GoodK wrote:
Just dropping by to say that Daniel C. Peterson is guilty of pissing on my privacy, pitting my step-parent against me, and continuously reporting my posts to my step-father.
Does "Creepy Network of informants" ring a bell?
GoodK wrote:
Just dropping by to say that Daniel C. Peterson is guilty of pissing on my privacy, pitting my step-parent against me, and continuously reporting my posts to my step-father.
Ray A wrote:
You of all people should know that change will never occur, no matter if harmony had a face to face meeting with the Prophet. Because that's not how Mormonism works.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:Someone should have told Gene England, Richard Poll, Lester Bush, and Armand Mauss.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:Ray A wrote:
You of all people should know that change will never occur, no matter if harmony had a face to face meeting with the Prophet. Because that's not how Mormonism works.
Someone should have told Gene England, Richard Poll, Lester Bush, and Armand Mauss.
Ray A wrote:
Does "Creepy Network of informants" ring a bell?
DCP wrote:And how much "private information" would she have to supply to enable Lamanite to buy an airline ticket for her?
LifeOnaPlate wrote:Ray A wrote:
You of all people should know that change will never occur, no matter if harmony had a face to face meeting with the Prophet. Because that's not how Mormonism works.
Someone should have told Gene England, Richard Poll, Lester Bush, and Armand Mauss.
1. Open the books and restore the trust that's been missing for almost 50 years. Even if they don't know it, the members have been and are being cheated.
2. Develop a mechanism by which rank and file members will be regularly accessed by leaders from the highest level. Get past their hero worship and actually listen to what the members say, even when what they say is not what you want to hear.
3. Live humbly, acknowledging that your roof and your daily bread comes from the labor of others.
4. Listen to those who have been hurt by the church. Get past their anger and actually hear the underlying pain.
5. Address the dysfunctional aspects of Mormon culture. Nothing is exempt.
6. Treat all members alike.
harmony wrote:Armand Mauss? What change came about because of Armand Mauss?
Q : When did the Mormon Church finally change its policies about blacks?
A : 1978.
Q : That seems a little late. Didn't most churches and other institutions drop all their racial restrictions a lot earlier than that?
A : Yes; generally a little earlier. But Church leaders had the matter under consideration for at least twenty years before 1978.22
Q : What took so long? Why couldn't the prophet just change the policy?
A : Especially in such important matters as this one, a prophet or president in the LDS Church is not inclined to act alone. The president, his two counselors, and the twelve apostles are all considered "prophets, seers, and revelators," and they usually act as a body when deciding on fundamental doctrines and policies. This process is by definition a conservative one, since it requires a relatively long period of discussion, deliberation, and prayer in order to reach a consensus--in order to feel that they have all been moved by the Holy Spirit toward the same decision. The prophets came close to consensus more than once across the years before they finally achieved it in 1978.23 (emphasis added)
See my account of the long and anguished history leading up to the policy change on priesthood in the LDS Church: "The Fading of the Pharoah's Curse: The Decline and Fall of the Priesthood Ban against Blacks in the Mormon Church," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 14:3 (Fall 1981), 10-45, summarized in All Abraham's Children, 231-241. See also Lester E. Bush, Jr., "Writing 'Mormonism's Negro Doctrine: a historical Overview' (1973): Context and Reflections," Journal of Mormon History 25:1 (Spring 1999), 229-271; and Gregory A. Prince, "David O. McKay and Blacks: Building a Foundation for the 1978 Revelation," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 35:1 (Spring 2002), 145-153.