsome" after Smith's death in subsequent editions, as editions were based on one published in England. In 1981, the First Presidency approved a change that adopted the 1840 version by Smith, as saying that converts would become "pure and delightsome".[63]

Recent scrutiny and church response

Criticisms for the past policies on race discrimination were renewed during the 2012 presidential campaign of Mitt Romney and in 2018 surrounding the 40th anniversary of the lifting of race restrictions.[64][1] The church published the following statement in December 2013:[65]

Today, the Church disavows the theories advanced in the past that black skin is a sign of divine disfavor or curse, or that it reflects unrighteous actions in a premortal life; that mixed-race marriages are a sin; or that blacks or people of any other race or ethnicity are inferior in any way to anyone else. Church leaders today unequivocally condemn all racism, past and present, in any form.

In an October 2020 General Conference address following the George Floyd protests, church president Russell M. Nelson publicly condemned racism and called upon all church members to abandon attitudes and actions of prejudice.[66]

Polygamy officially discontinued in 1890

The Tanners argue that the church's 1890 reversal of its policy on polygamy was done for political reasons, citing the fact that the change was made during the church's lengthy conflict with the federal government over property seizures and statehood.[67] The Ostlings say that, soon after the church received the revelation that polygamy was prohibited, Utah again applied for statehood. This time the federal government did not object to starting the statehood process. Six years later, the process was completed and Utah was admitted as a state in 1896.[68] The Ostlings note that soon after the church suspended the practice of polygamy, the federal government reduced its legal efforts to seize church property.[68] Despite this, Mormon leaders after 1890 continued to sanction and participate in plural marriages in secret, in smaller numbers, both in the U.S. and in Mexico, for the next several decades.[69]

Mormons Ron Wood and Linda Thatcher do not dispute that the change was a result of federal intervention and say that the church had no choice in the matter. The 1887 Edmunds–Tucker Act was crippling the church and "something dramatic had to be done to reverse [the] trend."[70] After the church appealed its case to the U.S. Supreme Court and lost, church president Wilford Woodruff issued the 1890 Manifesto. Woodruff noted in his journal that he was "acting for the temporal salvation of the Church".[71]

Polygamy after 1890

Richard Abanes, Richard and Joan Ostling, and D. Michael Quinn note that after the 1890 Manifesto, church leaders authorized more than 200 polygamous marriages and lied about the continuing practice.[72][73][74]

Joseph F. Smith acknowledged reports that church leaders did not fully adhere to the 1890 prohibition. After the Second Manifesto in 1904, anyone entering into a new plural marriage was excommunicated.[75]

Recent leaders and the world-wide church (1951–present)

God was once a man

Critics such as Richard Abanes[76] and the Institute for Religious Research[77] criticize the church[76][77] for changing the principle asserting that God was once a man. They cite changes to the LDS Church publication Gospel Principles between the 1978[78] and 1997[79] editions, where "We can become Gods like our Heavenly Father" was changed to "We can become like our Heavenly Father", and "our Heavenly Father became a God" was changed to "our Heavenly Father became God".[76][77] But, official LDS Church publications still affirm the doctrine of eternal progression, and the official church manual, Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Lorenzo Snow (2012),[80] affirms that "As man is, God once was; as God now is, man may be."[81][82] The 2009 edition of Gospel Principles quotes Joseph Smith as stating, "It is the first principle of the Gospel to know for a certainty the Character of God. … He was once a man like us; … God himself, the Father of us all, dwelt on an earth, the same as Jesus Christ himself did".[83]

Responses to abuse allegations

Reacting to accusations of abuse by teachers,[84] Boy Scouts leaders,[85] clergy, etc., social welfare activists have campaigned for more robust of measures toward greater prevention of abuse of individuals served by counselors and other professionals, advocating greater transparency and quicker referral of allegations to criminal investigators.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests and others have criticized one-on-one ("worthiness") interviews between LDS pastoral leaders and (especially) adolescent congregants, believing them "an invitation" for abuse. An editorial in the sectarian (LDS Church) Deseret News responded:[86][87]

The LDS Church has a zero tolerance policy concerning sexual misconduct. It also gives specific instruction on conducting one-on-one interviews with youths, including encouraging them to have parents or other trustworthy adults sit directly outside the room. Church leaders are to avoid any situation that could be misinterpreted.

 
2018 protest over leaders' sexual interviews with children and teens

In 2018 over 800 protesters gathered and marched to the LDS Church headquarters to deliver a petition with over 55,000 signatures asking for an end to semiannual, closed-door, one-on-one interviews between adult male local church leaders and children and teens during which many members have been asked about their sexual behaviors and thoughts in ways they felt were harmful.[88]

Finances

The church has often been secretive about its finances, especially in the United States. The church has not disclosed its assets in the U.S. since 1959.[89] This has drawn criticism from the Ostlings and the Tanners, who consider its financial practices to be overly secretive.[relevant?][90][91][92]

The church does disclose financials in the United Kingdom[93] and Canada,[94] where it is required to by law. In addition, the church employs an independent audit department that provides its certification at each annual general conference that church contributions are collected and spent in accordance with church policy.[95] Moreover, the church engages a public accounting firm (currently Deloitte & Touche in the United States; PricewaterhouseCoopers in the United Kingdom) to perform annual audits of its not-for-profit,[96] for-profit,[97] and educational[98][99] entities. Lay leaders at the local level are not paid.[100]

The Tanners and the Ostlings accuse the church of being overly greedy and materialistic, citing the large amount of wealth accumulated by the church, and citing the strong emphasis on tithing,[101] and suggest that the church is more like a business than a spiritual endeavor.[92][102]

In December 2019, a whistleblower alleged the church holds over $100 billion in investment funds, which are managed by an affiliate, Ensign Peak Advisors; that it failed to use the funds for charitable purposes and instead used them in for-profit ventures; and that it misled contributors and the public about the usage and extent of those funds. According to the whistleblower, applicable law requires the funds be used for religious, educational or other charitable purposes for the fund to maintain its tax-exempt status.[103] Other commentators have argued that such expenditures may not be legally required as claimed.[104] In response to the allegations, the church's First Presidency stated that "the Church complies with all applicable law governing our donations, investments, taxes, and reserves," and that "a portion" of funds received by the church are "methodically safeguarded through wise financial management and the building of a prudent reserve for the future."[105]

Criticism of response to internal dissent

The Ostlings say that the LDS Church retaliates against members that publish information that undermines church policies,[106] citing excommunications of scientist Simon Southerton[107] and biographer Fawn M. Brodie.[108] They further state that the church suppresses intellectual freedom, citing the 1993 excommunication of the "September Six", including gay LDS historian D. Michael Quinn, and author Lavina Fielding Anderson.[106] The Ostlings write that Anderson was the first to reveal the LDS Church keeps files on Mormon scholars, documenting questionable activities, and the Ostlings state that "No other sizable religion in America monitors its followers in this way".[106]

The American Association of University Professors, since 1998, has put LDS Church-owned Brigham Young University along with twenty-six other universities on its censured list of universities that do not allow tenured professors sufficient freedom in teaching and research.[109]

Richard Abanes lists the following as church members excommunicated or censured for views unacceptable to the church hierarchy:[110]

Church monitors members' critical publications

Richard Abanes and the Ostlings criticize the LDS Church for maintaining a group called the Strengthening Church Members Committee, led by two church apostles.[110] According to the Ostlings, the purpose of this committee is to collect and file "letters to the editor, other writings, quotes in the media, and public activities" of church members that may be publishing views contrary to those of the church leadership.[111] The committee has also recruited students to spy on professors at Brigham Young University who are suspected of violating the church's dictates.[112][113]

The Tanners state that throughout the 20th century the church denied scholars access to many key church documents, and in 1979 said that it had refused to publish Joseph Smith's diary.[114] Apologists point out that The Joseph Smith Papers project provides access to Smith's journals.[115]

Alleged distortion of its own history

An analysis of B. H. Roberts's work History of the Church, when compared to the original manuscripts from which it is drawn, "more than 62,000 words" can be identified that were either added or deleted.[116] Based on this analysis, Jerald and Sandra Tanner contend that the church distorts its history in order to portray itself in a more favorable light.[117] Specifically, they allege that there was a systematic removal of events that portray Joseph Smith in a negative light.[118]

D. Michael Quinn responded to these charges by pointing out that methods by Roberts used in creating History of the Church—while flawed by today's standards—were not uncommon practices in the nineteenth century, even by reputable historians.[119]

The Tanners cite the selective use of Brigham Young's statements, presented in a manner to give the illusion that he was in favor of blacks receiving the priesthood.[120] The Tanners also state that the church attempted to discredit evidence that Joseph Smith was arrested, tried, and found guilty by a justice of the peace in Bainbridge, New York, in 1826.[121] The Tanners have also highlighted changes such as the title page of the 1830 edition of the Book of Mormon that described Smith as "Author and Proprietor" of the book, which was revised in subsequent editions to be "Translator",[122] and the description of Oliver Cowdery's skill at using the divining rod found in the 1829 edition of the Book of Commandments, which does not appear in the corresponding section of the 1835 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants.[123]

FARMS responds to the "author and proprietor" charge by arguing this title conformed to the governing copyright laws in 1830.[124]

The Ostlings consider other omissions to be distortion, noting that the widely distributed church manual Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Brigham Young omits any mention of Young's polygamy, and that the book's chronological summary of Young's life includes the date of his first marriage, the date of the first wife's death, and the date of the second legal marriage, but omits mention of Young's dozens of other marriages.[125]

In 1842, Willard Richards compiled a number of records in order to produce a history of the church. Among the records examined were the various accounts related to Zelph. In the process of combining the accounts, Richards crossed out Woodruff's references to "hill Cumorah," and Heber C. Kimball's reference to the "last great struggle with the Lamanites"[126]

Mormon historian D. Michael Quinn has accused LDS Church leaders of urging historians to hide "controversies and difficulties of the Mormon past".[127] Mormon scholar Allen Robers says church leaders "attempt to control depictions of the Mormon past".[128] Non-Mormon professor John Hallwas of Western Illinois University says of LDS historians: "[they] do not mention Mormon intimidation, deception, repression, theft, and violence, or any other matters that might call into question the sacred nature of the Mormon experience."[129]

