Date: Dec 24 00:02
Author: Deconstructor
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Great Moments in Church History
The following historical moments come from Michael Quinn's excellent book The Mormon
Hierarchy : Extensions of Power
. For references, refer to the book. All of these events actually happened...
Jan 23,1852 - Brigham Young instructs Utah Legislature to legalize slavery because
"we must believe in slavery."
Feb 5,1852 - Brigham Young announces policy of denying priesthood to all those black
African ancestry, even "if there never was a prophet, or apostle of Jesus Christ
spoke it before" because "negroes are the children of old Cain....any many
having one drop of the seed of Cain in him cannot hold the priesthood." Contrary to
Joseph Smith's example in authorizing the ordination of Elijah Abel, this is LDS policy
for the next 126 years.
Jan 3,1854 - Brigham Young invites Elijah Ablel, free black and ordained Seventy, to party
with 98 other men in Social Hall. Some of these parties are male-only dances.
Nov 22,1855 - Brigham Young secretly ordains his eleven year old son John W. an apostle in
connection with receiving the endowment. Young later ordains three other sons apostles.
Mar 21,1858 - Brigham Young tells this special conference that Joseph Smith disobeyed
revelation by returning to Nauvoo to stand trial, that the church's founding prophet lost
Spirit of God the last days of his life, and died as unnecessary martyr. He published this
talk as pamphlet.
Dec 15,1858 - Young readily grants divorce to unhappy plural wives but requires husbands
to pay him personally a $10 fee ($214.50 in 2001 U.S. dollars). Young issues 1,600
certificates of divorce for unhappy polygamous marriages. (This equals 16 thousand
dollars, or $343,200 2001 U.S. dollars)
Aug 20,1859 - Brigham Young regarding slavery: "We consider it of devine institution,
and not to be abolished until the curse pronounced on Ham shall have been removed from his
descendants.
Sep 7,1859 - Salt Lake City clerk records sale of twenty six year old "negro
boy" for $800 to William H. Hooper. Until federal law ends slavery in U.S.
Territories in 1862, some African-American slaves are paid as tithing, bought, sold and
otherwise treated as chattel in Utah.
Nov 18,1861 - Abraham Lincoln checks out Book of Mormon from Library of Congress. He
returns it on 29 July 1862, apparently first U.S. president to read Book of Mormon.
Dec 10,1862 - Deseret News reports that Church Historian's Office is displaying sample of
tobacco crops grown in Provo during past summer.
Oct 6,1863 - Brigham Young prophesies to general conference: "Will the present
struggle (of the U.S. Civil War) free the slaves? No..... and men will be called to
judgement for the way they have treated the negroe." The 13th Ammendment legally ends
slavery in the United States in 1865.
May 15,1864 - Brigham Young preaches, "I don't want Mormonism to become too
popular... we would be overrun by the wicked."
Dec 9,1869 - ZCMI Drug Stores advertises that is has just opened on Main Street with
"Liquors, Draught and by the case."
Jun 18,1870 - First Counselor George A Smith tells Salt Lake School of Prophets about
"the evil of masterbation" among Utah Mormons. Apostle Lorenzo Snow says that
"plural marriage would tend to diminish the evil of self pollution and the indulgence
on the part of men was less in plural marriage than in monogamy."
Sep 1,1870 - Salt Lake City's 9th Ward reports that only thirty one of its 181 families
attends Sunday Services regularly and 50% of families are perfectly indifferent.
Jun 3,1871 - Salt Lake Tabernacle service: "Pres D.H. Wells spoke 25 minutes
following Pres Young's remarks. Not very good attention. Considerable moving about,
passing out, and drowsiness."
Jan 4,1877 - Joseph Smith's last born child David is committed to Illinois Hospital for
the Insane. Proclaimed by Brigham Young in 1866 as rightful heir of LDS presidency, he has
served as counselor on RLDS presidency since 1873. He dies in asylum in 1904.
Aug 29,1877 - Brigham Young dies. His last words are "Joseph, Joseph, Joseph!"
June 4,1879 - John Taylor and apostles decline to allow Elijah Abel to receive temple
endowment because he is Negroid, even though Abel received Melchizedek priesthood with
Joseph Smith's authorization in 1836. This African American regularly attends his
Seventy's quorum meetings and serves proselyting mission just before his death in 1888.
Dec 27,1879 - Apostle Wilford Woodruff tells stake conference in Snowflake, Arizona,
"There will be no United States in the year 1890."
Jan 9,1880 - Apostle Orson Pratt writes to his children that city of New Jerusalem will be
constructed by April 1950.
Jan 7,1882 - Apostle Francis M Lyman's diary begins recording month-long nervous breakdown
of Heber J Grant, his successor as Tooele Stake President. Physician diagnoses Grant's
condition as "nervous convulsions" and warns that condition could lead to
"softening of the brain," if Grant continues his stressful pace of activity.
Grant becomes apostle ten months later and is first LDS leader with diagnosed history of
emotional illness.
Mar 31,1882 - John Taylor closes Church Historian's Office to the public.
