by Jerald and
Sandra Tanner
(This article originally appeared
in The Salt Lake City Messenger, Issue No. 39, July 1978)
Bruce
R. McConkie, who now serves as an Apostle in the Mormon Church, made these
remarks concerning blacks in his book Mormon Doctrine:
"Negroes
in this life are denied the Priesthood; under no
circumstances can they hold this delegation of authority from the
Almighty. (Abra. 1:20-27.) The gospel message of salvation is
not carried affirmatively to them... negroes are not equal with other
races where the receipt of certain spiritual blessings are concerned,
particularly the priesthood and the temple blessings that flow therefrom,
but this inequality is not of man's origin. It is the Lord's
doing, is based an his eternal laws of justice, and grows
out of the lack of Spiritual valiance of those
concerned in their first estate." (Mormon Doctrine, 1966, pp.
527-528)
"However,
in a broad general sense, caste systems have their root and
origin in the gospel itself, and when they operate according
to the divine decree, the resultant restrictions and
segregation are right and proper and have the approval of
the Lord. To illustrate: Cain, Ham, and the whole negro race
have been cursed with a black skin, the mark of Cain, so
they can be identified as a caste apart, a people with whom the other
descendants of Adam should not intermarry." (Ibid., p. 114)
Because
of these teachings the Los Angeles Times for August 27, 1967
referred to the Mormon Church as "one of the few uncracked fortresses of
discrimination." For eleven more years the Latter-day Saints continued to
cling to a policy of discrimination. Church leaders claimed that the
doctrine could only be changed by revelation from God. Finally, on June 9,
1978 the Mormon Church's Deseret News carried a startling
announcement by the First Presidency which said that a new revelation had
been given and that blacks would be allowed to hold the priesthood:
"...we
have pleaded long and earnestly in behalf of these, our faithful brethren,
spending many hours in the upper room of the Temple supplicating the Lord
for divine guidance.
"He
has heard our prayers, and by revelation has
confirmed that the long-promised day has come when every faithful, worthy
man in the church may receive the holy priesthood, with power to exercise
its divine authority, and enjoy with his loved ones every blessing that
flows therefrom, including the blessings of the temple. Accordingly, all
worthy male members of the church may be ordained to the priesthood
without regard for race or color." (Deseret News, June 9, 1978,
page 1A)
Since
we have probably printed more material critical of the Mormon anti-black
doctrine than any other publisher, the new revelation comes as a great
victory and a vindication of our work. We printed our first criticism of
this doctrine in 1959. This was certainly not a popular cause to espouse
in those days. (In fact, at one time a Mormon threatened to punch Sandra
in the nose over the issue.) In November 1965 we published a Messenger
which showed that a black man named Elijah Abel held the priesthood: in
the early Mormon Church and that his descendants, who now pass as
"whites," are still being ordained to the priesthood. This was an absolute
contradiction to the doctrine taught by the Mormon leaders. Apostle Mark
E. Petersen said that "If there is one drop of Negro blood
in my children, as I have read to you, they receive the curse."
(Race Problems--As They Affect The Church, page 7) The Church was
never able to refute the serious accusation about Abel's descendants
holding the priesthood, and this undoubtedly destroyed many Mormon's faith
in the doctrine concerning blacks. For more information an this matter see
Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? pages 267-272.
In
1967 the original papyrus from which Joseph Smith "translated" the Book of
Abraham was rediscovered. Immediately after the papyrus came to light we
began publishing material which showed that Joseph Smith was completely
mistaken in his purported translation. The papyrus was in reality a copy
of the Egyptian Book of Breathings, a pagan text that had absolutely
nothing to do with Abraham or his religion. Since the Book of Abraham was
the real source of the Church's teaching that blacks could not hold the
priesthood, we called upon the Mormon leaders to "repudiate the Book of
Abraham and renounce the anti-Negro doctrine contained in its pages." (Salt
Lake City Messenger, March, 1966) For a complete treatment of the
subject see Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? pp. 294-369.
The
translation of the papyrus by noted Egyptologists caused many of the
intellectual Mormons to lose faith in Joseph Smith's work and consequently
the Church's anti-black doctrine began to be more openly criticized by
members of the Church. Some were even excommunicated because of their
opposition to the Church's position.
Those
of us who have criticized the Mormon Church for its racial teachings have
been ridiculed for attempting to change the doctrine. Mormon apologist
Armand L. Mauss wrote: "My plea, then to the civil rights organizations
and to all the critics of the Mormon Church is: get off our
backs! ... agitation aver the 'Negro issue' by non-Mormon
groups, or even by Mormon liberals, is likely simply to increase the
resistance to change." (Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought,
Winter 1967, pp. 38-39)
John
L. Lund said that "Those who believe that the Church 'gave in' on the
polygamy issue and subsequently should give in on the Negro question are
not only misinformed about Church History, but
are apparently unaware of Church doctrine.... Therefore, those who hope
that pressure will bring about a revelation need to take a closer look at
Mormon history and the order of heaven. (The Church and the Negro,
1967, pp. 104-5)
On
page 109 of the same book, Mr. Lund emphasized that "Those who would try
to pressure the Prophet to give the Negroes the Priesthood do not
understand the plan of God nor the order of heaven. Revelation is the
expressed will of God to man. Revelation is not man's will expressed to
God. All the social, political, and governmental pressure in the world is
not going to change what God has decreed to be."
When
Stewart Udall, a noted Mormon, came out against the Church's anti-black
doctrine, Paul C. Richards responded: "The Church is either true or it
isn't. If it changes its stand on the strength
of the 'great stream of modern religious and social thought,'
it will be proven untrue. If that happens, the more serious
members would do well to join the Cub Scouts. It's cheaper and there is
less work and less criticism....
"If
the Church is true it will hold to its beliefs in spite of
its members. If it is false, more power to the easy-way-out philosophers
who claim to know the 'imperious truths of the contemporary world." (Dialogue:
A Journal of Mormon Thought, Autumn 1967, page 6)
In
the Salt Lake City Messenger for March 1970, we commented: "The
Lord plainly reveals to us, as he did to Peter many years ago, that
'GOD IS NO RESPECTER OF PERSONS' (Acts 10:34). To
accept the anti-Negro doctrine is to deny the spirit of revelation. If we
allow others to do our thinking on this vital issue it could lead to
violence or bloodshed. Because we felt that it was not right to put our
trust in man, we separated ourselves from the Mormon Church."
As
early as 1963 we printed a sheet entitled, "WILL THERE BE A REVELATION
REGARDING THE NEGRO?" At the bottom of this sheet we predicted: "If the
pressure continues to increase on the Negro question the leaders of the
Mormon Church will probably have another revelation
which will allow the Negro to hold the priesthood." In
Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? pp. 291-292, we pointed out:
"If
the Mormon Church should decide to change its policy and allow Negroes to
hold the priesthood, it will not be the first time that Mormon doctrine
has been revised to fit a changing world.
