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Correct Principles

Is it just me, or does “Follow the living prophet” contradict “I teach them correct principles and they govern themselves”? On the one hand we are exhorted to follow whatever the current prophet says. On the other, we are supposed to be given correct principles and then left to govern ourselves. So which is it: prophet or principles?

Some may say that the living prophet is the source of correct principles, but surely a correct principle won’t change with the changing of church administrations. If prophet A teaches X as the word of God and prophet B preaches the opposite of X similarly, then one of them isn’t teaching a correct principle. Or they make God changeable. Either way, they are not a source of principles as I understand the word.

For example, Brigham Young sounds uncompromising when he says “The only men who become Gods, even the Sons of God, are those who enter into polygamy” (Journal of Discourses, Vol. 11, page 269). When we remember that the New and Everlasting Covenant of Marriage was historically understood to refer to polygamous marriage (hence the need to keep this section secret for years), it is evident that Doctrine and Covenants 132 supports Brigham Young’s view.

Gordon B. Hinckley sounds equally uncompromising when he says “I condemn [polygamy], yes, as a practice, because I think it is not doctrinal.” (Larry King Live, aired 8 September 1998) Hinckley receives support from Official Declaration 1, only if we accept the idea that a current prophet can flatly contradict what a previous prophet taught as an eternal principle.

Some may claim that this apparent contradiction reflects a deeper principle, the principle of Jacob 2 where polygamy is righteous when God commands it. If that is the principle, then Brigham Young and Gordon Hinckley have both proven themselves unreliable in providing the correct principle by which the people can govern themselves. Given their public statements, their hearers would be unable to govern themselves. The audience is beholden to the prophets for constant guidance. Nothing that a prophet states as the truth can be relied upon to remain in force, even if the prophet states that it is an eternal principle:

The same God that has thus far dictated me and directed me and strengthened me in this work, gave me this revelation and commandment on celestial and plural marriage, and the same God commanded me to obey it. He said to me that unless I accepted it, and introduced it, and practiced it, I, together with my people would be damned and cut off from this time henceforth. We have got to observe it. It is an eternal principle and was given by way of commandment and not by way of instruction. (Joseph Smith, Contributor, Vol. 5, p. 259, emphasis added)

Contrast this train wreck of conflicting doctrine with the conservation of energy: energy can not be created or destroyed, it can only be changed from one form to another. This principle applies everywhere and for all time. We can rely on it to be true. When compared to the shifting sands of Mormon prophetic writ, this physical principle seems like an oasis in the desert.

The only principle that the Mormon church seems to preach is complete obedience to the titular head of its hierarchy. They are not, as Brother Joseph poetically put, taught correct principles and allowed to govern themselves. I wish they were.

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2 Comments

  1. LDS Anarchist said,

    October 20, 2007 @ 9:34 pm

    Both Young and Hinckley are correct. Young was correct when he said, “The only men who become Gods, even the Sons of God, are those who enter into polygamy.” And Hinckley was correct when he said, ““I condemn [polygamy], yes, as a practice, because I think it is not doctrinal.” Of, course, Hinckley expressed his thoughts (beliefs or opinions.) He did not offer a definitive First Presidency Statement to the same, but in this instance, none is needed. His thought is correct. At the present time, polygamy, meaning a man having more than one living wife is not doctrinal. But we do practice “vicarious” polygamy, still, meaning that a man may be sealed to more than one wife, one living and the other(s) deceased. The law of chastity deals with legal and lawful. Currently polygamy is illegal if more than one wife is alive.

  2. Jonathan Blake said,

    October 21, 2007 @ 6:54 am

    Greetings LDS Anarchist,

    It would be interesting to talk about how anarchy/libertarianism fits into the LDS framework.

    I realize that a legalistic parsing of their words could be made to reconcile what these two men have said, but that makes Hinckley a dissembler. It makes someone who is supposed to be God’s mouthpiece seem like he’s skirting the issue in order to avoid saying the plain truth: we still believe in polygamy; we just don’t practice it while any given wife is alive; we expect that every man who inherits the Celestial Kingdom will have more than one wife. That’s the simple, plain truth, so why should the prophet of God mince words? It sure seems like he wants the church to be accepted as a mainstream Christian church with priesthood authority, or something.

    However you see the polygamy question, it’s much more difficult to reconcile these two men’s views on the Adam-God doctrine, for example. This and other LDS doctrines have changed over time making one prophet contradict another.

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