Mar 22,1884 - James E Talmage begins using hashish at Johns Hopkins University as "my
physiological experiment" of its effects. By April 6 he is using twenty grains,
"and the effect was felt in a not very agreeable way." This is last reference in
his diary. Four months later he becomes member of stake high council.
May 17,1888 - At dedication of Manti Temple, Wilford Woodruff says, "We are not going
to stop the practice of plural marriage until the Coming of the Son of Man."
Feb 27,1889 - LDS political newspaper Salt Lake Herald: "In 1870 Utah had second
highest rate of divorce and in 1880 the tenth highest for all states and
territories."
Jun 8, 1889 - Apostle Lorenzo Snow says that "his sister, the late Eliza R. Snow
Smith, was a firm believer in the principle of reincarnation and that she claimed to have
received if from the Joseph the Prophet, her husband. He said he saw nothing unreasonable
in it, and could believe it, it it came from the Lord or His oracle."
Dec 5, 1891 - Stake President relates "incident of the Prophet Joseph telling Dimick
B Huntington.....that Noah built the Ark in the land where South Carolina is now.
Nov 29,1893 - Presidents Wilford Woodruff and George Q Cannon meet with three apostles and
James E Talmage: "That there will also be daughters of Perdition there is no doubt in
the minds of the brethren."
Dec 7,1893 - First Presidency and Twelve decide that garments worn under clothing should
be white. This is first departure of Utah temple garment from contemporary "Union
Suit" which comes in various colors and upon which Utah "street garment" is
based.
Apr 5,1894 - At meeting of First Presidency and apostles, Wilford Woodruff announces
revelation which ends practice of adopting (sealing) men to LDS leaders.
Apr 9,1894 - Death of Thomas C Sharp, principal conspirator in murder of Joseph and Hyrum
Smith. He has had a successful career as mayor, judge, school principal and newspaper
editor.
Apr 15,1894 - Juvenile Instructor publishes hymn "Our Mother in Heaven," which
is phrased as prayer to the goddess.
May 18,1894 - In Salt Lake Temple, "Jane Elizabeth Manning (a Negro woman) is sealed
as a servitor for eternity to the Prophet Joseph Smith." Joseph F. Smith acts as
proxy.
Aug 26,1894 - "First time a woman has spoken in the Salt Lake Tabernacle on the
Sabbath at the regular service- the people don't know what to make of it-it must bode good
for women." The speaker is a non-Mormon.
Oct 24,1894 - Wilford Woodruff and his two counselors each give approval for Apostle
Abraham H Cannon to marry another plural wife. In all, ten general authorities marry
post-Manifesto plural wives by permission of church president or his counselors during
next ten years.
Mar 1,1895 - Some non-Mormons are given full tour of dedicated Salt Lake Temple interior.
Apr 7,1895 - Wilford Woodruff tells conference: "Cease troubling yourselves about who
God is; who Adam is, who Christ is, who Jehova is. For Heaven's sake, let these things
alone.
Aug 22,1895 - First Presidency and apostles decide to deny temple endowments to
"Black Jane" Manning (James) because of her "negro blood."
Mar 12,1896 - First Presidency gives James E. Talmage "an instruction to smoke
tobacco to relieve his persistent insomnia."
Aug 23,1896 - Sugar House Ward congregation votes against man proposed as Bishop of new
ward to divided from the old. Salt Lake stake president Angus M. Cannon furiously shouts,
"Sit down! and shut your mouths, you have no right to speak!" When Cannon
engages in shouting match with dissenting congregation, a ward member and policeman
threaten to arrest stake president for disturbing the peace. Cannon more calmly repeats
his attempt but is voted down "again several times." Secretary of the First
Council in attendance writes: "I have been taught that the appointing power comes
from the priesthood and the sustaining power from the people and that they have the right
of sustaining or not sustaining appointees."
Aug 26,1896 - Apostle Moses Thatcher begins treatment with Keeley Institute for his
addiction to opium and morphine. First Presidency and apostles tolerated Thatcher as a
"morphine fiend" and "opium eater", but on 26 July his family and
friends considered involuntary commitment to treatment. His is most prominent drug addict
in Mormon history. Twelve drop Thatcher from quorum membership on 19 Nov because of four
year conflict over his insubordination in political matters, but Thatcher's drug addiction
aggravates that conflict.
Nov 5,1896 - Apostle Lorenzo Snow's youngest plural wife bears his last child in Canada.
At age 82 he is the oldest General Authority to father a child.
Jan 15,1897 - Apostle Brigham Young, Jr. temporarily resigns as vice-president of Brigham
Young Trust Company because first counselor George Q. Cannon allows its property to become
"a first class" brothel on Commercial Street (now Regent Street), Salt Lake
City. Apostle Heber J. Grant is invited to its opening reception and is stunned to
discover himself inside "a regular whore-house." This situation begins in 1891,
and for fifty years church controlled real estate companies lease houses of prostitution.
Oct 7,1898 - At general conference Apostle John W. Taylor reports that in one rural area,
80% of LDS marriages involve premarital sex.
Feb 7,1901 - Apostle Brigham Young, Jr writes that proposal to provide Utah's school
children with smallpox vaccinations is "Gentile doctors trying to force Babylon into
the people and some of them are willing to disease the blood of our children if they can
do so, and they think they are doing God's service."
