12 February 2012

Tender ironies

I don’t believe very strongly in Mormon doctrine anymore. As I have written on this blog before, I still find much good in the teachings of the Church. And of course, I very much like many of its current and former members. While it is neither necessary nor productive to turn over every doctrinal cobble, I have suffered enough of my unease over Church history and policies in silence, and no longer feel as compelled to self-censor my thoughts.

This week, a three member panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld an earlier judicial finding that Proposition 8 in California is unconstitutional. Of course, further legal wrangling is all but certain, but along with Washington State being on the cusp of legalizing gay marriage, this ruling was one more small step towards marriage equality in the US. The following was part of the majority opinion:

“Proposition 8 serves no purpose, and has no effect, other than to lessen the status and dignity of gays and lesbians in California, and to officially reclassify their relationships and families as inferior to those of opposite-sex couples. The Constitution simply does not allow for ‘laws of this sort’.” Further the court determined, “The People may not employ the initiative power to single out a disfavored group for unequal treatment and strip them, without a legitimate justification, of a right as important as the right to marry.” (1)

In response to the ruling by the Ninth Circuit, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued a short statement on Tuesday that reads in part:

“The Church…regrets today’s decision. California voters have twice determined in a general election that marriage should be recognized as only between a man and a woman. We have always had that view. Courts should not alter that definition … Millions of voters in California …expressed their desire, through the democratic process, to keep traditional marriage as the bedrock of society …”. (2)

Obviously, the Church is welcome to express its opinion on the merits of gay marriage. Superficially, press room responses like the one above give the impression that the Church holds a simple and popular position. However, like so much in Mormonism, one needs to dig a little deeper to find the deep ironies that sometimes characterize the deceptively simplified narrative the Church offers. In other words, some historical context is needed.

Point 1: The Church repeatedly avows its loyalty to the US Constitution, but in its response to the judicial ruling by the Ninth Circuit, it is being selective. Its statement lauds the initiative process but attacks the judicial functions of balanced government. In doing so, it joins, at least in spirit, other conservatives who decry the actions of “activist judges” with whom they disagree. The complete system of governance in the United States involves not only means for the majority to enact law, but institutions and concepts such as checks and balances that are designed to protect the rights of the people. Fundamental civil rights, especially minority rights, are not intended to be subject to the whims of the majority. The judiciary plays a prominent role in preventing discrimination by the majority. (3)

Point 2: The Church is on shaky ground invoking the supremacy of the democratic process in matters of public policy, because its own structure and modus operandi are far from democratic. The Church is a theocracy, ruled by 15 unelected men who are the final voice in matters of doctrine and policy. Exercise of power at all levels in the Church is supposed to be done in love and righteousness (a laudable goal), but regardless, Church governance flows structurally from top to bottom. It is not democratic. Even if we ignore the silliness of a theocratic institution lecturing on democratic principles, I wonder what the Church will argue when the day comes that the voice of the people in a particular state approves gay marriage. Public opinion on gay marriage is changing, and it is changing very quickly.  Prop 8 did not pass by an overwhelming majority in California.

Point 3: In its very active political opposition to gay marriage, the Church is actively campaigning against the legitimate aspirations of a minority people. In seeking marriage equality, gays are not interfering in the liberties of others, but seeking only to advance their own pursuit of happiness. The Church’s own history of persecution as an unpopular minority should invoke, at a very minimum, deep empathy for LGBT persons who are fighting for equality under the law. Driven from Ohio to Missouri to Illinois, then to Utah, attacked by mobs, and having suffered terrible hardships in the course of pursing their faith in the 1800s, Latter-day Saints are well acquainted with the injustices perpetrated by intolerant neighbors and hostile laws. Nineteenth century Mormons by and large wanted to be left alone to pursue their way of life; twenty-first century gays by and large want to be left alone to love who they love.