Columbia University professor Richard Bushman, a member of The Joseph Smith Papers advisory board, responds to critics that those on the project "work on the assumption that the closer you get to Joseph Smith in the sources, the stronger he will appear, rather than the reverse, as is so often assumed by critics."[130]

In 1969, the Western History Association published Jewish historian Moses Rischin's observation of a new trend among Mormon historians to report objectively.[131] Quinn cites this as the origin of the term "New Mormon history", while citing previous efforts towards objectivity such as Juanita Brooks's 1950 publication of The Mountain Meadows Massacre by Stanford University Press.[132]

Views on sexuality

Deborah Laake and Colleen McDannell say that the church takes a repressive stance towards sexuality and that this may be psychologically unhealthy.[133][134]

Affirmation, a Mormon LGBT organization, and Ed Decker, a critic of the LDS Church, both state that the repressive attitude of the church may—in extreme cases—lead to suicide, as in the case of 16-year-old Kip Eliason, who committed suicide because of the stresses that resulted when his church bishop told him that masturbation was sinful.[135][136]

In January 1982, the church's First Presidency issued a letter to local leaders stating that they had "interpreted oral sex as constituting an unnatural, impure, or unholy practice." The letter was not distributed to the general membership.[137] This letter also instructed local leaders not to inquire into the specifics of married members' sex lives. However, this portion of the letter was often ignored, and in response to letters of protest from members, another letter was issued to local leaders in October reiterating the prohibition on inquiring into specific sexual practices.[138]

Views on homosexuality

Scott Thumma and Affirmation.org contend that the LDS Church is homophobic.[139][140] Affirmation.org cites a faithful, celibate, gay Latter-day Saint who shortly before his suicide wrote: "Straight members have absolutely no idea what it is like to grow up gay in this church. It is a life of constant torment, self-hatred and internalized homophobia."[141]

"God Loveth His Children", a pamphlet produced by the LDS Church, acknowledges that many gays "have felt rejected because members of the Church did not always show love." It criticizes those members, and challenges gays to show love and kindness so the members can "change their attitudes and follow Christ more fully".[142]

Gay historian D. Michael Quinn has hypothesized that early church leaders had a more tolerant view of homosexuality. He writes that several early church leaders and prominent members, including Louie B. Felt, May Anderson, Evan Stephens, and presiding patriarch Joseph Fielding Smith, may have either had homosexual tendencies or were involved in homosexual relationships.[143] George Mitton and Rhett S. James do not dispute that some early members may have had homosexual tendencies, but they call Quinn's assertion of tolerance a distortion of church history that has little support from other historians. They state the current leadership of the church "is entirely consistent with the teachings of past leaders and with the scriptures."[144]

In the early 1970s, Ford McBride did research in electroshock therapy while a student at Brigham Young University (BYU); he performed it on volunteer homosexual students to help cure them of ego-dystonic sexual orientation.[145][146] This was a standard type of aversion therapy used to treat homosexuality,[147] which was considered a mental illness at the time.[148]

As church president, Gordon B. Hinckley encouraged church members to reach out to homosexuals with love and understanding.[149]

Affirmation.org has particularly criticized sexual repression of homosexuals, both inside and outside of the church.

A letter dated June 20, 2008, sent to Mormon bishops and signed by the First Presidency, called on Mormons to donate "means and time" to a California ballot measure designed to defeat the state's May ruling allowing same-sex marriage. Richard and Joan Ostling point out that the LDS Church actively campaigns against same-sex marriage statutes, including donating $500,000 in 1998 towards a campaign to defeat such a referendum in Alaska.[150] The church's support (80 to 90 percent of the early volunteers who walked door-to-door in election precincts and as much as half of the nearly $40 million raised[151]) of California's Proposition 8 in 2008 sparked heated debate and protesting by gay-rights organizations.[3] The church's political involvement and stance on homosexuality has been denounced by antagonistic former LDS member and homosexual Reed Cowan in the 2010 documentary film 8: The Mormon Proposition (although Cowan's reputation as a journalist has been damaged by recent accusations of extortion).[152]

Gender bias and sexism

Richard and Joan Ostling argue that the LDS Church treats women as inferior to men.[153] The Cult Awareness and Information Centre also point to comments such as those made by church leader Bruce R. McConkie, who wrote in 1966 that a "woman's primary place is in the home, where she is to rear children and abide by the righteous counsel of her husband".[154] The First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve espouse a complementarian view of gender roles.[155]

Claudia Lauper Bushman notes that, in the 1970s and 1980s, "just as American women pressed for greater influence", the LDS Church decreased the visibility and responsibilities of women in various areas including welfare, leadership, training, publishing, and policy setting. Despite this, Bushman asserts, "most LDS women tend to be good-natured and pragmatic: they work on the things that they can change and forget the rest."[156]

Jerald and Sandra Tanner point to comments by certain church leaders as evidence that women are subject to different rules regarding entry into heaven. They state that 19th-century leader Erastus Snow preached: "No woman will get into the celestial kingdom, except her husband receives her, if she is worthy to have a husband; and if not, somebody will receive her as a servant".[157] In Mormon doctrine, celestial marriage is a prerequisite for exaltation for members of either gender.[158]

Those who adopt humanist or feminist perspectives may view certain alleged or former LDS Church doctrines (including the spiritual status of blacks, polygamy, and the role of women in society) as racist or sexist.[159]

Criticism regarding temples

Critics find fault with the church's temple policies and ceremonies, which include an endowment ceremony, weddings, and proxy baptism for the dead.

Temple admission restricted

Richard and Joan Ostling, and Hugh F. Pyle state that the LDS Church's policy on temple admission is unreasonable, noting that even relatives cannot attend a temple marriage unless they are members of the church in good standing.[160][161] The Ostlings, the Institute for Religious Research, and Jerald and Sandra Tanner say that the admission rules are unreasonable because admission to the temple requires that a church member must first declare that they pay their full tithe before they can enter a temple.[162][163][164] The Mormonism Research Ministry calls this "coerced tithing" because church members that do not pay the full tithe cannot enter the temple, and thus cannot receive the ordinances required to receive the highest order of exaltation in the next life.[165]

Baptism for the dead

The church teaches that a living person, acting as proxy, can be baptized by immersion on behalf of a deceased person, citing 1 Corinthians 15:29;[166] Malachi 4:5–6; John 5:25; and 1 Peter 4:6 for doctrinal support.[167] These baptisms for the dead are performed in temples.

Floyd C. McElveen and the Institute for Religious Research state that verses to support baptism for the dead are not justified by contextual exegesis of the Bible.[168][169] In 2008, the Vatican issued a statement calling the practice "erroneous" and directing its dioceses to keep parish records from the Genealogical Society of Utah which is affiliated with the LDS Church.[170]

Holocaust survivors and other Jewish groups criticized the LDS Church in 1995, after discovering that the church had baptized more than 300,000 Jewish Holocaust victims.[171][172] After that criticism, church leaders put a policy in place to stop the practice, with an exception for baptisms specifically requested or approved by victims' relatives.[173] Jewish organizations again criticized the church in 2002, 2004, and 2008[174] stating that the church failed to honor the 1995 agreement.[173] However, Jewish and Mormon leaders subsequently acknowledged in a joint statement in 2010 that "concerns between members of both groups...have been eliminated."[175][176]

Endowment ceremony

Jerald and Sandra Tanner allege that Joseph Smith copied parts of the Mormon temple endowment ceremony from Masonic rituals (such as secret handshakes, clothing, and passwords), and that this undermines the church's statement that the rituals were divinely inspired.[177] The Tanners also point to the fact that Joseph Smith was himself a Freemason[178] prior to introducing the endowment rituals into Mormonism.

The Tanners criticize the church's revision of the temple endowment ceremony over the years, saying that revisions were made to obscure provocative practices of the early church.[117][179]

FairMormon, a Mormon apologetic organization, acknowledges changes to the endowment ceremony and points out that (according to Joseph Fielding Smith) Joseph Smith told Brigham Young the ceremony was "not arranged perfectly", and challenged him to organize and systemize it, which Young continued to do throughout his presidency.[180]

Mormon apologetics organizations

FARMS scholarship questioned

Critics say the LDS Church is academically dishonest, because it supported biased research conducted by the previously church-owned Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS). FARMS was an independent organization but in 1997 became a research institute within church-owned Brigham Young University that publishes Mormon scholarship. It was dissolved in 2006. Critic Matthew Paulsen, of the Christian countercult group Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry, faulted FARMS for limiting peer review to members of the LDS Church. He stated that FARMS's primary goal is to defend the Mormon faith rather than to promote truthful scholarship.[181] Molecular biologist Simon Southerton, a former LDS Church bishop and author of Losing a Lost Tribe: Native Americans, DNA, and the Mormon Church said, "I was amazed at the lengths that FARMS went to in order to prop up faith in the Book of Mormon. I felt that the only way I could be satisfied with FARMS explanations was to stop thinking .... The explanations of the FARMS researchers stretched the bounds of credibility to breaking point on almost every critical issue".[182]

FARMS supported what it considered to be "faithful scholarship", which includes academic study and research in support of Christianity and Mormonism, and in particular, where possible, the official position of the LDS Church.[183]

Allegations of covering up sex abuse

On December 28, 2020, seven lawsuits were filed against the LDS Church for allegedly covering up decades of sexual abuse among its Boy Scouts of America (BSA) troops in Arizona.[184] On September 15, 2021, it was agreed that the BSA, which the church ended affiliation with in 2020, would receive an estimated $250 million in settlements from the church.[185][186] The church had been the BSA's largest single sponsor.[186]