Mar 3,1901 - Lorenzo Snow promises Salt Lake temple workers that "some of us would go
back to Jackson County, Missouri."
July 11, 1901 - First Presidency and apostles agree that Danish beer is not harmful or in
violation of Word of Wisdom and release an official statement to the same affect.
Nov 7,1901 - First Presidency officialy declares that there is no "rule in the church
forbidding cousins to intermarry" and that first cousins can have temple marriages if
they present civil license.
Apr 3,1902 - First Presidency and apostles read letter that U.S. President Theodore
Roosevelt and Republican Part leader Mark Hanna guarantee they will arrange to defeat
proposed constitutional amendment on polygamy and unlawful cohabitation. They expect
Mormons to vote Republican in exchange.
Mar 26,1903 - Joseph F Smith tells apostles "there would be no daughters of
perdition, only sons" in final judgement.
Oct 22,1903 - First Presidency and Twelve authorize purchase of twenty five acres of the
original temple lot at Independence, Jackson County, Missouri. Purchase is complete on 14
Apr 1904. These purchases continue throughout twentieth century.
Feb 20 1904 - First verified suicide of full time LDS missionary. He shoots himself as he
is returning to Utah.
Mar 2,1904 - Before committee of U.S. Senate, Joseph F. Smith testifies: "I have
never pretended to nor do I profess to have received revelations. I never said that I had
a revelation except so far as God has shown me that so-called Mormonism is God's devine
truth, that is all."
Apr 14,1904 - First Presidency and apostles decide to resume sale of liquor at church
resort of Saltair due to need for non-Mormon patronage.
Jan 10,1906 - First Council of Seventy instructs B.H.Roberts to go to Los Angeles for
"recuperation from a weakness for liquor that had fastened itself upon him."
Oct 6, 1907 - At sustaining of church officers a man votes against Joseph F. Smith because
of his admitted violation of Utah's cohabitation law. Smith has him ejected from Salt Lake
Tabernacle.
1904 - Church president instructs twelve apostles to walk through all doorways in order of
seniority.
1906 - Joseph F. Smith pleads quilty in court to unlawful cohabitation for which he pays
$300 fine.
1907 - General Conference votes to send twenty tons of flour to China for famine relief.
This comes from Relief Society grain storgage program.
1909 - October at General Conference, Apostle George Albert Smith stops speaking after
three minutes as he begins to "tremble and perspire." Apostle Reed Smoot had
referred two weeks earlier to Smith's "mental trouble." Since January Smith's
diary has described symptoms of his eventual collapse. At age thirty-nine he is first
general authority whose debilitating mental problems cannot be attributed to senility.
Hospitalized for ten weeks at Gray's Sanatarium in Salt Lake City, Smith does not recover
from his emotional breakdown until 1913. Problem re-emerges in 1930's and in 1949-51.
1910 April - Stake president writes of church members "complaining on account of so
many Smiths being chosen." Recent conference sustained John Henry Smith as second
counselor and President Smith's son, Joseph Fielding Smith, as new apostle. In addition to
appointing his son Hyrum M. an apostle in 1901, Smith also appointed his son David A.
Smith to Presiding Bishopric in 1907.
Oct 2,1910 - First anti-Mormon film, Victim of the Mormons ("Mormonens Offer"),
opens in Copenhagen, Denmark. Film goes into international distribution, is publicly
condemned by Apostle David O. McKay at next general conference. It is target of first
censorship effort led by Utah governor (William Spry, LDS).
Jan 1913 - Deseret News favorably reviews One Hundred Years of Mormonism, first commercial
film about Mormons made with cooperation of church officials. The 6 reel, 90 minute silent
film features one of Brigham Young's grandsons in the role of his grandfather. During
Joseph F. Smith presidency, Hollywood produces other silent features which portray
Mormonism less favorably: A Trip to Salt Lake City (1905), The Mountain Meadow Massacre
(1912), The Mormon (1912), Deadwood Dick Spoils Brigham Young(1915), Cecil B. DeMille's A
Mormon Maid (1917), and The Rainbow Trail (1918).
Dec 17,1913 - Death of Joseph Smith's last surviving plural wife, Mary E. Rollins
Lightner. She helped save the still-unbound Book of Commandments from printing office set
afire by mob in 1833. She witnessed adoption of 1835 D&C, which prohibited polygamy,
and became secret plural wife of Joseph Smith at Nauvoo while still living with her
non-Mormon husband.
Oct 8, 1916 Apostle James E. Talmadge anounces in Conference that "The [ten lost]
tribes shall come: they are not lost unto the Lord; they shall be brought forth as hath
been predicted; and I say unto you there are those now living - aye, some here present -
who shall live to read the records of the Lost Tribes of Israel..."
Mar 22,1919 - "The Nigger" is the new production to be given at the Social Hall,
proclaims Deseret News with explanation: "The Nigger" is distinctly Southern. It
is a romance based on Southern ideals and the race problem.
