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1890 Manifesto

The 1890 Manifesto (also known as the Woodruff Manifesto, the Anti-polygamy Manifesto, or simply "the Manifesto") is a statement which officially advised against any future plural marriage in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Issued by church president Wilford Woodruff in September 1890, the Manifesto was a response to mounting anti-polygamy pressure from the United States Congress, which by 1890 had disincorporated the church, escheated its assets to the U.S. federal government, and imprisoned many prominent polygamist Mormons. Upon its issuance, the LDS Church in conference accepted Woodruff's Manifesto as "authoritative and binding."

The Manifesto was a dramatic turning point in the history of the LDS Church. It advised church members against entering into any marriage prohibited by the law of the land, and made it possible for Utah to become a U.S. state. Nevertheless, even after the Manifesto, the church quietly continued to perform a small number of plural marriages in the United States, Mexico, and Canada,[1][2] thus necessitating a Second Manifesto during U.S. congressional hearings in 1904. Though neither Manifesto dissolved existing plural marriages, plural marriage in the LDS Church gradually died by attrition during the early-to-mid 20th century. The Manifesto was canonized in the LDS Church standard works as Official Declaration 1[3][4] and is considered by mainstream Mormons to have been prompted by divine revelation (although not a revelation itself), in which Woodruff was shown that the church would be thrown into turmoil if they did not comply with it.[5] Some Mormon fundamentalists rejected the manifesto.[6]

Background Edit

The Manifesto was issued in response to the anti-polygamy policies of the federal government of the United States, and most especially the Edmunds–Tucker Act of 1887. This law disincorporated the LDS Church and authorized the federal government to seize all of the church's assets. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the provisions of the Edmunds–Tucker Act in Late Corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. United States in May 1890.[7]

In April 1889, Woodruff, the president of the church, began privately refusing the permission that was required to contract new plural marriages.[8] In October 1889, Woodruff publicly admitted that he was no longer approving new polygamous marriages, and in answer to a reporter's question of what the LDS Church's attitude was toward the law against polygamy, Woodruff stated, "We mean to obey it. We have no thought of evading it or ignoring it."[9] Because it had been Mormon practice for over 25 years to either evade or ignore anti-polygamy laws, Woodruff's statement was a signal that a change in church policy was developing.[10]

In February 1890, the Supreme Court had already ruled in Davis v. Beason[11] that a law in Idaho Territory which disenfranchised individuals who practiced or believed in plural marriage was constitutional.[12] That decision left the Mormons no further legal recourse to their current marriage practices and made it unlikely that without change Utah Territory would be granted statehood.[citation needed]

Woodruff later said that on the night of September 23, 1890, he received a revelation from Jesus Christ that the church should cease the practice of plural marriage.[13] The following morning, he reported this to some of the general authorities and placed the hand-written draft on a table. George Reynolds would later recount that he, Charles W. Penrose, and John R. Winder modified Woodruff's draft into the current language accepted by the general authorities and presented to the church as a whole.[14] Woodruff announced the Manifesto on September 25 by publishing it in the church-owned Deseret Weekly in Salt Lake City.[15] On October 6, 1890, it was formally accepted by the church membership, though many held reservations or abstained from voting.[1][16][17]

Utah ratified its constitution in November 1895 and granted statehood on January 4, 1896.[18] One of the conditions for granting Utah statehood was that a ban on polygamy be written into their state constitution.[19][20]

Text Edit

The Manifesto states:

To Whom It May Concern:

Press dispatches having been sent for political purposes, from Salt Lake City, which have been widely published, to the effect that the Utah Commission, in their recent report to the Secretary of the Interior, allege that plural marriages have been contracted in Utah since last June or during the past year, also that in public discourses the leaders of the Church have taught, encouraged and urged the continuance of the practice of polygamy—

I, therefore, as President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, do hereby, in the most solemn manner, declare that these charges are false. We are not teaching polygamy or plural marriage, nor permitting any person to enter into its practice, and I deny that either forty or any other number of plural marriages have during that period been solemnized in our Temples or in any other place in the Territory.