"Twenty-five
years before the Mormon Church gave up the practice of polygamy they were
declaring that no such change could be made ln the Millennial Star,
Oct. 28, 1865, the following appeared: 'We have shown that in requiring
the relinquishment of polygamy, they ask the
renunciation of the ENTIRE FAITH of this people....
'There
is no half way house. THE CHILDISH BABBLE ABOUT ANOTHER
REVELATION IS ONLY AN EVIDENCE HOW HALF INFORMED MEN CAN TALK.'
"As
the pressure increased against polygamy, Wilford Woodruff issued the
Manifesto (now claimed to be a revelation) which suspended the practice of
polygamy."
BRIGHAM YOUNG MISREPRESENTED
We
feel that the Mormon Church's change on the doctrine concerning blacks is
a very good move because it will undoubtedly help blacks obtain equality
in Utah and will probably prevent much bloodshed and trouble.
Nevertheless, we must point out that Brigham Young and other leaders have
been misrepresented in order to make the change palatable to the Mormon
people. For instance, the Church's Deseret News would have us
believe that the change was a fulfillment of a prophecy uttered by Brigham
Young, the second President of the Church:
"The
announcement Friday fulfilled statements made by most LDS Church
presidents since Joseph Smith that blacks would one day obtain the full
blessings of the church, including the priesthood.
"Speaking
against slavery, Brigham Young once told the Utah Legislature, '...the the
[sic] day will come when all that race (Blacks) will be redeemed and
possess all the blessings which we now have.'" Deseret News, June
10, 1978, p. 1A)
While
it is true that Brigham Young believed that blacks would eventually
receive the priesthood, he made it clear that this was not to happen
until AFTER the resurrection. The context of the
speech which the Deseret News cites reveals that Brigham Young
believed it would be a sin for the Church to give blacks the priesthood
before the "last of the posterity of Able" had received it. He went on to
say that if the Church gave "all the blessings of God" to the blacks
prematurely, the priesthood would be taken away and the Church would go to
destruction. This address is preserved in the Church Historical
Department. Michael Marquardt has provided a typed copy which retains the
spelling errors of the original. We extract the following from Brigham
Young's speech:
"What
is that mark? you will see it on the countenance of every African you ever
did see upon the face of the earth,...the Lord told Cain that he
should not receive the blessings of the preisthood nor his seed,
until the last of the posterity of Able had received the preisthood, until
the redemtion of the earth. If there never was a prophet, or
apostle of Jesus Christ spoke it before, I tell you, this people that are
commonly called negroes are the children of old Cain.... they cannot bear
rule in the preisthood, for the curse on them was to remain
upon them, until the resedue of the posterity of Michal and
his wife receive the blessings,... until the times of the restitution
shall come,... Then Cain's seed will be had in remembrance, and the time
come when that curse should be wiped off....
"I
am as much oposed to the principle of slavery as any man in the present
acceptation or usage of the term, it is abused. I am opposed to abuseing
that which God has decreed, to take a blessing, and make a curse of it.
It is a great blessing to the seed of Adam to have the seed of
Cain for servants,...Let this Church which is
called the kingdom of God on the earth; we will sommons the
first presidency, the twelve, the high counsel, the Bishoprick, and all
the elders of Isreal, suppose we summons them to apear here, and here
declare that it is right to mingle our seed, with the black race of Cain,
that they shall came in with with us and be pertakers with us
of all the blessings God has given to us. On
that very day, and hour we should do so,
the preisthood is taken from this Church and kingdom and God
leaves us to our fate. The moment we consent to mingle with
the seed of Cain the Church must go to desstruction,--
we should receive the curse which has been placed upon the
seed of Cain, and never more be numbered with the children
of Adam who are heirs to the priesthood untill that curse be removed."
(Brigham Young Addresses, Ms d 1234, Box 48, folder 3, dated Feb. 5, 1852,
located in the LDS Church Historical Dept.)
The
Mormon people are now faced with a serious dilemma; if they really believe
Brigham Young was a prophet, then it follows from his statement that the
Church has lost the priesthood, been put under "the curse" and is going to
destruction! In spite of Brigham Young's emphatic warning against giving
blacks "all the blessings God has given us," the
present leaders have announced that blacks will now receive "all
of the privileges and blessings which the gospel affords." (Deseret
News, June 9,1978)
After
the First Presidency made their statement, many people became confused
over the Church's position on interracial marriage. It soon became
apparent, however, that the Church's ban on marriage to blacks had been
lifted. Joseph Freeman, the first black man ordained to the priesthood
after the change, indicated that he wanted to be sealed in the Temple to
his wife who was not of African descent. Church spokesman Don LeFevre said
that such a marriage would be possible and that although the Church did
not encourage interracial marriage, there was no longer a ban on whites
marrying blacks:
"That
is entirely possible, said Mr. LeFevre....'So there is no ban
on interracial marriage.
"'If
a black partner contemplating marriage is worthy
of going to the Temple, nobody's going to stop him--if he's marrying
a white, an Oriental...if he's ready to go to the
Temple, obviously he may go with the blessings of the church."' (Salt
Lake Tribune, June 14, 1978)
On
June 24, 1978 the Tribune announced that "Joseph Freeman, 26, the
first black man to gain the priesthood in the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, Friday went in the Salt Lake Temple with his wife and 5
sons for sacred ordinances...Thomas S. Monson, member of the church's
Quorum of Twelve Apostles, conducted the marriage
and sealing ceremonies [sic]."
In
allowing temple marriages between blacks and whites, the Church is
completely disregarding what President Brigham Young referred to as "the
law of God":
"Shall
I tell you the law of God in regard to the
African race? If the white man who belongs to the chosen seed mixes his
blood with the seed of Cain, the penalty, under the law of God,
is death on the spot, This will
always be so." (Journal of Discourses, Vol.10, page
110)
The
reader will notice that Brigham Young said that this "Law of God" could
never be changed. In 1967 the Mormon writer John L. Lund made these
comments about Brigham Young's statement:
"Brigham
Young made a very strong statement on this matter when he said, '...Shall
I tell you the law of God in regard to the African race? If the white man
who belongs to the CHOSEN SEED mixes his blood with the seed of Cain, the
penalty under the law of God, is death on the spot. This will always be
so.' God has commanded Israel not to intermarry. To go against this
commandment of God would be to sin. Those who willfully sin with their
eyes open to this wrong will not be surprised to find that they will be
separated from the presence of God in the world
to come. This is spiritual death.... It does not matter if they are
one-sixth Negro or one-one hundred and sixth, the curse of no Priesthood
is still the same.... To intermarry with a Negro is to forfeit a 'Nation
of Priesthood holders."' (The Church and the Negro, 1967, pp.