Nov 11,1919 - Apostle James E. Talmage attends Third Christian Citizenship Conference in
Pittsburgh as delegate chosen by Utah's governor. Utah delegates are booed and hissed by
4,000 other delegates. Talmage hurriedly leaves after some delegates surround him and
threaten to strip off his clothes in order to display his temple garments.
Jan 4,1922 - From 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Brigham H. Roberts presents detailed summary of
textual and historical problems in Book of Mormon to combined meeting of First Presidency,
apostles, and Seventy's presidents. He recommends that these problems should be researched
and publicly discussed.
May 17,1923 - First Presidency and Twelve agree to alter temple undergarment worn outside
temple: "buttons instead of strings; no collar; sleeves above the elbow and few
inches below the knee and a change in the crotch so as to cover the same." Mormons of
the time regard this as a dramatic change from endowment garment introduced by Joseph
Smith.
Nov 26,1923 - Corporation of the President is incorporated, becoming the successor of the
Trustee-in-Trust as center of church financial operations.
Jan 21,1925 - Mason Grand Lodge of Utah officially prophibits Mormons from membership in
any of its Masonic lodges and provides for expulsion of any Mormons who are current
members of any Utah lodge. Utah is the only state with formal Masonic restricition against
religious group or denomination. Some Mormons (primarily converts) affiliiate or preside
in Masonic lodges outside Utah after 1925.
May 22,1925 - Deseret News editorializes in favor of new Utah law which leagalizes horse
racing and pari-mutual betting. Legislature has appointed Brigham F. Grant as chair of
Racing Commission. He is manager of Deseret News and brother of church president, Heber J.
Grant.
Feb 15,1927 - Apostle George F. Richards notifies temples that it is decision of First
Presidency and Quorum of Twelve to immediately omit from prayer circles "all
references to avenging the blood of the Prophets. Omit from the ordinance and lecture all
reference to retribution." Letter also instructs to "omit the kissing" at
the end of the proxy sealings.
Jan 19-20,1928 - Frederick M. Smith, RLDS president, supervises disinterment of his
martyred grandfather and granduncle, Joseph and Hyrum Smith, from coffin-less burial place
kept secret since 1844. They are reburied in coffins, one on each side of Emma Hale Smith
Bidamon, next to Mansion House in Nauvoo.
Sept 24,1929 - Heber J. Grant writes: "I am free to confess that I am disappointed
with the Yosemite valley. It seems only about one-half as grand as the American Fork
canyon of Utah."
Aug 16,1930 - Heber J. Grant remarks that Apostle George Albert Smith "is getting
very nervous. We don't want him to have another breakdown such as he had years ago, almost
costing him his life." Apostle Smith doesn't begin describing his symptoms until
January 1932, and year later writes,"My Nerves are nearly gone but am holding on the
best I know how." Symptoms gradually subside and do not resume until he is church
president years later.
April 2,1932 - Heber J. Grant launches campaign against use of tobacco as part of his
emphasis on observing Word of Wisdom by total abstinance from alcohol, tobacco, tea and
coffee. Previously, Section 89 was not regarded as a commandment nor was it interpreted as
simply abstaining from four specific substances.
May 5,1932 - Apostle Stephen L. Richards tells First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve
that he will resign as apostle rather than apologize for his general conference talk which
says church is putting too much emphasis on Word of Wisdom. He later confesses his error
to Heber J. Grant on 26 may and retains his position.
July 29,1932 - Death of George H. Brimhall from self inflicted gunshot. He served as BYU
President from 1904 to 1921 and is only BYU president to commit suicide.
Dec 9,1933 - Church News article "Mormonism in The New Germany," enthusiatically
emphasizes parallels "between the LDS Church and some of the ideas and policies of
the National Socialists." First, Nazis have introduced "Fast Sunday."
Second, "it is a very well known fact that Hitler observes a form of living which
Mormons term the Word of Wisdom. Finally, due to the importance given to the racial
question by Nazis and the almost necessity of proving that one's grandmother was not
Jewess, there no longer is resistance against genealogical research by German Mormons who
now have received letters of encouragment complimenting them for their patriotism."
Jan 25,1936 - Church News Section photograph of LDS basketball team in Germany giving
"Sieg Heil: salute of Nazi Party.
Oct 31,1936 - First Presidency publishes unsigned editorial in Deseret News, which argues
against re-election of Democratic president Franklin D. Roosevelt. Editorial, written by
J. Reuben Clark, accuses F.D.R. of unconstitutional and Communist activities. In response
one thousand Mormons angrily cancel their subscriptions to the News. Three days later,
69.3 percent of Utah's voters help re-elect Roosevelt. Utah's electorate re-elects F.D.R.
again (1940,1944), despite First Presidency's opposition.
Mar 29,1940 - First Presidency asks Apostle Joseph Fielding Smith to chair
"Literature Censorship Committee authorized by Quorum of the Twelve last
Thursday."
Mar 10,1941 - First Presidency orders Clayton Investment Company to get rid of its
"whore-houses," no matter the financial loss, so that church affiliated company
can merge with church-owned Zion's Securities Corp. Ends fifty years of church's leases to
brothels.