See also

Footnotes

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References

Further reading

External links

Critical
  • Utah Lighthouse Ministry – Maintained by Sandra Tanner
  • MormonThink
Apologetic
  • Church-unaffiliated Foundation for Apologetic Information & Research (FAIR)

criticism, church, jesus, christ, latter, saints, church, jesus, christ, latter, saints, church, been, subject, criticism, sometimes, discrimination, since, early, years, york, pennsylvania, late, 1820s, criticism, centered, around, claim, joseph, smith, have,. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church has been subject to criticism and sometimes discrimination since its early years in New York and Pennsylvania In the late 1820s criticism centered around the claim by Joseph Smith to have been led to a set of golden plates from which the Book of Mormon was reputedly translated In the 1830s one of several criticisms was for Smith s handling of a banking failure in Kirtland Ohio After the Mormons migrated west there was fear and suspicion about the LDS Church s political and military power in Missouri culminating in the 1838 Mormon War and the infamous Mormon Extermination Order by Governor Lilburn Boggs In the 1840s criticism of the church centered on its theocratic aspirations in Nauvoo Illinois Criticism of the practice of plural marriage and other doctrines taught by Smith were published in the Nauvoo Expositor Opposition led to a series of events culminating in the death of Smith and his brother while jailed in 1844 As the church began openly practicing plural marriage under Brigham Young during the second half of the 19th century the church became the target of nationwide criticism for that practice as well as for the church s theocratic aspirations in Utah Territory Young introduced policies in 1852 that discriminated against black men and women of African descent which were not reversed until 1978 1 Beginning in 1857 the church also came under significant media criticism after the Mountain Meadows Massacre in southern Utah Academic critics have questioned the legitimacy of Smith as a prophet as well as the historical authenticity of the Book of Mormon and the Book of Abraham Criticism has expanded to include claims of historical revisionism homophobia racism and sexist policies Notable 20th century critics include Jerald and Sandra Tanner and historian Fawn Brodie Evangelical Christians continue to argue that Smith was either fraudulent or delusional Mormon apologetics organizations such as the Foundation for Apologetic Information amp Research FAIR and the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies FARMS have been founded to counter these criticisms Most of the apologetic work focuses on providing and discussing evidence supporting the claims of Smith and the Book of Mormon Scholars and authors such as Hugh Nibley Daniel C Peterson Orson Scott Card and James E Talmage are well known apologists within the church Contents 1 Critics 2 Joseph Smith and the early church 1820 1844 2 1 Polygamy 2 2 Historical authenticity of the Book of Mormon 3 Brigham Young and the pioneer church 1844 1951 3 1 Adam God doctrine 3 2 Blood atonement 3 3 Racism 3 3 1 Restrictions on black members of African descent 3 3 2 Policy reversal 3 3 3 Calls for apology and transparency 3 3 4 Recent scrutiny and church response 3 4 Polygamy officially discontinued in 1890 3 5 Polygamy after 1890 4 Recent leaders and the world wide church 1951 present 4 1 God was once a man 4 2 Responses to abuse allegations 4 3 Finances 4 4 Criticism of response to internal dissent 4 5 Church monitors members critical publications 4 6 Alleged distortion of its own history 4 7 Views on sexuality 4 7 1 Views on homosexuality 4 7 2 Gender bias and sexism 5 Criticism regarding temples 5 1 Temple admission restricted 5 2 Baptism for the dead 5 3 Endowment ceremony 6 Mormon apologetics organizations 6 1 FARMS scholarship questioned 7 Allegations of covering up sex abuse 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksCritics EditThe LDS Church and Mormonism have attracted criticism from their inception to the present day Notable early critics of Mormonism included Lucy Harris Abner Cole Eber D Howe and Thomas C Sharp Notable modern critics of the LDS Church include Jerald and Sandra Tanner Richard Abanes Richard and Joan Ostling historian Fawn M Brodie Jeremy Runnells and John Dehlin In recent years the Internet has provided a new forum for critics 2 The church s 2008 support of California s Proposition 8 sparked heated debate and protests by gay rights organizations 3 4 Affirmation is a group of current and former members of the LDS Church who have criticized the church s policies on homosexuality Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry is a Christian organization that has criticized the church s theology The Institute for Religious Research is an organization that has criticized the church in particular the Book of Abraham Numerous other organizations maintain web sites that criticize the church Joseph Smith and the early church 1820 1844 EditPolygamy Edit Main articles Mormonism and polygamy and Origin of Latter Day Saint polygamy Polygamy is perhaps the most controversial early LDS practice and was a key contributing factor for Smith s murder Under heavy pressure Utah would not be accepted as a state if polygamy was practiced the church formally and publicly renounced the practice in 1890 Utah s statehood soon followed However plural marriage remains a divisive issue as despite the official renunciation of 1890 it still has sympathizers defenders and semi secret practitioners Sarah Pratt first wife of Apostle Orson Pratt in an outspoken critique of Mormon polygamy said that polygamy 5 completely demoralizes good men and makes bad men correspondingly worse As for the women well God help them First wives it renders desperate or else heart broken mean spirited creatures Pratt ended her marriage to husband Orson Pratt in 1868 because of his obsession with marrying younger women at age 57 Orson Pratt married a sixteen year old girl his tenth wife younger than his daughter Celestia 6 Sarah Pratt lashed out at Orson in an 1877 interview stating 7 Here was my husband gray headed taking to his bed young girls in mockery of marriage Of course there could be no joy for him in such an intercourse except for the indulgence of his fanaticism and of something else perhaps which I hesitate to mention The Tanners argue that early church leaders established the practice of polygamy in order to justify behavior that would otherwise be regarded as immoral 8 The Ostlings criticize Joseph Smith for marrying at least 32 women during his lifetime including several under the age of 16 a fact acknowledged by Mormon historian Todd Compton 9 10 Compton also acknowledges that Smith entered into polyandrous marriages that is he married women who were already married to other men 10 and that he warned some potential spouses of eternal damnation if they did not consent to be his wife 11 in at least two cases Smith married orphan girls who had come to live at his home 12 However Bushman notes that evidence of sexual relations between Smith and any wives of his followers is sparse or unreliable 13 Compton argues that some marriages were likely dynastic in nature to link families citation needed Bar chart showing age differences at the time of polygamous marriage between teenage brides and early Latter Day Saint church leaders 14 15 16 17 The average age of first marriage for white US women from 1850 to 1880 was 23 with those marrying at ages from 15 to 19 ranging from 6 5 to 27 5 percent of the population depending on region and year 18 Historical authenticity of the Book of Mormon Edit Main article Historical authenticity of the Book of Mormon Discussion regarding the historicity of the Book of Mormon often focuses on archaeological issues some of which relate to the large size and the long time span of the civilizations mentioned in the book Joseph Smith founded the movement in upstate New York in the 1820s The faith drew its first converts while Smith was dictating the text of the Book of Mormon from golden plates which had reformed Egyptian writing on them which he said he found buried after being directed to their location by the Angel Moroni The book described itself as a chronicle of early indigenous peoples of the Americas known as the Nephites portraying them as believing Israelites who had a belief in Christ many hundred years before his birth According to the book the Nephites are one of four groups the others being the Lamanites Jaredites and Mulekites which settled in the ancient Americas The Nephites are described as a group of people that descended from or were associated with Nephi the son of the prophet Lehi who left Jerusalem at the urging of God c 600 BC and traveled with his family to the Western Hemisphere arriving in the Americas c 589 BC After the translation was complete Smith said he returned the golden plates to the Angel Moroni A contemporary Mormon view is that these Israelite civilizations rose and fell in Mesoamerica 19 Civilizations of their magnitude and duration would be expected to leave extensive archaeological records 20 Several Mesoamerican civilizations did exist in the time period covered by the Book of Mormon including the Olmec Zapotec and Maya The Olmec and Zapotec civilizations developed a writing system that may have served as the model for the later Mayan writing system which became highly developed The Maya developed a complex calendar and were advanced in astronomy and mathematics 21 22 The Book of Mormon mentions several animals plants and technologies for which there is no evidence in Book of Mormon time frames in pre Columbian America These include asses cattle horses oxen sheep swine goats elephants wheat barley 23 silk 24 steel 25 brass breast plates chains plows swords scimitars and chariots 26 The Smithsonian Institution stated in 1997 that none of the principal food plants and domestic animals of the Old World except the dog were present in the New World before Columbus 27 Adherents of the Latter Day Saint movement give varied responses to these criticisms Some point to what they claim is evidence for the presence of these items and locations clarification needed 28 Others invoke the limited geography model regarding the events of the Book of Mormon as taking place in such a geographically limited area that no evidence should be expected Some counter that the words used in the Book of Mormon refer not to the animals plants and technologies that they do presently but to other similar items that did exist at the time 29 unreliable source 30 These views are not directly supported by the LDS Church but they do support archaeological efforts to further understand these situations including research being performed by Brigham Young University BYU professors 30 Brigham Young and the pioneer church 1844 1951 EditAdam God doctrine Edit Main article Adam God doctrine The Ostlings criticize Brigham Young s teachings that God and Adam are the same being 31 32 One apostle Franklin D Richards also accepted the doctrine as taught by Young stating in a conference held in June 1854 that the Prophet and Apostle Brigham has declared it and that it is the word of the Lord 33 But when the concept was first introduced several LDS leaders disagreed with the doctrine including apostle Orson Pratt who expressed that disagreement publicly 34 The church never formally adopted the doctrine and has since officially repudiated it 35 36 Blood atonement Edit Main article Blood atonement Brigham Young introduced a doctrine known as blood atonement regarding the unpardonable sin or sin for which Jesus Christ s atonement does not apply 37 38 He taught that a person could atone for such sins only by giving up his or her life 39 Various church