Church History and
Censorship
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to Mormon Quotes Index
“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 have a hard time
with historians... because they idolize the truth.
The truth is not uplifting; it destroys. Historians should tell only
that part of the truth that is inspiring and uplifting.”
-
Apostle Boyd K. Packer, as related by D. Michael
Quinn, “Pillars of My Faith,” talk delivered at Sunstone Symposium,
Salt Lake City, August 19, 1994
“None of the early
revelations of the Church have been revised.”
- Apostle Hugh
B. Brown, letter to Morris Reynolds, May 13,
1966, reprinted in Tanner, Major Problems of Mormonism, p. 133, online
at http://www.xmission.com/~country/reason/changes.htm
“There has been no
tampering with God’s Word…. The whole body of Church
laws forms a harmonious unit, which does not anywhere contradict itself
nor has it been found necessary to alter any part of it.”
- Apostle John
Widtsoe, Joseph Smith – Seeker After Truth, 1951,
p. 119, 122
“Inspiration is
discovered in the fact that each part, as it was
revealed, dovetailed perfectly with what had come before. There was no
need for eliminating, changing, or adjusting any part to make it fit.”
- Prophet
Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines of Salvation, 1954,
v. 1, p. 170; Smith made this statement while he was church historian,
thus exemplifying the kind of ignorance (and/or lying) necessary to be
a LDS historian.
“No true Latter-day
Saint will ever take a stand that is in opposition
to what the Lord has revealed to those who direct the affairs of his
earthly kingdom. No Latter-day Saint who is true and faithful in all
things will ever pursue a course, or espouse a cause, or publish an
article or book that weakens or destroys faith.”
- Apostle Bruce
R. McConkie, Conference Report, October 1984, p.
104
Statements from
Scholars
“Many things have been
intentionally ignored and sometimes concealed or
have been taken to have religious meanings or implications which, in my
opinion, have no religious connections whatsoever. I believe that the
Church has intentionally distorted its own history by dealing fast and
loose with historical data and imposing theological and religious
interpretations on the data that are entirely unwarranted.”
-
Sterling McMurrin, Mormon scholar, “7EP Interview:
Sterling M. McMurrin,” by Blake Ostler, Seventh East Press, January 11,
1983, p. 1
“Honesty is not a
particularly common virtue of churches, or of any
other organizations. There is nothing new about churches perverting
history... Most institutions, including churches, governments, and
government agencies... often find it advantageous to ignore historical
facts and do a little reconstructing here and there on their own
history.”
-
Sterling McMurrin, Mormon scholar, “7EP Interview:
Sterling M. McMurrin,” by Blake Ostler, Seventh East Press, January 11,
1983, p. 2
“No church can stand a
close scrutiny of its origins and history
without a good deal of moral and intellectual cringing.”
-
Stanley McMurrin, Mormon scholar, “7EP Interview:
Sterling M. McMurrin,” by Blake Ostler, Seventh East Press, January 11,
1983, p. 3
“Mormon historians are
told to write church history as elementarily as
possible and as defensively as possible. This is accommodation history
for the weakest of the weak Latter-day Saints, for the vilest of the
vile anti-Mormons, and for the most impressionable of the world’s
sycophants....
“Historians did not
create problem areas of the Mormon past, but most
of us cannot agree to conceal them, either. We are trying to respond to
those problem areas of Mormon experience. Attacking the messenger does
not alter the reality of the message.”
- D.
Michael Quinn, see Mormon Mavericks: Essays on
Dissenters, p. 339
“Three apostles gave
orders for my stake president to confiscate my
temple recommend. Six years earlier, I had formally notified the First
Presidency and the Managing Director of the Church Historical
Department about my research on post-Manifesto polygamy and my
intention to publish it. Now I was told that three apostles believed I
was guilty of ‘speaking evil of the Lord’s anointed.’ The stake
president was also instructed ‘to take further action’ against me if
this did not ‘remedy the situation’ of my writing controversial Mormon
history.
“James M. Paramore,
the area president who relayed these orders,
instructed my stake presidency to tell me that this was a local
decision and reflected their own judgment of the state of my church
membership. My stake president replied that he was not going to tell me
something which was untrue. Instead, the stake president informed me
how this order came about and how they had resisted the area president
for more than two hours. Unlike the area president, my stake president
and one of his counselors had already read the Dialogue article. My
stake presidency saw nothing in it to justify what they were being
required by church headquarters to do to me.
“I told my stake
president that I would not tell colleagues or friends
about this because I did not want to be the center of more publicity.
However, I told the stake president that this was an obvious effort to
intimidate me from doing history that might ‘offend the Brethren’ (to
use Ezra Taft Benson’s phrase). I didn’t feel I should be punished for
describing Mormon events which the current general authorities wished I
had never occurred. I said it was wrong-headed for them to confiscate
my temple recommend, and that ‘I won’t be intimidated by anybody.’”