June 8,1941 - First counselor J. Reuben Clark tells annual conference of youth and their
leaders: "When I was a boy it was preached from the stand, and my father and mother
repeated the principle to me time and time again. They said, 'Reuben, we had rather bury
you than to have you become unchaste.' and that is the law of this Church." This
doctrine continues in the church and is included in all editions of Bruce R. McConkie's
great work Mormon Doctrine under the heading "Chastity."
June 1945 - Improvement Era states: "When our leaders speak, the thinking has been
done." This is the ward teacher's message to all members for the month. To an
inquiring Unitarian minister, George Albert Smith writes that "not a few members of
the Church have been upset in their feelings, and General Authorities have been
embarrassed" by above statement. "Even to imply that members of the Church are
not to do their own thinking is grossly to misrepresent the true ideal of the
Church," he continues. However, church president's retraction reaches one non-Mormon,
while original statement reaches entire LDS population without similar retraction.
Oct 6,1946 - Public release of Joseph Fielding Smith (b. 1899) as Patriarch to Church due
to "ill health" but actually due to discovery of his recent homosexual activity.
Oct 9,1946 - First Presidency and apostles decide to allow faithful African-American
Mormons to receive patriarchal blessings, and Patriarch Eldred G. Smith blesses black
couple for the first time.
April 16,1948 - Apostle Mark E. Petersen asks for permission to instruct local leaders to
begin excommunication trials for persons he suspects of having disloyal attitudes towards
LDS Church. First Counselor J. Reuben Clark warns Petesen "to be careful about the
insubordination or disloyalty question, because they ought to be permitted to think, you
can't throw a man off for thinking."
Jan 20,1949 - President George Albert Smith begins week's stay in California Lutheran
Hospital for his "tired nerves," which his diary first refers to at Oct 1948
general conference. He is first LDS president with history of severe emotional illness and
hospitalization. He does not recover from this episode unitl mid May 1949, when able to be
in First Presidency office at least half day. Smith is absent from church headquarters 12
Jan to 27 Feb 1950 to stay at Laguna Beach, California, "to rest my nerves." He
returns there to recuperate again for ten days in March. Year later his nurse notes that
church president is "very confused, very nervous." Ten days before his death,
nurse adds that George Albert Smith is "irrational at times."
April 5,1949 - First counselor J. Reuben Clark tells meeting of bishops: "I wish that
we could get over being flattered into almost anything. If any stranger comes among us and
tells us how wonderful we are, he pretty much nearly owns us."
Aug 17,1951 - First Presidency statement that church's restriction on negroid peoples
receiving priesthood "is not a matter of the declaration of policy but of direct
commandment from the Lord."
Oct 16,1951 - Temple council of First Presidency, Quorum of Twelve Apostles and Patriarch
to church decides to allow beer commercials on church-owned KSL television station.
Nov 5,1951 - First Presidency learns of plans by Warner Brothers to make film about
Mountain Meadows Massacre, based on recent scholarly book by LDS Juanita Brooks. Within
seven days First Presidency successfully persuades Hollywood studio to kill project.
Mar 3,1953 - First Presidency secretary answers Mormon's inquiry about receiving blood
transfusions from African Americans: "The LDS Hospital here in Salt Lake City has a
blood bank which does not contain any colored blood." This represents five year
effort to keep LDS Hospital's blood bank separate from American Red Cross system in order
"to protect the purity of the blood streams of the people of this Church"
(Counselor J. Reuben Clark's phrase.)
March 30,1955 - Quorum of Twelve recommends establishment of separate unit or branch for
African-american members in Salt Lake City.
April 10,1956 - Non-LDS governor of Utah, J. Bracken Lee, speaks of his counsel to
prominent non-Mormons: "I said to them you are never going to have any success in
Utah unless you let the leaders of the Church give you some advice."
Dec 4,1959 - Budget Committee reports that church spent $8 million more than its revenues
that year. As result, church permanantly stops releasing annual reports of expenditures.
Jan 7-8,1960 - First Presidency decides that Bruce R. McConkie's Mormon Doctrine
"must not be re-published, as it is full of errors and misstatements, and it is most
unfortunate that it has received such wide circulation." They are exasperated that
McConkie and his publisher released the book without pre-publication publicity or
notifying First Presidency. Even his father-in-law, senior apostle, Joseph Fielding Smith,
"did not know anything about it until it was published." This is McConkie's way
to avoid repetition of Presidency's stopping his pre-announced Sound Doctrine three years
earlier.
Committee of two apostles (Mark E. Petersen and Marion G. Romney) report that McConkie's
Mormon Doctrine contains 1,067 doctinal errors. For example, page 493 said: "Those
who falsely and erroneously suppose that God is progressing in knowledge and gaining new
truths cannot exercise sufficient faith in him to gain salvation until they divest
themselves of their false beliefs." However, McConkie is affirming doctrine of
omniscience officially condemned by previous First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles in 1865. In announcing their decision to the Twelve on 28 Jan 1960, First
Presidency says there should be no revised edition of Mormon Doctrine. Presidency reverses
initial decision on 7 Jan. "that the book should be officially repudiated."
By 28 Jan Presidency decides against requiring McConkie to make public apology because
"it might lessen his influence" as general authority.