leaders in the 19th century taught likewise 40 41 42 but more recently church leaders have taught that the atonement of Jesus Christ is all encompassing and that there is no sin so severe that it cannot be forgiven with the exception of the unpardonable sin of denying the Holy Ghost 43 Racism Edit Main article Black people and Mormonism Further information Mormonism and slavery Restrictions on black members of African descent Edit From 1852 to 1978 church policy excluded men of black African descent from ordination to the priesthood During the same period black men and women were not allowed to participate in temple endowment or sealing ordinances 1 Richard and Joan Ostling point to the restrictions as evidence that past LDS Church policies were racist in nature Before the change in policy most other adult males in the LDS Church were given the priesthood 44 Jerald and Sandra Tanner cite quotes from church leaders such as Brigham Young who said You must not think from what I say that I am opposed to slavery No The negro is damned and is to serve his master till God chooses to remove the curse of Ham 45 The Tanners also illustrate church racism by quoting sections of the Book of Mormon which describe dark skin as a sign of a curse and a mark from God to distinguish a more righteous group of people from a less righteous group and by citing passages describing white skin as delightsome while dark skin is portrayed as unenticing 2 Nephi 30 6 These references in the Book of Mormon refer to those presumed to be the ancestors of Native Americans not people of African descent 46 Joseph Fielding Smith later president of the church wrote in a 1963 letter that people with dark skin were less faithful in the pre mortal life and as such did not warrant the blessings of the priesthood 47 48 The Tanners also cite other church leaders historical and modern who have spoken in favor of segregation and restrictions on admission to the priesthood for men of African descent 47 49 Policy reversal Edit On 8 June 1978 church president Spencer W Kimball rescinded the restriction on priesthood ordination and extended temple worship to all worthy Latter day Saint men and women 50 Also in 1978 Apostle Bruce R McConkie told members to f orget everything that I have said or what President Brigham Young or President George Q Cannon or whomsoever has said about Blacks and the priesthood We spoke with a limited understanding 51 Both the original policy and the reversal are criticized The Tanners state that the church s 1978 policy change of allowing all worthy male members including people of black African descent to hold the priesthood was not divinely inspired as the church said but simply a matter of convenience 52 Richard and Joan Ostling point out that this reversal of policy occurred as the LDS Church began to expand outside the United States into countries such as Brazil that have large ethnically mixed populations and as the church prepared to open a new temple in Sao Paulo Brazil 53 The restriction on the priesthood was never formally established as church doctrine The reasons for it have never been made clear although some opinions were expressed over the years by various church leaders A few black elders were ordained to the priesthood under Joseph Smith who never expressed any opposition to having the priesthood available to all worthy men The priesthood restriction originated under Brigham Young 54 Gregory Prince and William Robert Wright state that these leaders were a product of their time and locale They say that many leaders including Smith David O McKay and initially Brigham Young were not opposed to blacks receiving the priesthood 55 They further state that the policy was a practice supported by Christian scripture and was not a doctrine of the church 56 Despite several church leaders throughout the 1950s and 1960s supporting its reversal the policy was kept in place through 1978 because the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles felt that a revelation to the president of the church was needed to change it 57 Calls for apology and transparency Edit Some black members and critics have called on the church to do more to apologize for the restrictions while other black members have argued against that effort In 2004 Darron Smith a critical black church member contends in his book Black and Mormon that the church refuses to acknowledge and undo its racist past and until it does that members continue to suffer psychological damage from it and that the church has not done enough to rectify its racist past 58 The large majority of black Mormons however say they are willing to look beyond the racist teachings and adhere to the church 59 Church president Gordon B Hinckley gave sermons against racism In 2005 he taught that no one who utters denigrating remarks can consider himself a true disciple of Christ and noted the irony of racial claims to the Melchizedek priesthood 60 In 2003 Richard Abanes contended that the church tries to hide past racial practices citing the 1981 change in the Book of Mormon which stated that the Lamanites had become a white and a delightsome people to a pure and a delightsome people 2 Nephi 30 6 61 In 1840 the white and delightsome of the original Book of Mormon text was changed by Joseph Smith to pure and delightsome in the third edition 62 it reverted to white and delightsome after Smith s death in subsequent editions as editions were based on one published in England In 1981 the First Presidency approved a change that adopted the 1840 version by Smith as saying that converts would become pure and delightsome 63 Recent scrutiny and church response EditCriticisms for the past policies on race discrimination were renewed during the 2012 presidential campaign of Mitt Romney and in 2018 surrounding the 40th anniversary of the lifting of race restrictions 64 1 The church published the following statement in December 2013 65 Today the Church disavows the theories advanced in the past that black skin is a sign of divine disfavor or curse or that it reflects unrighteous actions in a premortal life that mixed race marriages are a sin or that blacks or people of any other race or ethnicity are inferior in any way to anyone else Church leaders today unequivocally condemn all racism past and present in any form In an October 2020 General Conference address following the George Floyd protests church president Russell M Nelson publicly condemned racism and called upon all church members to abandon attitudes and actions of prejudice 66 Polygamy officially discontinued in 1890 Edit Main article 1890 Manifesto The Tanners argue that the church s 1890 reversal of its policy on polygamy was done for political reasons citing the fact that the change was made during the church s lengthy conflict with the federal government over property seizures and statehood 67 The Ostlings say that soon after the church received the revelation that polygamy was prohibited Utah again applied for statehood This time the federal government did not object to starting the statehood process Six years later the process was completed and Utah was admitted as a state in 1896 68 The Ostlings note that soon after the church suspended the practice of polygamy the federal government reduced its legal efforts to seize church property 68 Despite this Mormon leaders after 1890 continued to sanction and participate in plural marriages in secret in smaller numbers both in the U S and in Mexico for the next several decades 69 Mormons Ron Wood and Linda Thatcher do not dispute that the change was a result of federal intervention and say that the church had no choice in the matter The 1887 Edmunds Tucker Act was crippling the church and something dramatic had to be done to reverse the trend 70 After the church appealed its case to the U S Supreme Court and lost church president Wilford Woodruff issued the 1890 Manifesto Woodruff noted in his journal that he was acting for the temporal salvation of the Church 71 Polygamy after 1890 Edit Main article Latter Day Saint polygamy in the late 19th century Richard Abanes Richard and Joan Ostling and D Michael Quinn note that after the 1890 Manifesto church leaders authorized more than 200 polygamous marriages and lied about the continuing practice 72 73 74 Joseph F Smith acknowledged reports that church leaders did not fully adhere to the 1890 prohibition After the Second Manifesto in 1904 anyone entering into a new plural marriage was excommunicated 75 Recent leaders and the world wide church 1951 present EditGod was once a man Edit Main article Exaltation Mormonism Critics such as Richard Abanes 76 and the Institute for Religious Research 77 criticize the church 76 77 for changing the principle asserting that God was once a man They cite changes to the LDS Church publication Gospel Principles between the 1978 78 and 1997 79 editions where We can become Gods like our Heavenly Father was changed to We can become like our Heavenly Father and our Heavenly Father became a God was changed to our Heavenly Father became God 76 77 But official LDS Church publications still affirm the doctrine of eternal progression and the official church manual Teachings of Presidents of the Church Lorenzo Snow 2012 80 affirms that As man is God once was as God now is man may be 81 82 The 2009 edition of Gospel Principles quotes Joseph Smith as stating It is the first principle of the Gospel to know for a certainty the Character of God He was once a man like us God himself the Father of us all dwelt on an earth the same as Jesus Christ himself did 83 Responses to abuse allegations Edit Further information Mormon abuse cases Reacting to accusations of abuse by teachers 84 Boy Scouts leaders 85 clergy etc social welfare activists have campaigned for more robust of measures toward greater prevention of abuse of individuals served by counselors and other professionals advocating greater transparency and quicker referral of allegations to criminal investigators The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests and others have criticized one on one worthiness interviews between LDS pastoral leaders and especially adolescent congregants believing them an invitation for abuse An editorial in the sectarian LDS Church Deseret News responded 86 87 The LDS Church has a zero tolerance policy concerning sexual misconduct It also gives specific instruction on conducting one on one interviews with youths including encouraging them to have parents or other trustworthy adults sit directly outside the room Church leaders are to avoid any situation that could be misinterpreted 2018 protest over leaders sexual interviews with children and teens In 2018 over 800 protesters gathered and marched to the LDS Church headquarters to deliver a petition with over 55 000 signatures asking for an end to semiannual closed door one on one interviews between adult male local church leaders and children and teens during which many members have been asked about their sexual behaviors and thoughts in ways they felt were harmful 88 Finances Edit Main article Finances of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints The church has often been secretive about its finances especially in the United States The church has not disclosed its assets in the U S since 1959 89 This has drawn criticism from the Ostlings and the Tanners who consider its financial practices to be overly secretive relevant 90 91 92 The church does disclose financials in the United Kingdom 93 and Canada 94 where it is required to by law In addition the church employs an independent audit department that provides its certification at each annual general conference that church contributions are collected and spent in accordance with church policy 95 Moreover the church engages a public accounting firm currently Deloitte amp Touche in the United States PricewaterhouseCoopers in the