- D.
Michael Quinn, “On Being a Mormon Historian,”
pp. 91-92
“The tragic reality is
that there have been occasions when [Mormon]
Church leaders, teachers, and writers have not told the truth they knew
about difficulties of the Mormon past, but have offered to the Saints
instead a mixture of platitudes, half-truths, omissions, and plausible
denials.”
- D.
Michael Quinn, “On Being a Mormon Historian,” p.
8; reprinted in Smith, ed., Faithful History: Essays on Writing Mormon
History, 1992, pp. 69-111
“When Elder Packer
interviewed me as a prospective member of Brigham
Young University’s faculty in 1976, he explained: ‘I have a hard time
with historians because they idolize the truth. The truth is not
uplifting; it destroys. I could tell most of the secretaries in the
church office building because that they are ugly and fat. That would
be the truth, but it would hurt and destroy them. Historians should
tell only that part of the truth that is inspiring and uplifting.’”
- D. Michael
Quinn, “On Being a Mormon Historian (and Its
Aftermath),” in George D. Smith, ed., Faithful History: Essays on
Writing Mormon History, 1992, p. 76
“Revelations have been
revised whenever necessary. That is the nice
thing about revelation – it is strictly open-ended.”
- Hugh Nibley,
LDS scholar, letter to Morris L. Reynolds, May
12, 1966, quoted in Tanner, Case Against Mormonism, 1967, v. 1, p. 132,
online at http://www.xmission.com/~country/reason/changes.htm
“Joseph would dictate
them [his revelations] to a clerk at as fast and
steady a pace as the clerk was able to write, maintaining an even flow
of delivery, and never altering the words spoken.”
- John J.
Stewart, Mormon scholar, Joseph Smith the Mormon
Prophet, 1966, p. 57
Others:
“F. Burton
Howard and F. Enzio Busche came out on separate
occasions and told me we have an obligation to conceal our doctrines;
that we are trying to be a mainstream Christian Church.”
-
Michael Barrett, LDS attorney, quoted in Bill
McKeever, “Excommunicated for Publicly Discussing Mormon Doctrine?,”
Mormonism Researched, Summer 1994, p. 3
“Charismatic
movements, such as Mormonism, maximize events by coloring
them with an indelible strain of folklore. Myth is frequently
more powerful than the historical reality that endangers it.”
-
Richard S. Van Wagoner, LDS Historian, Sidney
Rigdon – Portrait of Religious Excess, p. 246
“In sacred history,
the divine is an actor in the drama, a direct
participant, not a supernatural presence. Because the divine is a
natural part of the process, sacred history inevitably takes on a
mythic character, which makes it ‘truer than true,’ if by truth one
means that which is established and verified according to the canons of
historical scholarship. Sacred history has other characteristics
as well. It is stripped down – in artistic terms, stylized – so
that the story is told in blacks and whites, with no grays. The
persecuted and persecutors, the people of God and the people of Satan,
good and evil are locked in mortal combat in which compromise is out of
the question. All the ambiguity and complexity of human existence
is shorn away. Moreover, the context is left ambiguous enough to
keep the narrative from being either time bound or culture bound; it
functions as scripture.... Mormonism’s sacred history, like all
sacred history, is a part of the mythological dimension of this
religion. By its very nature it can only be retold and defended;
not reinvestigated, researched.”
-
Jan Shipps, religious scholar, “The Mormon Past:
Revealed or Revisited?”, Sunstone, v. 6 (Nov./Dec. 1981), p.
57
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Plagarism in Church History
The Wasp (original newspaper report):
“Joseph Smith was
arrested upon a requisition of Gov. Carlin,… in
accordance with a process from Gov. Reynolds of Missouri, upon the
affidavit of Ex-Governor Boggs,… the Municipal court issued a writ of
habeas corpus according to the constitution of the State,… they left
them in care of the Marshal, without the original writ by which they
were arrested, and by which only they could be retained, and returned
back to Gov. Carlin for further instruction, - and Messrs. Smith and
Rockwell went about their business. As to Mr. Smith, we have yet to
learn by what rule of right he was arrested to be transported to
Missouri for a trial of the kind stated.” (August 13, 1842)
History of the Church
(Joseph Smith, Jr. version):
“I was arrested… on a
warrant issued by Governor Carlin, founded on a
requisition from Governor Reynolds of Missouri, upon the affidavit of
ex-Governor Boggs,… the municipal court issued a writ of habeas corpus
according to the constitution of the state,… they left us in the care
of the marshal, without the original writ by which we were arrested,
and by which only we could be retained, and returned to Governor Carlin
for further instructions, and myself and Rockwell went about our
business. I have yet to learn by what rule of right I was arrested to
be transported to Missouri for a trial of the kind stated.” (v. 5, pp.
86-87 – more direct quotes follow this passage)