In 1966 year after his father-in-law becomes assistant counselor to First Presidency,
McConkie publishes second edition of Mormon Doctrine. It corrects only a few of first
edition "errors" cited by First Presidency and apostles in 1960. Book becomes
best seller among Latter-day Saints. McConkie becomes member of Quorum of Twelve Apostles
to fill vacancy which his father-in-law's death creates in 1972.
Nov 10,1960 - Brigham Young University's president tells Executive Committee of BYU's
trustees "about a colored boy on campus having been a candidate for the vice
presidency of a class and receiving a very large vote." The three apostles present
want to exclude all African Americans from BYU. "If a granddaughter of mine should
ever go the BYU and become engaged to a colored boy," Apostle Harold B. Lee fumes,
"I would hold you responsible!"
May 14,1961 - Apostle Joseph Fielding Smith announces to stake conference in Honolulu:
"We will never get a man into space. This earth is man's sphere and it was never
intended that he should get away from it." Smith, the Twelve's president and next in
succession as LDS President, adds: "The moon is a superior planet to the earth and it
was never intended that man should go there. You can write it down in your books that this
will never happen." In May 1962, he privately instructs that this view be taught to
"the boys and girls in the Seminary System." On 20 July 1969 U.S. Astronauts are
first men to walk on moon. Six months later Joseph Fielding Smith becomes church
president.
June 22,1961 - First Presidency supports plan to persuade U.S. Army to send its
"colored contingents" to California rather than to Utah. At its same meeting
Presidency agrees to allow baptism of Nigerians seeking membership in church.
Feb 3,1962 - Church News Headlines, "MIA Bans The Twist," popular dance among
teenagers and young adults. This prohibition is widely ignored by youth and even by adult
leaders in some wards and stakes, especially in Britian and Europe.
May 25,1962 - Boyd K. Packer is first to earn regular doctorate while serving as general
authority. He receives Ed.D. degree from Brigham Young University.
Sep 19,1962 - First Presidency rules that prominent Egyptian polygamist can be baptized
because polygamy is legal in Egypt. This is in reference to "an earlier ruling in the
matter of Indians who had married more than one wife and it was decided that they may be
baptized, if they were legally married according to their tribal customs."
Oct 27,1962 - In midst of Cuban Missle Crisis, Apostle Ezra Taft Benson publicly endorses
John Birch Society as "the most effective non-church organization in our fight
against creeping socialism and godless communism," and his son Reed A. Benson
announces that he is Utah coordinator of the society.
Jan 1,1964 - "Home Teaching" replaces traditonal "ward teacing"
program of monthly visits of priesthood men to church members. This begins new emphasis on
family life which subtly (yet fundamentally) replaces previous priorities of God, Church
and family with new ranking of family, church and God.
Feb 29,1964 - After forty one years teaching in Church Education System, George S. Tanner
writes that " a large majority" of CES teachers are so narrow and ignorant that
it is a shame to have them indoctinating our young people. I would much rather my sons and
daughters go to other schools in the state than have them led by these religious
fanatics."
Apri 15,1964 - Daryl Chase, Mormon president of Utah State University, confides that
"the LDS church has a greater strangle hold on the people and institutions of the
state now than they had in Brigham's time. Complete academic freedom is actually
non-existent."
March 3,1965 - Apostle Harold B. Lee is "protesting vigorously over our having given
a scholarship at BYU to a negro student from Africa. Brother Lee holds the traditional
belief as revealed in the Old Testament that the races ought to be kept together and that
there is danger in trying to integrate them on the BYU campus."
April 29,1965 - BYU President Ernest L. Wilkinson makes first reference in his diary to
receiving reports from student "spy ring" he has authorized and which becomes
national scandal within ten months.
July 1967 - Church-wide Priesthood Bulletin prohibits women from praying in sacrament
meeting.
Nov 27,1967 - New York Metropolitan Museum of Art gives to LDS church the original
Egyptian papyri upon which Joseph Smith based "Book of Abraham" in Pearl of
Great Price. Scholars and church officials authenticate papyri as the same used by Smith.
Apostle N. Eldon Tanner states the discovery of the papyri will finally prove Joseph Smith
could translate ancient documents. Unfortunately, Egyptologists, LDS and non-LDS, verify
that these papyri are typical "Book of Breathings" in form and content. Church
officials begin repressing the story that the original papyri have been discovered and are
in their possesion.
June 33,1967 - BYU's president receives "confidential draft" by Terry Warner,
professor of philosophy and religion, that "freedom of speech as it is known today is
a secular concept and has no place of any kind at the BYU."
Nov 19,1967 - BYU's administration discuss possibility of taking legal action to close
down off campus student newspaper.
Dec 19,1967 - BYU's Daily Universe publishes article in favor of recruiting African
American athletes. BYU's president writes: "This agures all the more in favor of our
making the student newspaper an agency of our Communications Department rather than a
student publication." Universe ceases to be independent student paper on 18 Apr 1969,
but "nothing would be announced about this new policy."
Sep 14,1971 - Apollo 15 astronauts present to President Joseph Fielding Smith a Utah state
flag that has traveled with them to the moon.
