Brigham Young University
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Mormon Quotes Index
“The evidence is
overwhelming that attending BYU, even for only one
semester, produces young adults who are highly active in the church.”
-
BYU internal study of students, see “BYU Grads More
Active Than Other University Attenders,” Sunstone, 19:2, no.
102, June 1996
"The pedagogical
posture of the CES has become increasingly
anti-scientific and anti-intellectual, more inward looking, more intent
on the uniqueness and exclusiveness of the Mormon version of the gospel
as opposed to other interpretations, whether religious or scientific.
Lesson manuals still occasionally take gratuitous swipes at scientists,
intellectuals, and modernist ideas, which are blamed for jeopardizing
students' testimonies. Non-Mormon sources and resources are rarely used
and highly suspect."
-
Armand Mauss, Mormon scholar, The Angel and the
Beehive, p. 102;
online at http://spires.net/responces/Assessing.html
"Although we want to
ensure that every faculty member has the right to
discuss and analyze as broadly and widely as possible any topic,
including religious topics, including fundamental doctrine of the
church, we do not believe they have--they should be able to publicly
endorse positions contrary to doctrine, or to attack the doctrine."
-
BYU President Merrill J. Bateman, interview quoted
in Mormon America, by Richard and Joan
Ostling, pp. 235-236;
online at http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/religion/july-dec97/mormons_7-18.html
“We should not hire
people who are a threat to the religious faith of
our students or a critic of the Church and its leaders.”
-
BYU hiring process memo leak, see “BYU Tightens
Faculty Hiring Process,” Sunstone, 16:8, no. 94, February
1994,
p. 79
“[Church history] if
not properly written or properly taught,... may be
a faith destroyer... The writer or teacher who has an exaggerated
loyalty to the theory that everything must be told is laying a
foundation for his own judgment.... The Lord made it very clear that
some things are to be taught selectively and some things are to be
given only to those who are worthy.”
-
Boyd K. Packer, “The Mantle is Far, Far Greater
Than the Intellect,” reprinted in BYU Studies, v. 21, no. 3,
1981, pp. 259-277; online at http://www.mormonismi.net/kirjoitukset/bkp_mantteli.shtml
“Satan can even use
truth to promote his purposes. Facts, severed from
their context, can convey an erroneous impression.”
-
Dallin H. Oaks, “Reading Church History,” speech
delivered at the Ninth Annual Church Educational System Religious
Educators’ Symposium, BYU, August 16, 1985
“We have the
responsibility to preserve the doctrinal purity of the
Church. We are united in this objective.”
-
First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve
statement, Sunstone, 16:6, no. 92, November
1993, p. 72; http://www.mormonismi.net/artikkelit/puhdistus1993.shtml
“I’m pretty
pessimistic because it seems like things are just getting
narrower and narrower. It’s beginning to affect the students.”
-
Eugene England, Dialogue founder, “An Interview
with Eugene England,” Student Review, April 10, 1998, p. 10-11
“It’s [BYU] a place
where no one is allowed to drink or smoke; where
sex is outlawed for everyone but married couples; where public figures
like Senator Edward Kennedy and former first lady Betty Ford have been
prevented from speaking on campus and films like The Godfather deemed
unfit for student viewing; where a boy was brought to trial for looking
up a girl’s skirt in the library stacks (the girl never noticed, but a
security man did); and where gays are not only systematically expelled
but, until recent years, were even subjected occasionally to
electroshock therapy to treat their ‘affliction.’”
-
Peter Bart, “Prigging Out,” Rolling Stone,
April 14, 1983, p. 89
“Some bishops
distribute a handbook that dispenses some unusual
recommendations to male students on how to curb their onanistic urge:
avoid spicy foods, keep your shower door slightly ajar, and if all else
fails, tie your hand to the bedpost... when Playboy magazine declared
recently that, based on its survey of major college campuses, BYU had
the lowest sexual temperature, the news was greeted with a sense of
relief on campus.”
-
Peter Bart, “Prigging Out,” Rolling Stone,
April 14, 1983, p. 92
“Some speakers were
rejected because of their politics, in spite of
university policies prohibiting politics as a criterion for selecting
speakers, and others were rejected for their ‘reputation’ or statements
on moral issues.”
-
“BYU Rejected Speakers for Morals, Politics,” Salt
Lake Tribune,
April 10, 1980, p. B4
“Academic freedom
exists at BYU only for what is considered
non-controversial by the university’s Board of Trustees and
administrators. By those definitions, academic freedom has always
existed at Soviet universities (even during the Stalin era).”
- D.
Michael Quinn to F. Lamond Tullis, August 29,
1988, in “On Being a Mormon Historian,” p. 94; online at http://www.signaturebooks.com/excerpts/faithful.htm#59