Rollo Tomasi wrote:mms wrote:Polygamy also survives in Mormon theology, in the Mormon concept of the afterlife, according to Richard Bushman, a Mormon and visiting professor in Mormon studies at Claremont Graduate University in California.
"A man can be sealed [in eternal marriage] to two women if one of them dies and he marries again," Bushman explains. "There's sort of an implicit heavenly plural marriage that is still authorized and acknowledged. So at the very best we're caught in kind of an ambiguous situation, and people probably pick that up."
Kudos to Bushman for acknowledging this ongoing, albeit limited, practice of a form of polygamy in the modern LDS Church (of course, it's a bit more complicated than Bushman reveals: in addition to a widower, a civilly divorced man (whose sealing to his ex-wife remains) can also be sealed to a second living woman; in contrast, a living woman (widowed or civilly divorced) cannot be sealed to more than one man at any given time).
Just to illustrate how misunderstood this policy is, even by today's members, there's a thread going on right now over at MADB about the justification for Joseph Smith's polyandry. A sweet widow named "Maidservant" made this post:
Any justification it needs is a property of point of view (a variety of possibilities), not reality.
I am a wife. I am sealed to my husband. I am a widow. Any man who marries me will be marrying another man's wife. I hope it happens! Both men would need to share. I don't find anything sinister, immoral, repulsive or shocking in this -- just a willingness for some sacrifice.
Clearly this kindly sister does not realize there will be no "sharing" among men for the same woman in the hereafter -- she will go to her 1st husband, and that's it.
When challenged by another poster about his, "Maidservant" responded:
Polyandry is a very interesting thing that happened, does happen, and will be the state of some in the eternities, I believe. So it's definitely worth bringing up and exploring.
My husband is living, by the way. He's just not here with me. He's on the other side of the veil. We're separated, but he's living. In the eternities, we will all be living. Him, me and hopefullly husband number two.
The "hopefully" part refers to her desire to marry again (she's not yet found No. 2). Again, she still seems to think that a woman can have 2 eternal husbands in the hereafter. Sorry, but only the men get to practice polygamy for enternity. ;)