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Salt Lake Tribune May 4th, 1998 |
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Valeen Tippetts Avery, a professor of history at Northern Arizona University,
Flagstaff, had never met the perplexed young woman who came knocking at
her door. Newly married to a Mormon, the student had been reading up on the faith
and attending Relief Society, the church's auxiliary for women. She was
confused now, and someone had suggested she talk to Avery. Avery, a Mormon who knew the pioneer leader had 55 wives, couldn't explain
why the lesson manual being used since January by male and female church
members in 22 languages paints America's most famous polygamist as a monogamist. But she had some advice. "The Mormon church is trying to say to the new people coming into
the church, as well as to the larger American society, that there was
nothing questionable in the Mormon past," Avery told the woman. "And
if you want answers to these kinds of sticky questions, you're not going
to find them inside accepted Mormon manuals and doctrines." The absence of any mention of polygamy is just one of the criticisms
being leveled at the manual, the first of a projected series based on
selected teachings of presidents of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. "Homogenized pap," snorts historian Will Bagley. "It really
shows a contempt for the intelligence of the members." Embarrassed: "Whoever compiled the manual is extraordinarily embarrassed
by the church's second president," says Ron Priddis of Signature
Books. "It's a religious tract, not history," scoffs historian Nancy
J. Taniguchi. "This isn't about Brigham Young. It's about what somebody in the
church Correlation Department thinks is Brigham Young," says Glen
Hettinger, a lawyer and amateur church historian in Dallas. Church officials say the barbs are unfairly aimed at a work that never
was intended as a portrait of the colorful, controversial colonizer who
brought the Mormons west to establish a theocratic empire. Instead, they
say, it is a highly selective compilation of Young's teachings on a variety
of gospel topics seen by church leaders as relevant today. "We're introducing Brigham Young to a church member throughout the
world who is not familiar with the historian's perspective, so it's not
a biography. It's not a history," said Craig Manscill, chairman of
the writing committee that produced the 370-page work. "Those who believe that this is a historical account of Brigham
Young, or an all-inclusive book of his teachings, or something to learn
more about Brigham Young the man, the statesman, the great colonizer and
so on -- that was never the intent," said Ronald L. Knighton, managing
director of the church's Curriculum Department. Rather, the focus was the gospel of Jesus Christ "as taught through
the mouth and sermons of that great president of the church," he
said. Committee Formed: Soon, a writing committee was formed, using Discourses
of Brigham Young, a 1954 compilation of Young's teachings by Apostle John
A. Widtsoe, as the primary source for a new priesthood manual. A few months
later, church leaders decided the manual would be used by men and women
and added women to the writing committee. Polygamy, which church founder Joseph Smith secretly established as "the
new and everlasting covenant of marriage" and which Young publicly
championed, was dropped 13 years after his death in 1877 and appears nowhere
in the Widtsoe index or the new manual. Also missing from the manual are Young's theories that Adam was God the
Father and that Eve was just one of God's wives, the rest having been
left on other worlds. Blood atonement was another casualty. "I'd say that about 10 percent of the quotes are overtly lifted
out of context, with about another 10 percent that are more subtly altered.
In addition, about 5 percent have been abbreviated to avoid offense regarding
race, nationality, gender and so on," Priddis said. The ill-considered result, he said, is "Brigham Young as Gordon
B. Hinckley." Knighton acknowledges the work is "a cut and paste of doctrine,"
but "not to misrepresent or try to interpret." "We'd ellipse occasionally as the brethren would counsel -- most
of those ellipses, or many of them, came from the First Presidency's reading
-- but it was not an intent to capture full discourses," he said. The absence of polygamy -- even in a chronology of Young's life that
mentions his first wife -- should not be surprising, Manscill said, because
the church dropped the practice in 1890. "Was it in the material that we reviewed? Oh, it was there. And
did we ellipse in certain places? Of course we did. But we were following
what our leaders had asked us to do," he said, "meaning that
this was the [current] doctrines." Ronald K. Esplin, director of the Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for
Church History at Brigham Young University and a Young scholar, would
have preferred a more historically seasoned manual. But he recognizes
church leaders need to cater to first-generation Mormons who require a
steady diet of basic gospel principles. "No doubt the concerns for a worldwide curriculum are not ones that satisfy lifelong, fifth-generation Wasatch Front Latter-day Saints," he said. "That's been true for quite some time and it's probably even more true right now." |
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