United Kingdom to perform annual audits of its not for profit 96 for profit 97 and educational 98 99 entities Lay leaders at the local level are not paid 100 The Tanners and the Ostlings accuse the church of being overly greedy and materialistic citing the large amount of wealth accumulated by the church and citing the strong emphasis on tithing 101 and suggest that the church is more like a business than a spiritual endeavor 92 102 In December 2019 a whistleblower alleged the church holds over 100 billion in investment funds which are managed by an affiliate Ensign Peak Advisors that it failed to use the funds for charitable purposes and instead used them in for profit ventures and that it misled contributors and the public about the usage and extent of those funds According to the whistleblower applicable law requires the funds be used for religious educational or other charitable purposes for the fund to maintain its tax exempt status 103 Other commentators have argued that such expenditures may not be legally required as claimed 104 In response to the allegations the church s First Presidency stated that the Church complies with all applicable law governing our donations investments taxes and reserves and that a portion of funds received by the church are methodically safeguarded through wise financial management and the building of a prudent reserve for the future 105 Criticism of response to internal dissent Edit See also Academic freedom at Brigham Young University and September Six The Ostlings say that the LDS Church retaliates against members that publish information that undermines church policies 106 citing excommunications of scientist Simon Southerton 107 and biographer Fawn M Brodie 108 They further state that the church suppresses intellectual freedom citing the 1993 excommunication of the September Six including gay LDS historian D Michael Quinn and author Lavina Fielding Anderson 106 The Ostlings write that Anderson was the first to reveal the LDS Church keeps files on Mormon scholars documenting questionable activities and the Ostlings state that No other sizable religion in America monitors its followers in this way 106 The American Association of University Professors since 1998 has put LDS Church owned Brigham Young University along with twenty six other universities on its censured list of universities that do not allow tenured professors sufficient freedom in teaching and research 109 Richard Abanes lists the following as church members excommunicated or censured for views unacceptable to the church hierarchy 110 Journalist Deborah Laake for her book Secret Ceremonies A Mormon Woman s Intimate Diary of Marriage and Beyond BYU English teacher Cecilia Konchar Farr for her views on abortion laws Writer Janice Merrill Allred English Professor Gail Houston Anthropologist David KnowltonChurch monitors members critical publications Edit Richard Abanes and the Ostlings criticize the LDS Church for maintaining a group called the Strengthening Church Members Committee led by two church apostles 110 According to the Ostlings the purpose of this committee is to collect and file letters to the editor other writings quotes in the media and public activities of church members that may be publishing views contrary to those of the church leadership 111 The committee has also recruited students to spy on professors at Brigham Young University who are suspected of violating the church s dictates 112 113 The Tanners state that throughout the 20th century the church denied scholars access to many key church documents and in 1979 said that it had refused to publish Joseph Smith s diary 114 Apologists point out that The Joseph Smith Papers project provides access to Smith s journals 115 Alleged distortion of its own history Edit Main article Mormonism and history See also History of the Latter Day Saint movement An analysis of B H Roberts s work History of the Church when compared to the original manuscripts from which it is drawn more than 62 000 words can be identified that were either added or deleted 116 Based on this analysis Jerald and Sandra Tanner contend that the church distorts its history in order to portray itself in a more favorable light 117 Specifically they allege that there was a systematic removal of events that portray Joseph Smith in a negative light 118 D Michael Quinn responded to these charges by pointing out that methods by Roberts used in creating History of the Church while flawed by today s standards were not uncommon practices in the nineteenth century even by reputable historians 119 The Tanners cite the selective use of Brigham Young s statements presented in a manner to give the illusion that he was in favor of blacks receiving the priesthood 120 The Tanners also state that the church attempted to discredit evidence that Joseph Smith was arrested tried and found guilty by a justice of the peace in Bainbridge New York in 1826 121 The Tanners have also highlighted changes such as the title page of the 1830 edition of the Book of Mormon that described Smith as Author and Proprietor of the book which was revised in subsequent editions to be Translator 122 and the description of Oliver Cowdery s skill at using the divining rod found in the 1829 edition of the Book of Commandments which does not appear in the corresponding section of the 1835 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants 123 FARMS responds to the author and proprietor charge by arguing this title conformed to the governing copyright laws in 1830 124 The Ostlings consider other omissions to be distortion noting that the widely distributed church manual Teachings of Presidents of the Church Brigham Young omits any mention of Young s polygamy and that the book s chronological summary of Young s life includes the date of his first marriage the date of the first wife s death and the date of the second legal marriage but omits mention of Young s dozens of other marriages 125 In 1842 Willard Richards compiled a number of records in order to produce a history of the church Among the records examined were the various accounts related to Zelph In the process of combining the accounts Richards crossed out Woodruff s references to hill Cumorah and Heber C Kimball s reference to the last great struggle with the Lamanites 126 Mormon historian D Michael Quinn has accused LDS Church leaders of urging historians to hide controversies and difficulties of the Mormon past 127 Mormon scholar Allen Robers says church leaders attempt to control depictions of the Mormon past 128 Non Mormon professor John Hallwas of Western Illinois University says of LDS historians they do not mention Mormon intimidation deception repression theft and violence or any other matters that might call into question the sacred nature of the Mormon experience 129 Columbia University professor Richard Bushman a member of The Joseph Smith Papers advisory board responds to critics that those on the project work on the assumption that the closer you get to Joseph Smith in the sources the stronger he will appear rather than the reverse as is so often assumed by critics 130 In 1969 the Western History Association published Jewish historian Moses Rischin s observation of a new trend among Mormon historians to report objectively 131 Quinn cites this as the origin of the term New Mormon history while citing previous efforts towards objectivity such as Juanita Brooks s 1950 publication of The Mountain Meadows Massacre by Stanford University Press 132 Views on sexuality Edit Main article Sexuality and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Deborah Laake and Colleen McDannell say that the church takes a repressive stance towards sexuality and that this may be psychologically unhealthy 133 134 Affirmation a Mormon LGBT organization and Ed Decker a critic of the LDS Church both state that the repressive attitude of the church may in extreme cases lead to suicide as in the case of 16 year old Kip Eliason who committed suicide because of the stresses that resulted when his church bishop told him that masturbation was sinful 135 136 In January 1982 the church s First Presidency issued a letter to local leaders stating that they had interpreted oral sex as constituting an unnatural impure or unholy practice The letter was not distributed to the general membership 137 This letter also instructed local leaders not to inquire into the specifics of married members sex lives However this portion of the letter was often ignored and in response to letters of protest from members another letter was issued to local leaders in October reiterating the prohibition on inquiring into specific sexual practices 138 Views on homosexuality Edit Main article Homosexuality and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Scott Thumma and Affirmation org contend that the LDS Church is homophobic 139 140 Affirmation org cites a faithful celibate gay Latter day Saint who shortly before his suicide wrote Straight members have absolutely no idea what it is like to grow up gay in this church It is a life of constant torment self hatred and internalized homophobia 141 God Loveth His Children a pamphlet produced by the LDS Church acknowledges that many gays have felt rejected because members of the Church did not always show love It criticizes those members and challenges gays to show love and kindness so the members can change their attitudes and follow Christ more fully 142 Gay historian D Michael Quinn has hypothesized that early church leaders had a more tolerant view of homosexuality He writes that several early church leaders and prominent members including Louie B Felt May Anderson Evan Stephens and presiding patriarch Joseph Fielding Smith may have either had homosexual tendencies or were involved in homosexual relationships 143 George Mitton and Rhett S James do not dispute that some early members may have had homosexual tendencies but they call Quinn s assertion of tolerance a distortion of church history that has little support from other historians They state the current leadership of the church is entirely consistent with the teachings of past leaders and with the scriptures 144 In the early 1970s Ford McBride did research in electroshock therapy while a student at Brigham Young University BYU he performed it on volunteer homosexual students to help cure them of ego dystonic sexual orientation 145 146 This was a standard type of aversion therapy used to treat homosexuality 147 which was considered a mental illness at the time 148 As church president Gordon B Hinckley encouraged church members to reach out to homosexuals with love and understanding 149 Affirmation org has particularly criticized sexual repression of homosexuals both inside and outside of the church A letter dated June 20 2008 sent to Mormon bishops and signed by the First Presidency called on Mormons to donate means and time to a California ballot measure designed to defeat the state s May ruling allowing same sex marriage Richard and Joan Ostling point out that the LDS Church actively campaigns against same sex marriage statutes including donating 500 000 in 1998 towards a campaign to defeat such a referendum in Alaska 150 The church s support 80 to 90 percent of the early volunteers who walked door to door in election precincts and as much as half of the nearly 40 million raised 151 of California s Proposition 8 in 2008 sparked heated debate and protesting by gay rights organizations 3 The church s political involvement and stance on homosexuality has been denounced by antagonistic former LDS member and homosexual Reed Cowan in the 2010 documentary film 8 The Mormon Proposition although Cowan s reputation as a journalist has been damaged by recent accusations of extortion 152 Gender bias and sexism Edit Main article Women and Mormonism Richard and Joan Ostling argue that the LDS Church treats women as