Point 4: Recently Church leaders have linked the advance of gay marriage to threats to religious liberty. These arguments are as much of a smokescreen as a genuine concern. Elder Dallin H. Oaks (4) and others (5), for example, may claim that gay marriage infringes conservative religious freedoms, but eliminating the opportunity for gay marriage infringes the rights of other religious groups and individuals to perform marriages that they believe are equally acceptable to God. The religious freedom argument is a twisted one: the Church is seeking freedom from the beliefs of others, not freedom to define its own beliefs. As long as the Church is not forced to perform gay marriages, change its doctrine, or alter its own practices in any substantive way, its religious freedom is not infringed. Of course there may be some legal complexities and some need for compromise to both implement legal gay marriage and preserve freedom for certain religious viewpoints, but blanket prohibition of gay marriage is not acceptable. Hearing a wealthy conservative religion with a public voice disproportionate to its actual membership size crying victim is a little pathetic.

Point 5: Finally, there is great irony in hearing appeals for “traditional marriage” from Latter-day Saint leaders. As much as Church leadership may prefer to whitewash its own controversial history with sexuality, polygamy was a major component of Mormon theology for decades before the practice gradually faded away during the late 1800s and early 1900s following intense public disapproval and persecution from the US government (6). Moreover, monogamous heterosexual marriage – the way much of the rest of modern western society might have defined “traditional” marriage until recently – isn’t a completely accurate expression of current Mormon views of marriage anyway. Theologically, polygamy remains a component of mainstream LDS views because a man can be sealed to more than one woman during the course of his life as long as only one of the women is alive at the time – polygamy is thus believed to exist in the next life (7). Joseph Smith, the first LDS President and founder of polygamy among the Saints, had many wives, some of these women being already married to other men at the time he courted them and one being as young as 14 years old (8). Thus, early Mormons practiced both polygamy and polyandry. Brigham Young and subsequent leaders of the Church continued polygamy for several decades and defiantly challenged laws that prohibited the practice (9). Unfortunately much of this history occurred under a mantle of secrecy and deception so it is perhaps not even well known to most Latter-day Saints. Whether we’re talking about the 1800s or 2012, early Mormon sexuality represented some very unconventional experimentation with marriage! The Church’s position on gay marriage may be consistent over the short span of time that it has been debated openly, but its broader sexual history probably wouldn’t be deemed “traditional” to most people today.

Why the Church has invested so much energy into public opposition to gay marriage is beyond my comprehension. I can only speculate. But the ironies inherent in its political opposition are blatantly obvious to anyone who takes a careful look at Church history, doctrine, and culture. My conclusion is that the Church is exhibiting a bewildering disregard for its own history and culture in the process of publicly defending its position on gay marriage. Perhaps for those of us who have taken the courage to oppose the Church on marriage equality, our frustrations with its position are tempered by this thought: these ironies remind us that we are on the right side of history.

Notes:

(1) Ninth Circuit opinion.
(2) LDS statement.
(3) The desegregation of schools mandated by Brown v. Board of Education is an excellent example of judicial sanity in the face of majority discrimination.
(4) Elder Oaks’s speech at Chapman University.
(5) An open letter from several religious conservatives.
(6) Official Declaration 1, contained in the Doctrine and Covenants, comprises the 1890 manifesto by President Wilford Woodruff that banned polygamy, at least in the US. Despite the modern tendency to interpret this document as a revelation, and perhaps to believe that polygamy ended abruptly upon its reciept, the history is not so clear cut and polygamous marriages continued into the 1900s. For instance, polygamous LDS colonies were created in northern Mexico even though the practice was illegal since 1884 in that country. The Church acknowledges these post-manifesto plural marriages and that phasing out of polygamy was a gradual process. See Quinn, D.M. 1985. LDS Church authority and new plural marriages, 1890-1904. Dialogue 18:11-107 at this link.
(7) The term sealing refers, in part, to an eternal marriage in LDS theology. Theologically, polygamy is enshrined in LDS doctrine in section 132 of the Doctrine and Covenants.
(8) This site contains very detailed information on early plural marriages in the Church including source documentation for most of the claims in the document. Most of Joseph’s additional marriages appeared to have occurred during the last few years of his life.
(9) Quinn, D.M. 1985. LDS Church authority and new plural marriages, 1890-1904. Dialogue 18:11-107.

