maklelan wrote:just me wrote:I am interested in the "numerous church leaders" who campaigned for the ban to be lifted in the 60s and 70s. Do you have names or something I can read about them?
All I know of is a couple guys that got ex'd over it. And I can't remember their names.
TIA
Kimball's son wrote a good article on the issue in BYU studies (
here).
Where exactly are the passages in this article that show "'numerous church [sic] leaders' who campaigned"? There is nothing like that in the piece. The word "campaign" suggests that these "church leaders" (and who are we talking about here? The Brethren? Bishops? Minnesota sociologists?) were actively and openly and aggressively lobbying for policy and/or doctrine change, and your article describes nothing of the sort. It shows the Brethren being
indecisive and unclear on how to interpret the doctrine/policy. But "campaigning"? I think not.
The materials I've read all suggest that Elder Hugh B. Brown was the foremost opponent of the policy, but this article essentially says that his suggestions were pooh-poohed away. From pg. 21:
Hugh B. Brown, counselor to President McKay from 1961 to 1970,
appears to have been the leader most open to change. He urged that the
priesthood restriction could be dropped as a matter of Church administra-
tive policy without requiring a specific revelation. He reasoned that if the
restriction had not come by revelation,33 it could be vacated without revela-
tion. But despite his strongly held views and powerful influence, President
Brown’s position did not then prevail.34
(emphasis mine)
Later, the piece describes academic-types who scoured old documents, trying to find some doctrinal "out," but again, I would hardly describe this as campaigning, especially given a passage like this, from pg. 28:
But others thought it presumptuous for members to do anything
but wait patiently and faithfully defend the Church’s position. Spencer
Kimball, to whom loyalty was an article of faith, placed himself in this
latter group.
So, where exactly are the passages showing ""numerous church leaders" who campaigned for the ban to be lifted in the 60s and 70s."?
"[I]f, while hoping that everybody else will be honest and so forth, I can personally prosper through unethical and immoral acts without being detected and without risk, why should I not?." --Daniel Peterson, 6/4/14