inferior to men 153 The Cult Awareness and Information Centre also point to comments such as those made by church leader Bruce R McConkie who wrote in 1966 that a woman s primary place is in the home where she is to rear children and abide by the righteous counsel of her husband 154 The First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve espouse a complementarian view of gender roles 155 Claudia Lauper Bushman notes that in the 1970s and 1980s just as American women pressed for greater influence the LDS Church decreased the visibility and responsibilities of women in various areas including welfare leadership training publishing and policy setting Despite this Bushman asserts most LDS women tend to be good natured and pragmatic they work on the things that they can change and forget the rest 156 Jerald and Sandra Tanner point to comments by certain church leaders as evidence that women are subject to different rules regarding entry into heaven They state that 19th century leader Erastus Snow preached No woman will get into the celestial kingdom except her husband receives her if she is worthy to have a husband and if not somebody will receive her as a servant 157 In Mormon doctrine celestial marriage is a prerequisite for exaltation for members of either gender 158 Those who adopt humanist or feminist perspectives may view certain alleged or former LDS Church doctrines including the spiritual status of blacks polygamy and the role of women in society as racist or sexist 159 Criticism regarding temples EditMain article Temple LDS Church Critics find fault with the church s temple policies and ceremonies which include an endowment ceremony weddings and proxy baptism for the dead Temple admission restricted Edit Main article LDS Church temple entrance requirements Richard and Joan Ostling and Hugh F Pyle state that the LDS Church s policy on temple admission is unreasonable noting that even relatives cannot attend a temple marriage unless they are members of the church in good standing 160 161 The Ostlings the Institute for Religious Research and Jerald and Sandra Tanner say that the admission rules are unreasonable because admission to the temple requires that a church member must first declare that they pay their full tithe before they can enter a temple 162 163 164 The Mormonism Research Ministry calls this coerced tithing because church members that do not pay the full tithe cannot enter the temple and thus cannot receive the ordinances required to receive the highest order of exaltation in the next life 165 Baptism for the dead Edit Main article Baptism for the dead The church teaches that a living person acting as proxy can be baptized by immersion on behalf of a deceased person citing 1 Corinthians 15 29 166 Malachi 4 5 6 John 5 25 and 1 Peter 4 6 for doctrinal support 167 These baptisms for the dead are performed in temples Floyd C McElveen and the Institute for Religious Research state that verses to support baptism for the dead are not justified by contextual exegesis of the Bible 168 169 In 2008 the Vatican issued a statement calling the practice erroneous and directing its dioceses to keep parish records from the Genealogical Society of Utah which is affiliated with the LDS Church 170 Holocaust survivors and other Jewish groups criticized the LDS Church in 1995 after discovering that the church had baptized more than 300 000 Jewish Holocaust victims 171 172 After that criticism church leaders put a policy in place to stop the practice with an exception for baptisms specifically requested or approved by victims relatives 173 Jewish organizations again criticized the church in 2002 2004 and 2008 174 stating that the church failed to honor the 1995 agreement 173 However Jewish and Mormon leaders subsequently acknowledged in a joint statement in 2010 that concerns between members of both groups have been eliminated 175 176 Endowment ceremony Edit Main article Mormonism and Freemasonry Jerald and Sandra Tanner allege that Joseph Smith copied parts of the Mormon temple endowment ceremony from Masonic rituals such as secret handshakes clothing and passwords and that this undermines the church s statement that the rituals were divinely inspired 177 The Tanners also point to the fact that Joseph Smith was himself a Freemason 178 prior to introducing the endowment rituals into Mormonism The Tanners criticize the church s revision of the temple endowment ceremony over the years saying that revisions were made to obscure provocative practices of the early church 117 179 FairMormon a Mormon apologetic organization acknowledges changes to the endowment ceremony and points out that according to Joseph Fielding Smith Joseph Smith told Brigham Young the ceremony was not arranged perfectly and challenged him to organize and systemize it which Young continued to do throughout his presidency 180 Mormon apologetics organizations EditFARMS scholarship questioned Edit Main article Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies The factual accuracy of parts of this article those related to FARMS which no longer exists may be compromised due to out of date information Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2015 Critics say the LDS Church is academically dishonest because it supported biased research conducted by the previously church owned Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies FARMS FARMS was an independent organization but in 1997 became a research institute within church owned Brigham Young University that publishes Mormon scholarship It was dissolved in 2006 Critic Matthew Paulsen of the Christian countercult group Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry faulted FARMS for limiting peer review to members of the LDS Church He stated that FARMS s primary goal is to defend the Mormon faith rather than to promote truthful scholarship 181 Molecular biologist Simon Southerton a former LDS Church bishop and author of Losing a Lost Tribe Native Americans DNA and the Mormon Church said I was amazed at the lengths that FARMS went to in order to prop up faith in the Book of Mormon I felt that the only way I could be satisfied with FARMS explanations was to stop thinking The explanations of the FARMS researchers stretched the bounds of credibility to breaking point on almost every critical issue 182 FARMS supported what it considered to be faithful scholarship which includes academic study and research in support of Christianity and Mormonism and in particular where possible the official position of the LDS Church 183 Allegations of covering up sex abuse EditOn December 28 2020 seven lawsuits were filed against the LDS Church for allegedly covering up decades of sexual abuse among its Boy Scouts of America BSA troops in Arizona 184 On September 15 2021 it was agreed that the BSA which the church ended affiliation with in 2020 would receive an estimated 250 million in settlements from the church 185 186 The church had been the BSA s largest single sponsor 186 See also Edit Christianity portal LDS Church portalAnti cult movement Anti Mormonism Criticism of Mormon sacred texts Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Criticism Latter Day Saints in popular culture MormonWikiLeaks South Park episode All About Mormons Reformed Egyptian Stay LDS Mormon The God MakersFootnotes Edit a b c Bowman Matthew 29 May 2018 Mormons confront a history of Church racism The Conversation Retrieved 15 February 2021 Sink Mindy September 6 2003 Religion Journal Spiritual Issues Lead Many to the Net The New York Times Archived from the original on 2012 02 11 Retrieved 11 May 2020 a b Feytser Peter November 20 2008 San Diego march for marriage equality draws 20 000 protesters Gay and Lesbian Times No 1091 Archived from the original on 2009 02 14 Retrieved December 6 2011 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link California and Same Sex Marriage Newsroom LDS Church 2008 06 30 retrieved 2011 12 06 Eskridge 2002 pp 291 Van Wagoner 1986 Van Wagoner 1986 pp 92 Tanner 1980 pp 226 257 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America pp 60 63 ISBN 978 0 06 066371 1 a b Compton 1997 Compton 1997 pp 486 534 457 472 342 363 Compton 1997 pp 457 485 Bushman Richard Lyman 2005 Joseph Smith Rough Stone Rolling New York NY Alfred A Knoff p 439 ISBN 978 1 4000 4270 8 OCLC 56922457 There is no certain evidence that Joseph had sexual relations with any of the wives who were married to other men They married because Joseph s kingdom grew with the size of his family and those bonded to that family would be exalted with him Goodstein Laurie 10 November 2014 It s Official Mormon Founder Had Up to 40 Wives The New York Times Retrieved 2 June 2017 Joseph Smith Jr married Helen Mar Kimball a daughter of two close friends several months before her 15th birthday Turner John G 27 October 2012 Polygamy Brigham Young and His 55 Wives The Huffington Post Retrieved 2 June 2017 The sheer variety of Brigham Young s marriages makes it difficult to make sense of them He married was sealed to in Mormon parlance young Clarissa Decker 15 and old Hannah Tapfield King 65 Snodgrass Mary Ellen 15 May 2009 Civil Disobedience An Encyclopedic History of Dissidence in the United States 1st ed Rootledge p 220 ISBN 978 0765681270 Retrieved 2 June 2017 The name of each wife is followed by her age at marriage the place of marriage and the year the couple married Lorenzo Snow Sarah Minnie Jensen 16 Salt Lake City 1871 Ulrich Laurel Thatcher 10 January 2017 A House Full of Females Plural Marriage and Women s Rights in Early Mormonism 1835 1870 Knopf p 274 ISBN 978 0307594907 Retrieved 3 June 2017 Wilford Woodfruff amp Emma Smith born March 1st 1838 at Diahman Davis County Missouri was Sealed for time amp Eternity by President Brigham Young at 7 oclock P M March 13 1853 Hacker J David Hilde Libra Jones James Holland 2010 Nuptiality Measures for the White Population of the United States 1850 1880 The Journal of Southern History National Institute of Health 76 1 39 70 PMC 3002115 PMID 21170276 Allen Joseph L 2003 Sacred Sites Searching for Book of Mormon Lands American Fork Utah Covenant Communications ISBN 1591562724 OCLC 54031905 page needed Fagan Garrett G Feder Kenneth L 1 December 2006 Crusading against straw men an alternative view of alternative archaeologies response to Holtorf 2005 World Archaeology 38 4 718 729 doi 10 1080 00438240600963528 S2CID 162321776 Macri Martha J 1996 Maya and Other Mesoamerican Scripts in Daniels Peter T Bright William eds The World s Writing Systems Oxford Oxford University Press pp 172 182 ISBN 0195079930 OCLC 31969720 Rogers Henry 2005 Writing Systems A Linguistic Approach Malden MA Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0631234632 OCLC 53831495 page needed Mosiah 7 22 1 Nephi 14 7 1 Nephi 4 9 Alma 18 9 Anon September 28 1997 Smithsonian Institution statement on the Book of Mormon Institute for Religious Research archived from the original on May 20 2012 Welch John W ed 1992 Reexploring the Book of Mormon Provo Utah Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies ISBN 0875796001 OCLC 25131320 archived from the original on 2015 11 24 retrieved 2016 03 13 page needed AllAboutMormons Com Webmaster January 19 2008 Questions The Book of Mormon mentions AllAboutMormons com El Santo Gringo a b Bennett Robert R 2000 Naming by Analogy Horses in the Book of Mormon FARMS Neal A Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship archived from the original on 2015 02 13 retrieved 2016 03 13 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America p 331 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Young Brigham April 9 1852 Self Government Mysteries Recreation and Amusements not in Themselves Sinful Tithing Adam Our Father and Our God in Watt G D Journal of Discourses by Brigham Young President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints His Two