One case has been reported, in which the parties allege that the marriage was performed in the Endowment House, in Salt Lake City, in the Spring of 1889, but I have not been able to learn who performed the ceremony; whatever was done in this matter was without my knowledge. In consequence of this alleged occurrence the Endowment House was, by my instructions, taken down without delay.

Inasmuch as laws have been enacted by Congress forbidding plural marriages, which laws have been pronounced constitutional by the court of last resort, I hearby declare my intention to submit to those laws, to use my influence with the members of the Church over which I preside to have them do likewise.

There is nothing in my teachings to the Church or in those of my associates, during the time specified, which can be reasonably construed to inculcate or encourage polygamy; and when any Elder of the Church has used language which appeared to convey such teaching, he has been promptly reproved. And I now publicly declare that my advice to the Latter-day Saints is to refrain from contracting any marriage forbidden by the law of the land.

Wilford Woodruff [signed]

President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[21]

Formal acceptance by the LDS Church Edit

Less than a month after the Manifesto was issued, the LDS Church used the procedure of common consent to make it binding upon church members. At a general conference of the church in Salt Lake City on October 6, 1890, the Manifesto was read, after which Lorenzo Snow, the president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, made the following motion:

I move that, recognizing Wilford Woodruff as the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the only man on the earth at the present time who holds the keys of the sealing ordinances, we consider him fully authorized by virtue of his position to issue the Manifesto which has been read in our hearing, and which is dated September 1890, and that as a Church in General Conference assembled, we accept his declaration concerning plural marriages as authoritative and binding.[21]

The conference proceedings recorded that "the vote to sustain the foregoing motion was unanimous."[21] However, a modern author reports that "at least some voted against the Manifesto and perhaps a majority abstained".[17] Some members, including apostle Moses Thatcher, only reluctantly supported the Manifesto and interpreted it as a sign that the Second Coming of Jesus was imminent, after which plural marriage would be reinstated.[17]

New plural marriages vs. existing plural marriages Edit

The Manifesto was the end of official church authorization for the creation of new plural marriages that violated local laws. It had no effect on the status of already existing plural marriages, and plural marriages continued to be performed in locations where it was believed to be legal. As Woodruff explained at the general conference where the Manifesto was accepted by the church, "[t]his Manifesto only refers to future marriages, and does not affect past conditions. I did not, I could not, and would not promise that you would desert your wives and children. This you cannot do in honor."[22] Despite Woodruff's explanation, some church leaders and members who were polygamous did begin to live with only one wife.[23] However, the majority of Mormon polygamists continued to cohabit with their plural wives in violation of the Edmunds Act.[24]

Aftermath and post-Manifesto plural marriage Edit

Within six years of the announcement of the Manifesto, Utah had become a state and federal prosecution of Mormon polygamists subsided. However, Congress still refused to seat representatives-elect who were polygamists, including B. H. Roberts.[25]

D. Michael Quinn and other Mormon historians have documented that some church apostles covertly sanctioned plural marriages after the Manifesto. This practice was especially prevalent in Mexico and Canada because of an erroneous belief that such marriages were legal in those jurisdictions.[26] However, a significant minority were performed in Utah and other western American states and territories. The estimates of the number of post-Manifesto plural marriages performed range from scores to thousands, with the actual figure probably close to 250.[27] Today, the LDS Church officially acknowledges that although the Manifesto "officially ceased" the practice of plural marriage in the church, "the ending of the practice after the Manifesto was ... gradual."[28][1]

Rumors of post-Manifesto marriages surfaced and began to be examined by Congress in the Reed Smoot hearings. In response, church president Joseph F. Smith issued a "Second Manifesto" in 1904 which reaffirmed the church's opposition to the creation of new plural marriages and threatened excommunication for Latter-day Saints who continued to enter into or solemnize new plural marriages. Apostles John W. Taylor and Matthias F. Cowley both resigned from the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles due to disagreement with the church's position on plural marriage.[29] Plural marriage in violation of local law continues to be grounds for excommunication from the LDS Church.[30]

The cessation of plural marriage within LDS Church gave rise to the Mormon fundamentalist movement.[6]

