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- <text id=94TT0763>
- <title>
- Jun. 13, 1994: Religion:Saints Preserve Us
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 13, 1994 Korean Conflict
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 65
- Saints Preserve Us
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The Mormons are likely to choose another aged, ailing leader,
- but nevertheless their church is thriving
- </p>
- <p>By Sophfronia Scott Gregory--Reported by Anne Palmer Donohoe/Salt Lake City and Richard N.
- Ostling/New York
- </p>
- <p> Ezra Taft Benson had not appeared in public for two years.
- Toward the end, he could not leave his apartment and had to
- be fed by nasal tube. Yet he remained "Prophet, Seer and Revelator,"
- the supreme authority of the Mormon Church until his death last
- week at the age of 94. A group of dark-suited apostles called
- the Council of the Twelve will gather this week in the central
- Temple in Salt Lake City, Utah, to "set apart" a new prophet
- from among themselves. If tradition is a guide, they will select
- the chief of the council as Benson's successor and the Mormon
- Church's 14th president--in this case Howard Hunter. At 86,
- Hunter, who had open-heart surgery eight years ago and a gall-bladder
- operation last year, will be the first head of the Mormon Church
- born in the 20th century.
- </p>
- <p> In spite of this gerontocracy, the Church of Jesus Christ of
- Latter-day Saints remains vibrant. Its sedulous missionary work
- has made what seemed to be a quintessentially American faith
- extraordinarily successful both at home and overseas. The church
- has nearly 9 million members, up from 5.6 million in 1984. Though
- a slight majority (4.6 million) live in the U.S. and Canada,
- the Mormon Church's biggest success story of the past decade
- is Latin America, where it claims 2.7 million believers. "One
- of the major themes of 20th century Mormonism has been accommodation,"
- says Richard Bushman, a professor of history at Columbia University
- and a practicing Mormon. And by doing so, it has flourished
- spectacularly. Although its members were persecuted nearly to
- the point of extinction for its advocacy of polygamy in the
- late 19th century, the Mormon Church is now the epitome of family
- values and commands an estimated $8 billion in assets even as
- it accumulates the annual tithes from its millions of believers.
- Its current challenges: feminism and historical revisionism
- that pound away at the faith.
- </p>
- <p> That faith is an exotic mixture of innovative Americana and
- unconventional Christianity. Indeed, while Mormon teachers speak
- increasingly of "Mormon Christianity," most Christians would
- blanch at the actual theology. Mormon history states that Joseph
- Smith founded the church in Fayette, New York, in 1830 after
- being directed by the angel Moroni to unearth a set of inscribed
- golden plates. These provided him with revelations that ancient
- Hebrews migrated to North America around 600 B.C. Later Jesus
- Christ, after his ministry in the Middle East, came to preach
- to these lost tribes of Israel in America. The tribes eventually
- split into warring factions, the Nephites and Lamanites, the
- latter being the ancestors of the American Indians.
- </p>
- <p> Smith, who was assassinated in 1844 in Carthage, Illinois, taught
- that the trinity is not a triune God as Christians believe but
- rather "three gods." Meanwhile, God the Father was once a man
- who achieved divinity. As church prophet Lorenzo Snow, who died
- in 1901, put it, "As man is, God once was; as God is, man may
- become." In fact, Smith wrote in Doctrine and Covenants, men
- whose marriages are sealed and approved by the church will become
- gods in the hereafter.
- </p>
- <p> Mormons believe in a form of spiritual pre-existence--though
- not in reincarnation. They have a complex system of the afterlife
- as well--there is a three-tier realm of glory with the highest
- echelon reserved for believers, the next for well-meaning nonbelievers,
- the last for the devil and his angels. Adherents worried about
- the fate of their nonbeliever ancestors can have deceased relatives
- baptized vicariously. Thus Mormons zealously compile genealogies
- so all ancestors can eventually be baptized. Meanwhile, males
- must become lay "priests" and serve as missionaries (currently
- numbering more than 48,000).
- </p>
- <p> There are, however, no "priestesses." Benson said, "Adam, not
- Eve, was instructed to earn the bread by the sweat of his brow.
- Contrary to conventional wisdom, a mother's calling is in the
- home, not in the marketplace." That kind of male chauvinism
- has been challenged by feminists in the church. "It's an organization
- that can't find balance between men and women or between formal
- authority and individual conscience," says Maxine Hanks, a fifth-generation
- Mormon whose book Women & Authority: Re-Emerging Mormon Feminism
- claims women exercised priesthood powers in the 19th century
- when church followers were struggling to establish themselves
- in the Utah desert. "Contemporary Mormon women should reclaim
- their lost authority," she says. For holding such views, however,
- Hanks and other women have been excommunicated.
- </p>
- <p> Another serious challenge comes from historians. David Wright
- was fired from Brigham Young University, which is run by the
- church, for his unpublished opinion that Joseph Smith, not ancient
- authors, wrote The Book of Mormon, the church's original scripture.
- Wright, who still professes belief in Smith as a prophet, now
- teaches at Brandeis University. Meanwhile, D. Michael Quinn
- resigned under pressure from B.Y.U. for publishing Early Mormonism
- and the Magic World View, which detailed Smith's involvement
- with folk magic and the occult before becoming the church's
- first prophet. Quinn had earlier published an article indicating
- that despite the church's official disavowal of polygamy in
- 1890, high officials secretly continued to practice and sanction
- additional polygamous nuptials. Both Quinn and Wright have been
- excommunicated. The very act of reporting on dissent is severely
- discouraged. When Lavina Fielding Anderson, editor of Journal
- of Mormon History, published a piece detailing the pressures
- faced by church intellectuals, she too was excommunicated.
- </p>
- <p> Some time during the Benson presidency, the secret "Strengthening
- Church Members Committee" was created to monitor doctrinally
- troublesome writings and beliefs. Old-style polygamists have
- suffered as much as liberal Mormons from excommunication. Says
- Jan Shipps, a religious historian at Indiana University-Purdue
- University: "It's the steering of a middle course." That strict
- patrolling of dissent is likely to continue under the new leadership;
- it may even deepen. Next in the line of succession after Hunter
- are Benson's chief counselors, Gordon B. Hinckley, who will
- turn 84 this month, and Thomas Monson, 66. After them may come
- Boyd K. Packer, 69, an ardent promoter of doctrinal purity.
- </p>
- <p> Still, conservatism does not rule out innovation. After all,
- the prophet is a visionary and given to sudden revelations.
- In 1978 president Spencer Kimball had one such revelation, and
- blacks were finally allowed to become priests of the church.
- It was a practical vision. Proselytizing had been proceeding
- apace in Latin America, where--particularly in Brazil--many
- new converts had African ancestors. The only groups more successful
- than the Mormons in Latin America are the Pentecostal and other
- Evangelical preachers. Kimball's revelation also gave the church
- another continent to conquer: Africa, which recorded membership
- of 79,000, a 16% growth since 1990, the highest in all the church.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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