54-55)
The
Church Section of the Deseret News for June 17, 1978 says that
"Former presidents of the Church have spoken of the day when the blessings
of the priesthood would come to the blacks." A quotation from a sermon by
Brigham Young which appeared in the Journal of Discourses, Vol.7,
is cited, but when we go to the original book we find that it has been
taken out of context, In this sermon Brigham Young plainly taught that
blacks could not receive the priesthood until all of Adam's other children
receive it:
"Cain
slew his brother....and the Lord put a mark upon him, which is the flat
nose and black skin....How long is that race to endure the dreadful curse
that is upon them? That curse will remain upon them, and they
never can hold the Priesthood or share in it until all the other
descendants of Adam have received the promises and enjoyed the blessings
of the Priesthood and the keys thereof. Until
the last ones of the residue of Adam's children are brought up to that
favorable position, the children of Cain cannot receive the
first ordinances of the Priesthood. They were the first that were cursed,
and they will be the last from whom the curse will be removed, When the
residue of the family of Adam come up and receive their blessings, then
the curse will be removed from the seed of Cain, and they will receive
blessings in like proportion." (Journal of Discourses, Vol.7, pp.
290-291)
Brigham
Young also taught this doctrine in other published sermons:
"When
all the other children of Adam have had the
privilege of receiving the Priesthood, and of coming into the kingdom of
God, and of being redeemed from the four quarters of the earth,
and have received their resurrection from the dead,
then it will be time enough to remove the curse from Cain and
his posterity....he is the last to share the joys of the
kingdom of God." (Journal of Discourses, Vol. 2, page 143)
"And
when all the rest of the children have received their
blessings in the Holy Priesthood, then that curse will be
removed from the seed of Cain, and they will then come up and possess the
priesthood, and receive all the blessings which we now are entitled to." (Ibid.,
Vol. II, page 272)
In
1949 the First Presidency of the Mormon Church issued a statement in which
they cited Brigham Young's teaching that blacks cannot receive the
priesthood until after the resurrection:
"The
prophets of the Lord have made several statements...President Brigham
Young said: '...They will go down to death. And when all the
rest of the children have received their blessings in the
holy priesthood, then that curse will be removed from the seed of Cain,
and they will then come up and possess the priesthood,...'" (Statement by
the First Presidency, as cited in Mormonism and the Negro, by
John J. Stewart and William E. Berrett, 1960, Part 2, page 16)
Joseph
Fielding Smith, who served as the tenth President of the Mormon Church in
the early 1970's, taught that blacks would never hold the priesthood as
long as "time endures":
"Not
only was Cain called upon to suffer, but because of his wickedness he
became the father of an inferior race. A curse was placed upon
him and that curse has been continued through his lineage and must do so
while time endures. Millions of souls have come into this
world cursed with a black skin and have been denied the privilege of
Priesthood and the fullness of the blessings of the Gospel....they have
been made to feel their inferiority and have been separated from the rest
of mankind from the beginning." (The Way To Perfection, 1935,
page 101)
In
his book Answers To Gospel Questions, Vol. 2, p.188, Joseph
Fielding Smith said that the bestowal of priesthood on blacks was "in the
far distant future," and in a meeting held in Barratt Hall on October 11,
1958, he commented that "the Lord will, in due time, remove the
restrictions. Not in this world but the time
will come,..." (Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? p. 586)
N.
Eldon Tanner, a member of the First Presidency who finally signed the
statement granting blacks the Priesthood, was completely opposed to the
idea in 1967:
"'The
church has no intention of changing its doctrine on the Negro,'
N. Eldon Tanner, counselor to the First President told SEATTLE during his
recent visit here. 'Throughout the history of the original Christian
church, the Negro never held the priesthood. There's really nothing we can
do to change this. It's a law of God.'" (Seattle
Magazine, December 1967, p, 60)
Mormon
writer John L. Lund claimed that if the President of the Mormon Church
gave a revelation that blacks were to hold the priesthood, members of the
Church would accept it, but he emphasized that such a revelation would not
be forthcoming because the "present prophets are in complete agreement
with Brigham Young and other past leaders on the question of the Negro and
the Priesthood":
"Brigham
Young revealed that the Negroes will not receive the Priesthood
until a great while after the second advent of Jesus
Christ whose coming will usher in a millennium of peace.
"Revelation?
"In
view of what President Young and others have said, it would be
foolish indeed to give anyone the false
idea that a new revelation is immediately forthcoming on the issue of the
Negroes receiving the Priesthood....our present prophets are
in complete agreement with Brigham Young and
other past leaders on the question of the Negro and the Priesthood.
President Mc Kay was asked by a news reporter at the dedication of the
Oakland Temple, 'When will the Negroes receive the Priesthood?' He
responded to the question over a national television network saying, 'Not
in my lifetime, young man, nor yours.'...
"Social
pressure and even government sanctions cannot be expected to bring forth a
new revelation. This point is mentioned because there are groups in the
Church, as well as out, who feel that pressure on the Prophet will cause a
revelation to come forth. It would be wise to emphasize that all the
social pressure in the world will not change what the Lord has decreed to
be. Let those who would presume to pressure the Prophet be reminded that
it is God that inspires prophets, not social pressure....It is not the
responsibility nor the stewardship of any person on earth to dictate to
the Lord or the Lord's servants when a revelation should be given....
"The
prophets have declared that there are at least two major stipulations that
have to be met before the Negroes will be allowed to possess the
Priesthood. The first requirement relates to time. The Negroes
will not be allowed to hold the Priesthood during mortality,
in fact, not until after the resurrection of all of Adam's
children. The other stipulation requires that Abel's seed
receive the first opportunity of having the Priesthood....Negroes must
first pass through mortality before they may possess the Priesthood ('they
will go down to death'). Reference is also made to the condition that the
Negroes will have to wait until after the resurrection
of all of Adam's children before receiving the Priesthood....the last of
Adam s children will not be resurrected until the end of the
millennium. Therefore, the Negroes will not receive the
Priesthood until after that time.... this will
not happen until after the thousand years of Christ's reign on
earth....
"The
second major stipulation that needs to be met...is the requirement that
Abel's seed receive the opportunity of holding the Priesthood first....
"The
obvious question is, 'When will Abel's seed be redeemed?' It will first of
all be necessary that Abel marry, and then be resurrected, and ultimately
exalted in the highest degree of the Celestial Kingdom so that he can have
a continuation of his seed. It will then be necessary for Abel to create
an earth for his spirit children to come to and experience mortality.
These children will have to be 'redeemed' or resurrected. After the
resurrection or redemption of Abel's seed, Cain's descendants, the
Negroes, will then be allowed to possess the Priesthood." (The Church
and the Negro, 1967, pp. 45-49)
On
pages 109-110 of the same book, John L. Lund reiterates: "First,
all of Adam's children will have to resurrect and
secondly, the seed of Abel must have an opportunity to possess the
Priesthood. These events will not occur until sometime after
the end of the millennium.
As
late as 1974 Apostle Bruce R. McConkie questioned the spirituality of
Church members who believed it was time for a new revelation on the
blacks. In a conference message delivered Oct. 4, 1974, Apostle McConkie
said:
"Am
I valiant in the testimony of Jesus if my chief interest and concern in
life is laying up in store the treasures of the earth, rather than the
building up of the kingdom?...