Evolution of Latter-day Saint views on the Manifesto Edit

The Manifesto has been canonized by the LDS Church, and its text appears in the Doctrine and Covenants, one of the church's books of scripture. However, when the Manifesto was issued, it was not apparent that Woodruff or the other leaders of the LDS Church viewed it as the result of a divine revelation.[31]

Approximately one year after he declared the Manifesto, Woodruff began to claim that he had received instructions from Jesus Christ that formed the basis of what he wrote in the text of the Manifesto.[13] These instructions were reportedly accompanied by a vision of what would occur if the Manifesto were not issued.[13]

Following Woodruff's death in 1898, other church leaders began to teach that the Manifesto was the result of a revelation of God.[32] Since that time, church leaders have consistently taught that the Manifesto was inspired of God.[33][34][35] In 1908, the Manifesto was printed in the LDS Church's Doctrine and Covenants for the first time,[36] and it has been included in every edition since. A non-Mormon observer of the church has stated that "[t]here is no question that, from a doctrinal standpoint, President Woodruff's Manifesto now has comparable status with [Joseph Smith's] revelations in the Doctrine and Covenants".[37] Similarly, another writer has stated bluntly that "contemporary Latter-day Saints regard the Manifesto as a revelation".[36] The Manifesto is currently published as "Official Declaration 1" in the Doctrine and Covenants.[38]

