“Those who can not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” George Santayana, American philosopher
Recent political events have focused considerable negative attention on the LDS church, designating Mormons as the primary opponents to same-sex marriage initiatives across the country. Battle lines were drawn in California’s ballot initiative, Proposition 8, restricting the definition of marriage to a union between a man and a woman, effectively eliminating the right to same-sex marriage.
Due to the church’s stand for traditional marriage in that contest, it has since come under attack by the gay and lesbian community. Since the election, rancorous protests and demonstrations have singled out Mormons. Some of our temples and chapels have been defaced, individual Latter-day Saints have been accosted and the church has been demonized in the media by elements of the secular progressive movement.
Because we are in the forefront of the struggle to prohibit same-sex marriages, the gay community has used that as a rallying point against Mormons, declaring us bigoted and “unfair.” Political pressures are likely to escalate as the gay movement in the country continues to gather allies and strength in its push to achieve legitimacy and legal status.
Reflecting upon these recent events, Latter-day Saints would be well advised to recall another time, in the early days of the church, when such political opposition caused us great harm.
Look at our Nauvoo period. From the outset, the Saints had been well received by Illinois residents. Politicians, especially, were eager to court the Mormon vote, as they have been in our recent history.
The new city soon experienced exceptional growth as the highly successful missionary work in England sent converts by the boatload to the small Illinois settlement. The influx of converts overwhelmed the burgeoning frontier city. Joseph Smith and the Brethren were hard put to find room for all of them. Nauvoo eventually became more populous than Chicago.
Exceptional growth has also been a hallmark of the modern church since the early 1960s when Pres. David O McKay articulated the “every member a missionary” program. Since then, our numbers have grown dramatically from just over 1 million in 1961 to over 13 million or more today.
In 1992, a book entitled The American Religion by Harold Bloom, a literary and religion critic, examined Mormonism’s rapid growth. He wrote:
The nation will not always be only two percent Mormon. The Saints outlive the rest of us, have more children than all but a few American groups, and convert on a grand scale, both here and abroad. I do not know what figures they project for their increase, in the next generation, but my own guess is that by the year 2020 (when I will not be here), they could well form at least ten percent of our population, and probably rather more than that. Their future is immense … Salt Lake City may yet become the religious capital of the United States. (The American Religion, p.113.)
As Nauvoo, the beautiful city by the Mississippi, grew, so did tensions between the Saints and their neighbors. History repeated itself. Every time the Prophet and his people established roots—New York, Kirtland, Jackson County and now Nauvoo—they were ultimately despised and rejected by their neighbors.
Of course, every Mormon knows the tragedy at the heart of this story. The tide turned once again. The eventual outcome was the expulsion of the Saints from Illinois.
Could we experience a similar outcome today?
As with the Nauvoo Saints, today’s church has more political influence in the nation than its burgeoning membership would seem to indicate. Bloom recognized that reality. “Mormon financial and political power is exerted in Washington to a degree far beyond what one would expect from one voter in fifty.”
Our current political and financial power, brought to bear in the Prop 8 battle, is partly responsible for our present predicament. By affirming our belief in traditional marriage and putting our financial and political clout behind that doctrinal stance, we’ve once again made ourselves a target.
Like our predecessors in Nauvoo, remarkable growth coupled with our unique doctrinal views has thrust us into the political spotlight. Doctrinal issues certainly played a part in the Mormon expulsion from Nauvoo and would likely have a role in any future clash between Mormons and their neighbors. (An ironic correspondence: The doctrinal flashpoint in the Nauvoo period was polygamy; today, it is the sanctity of traditional marriage.)
Already other rival religious groups in America have labeled Mormonism a “cult,” thus downgrading our status in the eyes of their membership such that persecution of Mormons and our religion becomes more acceptable—even a sacred duty. Thus, Mormons are beneath contempt.
Thus far, sectarian abuse is only verbal and intellectual, but it could easily escalate. Add the in-your-face tactics of the gay community, which is infamous for its confrontational methods, and you have a volatile combination.
Today’s activist factions have taken lessons from the anti-war protestors and civil rights demonstrators of the 1960s and 70s. They’ve carefully observed the success the environmental extremists have had using the courts, beginning in the 1980s. Today’s gay rights activists employ all those lessons learned.
They will not go away, they will persist. The trend is already gaining momentum, in spite of noble opposition. In due time, Americans will be cowed and coerced by these tactics, if history is any indicator. Thus, the time will certainly come when same sex marriage will be given legal status in one state after another, until it becomes accepted nationwide.
What then? Those who oppose them will be branded as bigots and homophobes for wanting to deny civil rights to a segment of the populace. The tide will have turned. Once again, the Saints will see an emboldened movement rise up against us, empowered by law and the crushing authority of the state. It will then be forced upon us, and we will certainly be made to suffer, as did our forebears.
There will certainly be dissentions within the church. Out of fear of persecution, personal harm and reprisals for their beliefs, many will deny the faith. Those who stand firm will see themselves disenfranchised.
This eventuality has menacing implications and stunning echoes of the Nauvoo tragedy. Religious intolerance in that instance went hand-in-hand with political and social intolerance. Indeed, our stance today could consolidate otherwise disparate elements of American society to create an unholy alliance that would then present a united front against us.
Such a confrontation would take the shape and form it took in the Nauvoo period, pitting the church against other American institutions, the Mormons against their fellow Americans.
According to the statements in his book, Bloom believes “the twenty-first century will mark a full-scale return to the wars of religion.” Of course, that is what happened first in Jackson County and then in Nauvoo—a war of religion that cost Mormons dearly.