"Am
I valiant if I am deeply concerned about the Church's stand on who can or
who cannot receive the priesthood and think it is time for a new
revelation on this doctrine?...
"Am
I valiant if I engage in gambling, play cards, go to pornographic
movies,..." (The Ensign, November 1974, page 35)
"BETTER LATE THAN NEVER"
Writing
in the New York Times, June 11, 1978, Mario S DePillis observed:
"For Mormonism's anti-black policy a revelation was the only way out, and
many students of Mormonism were puzzled only at the lateness of the hour."
As far back as 1963, Donald Ira French, Jr., wrote a letter in which he
remarked: "Sir: As an elder in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, it has long seemed incredible to me that a church with so much
forward vision in social welfare and higher education can be so backward
in its outlook on a segment of the human race that is also supposed to be
among our brothers...
"The
revelation that the church is talking about with respect to the Negro and
the priesthood should have been sought 50 years ago--not
now when we are forced into looking for one.
Even if a revelation should come now, we have
compromised our position because it looks as if we have been forced into
seeking it, which will be true." (Time, Nov. l,
1963)
That
the Mormon Church was forced into the revelation is obvious to anyone who
seriously examines the evidence. In the books Mormonism--Shadow or
Reality? and Mormons and Negroes we show that there has been
a great deal of pressure exerted against the Church. For instance,
athletic teams from the Church's Brigham Young University have been the
target of very serious protests.
In
1974 the Mormon doctrine of discrimination against blacks brought the Boy
Scouts into a serious confrontation with the NAACP. The Boy Scouts of
America do not discriminate because of religion or race, but
Mormon-sponsored troops did have a policy of discrimination. On July 18,
1974, the Salt Lake Tribune reported: "A 12-year-old boy scout
has been denied a senior patrol leadership in his troop because he is
black, Don L. Cope, black ombudsman for the state, said Wednesday....
"The
ombudsman said Mormon 'troop policy is that in order for a scout to become
a patrol leader, he must be a deacon's quorum president in the LDS Church.
Since the boy cannot hold the priesthood, he cannot become a patrol
leader.'"
The
Mormon leaders apparently realized that they could never prevail in this
matter and a compromise was worked out:
"Shortly
before Boy Scout officials were to appear in Federal Court Friday morning
on charges of discrimination, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints issued a policy change which will allow
black youths to be senior patrol leaders, a position formerly reserved for
white LDS youths in troops sponsored by the church....
"An
LDS Church spokesman said Friday under the 'guidelines set forth in the
statement, a young man other than president of the deacons quorum could
(now) become the senior patrol leader if he is better qualified.'" (Salt
Lake Tribune, August 3, 1974)
Mormon
President Spencer W. Kimball "had been subpoenaed to testify" in the suit
(Ibid., Oct. 23), but on Nov. 7, 1974 the Tribune reported: "A
suit claiming discrimination against blacks by the Boy Scouts of America
was dismissed Wednesday in federal court...all parties to the suit...
signed an agreement stating the alleged discrimination 'has been
discontinued.'"
Since
1976 the Mormon Church has been repeatedly embarrassed by one of its own
members who became alienated over the anti-black doctrine and decided to
take matters into his own hands. On April 3, 1976 the Salt Lake
Tribune reported:
"PORTLAND,
Ore.--A member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ordained
a black into the priesthood Friday, saying he did so in an attempt to
force a revision in Mormon doctrine about the Negro race.
"Douglas
A. Wallace,...first baptized Larry Lester,...in the swimming pool of a
motel in northeast Portland. He then ordained Lester to the office of
priest in the Aaronic Priesthood of the LDS Church....
"The
rites were preceded by a news conference at which Wallace said he has long
been bothered by the Mormon Church's bias against blacks and he feels the
time has come to challenge it. He said often all that is required to
change a policy is for someone to break out of tradition....
"The
president of the Portland-Oregon Mission of the church, Robert Seamons,
said of Wallace's actions:
"'He
is using the priesthood in an unrighteous manner and his action will have
no validity because the president of the church has said that blacks are
not to hold the priesthood.'
"Wallace
said he hopes there are no recriminations against him for his action, such
as excommunication."
On
April 13, 1976 the Salt Lake Tribune revealed that "Douglas A.
Wallace was excommunicated from the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Sunday for ordaining a black man into
the church's priesthood."
After
a confrontation with Church personnel at an April conference session, Mr.
Wallace was ejected from the Tabernacle. Later he was served with "a court
order barring him from attending conference." (Ibid., Oct 4,
1976) Although we did not agree with some of Mr. Wallace's ideas on
religion, we did not consider him to be dangerous and we were rather
surprised to notice the close surveillance the police kept him under when
he walked along the public sidewalk outside of Temple Square. We were
rather startled to see such a thing in Salt Lake City.
SHOOTING OF OFFICER OLSON
The
Mormon leaders' fear of the threat Mr. Wallace presented to the Church
seems to have led to a tragic incident where a policeman was accidentally
shot and permanently paralyzed. This occurred about the time of the
Church's conference held in April, 1977. On April 5, 1977 the Salt
Lake Tribune reported:
"Mormon
dissident Douglas A. Wallace charged Monday that a Salt Lake City police
officer, shot early Sunday was keeping surveillance on him in a nearby
residence.
"Acting
Police Chief Edgar A. Bryan Jr. denied it.
"He
said his men were not keeping surveillance on Mr. Wallace,
a excommunicated member of the Church...but he would not say what the
stakeout's purpose was.
"Officer
David W. Olson remained in critical condition Monday at St. Mark's
Hospital, where personnel said he suffered a severed spinal cord from a
single shot in the neck. The policeman was shot accidentally by his
partner,... Wallace was staying at the home of a friend, Dr. John W.
Fitzgerald, 2177 Carriage Ln. (4600 South).
"He
was in Salt Lake City to try to make an appearance at the LDS World
Conference last weekend. Attorneys for the church, however, obtained a
temporary restraining order...which prevented the dissident from visiting
Temple Square.
"'I
have not committed any crime, and I don't intend to commit any crime. I
have been raised in the Mormon faith and I am a man of peace...This is not
Russia; this is not Nazi Germany; there is no reason why I should be under
surveillance of the police,' Mr. Wallace said."
The
following day the Salt Lake Tribune related: "Ex-Mormon Douglas
Wallace, who claims the wounding of an undercover police officer was done
while police held surveillance on him, Tuesday afternoon said he will
subpoena various high ranking police and sheriff's deputies to establish
the fact....
"Mr.
Wallace said also, 'It is clear from the evidence that we have uncovered
that I was under surveillance. The police department's denial of that
simply compounds the wrong. Is this going to be Salt Lake's sequel to the
Watergate scandal?'" (Salt Lake Tribune, April 6, 1977)
With
Mr. Wallace and his attorney pressing them hard, the police were finally
forced to admit the truth about the matter:
"Salt
Lake City police officers admitted Thursday that the accidental wounding
of an undercover officer occurred during surveillance of Mormon dissident
Douglas A. Wallace....
