
Just nice, regular folks.
Daniel Peterson wrote:I just don't think that being married to a descendent of the third cousin twice-removed of the great-great-grandfather of an 1830s Seventy makes one a Mormon aristocrat.
Daniel Peterson wrote:That Elder Oaks takes a special interest in Martin Harris is, to my mind, both understandable and harmless. In fact, I find it commendable. That Elder Ballard is proud of his family connections and of the achievements of his ancestors also seems to me perfectly normal and fine. And, since both Elder Ballard's ancestors and collateral relatives and Elder Oaks's relative are of general interest to believing, mainsteam members of the Church, I see nothing wrong with their talking about those relatives from time to time. Quite the contrary.
But I find it simply absurd to suppose that Elder Oaks owes his position in the Twelve, in any degree whatever, to a recognition on the part of the Brethren that, through his mother, he's a distant relative of Martin Harris.
If that was ever significantly true as a general rule -- I don't doubt for a moment that it was occasionally so -- it's far less common now.
I don't believe that I've ever in my life encountered any suggestion that I'm less of a Mormon because my father converted only late in his life and my mother wasn't of Mormon aristocratic stock.
And in a Church led by such people as Thomas Monson, who grew up in a very non-royal family in a non-elite neighborhood of Salt Lake City, and Dieter F. Uchtdorf, who was born in Nazi-occupied Bohemia and whose family converted to Mormonism when his grandmother met a Church member in line at a soup kitchen, it isn't clear that connections to old elite Mormon families are growing in importance.
harmony wrote:When I got married, one of the Mormon Royalty in my ward told my intended husband he could do better than marrying a convert, his family having been in the church almost since the beginning. A fine welcome to the ward, yes?
Trevor wrote:In my old ward, we knew some folks who were descended from early leaders of the Mormon Church, and they never put on airs. See this picture of them in the ward house parking lot:
Just nice, regular folks.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:harmony wrote:When I got married, one of the Mormon Royalty in my ward told my intended husband he could do better than marrying a convert, his family having been in the church almost since the beginning. A fine welcome to the ward, yes?
The same happened to my father when he married my mother (who converted shortly after their marriage). My father was born and raised in Utah by very strict LDS (his father left Norway to go to Zion), and his marrying a Catholic girl from the East was considered a form of apostasy by many of his neighbors (and family) in Utah. Even though my mother was a faithful member the remainder of her life, the 'taint' of convert never really disappeared among my father's Utah family and friends. It didn't really bother us kids because we never lived in Utah (just visited). But converts are a special breed when it comes to Mormonism -- because they aren't raised in the Church, they do not have some of the habits that come from growing up in Mormon culture (like obeying their leaders without question), causing them to be viewed (and even admired) as rabble-rousers who have a life.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:Color me honestly astounded; I've literally never heard of such a thing in my life. I grew up in Utah.
harmony wrote:Perhaps you simply weren't paying attention. I've noticed a remarkable position among many of my Utah and Southern Idaho friends and relatives: head in the sand.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:harmony wrote:Perhaps you simply weren't paying attention. I've noticed a remarkable position among many of my Utah and Southern Idaho friends and relatives: head in the sand.
I simply don't think that's it. I'm pretty social and involved. Have been for quite a long time. Unless the "Mormon Royalty" craze was most predominant during part of my my junior year of High School, or perhaps along the Wasatch Front from 2001-2003, I don't think I would have missed such a notion.