May 13,1972 - May Presidency letter that "fluoridation of public water supplies to
prevent tooth decay" is one of the "non-moral issues" that Mormons should
vote on "according to their honest convictions." John Birch Society, which
Apostle Ezra Taft Benson and many other Mormons support, is condemning fluoridation as a
Communist "plot."
April 6,1974 - April conference sustains Neal A. Maxwell as Assistant to the Twelve, first
general authority who previously worked for U.S. Government's Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA). Maxwell becomes member of the twelve in 1981.
Aug 14,1976 - New York Times reports U.S. patent granted to Mormons G. Richard Jacobs,
Cluff Peck, Dean G. Doderquist for "speaking mannequins" at LDS information
centers.
Nov 1,1977 - Spencer W. Kimball dedicates Osmond Family Studio in Orem, Utah.
Feb 15,1978 - First Presidency letter that Mohammed and Confucius "received a portion
of God's light."
June 9,1978 - First Presidency announces "priesthood now available to all worthy male
members." First Presidency secretary Francis M. Gibbons writes that this change
"seemed to relieve them of a subtle sense of guilt they had felt over the
years."
June 17,1978 - Church News headline "Interracial Marriage Discouraged" in same
issue which announces authorization of priesthood for those of black African descent.
Sources at church headquarters indicate that Apostle Mark E. Petersen requires this
emphasis.
Dec 29,1978 - First Presidency allows women to pray in sacrament meetings again, recind
earlier ban from July 1967.
August 1979 - Church's Ensign magazine publishes first counselor N. Eldon Tanner's
statement: "When the prophet speaks the debate is over," which echoes
Improvement Era's message of June 1945.
Feb 7,1980 - Dallin H. Oaks, president of BYU, is chair of board for television's Public
Broadcasting Service. He continues as PBS Chair after his appointment to Twelve in April
1984.
March 2,1980 - Introduction of "Consolidated Meeting Schedule" of three-hours on
Sundays. This eliminates week-day meetings of auxiliaries, as well as traidtional twice
daily Sunday meetings. This eases transportation and weekly scheduling but erodes
fellowshipping opportunities and diminshes tightly knit social environment of LDS Wards.
By 1996, this has severely diminshed emotional ties of North American Mormon youth to LDS
community, eroding what is called "Mormon ethnic identity." Most dramatic
manifestation of this trend is fact that for first time in Mormon history, young women
cease LDS participation at greater percentages than young men (according to general
authority Jack H. Goaslind's statement in BYU Daily Universe, 31 Aug 1992). Likewise,
despite absolute increase in missionary numbers, proportion of Mormon males who accept
full time missions has decreased significantly in North America.
July 3,1981 - After nearly eleven years of losing advertising revenues, Deseret News
begins publishing ads for R-rated movies.
August 22,1981 - Apostle Boyd K. Packer instructs BYU religion faculty, all seminary and
institute teachers, and administrators of Church Education System that Mormon history,
"if not properly written or properly taught, may be a faith destroyer," and he
affirms that Mormon historians are wrong in publicizing controversial elements of Mormon
past. BYU Studies publishes this address in full. At request of students, BYU history
professor gives his perspective on Elder Packer's talk and role of historical inquiry to
meeting of BYU's history majors. Summarized within days by off-campus student newspaper
Seventh East Press, this conflict between some apostles and some Mormon historians is
subject of Feb 1982 Newsweek article which quotes BYU professor that "a history which
makes LDS leaders flawless and benignly angelic would border on idolatry."
Oct 1,1981 - New York Times reports official announcement that new edition of Book of
Mormon changes prophecy that Lamanites will "become white and delightsome."
Instead of continuing original reference to skin color, new edition emphasizes inward
spirituality: "become pure and delightsome."
Oct 31,1981 - Apostle Bruce R. McConkie preaches to combined stakes of BYU that second
coming of Jesus Christ will not be in his lifetime or in lifetime of his children or his
grandchildren. This runs contrary to the common folk belief that Christ will come in year
2000 or shortly thereafter.
March 2,1982 - In televised sermon at BYU Apostle Bruce R. McConkie denounces
"spiritually immature: students and other Mormons who devote themselves to gaining a
special personal relationship with Christ." He criticizes widely circulated book on
that topic by popular religion professor George Pace who writes public letter of apology
within days and is released as stake president shortly thereafter.
April 2,1982 - First Presidency announces service of male missionaries is reduced from 24
months to 18 months. "It is anticipated that this shortened term will make it
possible for many to go who cannot go under present financial circumstances,"
counselor Gordon B. Hinckley explains. "This will extend the opportunity for
missionary service to an enlarged body of our young men." Instead, the annual number
of new missioinaries level off. Annual convert baptisms decline more than 7 percent each
year rather than increase by same proportion as before.
Jan 11,1983 - Second counselor Gordon B. Hinckley pays document dealer Mark Hofmann
$15,000 for alleged Joseph Smith letter about his treasure digging activities. He has
Hofmann agree not to mention the transaction to anyone else and then he sequesters
document in First Presidency's vault. First Presidency does not acknowledge its existence
unitl Los Angeles Times is about to release story about document, which Hofmann later
admits he forged.