"Reports
released Thursday by both the county sheriff's office and the county
attorney show that six officers were on stakeout
around the John W. Fitzgerald home...where Mr. Wallace was staying.
"The
lawmen were paired up in three police vehicles and two of those were
parked close together in opposite directions..." (Salt Lake Tribune,
April 8, 1977)
Those
who know Mr. Wallace find it strange that there should have be so many
policemen on the surveillance crew watching him at 4:20 a.m. A subsequent
story in the newspaper reported that the "lawmen...had been on duty for 16
straight hours, Chief Willoughby said." (Ibid., April 15, 1977)
At
any rate, Wallace claimed the Mormon Church was behind the whole affair:
"Ex-Mormon Douglas Wallace Friday renewed his assertion that the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was behind April police surveillance of
Mr. Wallace that led to the accidental shooting of a Salt Lake City police
officer." (Ibid., Sept. 17, 1977) Finally, David Olson the
disabled police officer, took exception to a press release issued by the
Church. In a letter to the Editor of the Salt Lake Tribune, Jan,
18, 1978, Mr. Olson made a direct attack on the President of the Church:
"I
would also like to thank Spencer W. Kimball for his incorrect
press release concerning the police involvement combined with the LDS
church's efforts to restrict Douglas A. Wallace from the temple grounds,
specifically the Tabernacle, on April 3, 1977.
"His
denial of these actions is wrong. Any man who can take such
actions and still call himself a prophet deserves more than I to be
confined to this wheelchair."
Douglas
Wallace filed lawsuits amounting to millions of dollars against the Mormon
Church, and although he has not been able to prevail against the Church in
the courts, the publicity surrounding the suits has caused the Church no
end of trouble. We feel that his actions and the embarrassment they have
caused the Church have played a part in bringing about the decision to
have a new "revelation."
Another
Mormon who has put a great deal of pressure on the Church is Byron
Marchant. Mr. Marchant took a very strong stand against racism in the
Church. The Dallas Morning News for Oct. 20, 1977 reported:
"SALT
LAKE CITY (AP)--The man who cast the first vote in modern history against
a leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been
excommunicated and fired as church janitor.
"Byron
Marchant, 35, of Salt Lake, is the second opponent of the church policy
withholding the priesthood from blacks to be excommunicated in the last
two years."
When
Mr. Marchant tried to distribute literature at Temple Square at the next
conference he was arrested:
"Byron
Marchant, excommunicated members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints was arrested Sunday at 1:45 p.m. at Temple Square of
charges of trespassing,....Marchant was requested to leave the church
grounds after he offered literature to people waiting in line for
admission to the 2 p.m. session of general conference, Mr. Gibbs said. J.
Earl Jones, director of security for the Mormon church reportedly advised
Mr. Marchant he was on private property and asked him to leave. When Mr.
Marchant refused, Mr. Gibbs said police officers were contacted and Mr.
Marchant was placed under arrest at approximately 1:45 p.m." (Salt
Lake Tribune, April, 3, 1978)
Mr.
Marchant published a sheet in which he called for demonstrations against
the Church's policy:
"Next
October Conference (1978) I will join all interested in a march on Temple
Square in Salt Lake City. In the event that the Mormon Church decides to
ordain worthy Afro-Americans to the priesthood this demonstration will be
a sort of celebration. A demonstration of support. In the meantime, every
person and/or group concerned about Utah Racism is encouraged to speak out
and attend the October protest."
Mr.
Marchant's threat of a demonstration at the next conference may have
caused Mormon leaders to think more seriously about having a new
revelation. The general authorities seem to have a real fear of
demonstrations around Temple Square. Although Mr. Marchant is probably a
peaceful man, the issue concerning blacks in the Mormon Church was so
explosive that the slightest incident could have touched off a riot where
innocent people could have been injured. We think that the Church was wise
to change its policy before the demonstration.
However
this may be, when the Mormon Church yielded Mr. Marchant dropped a civil
suit: "Following Friday's announcement that the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints will allow blacks to receive the priesthood, Byron
Marchant, longtime advocate of such a policy, dropped a civil suit filed
against Church President Spencer W. Kimball Wednesday.
"Marchant
was suing President Kimball for not appearing as a witness in a case
currently pending against Marchant....Marchant was suing the Mormon Church
president for $100 for not appearing after being subpoenaed to testify in
the case. Marchant's subpoena was quashed Thursday." (Salt Lake
Tribune, June 10, 1978)
Another
article in the same issue of the Tribune observed that "The last
three years have also seen repeated attempts by church dissidents to
subpoena Mormon leaders into court proceedings, with the central issue
often related to the church's belief about blacks."
PROBLEM IN BRAZIL
Besides
all the problems the Church was having with dissidents, it was faced with
an impossible situation in Brazil. Even the Church's own Deseret News
admitted that "A major problem the church has faced with its policy
regarding blacks was in Brazil, where the church is building a temple.
Many people there are miied [mixed?] racially, and it is often impossible
to determine whether church members have black ancestry." (Deseret
News, June 10, 1978)
Mormon
leaders have been aware of this problem for some time. Lester Bush, Jr.,
gave this revealing information in an article published in Dialogue: A
Journal of Mormon Thought, Spring 1973, p. 41:
"The
decision to deny the priesthood to anyone with Negro ancestry ('no matter
how remote'), had resolved the theoretical problem of priesthood
eligibility, but did not help with the practical problem of identifying
the 'blood of Cain' in those not already known to have Negro ancestry....
"The
growth of the international Church was clearly bringing new problems.
Brazil was particularly difficult. Later that year J. Ruben Clark, First
Counselor to George Albert Smith, reported that the Church was entering
'into a situation in doing missionary work...where it is very difficult
if not impossible to tell who has negro blood
and who has not. He said that if we are baptizing Brazilians, we are
almost certainly baptizing people of negro blood,
and that if the Priesthood is conferred upon them, which it no
doubt is, we are facing a very serious problem.'"
In
a letter published in Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought,
Autumn, 1967, p. 8, Gary Lobb observed: "My studies currently in
Brazil,... have led me to conclude that most Brazilians who are not second
or third generation descendants of German, Italian, Polish, or Japanese
immigrants, are probably descendants of Negroes. This is especially true
among the lower and lower-middle classes which make up a large portion of
L.D.S. membership in this land....In some of the branches of the Church
which my wife and I have attended here in Brazil, there appear
to be priesthood bearers who possess the essential characteristics of the
Negroid races."
The
hypocrisy of the situation in South America was pointed out in 1966 by
Wallace Turner: "A different thing is going on in South America where
Mormon missionaries are pushing ahead full throttle. There the former
careful selection to keep out 'white Negroes' has been allowed to slide a
little....