Counsellors the Twelve Apostles and Others vol 1 Liverpool F D amp S W Richards 1854 pp 46 53 1 Millennial Star 16 534 28 August 1854 Journal of Thomas Evans Jeremy Sr September 30 1852 Bergera 1980 Charles W Penrose Our Father Adam Improvement Era September 1902 873 GospeLink lt http gospelink com library browse cat id 6 permanent dead link gt reprinted in Charles W Penrose Our Father Adam Millennial Star 11 December 1902 785 90 this paragraph from p 789 Conference Report p 115 October 1 3 1976 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America p 332 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Brigham Young Journal of Discourses Vol 4 p 53 Snow Lowell M Blood Atonement Encyclopedia of Mormonism archived from the original on 2007 01 07 retrieved 2007 03 08 Grant Jedediah M March 12 1854 Discourse Deseret News published July 27 1854 vol 4 no 20 pp 1 2 archived from the original on December 15 2012 retrieved October 22 2019 Kimball Heber C January 11 1857 The Body of Christ Parable of the Vine A Wile Enthusiastic Spirit Not of God The Saints Should Not Unwisely Expose Each Others Follies in Watt G D ed Journal of Discourses by Brigham Young President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints His Two Counsellors and the Twelve Apostles vol 4 Liverpool S W Richards published 1857 pp 164 81 Grant Jedediah M September 21 1856 Rebuking Iniquity in Watt G D ed Journal of Discourses by Brigham Young President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints His Two Counsellors and the Twelve Apostles vol 4 Liverpool S W Richards published 1857 pp 49 51 Packer Boyd K November 1995 The Brilliant Morning of Forgiveness Ensign Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America pp 94 108 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Tanner 1980 pp 304 New York Herald May 4 1855 as cited in Dialogue Spring 1973 p 56 The Charge of Racism in the Book of Mormon Blacklds org Retrieved 2011 12 13 a b Tanner Jerald and Sandra 2004 Curse of Cain Racism in the Mormon Church Utah Lighthouse Ministry Web site with detailed documentation of racist acts in LDS history Retrieved 2007 12 05 Web site with detailed documentation of recent racist LDS policies Retrieved 2007 12 05 Race and the Priesthood The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints December 2013 Retrieved 15 February 2021 Bruce R McConkie 1978 All Are Alike Unto God A Symposium on the Book of Mormon The Second Annual Church Educational System Religious Educator s Symposium August 17 19 1978 Tanner 1980 pp 319 328 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America p 95 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Race and the Priesthood lds org LDS Church Retrieved April 14 2015 Prince Gregory A Wright William Robert 2005 David O McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism Salt Lake City University of Utah Press p 60 ISBN 978 0 87480 822 3 Prince Gregory A Wright William Robert 2005 David O McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism Salt Lake City University of Utah Press pp 79 80 ISBN 978 0 87480 822 3 Prince Gregory A Wright William Robert 2005 David O McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism Salt Lake City University of Utah Press p 80 ISBN 978 0 87480 822 3 Smith Darron 2004 Black and Mormon University of Illinois Press p 7 ISBN 0 252 02947 X Ramirez Margaret 2005 07 26 Mormon past steeped in racism Some black members want church to denounce racist doctrines Chicago Tribune Hinckley Gordon B May 2006 The Need for Greater Kindness Ensign Abanes 2003 pp 420 Smith Joseph 1840 Book of Mormon 3rd revised ed Nauvoo Illinois Robinson and Smith p 115 ISBN 1 60135 713 3 Retrieved 2009 08 03 The wording white and a delightsome was introduced in the 1st edition of the Book of Mormon in 1830 This was changed to pure and a delightsome in the 3rd edition in 1840 The 1841 and 1849 European editions of the Book of Mormon were printed in England by the Twelve Apostles and were the Kirtland 2nd edition with Anglicized spellings Future LDS editions were based on the European editions until the church issued a major reworking in 1981 Crawley Peter 1997 A Descriptive Bibliography of the Mormon Church Volume One 1830 1847 Provo Utah Religious Studies Center Brigham Young University p 151 ISBN 1 57008 395 9 Archived from the original on 2011 06 11 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Dobner Jennifer 10 December 2013 Mormon church explains defunct ban on blacks in priesthood Reuters Retrieved 15 February 2021 Race and the Priesthood www churchofjesuschrist org Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Retrieved 24 November 2020 Stack Peggy Fletcher Pierce Scott Noyce David 4 October 2020 In blunt language Nelson denounces racism urges Latter day Saints to lead out against prejudice Salt Lake Tribune Retrieved 15 February 2021 Tanner 1980 pp 258 285 a b Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America pp 78 79 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Hardy Carmon 1992 Solemn Covenant The Mormon Polygamous Passage University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 01833 8 This was done to place obedience to God above conformity with society or mammon Breakaway polygamist groups took this a step further parting with Salt Lake s leaders and practicing polygamy openly Rood Ron and Thatcher Linda Statehood Brief History of Utah historytogo utah gov 2 Wilford Woodruff Diary 1890 09 25 Abanes 2003 pp 336 342 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America pp 73 74 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Quinn Michael 1997 The Mormon Hierarchy Extensions of Power Signature Books pp 182 183 790 810 ISBN 1 56085 060 4 Joseph F Smith A profitable and enjoyable Conference Privilege of the people The Gospel includes temporal as well as spiritual salvation Official statement sustained Conference Report April 1904 p 97 a b c Abanes 2003 pp 385 a b c IRR site Finessing an Off Putting Mormon Doctrine Archived from the original on May 3 2011 Retrieved May 3 2011 Gospel Principles LDS Church 1978 Gospel Principles LDS CHurch 1997 Chapter 5 The Grand Destiny of the Faithful Teachings of Presidents of the Church Lorenzo Snow 2011 Millet Robert L Reynolds Noel B 1998 Do Latter day Saints believe that men and women can become gods Latter day Christianity 10 Basic Issues Provo Utah Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies ISBN 0934893322 OCLC 39732987 President Snow often referred to this couplet as having been revealed to him by inspiration during the Nauvoo period of the church See for example Deseret Weekly 3 November 1894 610 Deseret Weekly 8 October 1898 513 Deseret News 15 June 1901 177 and Journal History of the Church Historical Department LDS Church Salt Lake City 20 July 1901 4 Lund Gerald N February 1982 Is President Lorenzo Snow s oft repeated statement As man now is God once was as God now is man may be accepted as official doctrine by the Church Ensign Chapter 47 Exaltation Gospel Principles Salt Lake City Utah LDS Church 2009 Irvine Martha Tanner Robert 21 October 2007 Sexual Misconduct Plagues US Schools The Washington Post Retrieved 2008 04 12 Scout s Honor Sexual Abuse in America s Most Trusted Institution Patrick Boyle 1995 Anon December 15 2017 In our opinion Mormon bishop interviews are not invitations for abuse Deseret News Retrieved 2022 11 07 Statement from the LDS Church on Mormon bishops interviews The Salt Lake Tribune Tanner Courtney 30 March 2018 There is no limit to the gross sexually explicit questions Big crowd marches through Salt Lake City calling for an end to one on one Mormon bishop interviews with youths The Salt Lake Tribune Stack Peggy Fletcher Order to release financial data has LDS Church courts on collision course Salt Lake Tribune July 13 2007 Salt Lake Tribune Order to release financial data has LDS Church courts on collision course Archived from the original on 2007 07 15 Retrieved 2007 07 15 Retrieved 13 July 2007 PDF version Archived 2011 07 13 at the Wayback Machine at kosnoff com Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America pp 113 129 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Tanner 1980 pp 36 a b Tanner 1982 pp 516 528 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Great Britain Financial Statements Archived 2005 12 25 at the Wayback Machine provided by the Charity Commission based on the Charities Act Charities Listings Basic search results www cra arc gc ca Cantwell Robert W May 2007 Church Auditing Department Report 2006 Ensign 37 5 6 Retrieved 2011 12 06 The Church Auditing Department has been granted access to all records and systems necessary to evaluate the adequacy of controls over receipts of funds expenditures and safeguarding of Church assets The Church Auditing Department is independent of all other Church departments and operations and the staff consists of certified public accountants certified internal auditors certified information systems auditors and other credentialed professionals Based upon audits performed the Church Auditing Department is of the opinion that in all material respects contributions received expenditures made and assets of the Church for the year 2006 have been recorded and administered in accordance with appropriate accounting practices approved budgets and Church policies and procedures Why Deseret Trust Company Archived 2015 01 15 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 15 May 2007 Belo Corp Form 8 K BELO CORP BLC Unscheduled Material Events 8 K A Item 7 Financial Statements and Exhibits Archived from the original on 2008 04 30 Retrieved 2008 06 04 Accessed 16 May 2007 Financial Planning finserve byu edu Finance Section Draft 7 Without Requirements Archived from the original on 2008 05 27 Retrieved 2008 06 04 Accessed 16 May 2007 Finance accredit byu edu See page 9 of pdf document available at Finance 7 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 12 Retrieved 2009 02 05 Accessed 16 May 2007 Lay Leadership Volunteer Ministry of the Church Newsroom LDS Church Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 Mormon America Harper Collins p 178 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 Mormon America Harper Collins pp 395 400 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 If confirmed the 100 billion net worth would exceed the combined net worths of the world s largest university endowment Harvard University and the world s largest philanthropic foundation Gates Foundation Mormon Church has misled members on 100 billion tax exempt investment fund whistleblower alleges Washington Post Due to the categorization of Ensign Peak Advisors as an integrated auxiliary of a church not a public foundation 100 Billion In Mormon Till Does Not Merit IRS Attention Forbes First Presidency Statement on Church Finances Statement provided in response to media stories Newsroom LDS Church December 17 2019 a b c Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America pp 351 370 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 LDS Church Excommunicates DNA Author affirmation org Affirmation Gay amp Lesbian Mormons August 2005 Archived from the original on 2011 10 24 Retrieved 2011 12 06 Wolverton Susan 2004 Having Visions The Book of Mormon Translated and Exposed in Plain English Algora p 321 ISBN 0 87586 310 8 AAUP Academic Censure List www aaup org Retrieved 22 November 2020 a b Abanes 2003 pp 418 Sunstone 16 2 no 88 August 1992 p 63 As quoted in Ostling and Ostling p 354 Krakauer J 2004 Under the Banner of Heaven A Story of Violent Faith Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 364 ISBN 978 1 4000 7899 8 Retrieved September 24 2018 Ostling R N Ostling J K 2007 Mormon America the power and the promise HarperCollins p 261 ISBN 978 0 06 143295 8 Retrieved September 24 2018 Tanner 1980 pp 37 Walch Tad 2005 04 04 Miller funding Joseph