See also Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b c "The Manifesto and the End of Plural Marriage". lds.org. LDS Church. Retrieved 8 June 2015. The ledger of 'marriages and sealings performed outside the temple,' which is not comprehensive, lists 315 marriages performed between October 17, 1890, and September 8, 1903. Of the 315 marriages recorded in the ledger, research indicates that 25 (7.9%) were plural marriages and 290 were monogamous marriages (92.1%). Almost all the monogamous marriages recorded were performed in Arizona or Mexico. Of the 25 plural marriages, 18 took place in Mexico, 3 in Arizona, 2 in Utah, and 1 each in Colorado and on a boat on the Pacific Ocean.
  2. ^ Quinn, D. Michael. . Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 18 (1): 9–108. Archived from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  3. ^ Hammarberg, Melvyn (2013), The Mormon Quest for Glory: The Religious World of the Latter-Day Saints, New York: Oxford University Press USA, p. 135, ISBN 978-0199737628.
  4. ^ David E. Campbell, John C. Green, and J. Quin Monson (2014), Seeking the Promised Land: Mormons and American Politics, New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 58–59, ISBN 978-1107662674.
  5. ^ "Polygamy: Latter-day Saints and the Practice of Plural Marriage", mormonnewsroom.org.
  6. ^ a b Krakauer, Jon (2004). Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 139, 254–255. ISBN 978-1-4000-7899-8.
  7. ^ 136 U.S. 1 (1890).
  8. ^ Van Wagoner 1989, p. 135
  9. ^ Salt Lake Herald, 1889-10-27, quoted in: Van Wagoner 1989, p. 136
  10. ^ Smith 2005, pp. 62–63
  11. ^ 133 U.S. 333 (1890).
  12. ^ Smith 2005, pp. 63–64
  13. ^ a b c Remarks of Wilford Woodruff at Cache Stake Conference, Logan, Utah, November 1, 1891; reported at Wilford Woodruff, "Remarks", Deseret Weekly (Salt Lake City, Utah) November 14, 1891; excerpts reprinted in LDS Church, "Official Declaration 1", Doctrine and Covenants.
  14. ^ Burrows, Julius C.; Foraker, Joseph Benson; United States Congress Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections (1906), Proceedings Before the Committee On Privileges and Elections of the United States Senate in the Matter of The Protests Against the Right of Hon. Reed Smoot, a Senator From the State of Utah, To Hold His Seat, 59th Cong., 1st sess. Senate. Doc. 486, vol. II, pp. 52–53, OCLC 4795799
  15. ^ Wilford Woodruff, "Official Declaration", Deseret Weekly (Salt Lake City) 41:476 (1890-09-25).
  16. ^ Joseph Stuart (2012). . BYU Religious Education Student Symposium, 2012. Religious Studies Center. ISBN 978-0-8425-2829-0. Archived from the original on 2016-01-23. Retrieved 2015-06-16.
  17. ^ a b c Dan Erickson (1998). "As a Thief in the Night": The Mormon Quest for Millennial Deliverance. Signature Books. p. 205. Retrieved 2015-06-16.
  18. ^ Alexander, Thomas G. (2012). Edward Hunter Snow: Pioneer—Educator—Statesman. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-8061-8795-2.
  19. ^ Kaplan, David A. (2019). The Most Dangerous Branch: Inside the Supreme Court in the Age of Trump. Broadway Books. p. 423. ISBN 978-1-5247-5991-9.
  20. ^ Pulido, Elisa Eastwood (2020). The Spiritual Evolution of Margarito Bautista: Mexican Mormon Evangelizer, Polygamist Dissident, and Utopian Founder, 1878–1961. Oxford University Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-19-094212-0.
  21. ^ a b c LDS Church, Official Declaration 1, Doctrine and Covenants.
  22. ^ Diary entry of Marriner W. Merrill, 1890-10-06 (LDS Church archives), as cited in: Hardy 1992, p. 141.
  23. ^ Lorenzo Snow, who would succeed Woodruff as president of the church, was one such leader.
  24. ^ Cannon, Kenneth L., II (1978), "Beyond the Manifesto: Polygamous Cohabitation among LDS General Authorities after 1890", Utah Historical Quarterly, 46 (1): 24{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ Flake, Kathleen (2003), The Politics of American Religious Identity: The Seating of Senator Reed Smoot, Mormon Apostle, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 0-8078-5501-4, OCLC 57707347
  26. ^ Numerous marriages also were performed in international waters on the high seas.
  27. ^ Hardy 1992, pp. 167–335 and appendix II
  28. ^ "Plural Marriage and Families in Early Utah", churchofjesuschrist.org.
  29. ^ Jorgensen, Victor W.; Hardy, B. Carmon (1980), "The Taylor-Cowley Affair and the Watershed of Mormon History", Utah Historical Quarterly, 48 (1): 4.
  30. ^ Handbook 1: Stake Presidents and Bishops, Salt Lake City, Utah: LDS Church, 2010, p. 57.
  31. ^ Hardy 1992, pp. 146–52
  32. ^ See, e.g., Discourse delivered by Lorenzo Snow at St. George, Utah, on 1899-05-03, published as Lorenzo Snow, "Discourse" 2007-10-25 at the Wayback Machine, Millennial Star, vol. 61, no. 34 pp. 529–33 at p. 532 (1899-08-24), reprinted in Lorenzo Snow (1998, Clyde J. Williams ed.). The Teachings of Lorenzo Snow: Fifth President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft) pp. 192–93.
  33. ^ Widtsoe, John A. (1943), Evidences and Reconciliations: Aids to Faith in a Modern Day, Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, p. 89, OCLC 36111479.
  34. ^ Smith, Joseph Fielding (1971) [1922], Essentials in Church History: A History of the Church from the Birth of Joseph Smith to the Present Time (24th ed.), Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book, pp. 493–94, OCLC 48064256.
  35. ^ Kimball, Spencer W. (1998) [1982], Kimball, Edward L. (ed.), The Teachings of Spencer W. Kimball: Twelfth President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, pp. 447–48, ISBN 157008484X, OCLC 39304039.
  36. ^ a b Turner, John G. (2016), The Mormon Jesus: A Biography, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, p. 91, ISBN 9780674737433.
  37. ^ Shipps, Jan (1985), Mormonism: The Story of a New Religious Tradition, Urbana: University of Illinois Press, p. 114, ISBN 0252011597, OCLC 10726560.
  38. ^ Brzuzy, Stephanie; Lind, Amy (2007). Battleground: Women, Gender, and Sexuality [2 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 418. ISBN 978-0-313-08800-1.