"'There
is no question but that in Brazil they have been ordaining priests who are
part Negro,' said one careful observer." (The Mormon Establishment,
1966, page 261)
With
the opening of the new temple in Brazil the situation would have turned
into a real nightmare. Actually, the Mormon Church has the same problem in
the United States. Patriarch Eldred G. Smith remarked,"I had a young lady
who was blond, a[n]d no sign or indications visibly of the
Negro line at all, but yet she was deprived of
going to the Temple...We have these conditions
by the thousands in the United States today and are getting
more of them. If they have any blood of the Negro at all in
their line, in their veins at all,
they are not entitled to the blessings of the Priesthood,...
No limit as to how far back so far as I know." (Patriarchal
Blessings, Institute of Religion, January 17, 1964, page 8)
Time
Magazine for June 30, 1958, p. 47, pointed out Dr. Robert P. Stuckert
researched the "conclusion that of 135 million Americans classified as
white in 1950, about 28 million (21%) had some
African ancestry. The Church's stress on genealogical research placed many
members of the Church in a very embarrassing position. Many members of the
Church discovered they had black ancestors and attempted to cover it up.
Some however, faced the issue and yielded up all rights to the priesthood.
The Deseret News Church Section for July 11, 1970, told of an
interesting case:
"Mr.
and Mrs. John Lono Pea are an amazing couple....he was set apart as
genealogy secretary.
"'I
found out through my family telling me and in genealogy work that a
grandparent was an offspring of one of the Negroes who migrated to Hawaii
in 1820, through the slave trade.
"'I
have a sure testimony that what the Lord has said regarding the priesthood
is true. I sent my genealogy to the First Presidency so there would be no
chance of my getting the priesthood through any means except when the Lord
wills it.
"'I
don't want to offend God by trying to have it because someone through the
goodness of their heart, wants me to have it....'"
Unless
there is another man in Hawaii with the name "John L. Pea there is reason
to believe that Mr. Pea was mistakenly ordained to the priesthood and
performed baptisms and other ordinances before his ancestry was
discovered. The following is from a Council meeting held Oct. 29, 1936:
"Letter
read from President W. Francis Bailey of the Hawaiian Mission stating that
Brother William Pakale, a priest, and Brother John L. Pea,
who have recently been discovered to be one-eighth negro, have heretofore
officiated in performing some baptisms and other ordinances.
President Bailey asks for a ruling as to what should be done in such
cases.
"After
some discussion of the matter, Elder Stephen L. Richards moved that the
matter be referred to Elder George Albert Smith, who will attend the
approaching Oahu Stake Conference, with instructions that in
the event he should find that a considerable number of people are involved,
we assuming the authority was given to those brethren to officiate in
these ordinances, that ratification of their acts be
authorized. In the event he should discover that
there are only one or two affected, and that the
matter can be readily taken care of, it may be
advisable to have re-baptism performed.
"Motion
seconded by Brother Ballard and unanimously approved." (Council Minutes,
Oct. 29, 1936, Bennion papers, typed copy; also cited by Lester Bush in
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Spring 1973, p. 141)
REVELATION EVADES REAL ISSUE
O.
Kendall White, Jr., made these interesting observations six years before
the revelation was given: "Since they believe in 'continuing revelation,'
Mormons have a mechanism that enables them to reverse previous positions
without repudiating the past. This is illustrated in the resolution of the
conflict over polygamy. Mormons never disavowed their belief in polygamy,
but they discontinued the practice on the grounds that it conflicted with
another belief involving support for 'the law of the land'. That the
church will invoke such a mechanism to resolve the racial issue is not too
unlikely.
"However,
this approach has a serious drawback. It is the tendency not to
acknowledge the errors of the past. While revelation could be used to
legitimate a new racial policy and to redefine Mormon relations with black
people, Mormons might still be unwilling to condemn the racism involved in
their history. They might be inclined to argue that Mormons in earlier
periods were under a different mandate than the one binding them. This
obviously implies that the church is never wrong. Thus, change may come
through the notion of continuing revelation, but the racist aspects of a
Mormon history will not necessarily be condemned." (The Journal of
Religious Thought, Autumn-Winter, 1973, pp. 57-58)
It
would appear that the Church leaders have done exactly what Mr. White
warned against--i.e., they have used revelation as a means of sidestepping
the real issues involved. Mario S. DePillis pointed out that "the
revelation leaves unsolved other racist implications of the Book of Mormon
and the Pearl of Great Price--scriptures that are both cornerstones and
contradictions." (New York Times, June 11, 1978)
One
issue that the Mormon leaders now seem to be dodging is that concerning
skin color. From the beginning Mormon theology has taught that a black
skin is a sign of God's displeasure: "We will first inquire into the
results of the approbation or displeasure of God
upon a people, starting with the belief that a black skin is a
mark of the curse of heaven placed upon some portions of mankind."
(Juvenile Instructor, Vol. 3, p. 157)
The
Book of Mormon is filled with the teaching that people with dark
skins are cursed:
"...wherefore,
as they were white, and exceeding fair and delightsome, that they might
not be enticing unto my people the Lord God did cause a skin
of blackness to come upon them." (Book of Mormon,
page 61, verse 21)
"And
the skins of the Lamanites were dark, according
to the mark which was set upon their fathers,
which was a curse upon them because at their
transgression..." (Ibid., p. 201, v. 6)
On
page 468, verse 15, of the Book of Mormon the following statement
is made concerning the Indians: " ...for this people shall be scattered,
and shall become a dark, a filthy, and a
loathsome people, beyond the description of that which ever hath been
amongst us,..."
The
Book of Mormon, however, predicts that the Indians will repent of
their sins and become white: "...and many generations shall not pass away
among them, save they shall be a white and
delightsome people." (Book of Mormon, page 102, verse 6)
Spencer
W. Kimball, who gave the new revelation which allows blacks to hold the
priesthood, seems to be a real believer in the teaching that God makes
righteous people become "white and delightsome":
"I
saw a striking contrast in the progress of the Indian people today as
against that of only fifteen years ago....they are fast becoming
a white and delightsome people....they are now
becoming white and delightsome, as they were
promised. In this picture of the twenty Lamanite missionaries, fifteen of
the twenty were as light as Anglos;...The
children in the home placement program in Utah are often
lighter than their brothers and sisters in the hogans on the
reservation....There was the doctor in a Utah city who for two years had
had an Indian boy in his home who stated that he was some
shades lighter than the younger brother just coming into the
program from the reservation. These young members of the Church are
changing to whiteness and to delightsomeness.
One white elder jokingly said that he and his companion were donating
blood regularly to the hospital in the hope that the process might be
accelerated....today the dark clouds are dissipating." (Improvement
Era, December 1960, pp. 922-923)
It
is interesting to note that while Spencer W. Kimball believes that the
Indians are to become "white and delightsome," he has suppressed Joseph
Smith's 1831 revelation on polygamy which commanded the Mormons to marry
the Indians to make them white. We published this revelation in full in
the book Mormonism Like Watergate? in 1974. The most important
verse of this revelation reads as follows:
"4.
Verily, I say unto you, that the wisdom of man, in his fallen state,
knoweth not the purposes and the privileges of my holy priesthood, but ye
shall know when ye receive a fulness by reason of the anointing: For it is
my will, that in time, ye should take unto you wives of the
Lamanites and Nephites, that their posterity may
become white, delightsome and just, for even now their
females are more virtuous than the gentiles."
