On January 8, 1970, in a statement distributed to Mormon leaders around the world, the top leadership of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints reaffirmed its ban on Negroes in the priesthood. All other Mormon men were expected to join the priesthood at age 12.
However, on June 9, 1978, the 148-year-old policy was revoked. Church President Spencer W. Kimball announced in Salt Lake City that the decision had been based on a revelation that had come to church leaders, saying, "The long-promised day has come when every faithful, worthy man in the Church may receive the holy priesthood." The ban had become a source of tension between the church and minority groups, and the change was expected to facilitate the Mormons' active missionary program. Indeed, to look at today's slickly-produced commercials produced by the LDS to promote family life, you'd never know that such a ban had ever existed.
Wasn't it amazing (and convenient) that such a "revelation" just happened to come at a time when the Mormon church was facing increasing criticism for its practices from non-Mormon society? Just as the revelation to the church's leaders to ban polygamy happened to come at a time (1890) when statehood for Mormon-dominated Utah was being denied because of the long-standing practice. Just one question, Chief: How is it that the LDS leaders receive revelations that contradict previous revelations when all of the original LDS theology and practice was supposedly given by God as a restoration of true worship and a correction of the false doctrine and practice that had corrupted Christianity for centuries until 1830?
Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Your salvation does not depend on the fact that
you believe Christ to be the Savior of the godly, but that he is a Savior
to you and has become your own. 11. Such a faith will work in you love for
Christ and joy in him, and good works will naturally follow. If they do
not, faith is surely not present; for where faith is, there the Holy Ghost
is and must work love and good works. 12. This faith is condemned by
apostate and rebellious Christians, the pope, bishops, priests, monks, and
the universities. They call it arrogance to desire to be like the saints.
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*Matthew 21:1-9. Christ Enters Jerusalem: or Faith; Good Works; and the
Spiritual Meaning of This Gospel*
10. In the second place he particularly me...
2 hours ago
Yeah, well.. At least our pastors weren't reading from the Bible during lynchings and KKK rallies. Or making scriptural arguments for why Segregation was a good thing.
ReplyDeleteThat would have been the Protestants.
And ironically, LDS congregations today are less segregated than Protestant congregations are.
To each his own I guess.