café crema wrote:Why aren't sealings automatically canceled upon divorce then? I suppose it wouldn't be immaterial for a woman who wants to get married again to have to petition to do so.
To be honest, I don't exactly know.
In my capacity as a singles ward bishop, I never encountered the issue, and I don't have access to the handbook any more so as to be confident about the details of the policy, let alone about the reasoning or motivation behind it.
liz3564 wrote:I believe that it has to do with the sealing of the children to the family...or the children that have been born under the covenant of that marriage.
I suspect that that is the reason, or, at least, a substantial part of it.
liz3564 wrote:Their view is that it will work out in the next life the way it is supposed to.
I agree with them.
truth dancer wrote:Whether or not the sealing has been formally cancelled in such an instance is essentially a matter of bookkeeping.
Not really, or women would not have such a horrendously difficult time getting a sealing cancellation. We all know a man must give his permission for a sealing cancellation by his former wife. . . . Women are sealed in the LDS church until there is an official cancellation. If this is just a matter of bookkeeping, they need to get more help in the COB.
By "a matter of bookkeeping," I didn't intend to say that it was merely a matter of inefficiency in Church record-keeping. I was saying that, whatever is recorded upon the books, if one party to a covenant has reneged upon the covenant, or one or both parties want out of the covenant, that covenant is
de facto null, whether it is null
de jure or not.
truth dancer wrote:And, if this were so, women would be under the same rules as men but such is not the case. Men do not need to have a sealing cancellation prior to a second marriage.
It's quite true that men and women are treated differently under sealing rules. This is no surprise. The question is whether women effectively become the unwilling chattel possessions of even unworthy men, simply because a temple sealing has been performed and remains officially uncancelled.
I have never heard anybody espouse such a position. I certainly don't.
truth dancer wrote:Such a sealing is already "of no efficacy, virtue, or force in and after the resurrection from the dead." Whether the Church has formally noted the reality of the situation is immaterial, almost anticlimactic.
Immaterial? Tell that to the women who cannot get a cancellation!
Once again -- perhaps you're over-eager to view me as uncaring and sexist -- I think you're missing my point, which was that such a sealing, if the woman wants out of it, will be a dead letter in the life to come. She will not be forced to be the wife of someone she despises.
liz3564 wrote:My personal feeling is that women be allowed to be sealed to more than one man, just as men are allowed to be sealed to more than one woman.
If all "assignments" are going to be worked out in the hereafter, then why not just let the sealings stand, have God work it out?
I seem to recall that, in some cases, precisely that has been done.
malaise wrote:I was beaten by my Mormon boyfriend and the church elders I discussed it with were upset with me because they thought I was causing problems.
This is possible, I suppose. And it's certainly possible that it's your sincerely held view.
I'm genuinely sorry for any suffering you endured.
Whenever I encounter claims like this, though, I always wonder whether I'm getting the full story. What would the boyfriend say? What would "the church elders" -- an odd phrase, that -- say? What did they know? How did they understand the situation?
In all of my life, I don't believe that I've ever met a bishop, let alone a whole
group of local leaders, who would be serenely supportive of a man's beating a woman.
malaise wrote:Plenty of Mormons commit awful sins and still hold that their covenants are real.
In the Latter-day Saint view, it doesn't ultimately
matter what they think. What matters is what
God thinks.
zeezrom wrote:Why not just get rid of eternal sealings altogether?
Because they're a central part of the faith commonly known as "Mormonism." I'm not alone in believing in that faith.
Why don't Hindus just grill some hamburgers tonight? Why don't Jews just get with the program and worship a few more gods? Why doesn't Islam just jettison the Qur’an? What's the big fetish that Catholics have about the pope? Wouldn't Methodism be a lot less challenging if they dropped that Jesus guy? Wouldn't atheists be better accepted if they just acknowledged that there is a God? Why can't socialists just be libertarians?
malaise wrote:Define faithfulness and unfaithfulness.
I'm not defining them in any eccentric way, and I think you can easily enough figure out what I mean.
A person is either faithful to the terms of an agreement, or not.
malaise wrote:I did not read the passage by McConkie that you quoted
Then, in that case, I see no reason why
I should read what
you post.
malaise wrote:So if a man beats me and reforms, the covenant is still valid?
Not necessarily. But that is his only hope of having it divinely recognized. And, even so, only if the other party to the covenant still wants to hold to it.
malaise wrote:What if I divorce a man who beats me, and then he reforms his behavior, and then refuses to consent to the sealing being undone? What then?
You will not be bound to or by a covenant in eternity from which you want out. Not even with God, let alone with a husband.