There are those who might say that such a thing could not happen in a time when such obvious prejudice and bigotry are nearly nonexistent, that the law cannot be perverted as it was over a century ago on the American frontier. But those who so believe ignore the lessons of history, and are thus doomed to repeat its mistakes.
This is the heart of the issue at hand. Today’s members could find themselves faced with a similar predicament to that of the early Saints in Nauvoo. The commonalities between the Nauvoo experience and the present are too significant to be ignored.










I think this an important warning but it’s hard for me to see the current struggle having a similar result. The Church is much bigger and more powerful than it was then. You know?
This is just another example of taking a slippery slope idea way too far. Just like the church doesn’t want to imprison gay individuals and send them off to concentration camps, neither does “the gay community” want to force the church to recognize gay marriage, or change their doctrine. The whole slippery slope thing can go both ways, and neither side gains anything by continually playing off of it. Also, a few inaccuracies in the above:
1. No temples were “defaced” in the aftermath of proposition 8. Yes, there were peaceful protests at a few, but no vandalism occurred.
2. No church members were “accosted” as a result of proposition 8 either.
Allow me to offer a rebuttal to Mark’s statements 1 and 2 above. On the website of the Society for the Prevention of anti-Mormonism, we have the photos of the the gates of the L.A. temple that was spray painted with grafitti by anti-Prop 8 protestors. That may not be the temple itself, but it was the defacing of property on the temple grounds.
Not only were church members “accosted” but they were the targets of organized attempts to terrorize and intimidate them as well as non-Mormons who stood up for the traditional family.. According the an article at http://www.startribune.com/local/81782082.html?page=2&c=y, columnist Katharine Kersten wrote:
“Activists also targeted religious institutions, reserving special venom for Mormons. After Prop 8′s passage, at least 17 Mormon houses of worship were defaced, and a suspicious white powder was mailed to two others. At one temple, the Book of Mormon was torched on the doorstep.
“Gay-marriage activists made skillful use of public data to harass citizens who donated to the “Yes on 8″ campaign. One website, “eightmaps.com,” displayed a map that enabled activists to pinpoint the identity, employer, donation size and location of certain Prop 8 supporters. Another site, sponsored by a group called Californians Against Hate, revealed some Prop 8 donors’ addresses and telephone numbers. The San Francisco Chronicle and Los Angeles Times also posted search engines that facilitated targeting of this kind.
“Not surprisingly, many Prop 8 supporters were bombarded with harassing calls and e-mails. Some lost their jobs, including Scott Eckern, artistic director of the California Musical Theatre in Sacramento, and Richard Raddon, president of the Los Angeles Film Festival. Both resigned after their private donations were publicized and activists threatened to boycott their organizations. Dozens of businesses — including hotels, insurance agencies, accounting firms and dentist offices — were similarly targeted because of their owners’ or employees’ private donations.
“Even ordinary folks had reason to fear. After Prop 8 passed, gay activists mobbed El Coyote, a restaurant in Los Angeles, calling for a boycott because the owner’s daughter, Margorie Christoffersen, had donated $100 in support of the measure. Shouting “shame on you,” they hurled vulgarities at diners. Though Christofferson apologized, “boisterous street protests erupted” after she refused to renounce her stance, according to the Wall Street Journal. Christoffersen took a leave of absence.
It has become apparent to us at the S.P.A.M. web site that anti-Mormons are just as vicious on the liberal left as they are on the sectarian right. It’s one of the reasons I repeatedly urge latter-day saints to question the wisdom of fervent devotion to any political party. I agree with the author’s premise that, the Church will likely suffer from contention and political divisions. We’ll see liberal saints drop out because they feel that we’re not being kind and tolerant enough of gays. Conservatives will drop out, complaining that President Monson and the general authorities are not giving enough attention to the “new world order” and the undermining of the Constitution. Both groups are trying to “steady the ark.” I see no sense putting the noose in the hand of either party to put around our necks. Satan is playing both sides against us.
A latter-day saint will get equally “beat up” on Free Republic or the Democratic Underground. In Nauvoo, Joseph took the LDS vote off the table by running for office himself. It preserved Church unity at a critical time. Like the author, I see the confrontation coming and there are many resemblances to Nauvoo’s situation. Then, as now, anyone who puts any secular cause before the sustaining of the kingdom of God puts himself in spiritual jeopardy.
What an insightful take on modern political drama. I have had thoughts myself along this vein, but with one important deviation. You left out the part about Zion. In the last days, we are told that Zion will be built upon the American continent, and that is where the Saints will find safety. This too, parallels the early period of the Church. But in these final days, prophecy says it will work.
Greetings,
For those of you who have studied the works of Dave Talbott and the Electric Universe, as well as the great research, books, and newsletters provided by Anthony E. Larson will understand the following:
1) The Grand Sign described by Joseph Smith
2) The planetary events leading up to the appearance of the Grand Sign
3) The Desolation of Abomination that will virtually destroy this planet and almost all life
Once you have this viewpoint, it is plain as the nose on your face that virtually everything we have learned in Church is either untrue or based in symbolism. The story of the second coming is all about the reestablishment of the original Polar Configuration (PC) of Planets and the unbelievable destruction that series of events entails. The building of the temple is a symbolic representation of the establishment of the PC. There will not be any places of safety. Survivors will be few and they will merely be lucky. Maybe they will not be so lucky in light of the hardships they will face.
At any rate, I suspect the time will come when the LDS church, in order to avoid persecution, will have yet another revelation and Gay Marriage will be confirmed. And if there is time enough, the differences between the LDS Church and modern Christianity will be too small to notice. What a sad outcome for a church that was restored by the hand of God.