We
seriously doubt that President Kimball will ever allow this revelation to
be canonized in the Doctrine and Covenants since he feels that
the Indians are being made "white and delightsome" through the power of
God and has in the past discouraged intermarriage with the Indians. The
Church Section of the Deseret News for June 17, 1978 gave this
information:
"In
an address to seminary and institute teachers at Brigham Young University
on June 27, 1958, President Kimball, then a member of the Council of the
Twelve, said:
"'...there
is one thing that I must mention, and that is interracial
marriages. When I said you must teach your young people to
overcome their prejudices and accept the Indians,
I did not mean that you would encourage intermarriage.'"
Although
the Mormon Church is now opening the door to temple marriages between
blacks and whites, President Kimball is probably not too enthused about
the matter. An endorsement of Joseph Smith's 1831 revelation encouraging
intermarriage with Indians could now lead white members to seek marriages
with blacks. Since blacks are no longer cursed as to the priesthood, the
revelation might just as logically be interpreted that Mormons should
"take unto you wives" of the Ethiopians or Nigerians "that their posterity
may become white, delightsome and just,..."
For
more documentation and verification of the 1831 revelation on polygamy see
our book Mormonism Like Watergate? pp. 6-14.
Another
matter which the new revelation allowing blacks to hold the priesthood
does not resolve is the teaching concerning pre-existence. In the past
Mormon leaders have stressed that blacks were cursed as to the priesthood
because of "unfaithfulness in the spirit--or pre-existence" (see
Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? pp. 263-264). Should a faithful Mormon
continue to believe that blacks were unrighteous in a pre-existent state?
The Mormon leaders are silent concerning this matter. It will be
especially interesting to see how Church leaders explain this matter to
blacks in the Church. Monroe Fleming, far instance, was converted to the
Church over 25 years ago. President Joseph Fielding Smith explained to him
why he could not hold the priesthood, but since the new "revelation" he is
being encouraged to be ordained. Now, was Mr. Fleming really unfaithful in
a pre-existent state or did the Church leaders just make a mistake in the
past when they said he could not hold the priesthood? Church leaders
should explain if they believe black babies born after the new
"revelation" were inferior spirits in a pre-existent state. Now that they
have abandoned the idea that blacks cannot hold the priesthood, they
should explain if they are giving up some of their teachings on the
pre-existence. They should also explain whether they are repudiating the
Book of Mormon teaching that a dark skin is given by God as a
"curse."
By
giving a "revelation" on the matter without explaining its implications,
the Mormon leaders are leaving their people in a dense doctrinal fog. They
should take a lesson from the situation that has developed since the
Church gave up polygamy. Instead of actually repudiating the doctrine,
President Woodruff said he received a revelation and issued the Manifesto
which was supposed to put a stop to the practice. The Church retained
Joseph Smith's 1843 revelation on polygamy in the Doctrine and
Covenants Section 132. Church leaders continued to teach that
polygamy was a righteous doctrine, but since it was against the law, it
should not actually be practiced. Because of their reluctance to come to
grips with the real issue and repudiate the doctrine, the Mormon leaders
left their people in a confused state. Many Mormons have reasoned that
since the Church teaches plural marriage will be practiced in heaven, they
should practice it on earth. Therefore, in disregard to the Church's
Manifesto, thousands of people in Utah are living in polygamy today. The
Church excommunicates those who are caught living in the practice, but
since it retains the revelation on plural marriage in the Doctrine and
Covenants, the number of dissidents continues to grow.
Now,
if the Church continues to hide behind a purported revelation on the
blacks and fails to come to grips with its racist doctrines, thousands of
people are going to continue believing these doctrines and the Church will
be plagued with racism for many years to come. In 1960, Sterling McMurrin
predicted: "...I really believe, if I don't die in the very near future, I
will live to see the time when this doctrine is dissolved. I don't mean
repudiated. The Mormon Church is like the Catholic Church, it doesn't
repudiate doctrine that at one time or another were held to be revelation
or absolute truth. They didn't repudiate the doctrine of Polygamy. I use
the word dissolve, and I imagine by some technique they will dissolve the
doctrine on the Negro, rather than repudiate it. " (Mormonism--Shadow
or Reality? page 287)
Dr.
McMurrin's prediction seems to be coming true. The Mormon Church now
appears to be in the process of trying to dissolve the doctrine through
new "revelation." This is the very thing which we warned against in our
book Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? p. 293:
"The
honest solution to the problem facing the Mormon leaders is not to have
another 'revelation', but to repudiate the doctrine. They should admit
that Joseph Smith, Brigham Young and other Mormon leaders taught doctrines
that cannot be accepted as coming from God.
"The
reader will remember that Brigham Young, the second President of the
Mormon Church, said that slavery was a 'DIVINE INSTITUTION,'
and that the Civil War could not free the slaves (See Journal of
Discourses, Vol.10, p. 250); however, the Civil War did free the
slaves, and Brigham Young was wrong....
"Brigham
Young said that if a person who belongs to the chosen seed mixes his blood
with the Negro the penalty is 'DEATH ON THE SPOT'.
(Journal of Discourses, Vol. 10, page 110) Obviously, the Mormons
do not believe this statement by Brigham Young or they would be putting
many people to death. Brigham Young called this the 'LAW OF
GOD' and said that 'THIS WILL ALWAYS BE SO.'
Now, if Brigham Young was wrong about this, what assurance have we that he
was right when he said that the Negro could not hold the Priesthood? Why
should we disregard this teaching, which Brigham Young called the
'LAW OF GOD,' and yet hold to his teaching that the
Negro can not have the Priesthood?"
Instead
of continuing to cling to Joseph Smith's Book of Abraham, the Mormon
leaders should come to grips with the matter and acknowledge that it is a
false translation of the Egyptian Book
of Breathings. To come forth with a new "revelation" only compounds
the problem.
One
thing that should be noted about the new "revelation" is that the Church
has failed to produce a copy of it. All we have
is a statement by the First Presidency that says a revelation was
received. Joseph Smith printed many of his revelations in the Doctrine
and Covenant and other Church publications, and the Apostle Orson
Pratt mocked the Catholics for not adding revelations to the canon:
"...strange to say, none of their revelations are permitted to enter the
sacred canon... Here, indeed, is a strange inconsistency! Even the
Catholic church herself, evidently places no confidence
in the popes and bishops,...if she did, she would have
canonized their revelations along with the rest of the revelations
of the New Testament....We can but conclude that it is all an
imposition..,"(Orson Pratt's Works, "The Bible Alone An
Insufficient Guide," p. 39)
It
appears that the Mormon Church does not intend to canonize or even make
public the new revelation on the blacks. The Salt Lake Tribune
for June 13, 1978 reported: "Kimball refused to discuss the
revelation that changed the church's 148-year-old policy
against ordination of blacks, saying it was 'a personal thing.'...