Smith project Deseret News retrieved 2011 12 06 Jerald amp Sandra Tanner Changes in Joseph Smith s History Salt Lake City Utah Lighthouse Ministry 1965 a b Tanner 1980 Tanner 1980 pp 29 34 D Michael Quinn Jerald and Sandra Tanner s Distorted View of Mormonism A Response to Mormonism Shadow or Reality Tanner Jerald and Sandra 2004 Curse of Cain Racism in the Mormon Church Utah Lighthouse Ministry Chapter 10 part 2 p 311 Tanner 1980 pp 67 72 Tanner 1980 pp 129 Tanner 1980 pp 86 87 Norwood L Ara 1990 Joseph Smith and the Origins of the Book of Mormon FARMS Review 2 1 187 204 doi 10 2307 44796893 JSTOR 44796893 S2CID 164261657 archived from the original on 2011 07 18 retrieved 2011 12 06 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America p 248 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Godfrey 1994 Zelph was a white Lamanite a man of God who was a warrior and chieftain under the great prophet Onandagus who was known from the hill Cumorah is crossed out in the manuscript eastern Sea to the Rocky Mountains He was killed in battle by the arrow found among his ribs during a last crossed out great struggle with the Lamanites and Nephites crossed out D Michael Quinn On Being A Mormon Historian p 21 Lecture to BYU Student History Association Fall 1981 Allen Roberts Private Eye Weekly October 20 1993 p 12 Quoted in Jerald and Sandra Tanner Legacy A Distorted View of Mormon History Salt Lake City Messenger 88 May 1995 p 4 Hallwas John 1995 Cultures in Conflict A Documentary History of the Mormon War in Illinois Utah State University Press pp 2 3 ISBN 0 87421 272 3 The Joseph Smith Papers Quotes About the Project lds org Archived from the original on October 24 2012 Retrieved 2011 12 06 We work on the assumption that the closer you get to Joseph Smith in the sources the stronger he will appear rather than the reverse as is so often assumed by critics His warmth his sincerity and his absolute devotion to the cause come through page after page Rischin Moses The New Mormon History The American West Mar 1969 49 The New Mormon History Ed D Michael Quinn Salt Lake City Signature Books 1992 vii Laake Deborah 1994 Secret Ceremonies A Mormon Woman s Intimate Diary of Marriage and Beyond Dell Publishing ISBN 0 688 09304 3 McDannell Colleen 1995 Material Christianity Religion and Popular Culture in America Yale University Press pp 214 218 ISBN 0 300 07499 9 Affirmation article in Kip Eliason suicide Archived from the original on 2007 12 12 Retrieved 2007 12 08 Ed Decker 1982 The God Makers VHS Jeremiah Films Letter of January 5 1982 to all Stake Presidents and Bishops BYU Library Special Collections Letter of October 15 1982 to all Stake Presidents and Bishops BYU Library Special Collections Thumma Scott 2004 Gay Religion Rowman Altamira pp 99 113 ISBN 0 7591 0326 7 Affirmation a Gay and Lesbian Mormon organization Archived from the original on 2007 10 16 Retrieved 2007 12 06 Matis Stuart Letter to a Cousin Archived 2009 02 20 at the Wayback Machine God Loveth His Children LDS Church 2007 retrieved 2011 12 06 Quinn D Michael 2001 Same Sex Dynamics Among Nineteenth Century Americans A Mormon Example University of Illinois Press pp 195 264 ISBN 0 252 06958 7 George L Mitton Rhett S James A Response to D Michael Quinn s Homosexual Distortion of Latter day Saint History Archived August 8 2007 at the Wayback Machine Review of Same Sex Dynamics among Nineteenth Century Americans A Mormon Example by D Michael Quinn Provo Utah Maxwell Institute 1998 Pp 141 263 Shock Therapy Interview salamandersociety com The Salamander Society aka The Latter Day Lampoon unreliable source You searched for reparative therapy Seligman Martin E P What You Can Change and What You Can t The Complete Guide to Self Improvement Knopf 1993 ISBN 0 679 41024 4 Homosexuality not a disease to be cured Reproductive Health Matters November 2004 Oaks Dallin H October 1995 Same Gender Attraction Ensign 25 10 7 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America p 172 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Jesse McKinley and Kirk Johnson November 14 2008 Mormons Tipped Scale in Ban on Gay Marriage The New York Times retrieved February 14 2012 Erickson Briana April 7 2021 Las Vegas news anchor demands 20M amid fraud allegations Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved September 29 2021 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America pp 159 172 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 The Role of Women in Mormonism Caic org au 1995 03 27 Retrieved 2011 01 25 The Family A Proclamation to the World LDS Church 1995 retrieved 2011 12 06 Bushman 2006 pp 113 UTLM web site describing LDS treatment of women Retrieved 2007 12 04 Chapter 47 Exaltation www churchofjesuschrist org Hanks Maxine 1992 Women and Authority re emerging Mormon feminism Salt Lake City Utah Signature Books ISBN 1 56085 014 0 OCLC 25509094 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America pp 164 165 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 Pyle Hugh F 2000 The Truth about Mormonism Sword of the Lord pp 7 8 ISBN 0 87398 845 0 Ryssman Orin 2006 The Human Cost of Mormon Temple Marriage Policies IRR org Institute for Religious Research retrieved 2007 12 11 Temple Ritual Changed Again Salt Lake City Messenger Utah Lighthouse Ministry June 2005 retrieved 2012 01 17 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 10 20 Mormon America p 178 ISBN 0 06 066371 5 McKeever Bill Tithing by Coercion MRM org Mormonism Research Ministry retrieved 2013 01 17 Else what shall they do which are baptized for the dead if the dead rise not at all why are they then baptized for the dead 1 Corinthians 15 29 Baptism for the Dead Gospel Study Study by Topic LDS Church permanent dead link McElveen Floyd C 1997 The Mormon Illusion What the Bible Says About the Latter Day Saints Kregel Publications pp 110 112 ISBN 0 8254 3192 1 Did Jesus Establish Baptism for the Dead at irr org Archived March 14 2008 at the Wayback Machine Muth Chad 2008 05 02 Vatican letter directs bishops to keep parish records from Mormons Catholic News Service U S Conference of Catholic Bishops Archived from the original on 2008 05 13 Retrieved 2011 12 06 Urbina Ian 2003 12 21 New York Times Again Jews Fault Mormons Over Posthumous Baptisms The New York Times Retrieved 2010 04 30 Bushman 2006 pp 86 a b The LDS Agreement the Issue of The Mormon Baptisms of Jewish Holocaust Victims Jewishgen org Museum of Jewish Heritage A Living Memorial to the Holocaust retrieved 2011 01 25 CNN news article on baptism of holocaust victims CNN Archived from the original on December 18 2008 Purdy Michael September 2 2010 Jewish Mormon leaders issue joint statement Deseret News Dobner Jennifer September 1 2010 Mormon Jewish leaders tackle proxy baptism The Salt Lake Tribune AP Tanner 1980 pp 534 547 Tanner 1980 pp 535 Buerger David John 2002 The Mysteries of Godliness A History of Mormon Temple Worship 2nd ed Salt Lake City Signature Books ISBN 1 56085 176 7 pp 139 40 Changes to the Endowment ordinance FairMormon retrieved 2014 02 17 Paulson Matthew A 2000 Breaking the Mormon Code A Critique of Mormon Scholarship Wingspan Press pp 27 29 ISBN 1 59594 067 7 Gruss Edmond C 2006 What Every Mormon and Non Mormon Should Know Xulon Press p 119 ISBN 978 1 60034 163 2 BYU College of Religious Education Religion byu edu Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved 2011 01 25 Mormon church sued for allegedly covering up Boy Scouts sex abuse in Arizona CBS News December 29 2020 Retrieved April 20 2022 Chutchian Maria September 15 2021 Boy Scouts Mormon Church Reach 1 Billion Settlement With Sex Abuse Victims Claims Journal Retrieved April 20 2022 a b Romboy Dennis September 15 2021 Church of Jesus Christ will pay 250M into fund for Boy Scout sexual abuse claims Deseret News Retrieved April 20 2022 References EditAbanes Richard 2003 One Nation Under Gods A History of the Mormon Church New York Four Walls Eight Windows ISBN 978 1 56858 283 2 OCLC 52863716 Beckwith Francis 2002 Mosser Carl Owen Paul eds The New Mormon Challenge Grand Rapids Michigan Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 23194 3 OCLC 48428864 Bennett John C 1842 The History of the Saints or An Expose of Joe Smith and Mormonism Boston New York Leland amp Whiting Bradbury Soden OCLC 11081448 Bergera Gary James 1980 The Orson Pratt Brigham Young Controversies Conflict Within the Quorums 1853 to 1868 Dialogue A Journal of Mormon Thought 13 2 7 49 doi 10 2307 45224861 JSTOR 45224861 S2CID 254314595 Archived from the original on 2011 06 14 Brodie Fawn M 1995 1945 No Man Knows My History The Life of Joseph Smith 2nd rev and enl ed New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 73054 5 OCLC 36510049 Bushman Claudia L 2006 Contemporary Mormonism Latter day Saints in Modern America Westport Connecticut Praeger Publishers ISBN 0 275 98933 X OCLC 61178156 Compton Todd 1997 In Sacred Loneliness The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith Salt Lake City Signature Books ISBN 1 56085 085 X Eskridge William N Jr 2002 1999 Gaylaw Challenging the Apartheid of the Closet Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 00804 5 OCLC 49204149 Godfrey Kenneth W 1994 An Apologist for the Critics Brent Lee Metcalfe s Assumptions and Methodologies FARMS Review of Books Provo Utah Maxwell Institute 6 1 Retrieved 2007 03 01 Howe Eber D 1834 Mormonism Unvailed Painesville Ohio Printed and published by the author OCLC 10395314 Online copy Krakauer Jon 2003 Under the Banner of Heaven A Story of Violent Faith New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 50951 0 OCLC 51769258 Newell Linda King 1994 1984 Mormon Enigma Emma Hale Smith 2nd ed Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 06291 9 OCLC 28721939 Ostling Richard and Joan 1999 Mormon America San Francisco CA HarperSanFrancisco ISBN 978 0 06 066371 1 OCLC 41380398 Quinn D Michael 1994 The Mormon Hierarchy Origins of Power Salt Lake City UT Signature Books ISBN 978 1 56085 056 4 OCLC 30155116 Quinn D Michael 1997 The Mormon Hierarchy Extensions of Power Salt Lake City UT Signature Books ISBN 978 1 56085 060 1 OCLC 32168110 Sillito John R Staker Susan 2002 Mormon Mavericks Essays on Dissenters Salt Lake City Utah Signature Books ISBN 978 1 56085 154 7 OCLC 47805160 Smith Andrew F 1997 The Saintly Scoundrel The Life and Times of Dr John Cook Bennett Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 02282 1 OCLC 34721478 Tanner Jerald and Sandra 1980 The Changing World of Mormonism Chicago Moody Press ISBN 0 8024 1234 3 OCLC 5239408 Tanner Jerald and Sandra 1982 1972 Mormonism Shadow or Reality 4th enl and rev ed Salt Lake City UT Utah Lighthouse Ministry OCLC 15339569 Van Wagoner Richard S Summer 1986 Sarah Pratt The Shaping of an Apostate Dialogue A Journal of Mormon Thought 19 2 69 99 doi 10 2307 45225431 ISBN 9781591562849 JSTOR 45225431 OCLC 366662945 S2CID 254299794 archived from the original on 2009 02 21 retrieved 2018 12 03 Wymetal Wilhelm Ritter von 1886 Joseph Smith the Prophet His Family and His Friends A Study Based on Facts and Documents Salt Lake City UT Tribune Printing and Publishing Company OCLC 1538597 Online copy at olivercowdery comFurther reading EditMillet Robert 2011 No Weapon Shall Prosper New Light on Sensitive Issues Brigham Young University ISBN 978 0 8425 2794 1 archived from the original on 2013 12 28 retrieved 2013 12 28External links EditCriticalUtah Lighthouse Ministry Maintained by Sandra Tanner MormonThinkApologeticBYU operated Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies FARMS Church unaffiliated Foundation for Apologetic Information amp Research FAIR Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Criticism of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints amp oldid 1136187587, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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