General references Edit

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • Official Declaration 1: Full text of the Manifesto and other background statements from LDS Church Doctrine and Covenants
  • — essay by Quinn

1890, manifesto, also, latter, saint, polygamy, late, 19th, century, also, known, woodruff, manifesto, anti, polygamy, manifesto, simply, manifesto, statement, which, officially, advised, against, future, plural, marriage, church, jesus, christ, latter, saints. See also Latter Day Saint polygamy in the late 19th century The 1890 Manifesto also known as the Woodruff Manifesto the Anti polygamy Manifesto or simply the Manifesto is a statement which officially advised against any future plural marriage in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church Issued by church president Wilford Woodruff in September 1890 the Manifesto was a response to mounting anti polygamy pressure from the United States Congress which by 1890 had disincorporated the church escheated its assets to the U S federal government and imprisoned many prominent polygamist Mormons Upon its issuance the LDS Church in conference accepted Woodruff s Manifesto as authoritative and binding The Manifesto was a dramatic turning point in the history of the LDS Church It advised church members against entering into any marriage prohibited by the law of the land and made it possible for Utah to become a U S state Nevertheless even after the Manifesto the church quietly continued to perform a small number of plural marriages in the United States Mexico and Canada 1 2 thus necessitating a Second Manifesto during U S congressional hearings in 1904 Though neither Manifesto dissolved existing plural marriages plural marriage in the LDS Church gradually died by attrition during the early to mid 20th century The Manifesto was canonized in the LDS Church standard works as Official Declaration 1 3 4 and is considered by mainstream Mormons to have been prompted by divine revelation although not a revelation itself in which Woodruff was shown that the church would be thrown into turmoil if they did not comply with it 5 Some Mormon fundamentalists rejected the manifesto 6 Contents 1 Background 2 Text 3 Formal acceptance by the LDS Church 4 New plural marriages vs existing plural marriages 5 Aftermath and post Manifesto plural marriage 6 Evolution of Latter day Saint views on the Manifesto 7 See also 8 Citations 9 General references 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground EditThe Manifesto was issued in response to the anti polygamy policies of the federal government of the United States and most especially the Edmunds Tucker Act of 1887 This law disincorporated the LDS Church and authorized the federal government to seize all of the church s assets The U S Supreme Court upheld the provisions of the Edmunds Tucker Act in Late Corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints v United States in May 1890 7 In April 1889 Woodruff the president of the church began privately refusing the permission that was required to contract new plural marriages 8 In October 1889 Woodruff publicly admitted that he was no longer approving new polygamous marriages and in answer to a reporter s question of what the LDS Church s attitude was toward the law against polygamy Woodruff stated We mean to obey it We have no thought of evading it or ignoring it 9 Because it had been Mormon practice for over 25 years to either evade or ignore anti polygamy laws Woodruff s statement was a signal that a change in church policy was developing 10 In February 1890 the Supreme Court had already ruled in Davis v Beason 11 that a law in Idaho Territory which disenfranchised individuals who practiced or believed in plural marriage was constitutional 12 That decision left the Mormons no further legal recourse to their current marriage practices and made it unlikely that without change Utah Territory would be granted statehood citation needed Woodruff later said that on the night of September 23 1890 he received a revelation from Jesus Christ that the church should cease the practice of plural marriage 13 The following morning he reported this to some of the general authorities and placed the hand written draft on a table George Reynolds would later recount that he Charles W Penrose and John R Winder modified Woodruff s draft into the current language accepted by the general authorities and presented to the church as a whole 14 Woodruff announced the Manifesto on September 25 by publishing it in the church owned Deseret Weekly in Salt Lake City 15 On October 6 1890 it was formally accepted by the church membership though many held reservations or abstained from voting 1 16 17 Utah ratified its constitution in November 1895 and granted statehood on January 4 1896 18 One of the conditions for granting Utah statehood was that a ban on polygamy be written into