Religion
Mormons, God, and Gays
Mormons, God, and Gays

The Mormon Church is uniquely dogmatically nimble in times of necessity. What would happen if God now said gay was OK?
Matthew Breen
March 05 2014 4:00 AM EST
November 17 2015 5:28 AM EST
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Mormons, God, and Gays
When the news broke that same-sex couples in Utah were lining up at the Salt Lake County courthouse to marry, a collective "what?" erupted from court watchers and pundits. Really? Utah? It's the most Republican state, having gone red in every presidential election since 1968. Utah? Are you sure?
Though the overturning of the state's constitutional ban was the action of a federal judge and not the electorate, nevertheless it happened in a state where religion influences politics to an outsized degree. Over 62% of Utah's population is Mormon, and in 2008 exit polls, 75% of voters in Utah elections identified as Mormon. What the church says, covertly and overtly, often determines the political course of the state.
But Mormonism is unlike other, older religions. Its capacity for change has rescued it from collapse in the past, and it might make Utah, the reddest of states, a uniquely safe haven for gay and lesbian couples.
Mormonism is a relatively conservative faith that has been opaque to many outsiders--many of whom still imagined polygamist compounds--at least until Comedy Central's South Park, The Book of Mormon on Broadway, HBO's Big Love, and the presidential candidacy of Mitt Romney. Still, the prevailing stereotype is one of blond, all-American Pollyannas with big families who don't smoke, drink, or watch R-rated movies. And it's pretty widely known that they aren't so cool with the gays.
Not so long ago, the Mormon Church excommunicated many members for self-identifying as gay or lesbian. In recent years, the religion's policy has been refined to be of the "love the sinner, hate the sin" variety, with the view that same-sex attraction is aberrant, but one can be a good Mormon if one never acts on that attraction. The church has been outspoken in its opposition to marriage equality for same-sex couples, and the state of Utah has followed suit politically. Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight blog summarized Tim Chambless, a political science professor at the University of Utah, as saying, "Today, a majority of Mormon voters in Utah have two nonnegotiable litmus tests... abortion and same-sex marriage."
Image credit: Museum of Church and Art, Salt Lake City, 1913, Artist Unknown
Image credit: "Mormon Family" By Andrew J. Russel, 1864-1869, Yale Collection of Western Americana, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
In 1852, not long after Mormons established a theocratic state in the Utah Territory, they publicly declared that plural marriage was a central Mormon belief. Other Americans considered the practice deviant and it angered the United States government, which waged a legal and occasionally violent military campaign against the settlers for nearly 40 years. Between 1857 and 1887, President James Buchanan sent U.S. forces to Utah, Congress passed a series of laws outlawing polygamy, the government froze the church's assets, dis- enfranchised polygamists, and declared all children of polygamy to be illegitimate. With the very survival of Mormonism on the line, church president Wilford Woodruff issued a document now called the Woodruff Manifesto in 1890, ending polygamy as a church policy. The issuing of the manifesto, a result of Woodruff's revelatory experiences, got the government off the church's back and was key to its survival.
Similarly, revelation changed the course of the religion in the late 1970s. During the very early years of Mormonism, men of black African descent were included in the priesthood (what the church defines as the power and authority given to men by God). When Brigham Young took over the leadership of the LDS church on the occasion of Smith's death in 1847, blacks were excluded from leadership, and were barred from the priesthood until 1978.
In the 1970s, Mormonism expanded rapidly, and church president Spencer W. Kimball announced that new temples would be built across the globe, including, in March of 1975, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Determining eligibility for the priesthood, if men of black African ancestry were excluded, became problematic when considering Brazil's mutiethnic population, and the policy became embarrassing for the church.
During a prayer meeting of the church's highest leadership bodies, the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, "The Spirit of the Lord rested upon us all," wrote Bruce R. McConkie, a member of the Quorum. "From the midst of eternity, the voice of God, conveyed by the power of the Spirit, spoke to his prophet. The message was that the time had now come to offer the fullness of the everlasting gospel, including celestial marriage, and the priesthood, and the blessings of the temple, to all men, without reference to race or color, solely on the basis of personal worthiness."
In one significant meeting the church reversed a discriminatory policy based on race. The revelation expanded the religion to parts of the globe it hadn't before been able to reach. And the church now claims more than 14 million members worldwide.
But could gays and lesbians benefit from church leadership listening again for the word of God? Clue that indicate the church might do so were seen in the candidacy of Mitt Romney. Few things could have cemented the religion in the mainstream of American culture like having the world's most prominent head of state be a Mormon. His campaign was high-stakes for the church.
Yet Romney shied away from discussing his faith on the stump. Mormonism was a high hurdle for many evangelicals to traverse in order to support the Republican nominee. The religion happily accepts some of the stereotypes about its members--that they live cleanly, are good-natured, and have large families--and those traits Romney was happy to showcase, with his clean-shaven, smiling sons and their families often surrounding him on the road to the general election. Yet questions about whether Mormonism is truly a Christian church (many evangelicals believe it is not) and vague ideas about polygamy were major problems that Romney's campaign needed to face if it was to galvanize conservative Christian voters who might opt to stay home on Election Day, rather than pulling the lever for a Mormon.
Interestingly, the LDS church's response was to demystify Mormonism. The "I'm a Mormon" campaign, as seen on the official church website, attempts to enact a tactic proven to be successful before, most notably by LGBT rights groups. When you get to know people in the flesh, rather than as abstract notions, aspects of those individuals' personal lives, including their religion--or their partners' genders--become less spooky. The fact that this tactic was best demonstrated by post-Prop. 8 equality groups in California and in other states with ballot measures supporting marriage equality cannot be lost on Mormon leaders.
Image credit: Richard Ellis/Getty Images
Image credit: George Frey/Getty Images