maklelan wrote:You've already highlighted some of them, but there are a lot more local authorities who are not mentioned in this article.
Uh, no. I did not. The passages I cited show the Brethren being confused and hesitant about what to do. The article portrays top Church leaders as being
concerned about the racist priesthood ban. There is evidence that they debated it and talked about it, but "campaigned" is a stretch, Mak.
You write:
Maklelan wrote:The text later explains he convinced most of the twelve apostles to back him, but that Lee shot him down. Elder Hanks was another GA who worked to convince other leaders the ban could be dropped. I consider that to be campaigning, irrespective of the outcome. Do you disagree?
I'm not sure that the outcome matters, given that there are conflicting accounts as to whether or not Elder Brown did what you claim he did. It seems to me that your glossing over this:
The policy change was thwarted primarily because of Harold B. Lee’s
strong opposition. President Brown’s grandson says that when Elder Lee was away
President Brown had persuaded the Twelve to his point of view. But Elder Lee,
on his return, obtained reconsideration of and withdrawal from such agreement.
Firmage, “Hugh B. Brown in His Final Years,” 8; Firmage, Abundant Life, 142–43.
However, L. Brent Goates, biographer of President Lee, expressed doubt that any
such agreement was reached.
(emphasis mine)
...is a rather glaring omission. Do you have a better example of what you mean by "campaigning"? Preferably multiple examples, since your post to Just Me suggested that this was a widespread sort of thing? And this time, would you please be so kind as to quote some text?
As to this:
I consider that to be campaigning, irrespective of the outcome. Do you disagree?
Yes, I disagree. The private musings and conversations of the Brethren, in my book, do not constitute the kind of "campaign" that your earlier post described. Brown's activities--which are in doubt--is the closest thing you've got. The other bits you adduced constitute searching, wondering, and trying to find an "out." And given that all of this was taking place behind the scenes--with rank-and-file members getting ex'ed for
actually campaigning--I think you need to find better evidence.
"[I]f, while hoping that everybody else will be honest and so forth, I can personally prosper through unethical and immoral acts without being detected and without risk, why should I not?." --Daniel Peterson, 6/4/14