their state constitution 19 20 Text EditThe Manifesto states To Whom It May Concern Press dispatches having been sent for political purposes from Salt Lake City which have been widely published to the effect that the Utah Commission in their recent report to the Secretary of the Interior allege that plural marriages have been contracted in Utah since last June or during the past year also that in public discourses the leaders of the Church have taught encouraged and urged the continuance of the practice of polygamy I therefore as President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints do hereby in the most solemn manner declare that these charges are false We are not teaching polygamy or plural marriage nor permitting any person to enter into its practice and I deny that either forty or any other number of plural marriages have during that period been solemnized in our Temples or in any other place in the Territory One case has been reported in which the parties allege that the marriage was performed in the Endowment House in Salt Lake City in the Spring of 1889 but I have not been able to learn who performed the ceremony whatever was done in this matter was without my knowledge In consequence of this alleged occurrence the Endowment House was by my instructions taken down without delay Inasmuch as laws have been enacted by Congress forbidding plural marriages which laws have been pronounced constitutional by the court of last resort I hearby declare my intention to submit to those laws to use my influence with the members of the Church over which I preside to have them do likewise There is nothing in my teachings to the Church or in those of my associates during the time specified which can be reasonably construed to inculcate or encourage polygamy and when any Elder of the Church has used language which appeared to convey such teaching he has been promptly reproved And I now publicly declare that my advice to the Latter day Saints is to refrain from contracting any marriage forbidden by the law of the land Wilford Woodruff signed President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 21 Formal acceptance by the LDS Church EditLess than a month after the Manifesto was issued the LDS Church used the procedure of common consent to make it binding upon church members At a general conference of the church in Salt Lake City on October 6 1890 the Manifesto was read after which Lorenzo Snow the president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles made the following motion I move that recognizing Wilford Woodruff as the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints and the only man on the earth at the present time who holds the keys of the sealing ordinances we consider him fully authorized by virtue of his position to issue the Manifesto which has been read in our hearing and which is dated September 1890 and that as a Church in General Conference assembled we accept his declaration concerning plural marriages as authoritative and binding 21 The conference proceedings recorded that the vote to sustain the foregoing motion was unanimous 21 However a modern author reports that at least some voted against the Manifesto and perhaps a majority abstained 17 Some members including apostle Moses Thatcher only reluctantly supported the Manifesto and interpreted it as a sign that the Second Coming of Jesus was imminent after which plural marriage would be reinstated 17 New plural marriages vs existing plural marriages EditThe Manifesto was the end of official church authorization for the creation of new plural marriages that violated local laws It had no effect on the status of already existing plural marriages and plural marriages continued to be performed in locations where it was believed to be legal As Woodruff explained at the general conference where the Manifesto was accepted by the church t his Manifesto only refers to future marriages and does not affect past conditions I did not I could not and would not promise that you would desert your wives and children This you cannot do in honor 22 Despite Woodruff s explanation some church leaders and members who were polygamous did begin to live with only one wife 23 However the majority of Mormon polygamists continued to cohabit with their plural wives in violation of the Edmunds Act 24 Aftermath and post Manifesto plural marriage EditWithin six years of the announcement of the Manifesto Utah had become a state and federal prosecution of Mormon polygamists subsided However Congress still refused to seat representatives elect who were polygamists including B H Roberts 25 D Michael Quinn and other Mormon historians have documented that some church apostles covertly sanctioned plural marriages after the Manifesto This practice was especially prevalent in Mexico and Canada because of an erroneous belief that such marriages were legal in those