April 15,1983 - University Post: The Unofficial Newspaper of Brigham Young University
reports interview with director of Standards Department. He acknowledges that students
suspected of cheating, illegal drug use, stealing, or homosexuality are expelled from BYU
if they refuse to take polygraph examination. BYU Security has licensed polygraph
examiner.
Nov 26,1984 - First Presidency announces that as of 1 January mission service for young
men will return to 24 months.
May 5,1985 - LDS Astronaut Don Lind administers sacrament in zero gravity Skylab 3.
June 9,1985 - Church headquarters telephones all bishops in Utah, Idaho and Arizona with
instructions to forbid discussion of Linda Newell and Valeen Tippetts Avery's biography
Mormon Enigma:Emma Hale Smith in Relief Society or other church meetings. Lasting for ten
months, this ban is apparently what triples book's sales.
April 4,1987 - First Counselor Gordon B. Hinckley tells priesthood session of conference
that "marriage should not be viewed as a therapeutic step to solve problems such as
homosexual inclinations of practices..." This reverses decades long policy formulated
by Spencer W. Kimball.
Oct 2,1988 - Michaelene P. Grassli, general Primary President, is first woman to speak in
general conference in 133 years.
Oct 12,1989 - Deseret News reports that representative of Eli Lilly pharmaceutical company
confirms that Utah has highest per-capita use in nation of anti-depressant Prozac.
April 1,1991 - Student at BYU's commencement offers prayer to "Our Mother and Father
in Heaven."
April 17,1991 - Chronicle of Higher Education reports that Utah "ranks last in
proportion of students who are female" throughout the United States. This is result
of Utah's "traditions that inhibit the educational progress of women."
Aug 9,1991 - Salt Lake Tribune article, "Of LDS Women, 58% Admit Premarital
Sex."
April 4,1992 - Apostle Richard G. Scott tells general conference that LDS women should
avoid "morbid probing into details of past acts, long buried and mercifully
forgotten," and that "the Lord may prompt a victim to recognize a degree of
responsibility for abuse."
Among his concluding remarks: "Remember, false accusation is also a sin," and
'bury the past." Unspoken background to his remarks is that in recent years current
stake presidents and temple workers have been accused of child abuse by their now adult
children. Salt Lake Tribune reports that suicide prevention lines are swamped with
telephone calls by women in days after Scott's remarks.
Aug 8,1992 - Salt Lake Tribune reports that First Presidency's spokesman has acknowledged
existence of special "Strengthening the Members Committee" that keeps secret
files on church members regarded as disloyal. Due to publicity on this matter, including
New York Times, Presidency issues statement on 13 Aug. defending organization of this
apostle-directed committee as consistent with God's commandment to Joseph Smith to gather
documentation about non-Mormons who mob and persecute LDS Church. Presidency lists
Apostles James E. Faust and Russell M. Nelson as leading the committee.
May 18,1993 - Apostle Boyd K. Packer tells All-Church Coordinating Council that LDS church
faces three major threats: "The dangers I speak of come from the gay-lesbian
movement, the feminist movement (both of which are relatively new), and the ever-present
challenge from the so-called scholars or intellectuals."
June 27,1993 - Counselor Gordon B. Hinckley dedicates former Hotel Utah as new Joseph
Smith Memorial Building to serve primarily as additional office space for LDS central
bureaucracy. Its large theatres also begin showing devotional film, "Legacy"
(about Mormon pioneers), scripted by Academy award-winner Keith Merrill according to
Hinckley's instruction:"I want them to leave the theatre crying."
Nov 6,1994 - Apostle M. Russell Ballard tells 25,000 students at BYU that general
authorities "will not lead you astray. We cannot." This claim of infallibility
is officially published, and he repeats it to another BYU devotional meeting in March
1996.
May 3,1995 - Agreement between LDS church and American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust
Survivors "over the issue of posthumous baptisms of Jewish Holocaust victims."
First Presidency agrees to "remove from next issue of International Genealogical
Index [public-acess record only] names of all known posthumously baptized Jewish holocaust
victims,"and "to discontinue any further baptisms of deceased Jews, including
all lists of Jewish Holocaust victims who are know Jews, except if they were direct
ancestors of living members of the Church."
Sept 1995 - Ensign magazine publishes First Presidency message by second counselor James
E. Faust which denounces "the false belief of inborn homosexual orientation."
Next month's Ensign contains what appears as one apostle's direct challenge to First
Presidency's unequivocal statement. In his October article "Same-Gender
Attraction," Dallin H. Oaks writes: "There are also theories and some evidence
that inheritance is a factor in susceptibilities to various behavior-related disorders
like aggression, alcoholism, and obesity. It is easy to hypothesize that inheritance plays
a role in sexual orientation."
1996 Fall, Brigham Young University Studies publishes study by two sociologists who
analyze 1,384 questionnaires submitted by LDS "householders," including
discovery that LDS men are more likely to think they are going to heaven ("celestial
kingdom") than women think of themselves. Men are less likely to attend church or
pray privately than women.
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