"Kimball
said the revelation came at this time because conditions and people have
changed.
"'It's
a different world than it was 20 or 25 years ago. The world is
ready for it,' he said."
We
seriously doubt that President Kimball will put forth a written revelation
on the bestowal of priesthood on blacks. We doubt, in fact, that any such
document exists. What probably happened was that the leaders of the Church
finally realized that they could no longer retain the anti-black doctrine
without doing irreparable damage to the Church. Under these circumstances,
they were impressed with the fact that this doctrine had to be changed and
this impression was referred to as a revelation from God. In a letter to
the Editor of the Salt Lake Tribune, June 24, 1978 Eugene Wagner
observed: "...was this change of doctrine really a revelation from the
Lord, or did the church leaders act on their own? Why don't they publish
that revelation and let the Lord speak in his own words? All we saw was a
statement of the First Presidency, and that is not how a revelation looks.
"When
God speaks the revelation starts with the words: 'Thus sayeth the Lord...'
It seems when the Lord decides to change a doctrine of such great
importance he will talk himself to the people of his church. If such a
revelation cannot be presented to the members it is obvious that the first
presidency acted on its own, most likely under fear of public pressure to
avoid problems of serious consequences and to maintain peace and
popularity with the world."
In
Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? p. 281, we included an account of
an interview Michael Marquardt had with a member at the Genesis Group.
According to Mr. Marquardt's notes, "June 24, 1971 was the first time that
the First Presidency and Twelve have prayed in this Temple about whether
Black members of the Church should hold the Priesthood. The First
Presidency and Twelve were not in agreement on
the question. But they did agree that the Genesis Group should be formed."
We
will probably never know whether the First Presidency and Twelve reached a
unanimous decision in June, 1978, but it is logical to believe that the
majority had came to believe that the doctrine had to be changed.
Be
this as it may, we feel that it is wrong to attribute such a revelation to
God. It makes it appear that God has been a real racist for thousands of
years, and that the Mormon leaders by "pleading long and earnestly in
behalf of these, our faithful brethren, spending many hours in the upper
room of the Temple" have finally persuaded God to give blacks the
priesthood. The truth of the matter, however, is that "God is
no respecter of persons: But in every nation
he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him."
(Acts 10: 34-35) It is the Mormon leaders who have kept blacks under a
curse. They have continually and stubbornly opposed the advancement of
black people, threatening and excommunicating those who differed with them
on the matter. Finally, when their backs are to the wall, the Mormon
leaders are forced to change their position. We would think that at this
time they would fall down before God and acknowledge their wrong doing,
but instead they proudly stand up as heroes and proclaim that because of
their "pleading long and earnestly" on behalf of the blacks, God has
changed the doctrine and decided to give them the priesthood. To claim a
"revelation" at this point seems almost like mockery to God. Less than
four years ago Apostle McConkie was claiming that it was unspiritual
people who were "deeply concerned about the Church's stand on who can or
who cannot receive the priesthood and think it is time for a new
revelation..." Now members of the First Presidency admit that they have
been "pleading long and earnestly" concerning the question. Dr. Hugh
Nibley once claimed that "of all churches in the world" only the Mormon
Church "has not found it necessary to readjust any part of its doctrine in
the last hundred years." (No Ma'am, That's Not History, page 46)
The new revelation on the blacks is just another evidence of how Dr.
Nibley has misrepresented the situation.
Sterling
McMurrin made some interesting observations ten years ago:
"He
expressed belief the time would come when 'the Mormon people for the most
part will have to abandon their crude superstitions about Negroes because
their children forced them to.'
"But
he said there will be those who will remember 'with sadness and moral
embarrassment the day when their Church could have done great things to
hasten the achievement, but failed.'" (Ogden Standard-Examiner,
June 22, 1968)
IS THE PRIESTHOOD LOST?
The
reader will remember that President Brigham Young once said that if the
blacks were given all the blessings of the Gospel, the priesthood would be
taken from the Church and it would go to destruction. Our research leads
us to believe that the Mormon Church never had any priesthood to lose.
Even David Whitmer, one of the Three Witnesses to the Book of Mormon,
seems to have had some real reservations about the "priesthood":
"This
matter of 'priesthood,' since the days of Sydney Rigdon, has been the
great hobby and stumbling-block of the Latter Day Saints....Authority is
the word we used for the first two years in the church--until Sydney
Rigdon's days in Ohio. This matter of the two orders of priesthood in the
Church of Christ, and lineal priesthood of the old law being in the
church, all originated in the mind of Sydney Rigdon." (An Address To
All Believers in Christ, Richmond, Missouri, 1887, page 64)
The
question might well be asked, "If what David Whitmer says is true, how can
Section 27 and other sections of the Doctrine and Covenants be
accounted for?" Actually, these revelations have been changed from the way
they originally read when they were first printed. David Whitmer charged;
"You have changed the revelations from the way
they were first given...to support the error of high priests. You have
changed the revelations to support the error of a President of the high
priesthood, high counselors, etc." (Ibid., p. 49)
In
Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? Pp. 19, 22-25, we show through photographs
of the first printing of Joseph Smith's revelations that Whitmer was right
when he charged that serious changes were made concerning priesthood, and
on pages 177-182 we demonstrate that the Mormon idea of "priesthood" is
unscriptural. The Bible teaches that the old order of priesthood was
fulfilled and that Christ Himself is our High Priest. It indicates that
Jesus has "an unchangeable priesthood. Wherefore
he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him,
seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them." (Hebrews 7:24-25)
The
Bible also indicates that all Christians (not just men) are a "royal
priesthood" (1 Peter 2:9) In 1 Peter 2:5 we read that "Ye also, as lively
stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up
spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ." The priesthood
of the Old Testament has been fulfilled and now "as many as received him,
to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe
on his name (John 1:12)
IMPACT OF REVELATION
Some
people believe that the Mormon Church is not sincere in opening the
priesthood to blacks. We feel however, that even though the Mormon leaders
have failed to face some important issues, they have made a major
concession which will gradually weaken racism throughout the Church.
We
feel that one of the important reasons the Church decided to confer the
priesthood on blacks was that the anti-black doctrine was hurting
missionary work. With the change in this policy, we anticipate that the
Church will make many more converts. On the other hand, many members of
the Church have become disillusioned because of the Church's handling of
the racial issue, and the new "revelation" has tended to confirm in their
minds that the Lord had nothing to do with the whole matter. For those
Christians working with Mormons, this may really prove to be an opening
for effective witnessing.
For
those who are interested in the subject of the anti-black doctrine we
highly recommend our book Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? In this
book we have devoted over 100 pages to the doctrine and Joseph Smith's
false translation of the Book of Abraham. In addition to this, on pages
582-85 we have printed the "Excerpts From The Weekly Council Meetings Of
The Quorum Of The Twelve Apostles, Dealing With The Rights Of Negroes In
The Church, 1849-1940." This important document throws a great deal of
light on why the Church was finally forced to have a new "revelation."
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