4 comments:

  1. Wow, footnotes and everything...

    I agree mostly, but I have never felt totally comfortable with people using arguments like in your point 2, and I'd like you're opinion. I think it's not unnatural or silly for a "theocratic" institution such as the Church to talk about democracy because the institution itself exists within a democratic construct, and every individual member of the institution (talking about in the US/West here)--leaders and members--are also citizens in a democracy. I don't think it's illogical for individuals or an institution within such a larger context to be talking about principles that directly affect it.

    Mind you, I'm not saying that what they are arguing about democracy is necessarily correct, but I feel like rejecting the validity of such argument out-of-hand based on the Church's "theocratic" nature is denying the wider context of what's going on. Sure it's not "democratic," but neither is any corporation, social organization, charity, whatever... but they live and operate within the democracy and so no one thinks it incongruous when they have a say about their environment.

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  2. Hi Trev, Thanks for the thoughtful comment. You make some good points. Yes, most members of the Church live in countries in which democracy and/or representative government are practiced. So, Church members are going to participate in those processes (and in fact are encouraged to do so by Church leaders). I suppose I still find at least some irony in the situation, because the Church as an institution seems to view democracy as an inferior way of governing a group of people. Democracy is not really a part of how the Church operates now and will not be in the future (e.g., according to the doctrine, Christ will come and rule the world in the Millennium). This preferred governance structure seems to have originated with Joseph Smith, and especially Brigham Young, who by my reading of history were very authoritarian. So, the overall impression I get with the Church's approach to gay marriage is vaguely like: we'll use a variety of means possible, even if we don't really believe in the principles behind them, in order to oppose it. To me that is kind of a hard impression to swallow because (a) I feel like this belies a sort of visceral resistance in the Church to accepting anything having to do with gays, and (b) I feel "let down" since I believed for a long time - naive as it may have been - that the Church really operated on a higher moral plane.

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  3. Hmm...

    I definitely feel "a visceral resistance in the Church to accepting anything having to do with gays" and also feel "'let down,'" also, but for me these feelings have no connection to any differences between Church operation and democratic ideals.

    I *kind of* see where you're going with your explanation of seeing it as ironic, but it still feels like a stretch to me. Are you sure you aren't letting your negative reaction toward "a)" and "b)" above spill over into finding another irritant with the organization in its nondemocraticness? Do you feel this sense of irony when other corporations or institutions within our democratic system use "a variety of [democratic?] means... to oppose [issues you care about] even if [they] don't really believe in the principles behind them?"

    Sorry to be so nit-picky! I really enjoy your blog and this post in particular, but this one point of contention of the Church's nondemocraticness has just always seemed such a stretch to me that when I get any sign that one might be willing to discuss it, I'll take the opportunity to keep pushing my opinion and getting feedback.

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  4. Hi Trev,

    I've thought about your questions for a while now. I'm not sure that I have much to add at this time. Certainly some of my myriad frustrations with the Church have flavored my original post. So, I won't pretend to be completely unbiased on this issue.

    Given my skepticism about a number of the Church's claims, I find it unsettling that the Church - an essentially undemocratic institution - took the courts to task for doing something they are constitutionally mandated to do. It is convenient for the Church to cry foul about democracy in the case of gay marriage, but democracy is not really a part of its own culture or historical practices. Perhaps my basic impression is that this just seems disingenuous. It seems to be an argument born more of political expediency than genuine dismay that democracy is threatened by actions of the courts.

    I probably have not been any more convincing in this short response, but I appreciate the opportunity to think through these ideas a little more. Thanks for reading and responding!

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