jurisdictions 26 However a significant minority were performed in Utah and other western American states and territories The estimates of the number of post Manifesto plural marriages performed range from scores to thousands with the actual figure probably close to 250 27 Today the LDS Church officially acknowledges that although the Manifesto officially ceased the practice of plural marriage in the church the ending of the practice after the Manifesto was gradual 28 1 Rumors of post Manifesto marriages surfaced and began to be examined by Congress in the Reed Smoot hearings In response church president Joseph F Smith issued a Second Manifesto in 1904 which reaffirmed the church s opposition to the creation of new plural marriages and threatened excommunication for Latter day Saints who continued to enter into or solemnize new plural marriages Apostles John W Taylor and Matthias F Cowley both resigned from the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles due to disagreement with the church s position on plural marriage 29 Plural marriage in violation of local law continues to be grounds for excommunication from the LDS Church 30 The cessation of plural marriage within LDS Church gave rise to the Mormon fundamentalist movement 6 Evolution of Latter day Saint views on the Manifesto EditThe Manifesto has been canonized by the LDS Church and its text appears in the Doctrine and Covenants one of the church s books of scripture However when the Manifesto was issued it was not apparent that Woodruff or the other leaders of the LDS Church viewed it as the result of a divine revelation 31 Approximately one year after he declared the Manifesto Woodruff began to claim that he had received instructions from Jesus Christ that formed the basis of what he wrote in the text of the Manifesto 13 These instructions were reportedly accompanied by a vision of what would occur if the Manifesto were not issued 13 Following Woodruff s death in 1898 other church leaders began to teach that the Manifesto was the result of a revelation of God 32 Since that time church leaders have consistently taught that the Manifesto was inspired of God 33 34 35 In 1908 the Manifesto was printed in the LDS Church s Doctrine and Covenants for the first time 36 and it has been included in every edition since A non Mormon observer of the church has stated that t here is no question that from a doctrinal standpoint President Woodruff s Manifesto now has comparable status with Joseph Smith s revelations in the Doctrine and Covenants 37 Similarly another writer has stated bluntly that contemporary Latter day Saints regard the Manifesto as a revelation 36 The Manifesto is currently published as Official Declaration 1 in the Doctrine and Covenants 38 See also Edit Latter Day Saint movement portalCriticism of the Latter Day Saint movement Shelby Moore Cullom Group marriage Polyandry Proclamations of the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles Isaac S StrubleCitations Edit a b c The Manifesto and the End of Plural Marriage lds org LDS Church Retrieved 8 June 2015 The ledger of marriages and sealings performed outside the temple which is not comprehensive lists 315 marriages performed between October 17 1890 and September 8 1903 Of the 315 marriages recorded in the ledger research indicates that 25 7 9 were plural marriages and 290 were monogamous marriages 92 1 Almost all the monogamous marriages recorded were performed in Arizona or Mexico Of the 25 plural marriages 18 took place in Mexico 3 in Arizona 2 in Utah and 1 each in Colorado and on a boat on the Pacific Ocean Quinn D Michael LDS Church Authority and New Plural Marriages 1890 1904 Dialogue A Journal of Mormon Thought 18 1 9 108 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 8 June 2015 Hammarberg Melvyn 2013 The Mormon Quest for Glory The Religious World of the Latter Day Saints New York Oxford University Press USA p 135 ISBN 978 0199737628 David E Campbell John C Green and J Quin Monson 2014 Seeking the Promised Land Mormons and American Politics New York Cambridge University Press pp 58 59 ISBN 978 1107662674 Polygamy Latter day Saints and the Practice of Plural Marriage mormonnewsroom org a b Krakauer Jon 2004 Under the Banner of Heaven A Story of Violent Faith Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group pp 139 254 255 ISBN 978 1 4000 7899 8 136 U S 1 1890 Van Wagoner 1989 p 135 Salt Lake Herald 1889 10 27 quoted in Van Wagoner 1989 p 136 Smith 2005 pp 62 63 133 U S 333 1890 Smith 2005 pp 63 64 a b c Remarks of Wilford Woodruff at Cache Stake Conference Logan Utah November 1 1891 reported at Wilford Woodruff Remarks Deseret Weekly Salt Lake City Utah November 14 1891 excerpts reprinted in LDS Church Official Declaration 1 Doctrine and Covenants Burrows Julius C Foraker Joseph Benson United States Congress Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections 1906 Proceedings Before the Committee On Privileges and Elections of the United States Senate in the Matter of The Protests Against the Right of Hon Reed Smoot a Senator From the State of Utah To Hold His Seat 59th Cong 1st sess Senate Doc 486 vol II pp 52 53 OCLC 4795799 Wilford Woodruff Official Declaration Deseret Weekly Salt Lake City 41 476 1890 09 25 Joseph Stuart 2012 For the Temporal Salvation of the Church Historical Context of the Manifesto 1882 90 BYU Religious Education Student Symposium 2012 Religious Studies Center ISBN 978 0 8425 2829 0 Archived from the original on 2016 01 23 Retrieved 2015 06 16 a b c Dan Erickson 1998 As a Thief in the Night The Mormon Quest for Millennial Deliverance Signature Books p 205 Retrieved 2015 06 16 Alexander Thomas G 2012 Edward Hunter Snow Pioneer Educator Statesman University of Oklahoma Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 8061 8795 2 Kaplan David A 2019 The Most Dangerous Branch Inside the Supreme Court in the Age of Trump Broadway Books p 423 ISBN 978 1 5247 5991 9 Pulido Elisa Eastwood 2020 The Spiritual Evolution of Margarito Bautista Mexican Mormon Evangelizer Polygamist Dissident and Utopian Founder 1878 1961 Oxford University Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 19 094212 0 a b c LDS Church Official Declaration 1 Doctrine and Covenants Diary entry of Marriner W Merrill 1890 10 06 LDS Church archives as cited in Hardy 1992 p 141 Lorenzo Snow who would succeed Woodruff as president of the church was one such leader Cannon Kenneth L II 1978 Beyond the Manifesto Polygamous Cohabitation among LDS General Authorities after 1890 Utah Historical Quarterly 46 1 24 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Flake Kathleen 2003 The Politics of American Religious Identity The Seating of Senator Reed Smoot Mormon Apostle Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 5501 4 OCLC 57707347 Numerous marriages also were performed in international waters on the high seas Hardy 1992 pp 167 335 and appendix II Plural Marriage and Families in Early Utah churchofjesuschrist org Jorgensen Victor W Hardy B Carmon 1980 The Taylor Cowley Affair and the Watershed of Mormon History Utah Historical Quarterly 48 1 4 Handbook 1 Stake Presidents and Bishops Salt Lake City Utah LDS Church 2010 p 57 Hardy 1992 pp 146 52 See e g Discourse delivered by Lorenzo Snow at St George Utah on 1899 05 03 published as Lorenzo Snow Discourse Archived 2007 10 25 at the Wayback Machine Millennial Star vol 61 no 34 pp 529 33 at p 532 1899 08 24 reprinted in Lorenzo Snow 1998 Clyde J Williams ed The Teachings of Lorenzo Snow Fifth President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Salt Lake City Utah Bookcraft pp 192 93 Widtsoe John A 1943 Evidences and Reconciliations Aids to Faith in a Modern Day Salt Lake City Utah Bookcraft p 89 OCLC 36111479 Smith Joseph Fielding 1971 1922 Essentials in Church History A History of the Church from the Birth of Joseph Smith to the Present Time 24th ed Salt Lake City Utah Deseret Book pp 493 94 OCLC 48064256 Kimball Spencer W 1998 1982 Kimball Edward L ed The Teachings of Spencer W Kimball Twelfth President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Salt Lake City Utah Bookcraft pp 447 48 ISBN 157008484X OCLC 39304039 a b Turner John G 2016 The Mormon Jesus A Biography Cambridge Massachusetts and London Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 91 ISBN 9780674737433 Shipps Jan 1985 Mormonism The Story of a New Religious Tradition Urbana University of Illinois Press p 114 ISBN 0252011597 OCLC 10726560 Brzuzy Stephanie Lind Amy 2007 Battleground Women Gender and Sexuality 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 418 ISBN 978 0 313 08800 1 General references EditHardy B Carmon 1992 Solemn Covenant The Mormon Polygamous Passage Urbana Ill University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 01833 8 OCLC 23219530 Quinn D Michael 1997 The Mormon Hierarchy Extensions of Power Salt Lake City Signature Books ISBN 1 56085 060 4 OCLC 32168110 archived from the original on 2005 10 30 Smith Stephen Eliot 2005 The Mormon Question Revisited Anti polygamy Laws and the Free Exercise Clause LL M thesis Cambridge Mass Harvard Law School OCLC 70120125 Van Wagoner Richard S 1989 Mormon Polygamy A History 2nd ed Salt Lake City Signature Books ISBN 0941214796 OCLC 19515803Further reading EditPeterson Paul H 1992 Manifesto of 1890 in Ludlow Daniel H ed Encyclopedia of Mormonism New York Macmillan Publishing pp 852 853 ISBN 0 02 879602 0 OCLC 24502140External links EditOfficial Declaration 1 Full text of the Manifesto and other background statements from LDS Church Doctrine and Covenants Plural Marriages After The 1890 Manifesto essay by Quinn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1890 Manifesto amp oldid 1145531040, wikipedia, wiki, 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