Zoidberg wrote:A-man, that's the inconsistency here. For all we know, a boy born without a penis a few decades ago, when it was common practice to perform "corrective" surgeries at birth would have been given a vagina and raised as a girl and there is no basis whatsoever for assuming this person would be denied a temple recommend or not allowed to get married as a woman to a prietshood holder. Even though this person would be a biological male.
You also mentioned the President Kimball said that intersexed cases are rare. I think this is significant and that such cases no more swallow the LDS rule than say the existance of the mentally unstable means that nobody should be accountable for their actions. I think God will sort it out in the end so long as we do our best. Reassignment surgery could be ssen as more on the meddling with sacred reproductive powers for personal pleasure end of the scale than the obediance and faith end.
I'm perfectly fine leaving intersexed or reassigned people alone. I don't see why those who undergo reassignment should expect full temple blessings any more than someone who drinks coffee. Except there is one caveat I have. If some has changed genders, how could one repent and get temple blessings? A coffee drinker can stop drinking coffee. Does the reassigned person need to undergo the knife again? I think it's an interesting question but either way I don't see how it means the church is wrong about gender. I'm sure God will deal with exceptions even if He doesn't list them all for us.