Friday, October 24, 2008

Prop 8 Divides Mormon Faithful

The thought of going to church in her southern California LDS ward makes Carol Oldham cry. She can't face one more sermon against same-sex marriage. She can't tolerate the glares at the rainbow pin on her lapel. Oldham, a lifelong Mormon, is troubled by her church's zeal in supporting a California ballot initiative that would define marriage as between one man and one woman. She feels the church is bringing politics into her sanctuary. "It has tainted everything for me," Oldham said, choking up during a telephone interview. "I am afraid to go there and hear people say mean things about gay people. I am in mourning. I don't know how long I can last."

The LDS Church's campaign to pass Proposition 8 represents its most vigorous and widespread political involvement since the late 1970s, when it helped defeat the Equal Rights Amendment. It even departs from earlier efforts on behalf of traditional marriage, in which members felt more free to decide their level of involvement. This time, LDS leaders have tapped every resource, including the church's built-in phone trees, e-mail lists and members' willingness to volunteer and donate money. Many California members consider it a directive from God and have pressured others to participate. Some leaders and members see it as a test of faith and loyalty. Those who disagree with the campaign say they feel unwelcome in wards that have divided along political lines. Some are avoiding services until after the election; others have reluctantly resigned. Even some who favor the ballot measure are troubled by their church's zeal in the matter.

"I do expect the church to face a high cost - both externally and internally - for its prominent part in the campaign," said LDS sociologist and Proposition 8 supporter Armand Mauss of Irvine, Calif. He believes church leaders feel a "prophetic imperative" to speak out against gay marriage. "The internal cost will consist of ruptured relationships between and among LDS members of opposing positions, sometimes by friends of long standing and equally strong records of church activity," Mauss said. "In some cases, it will result in disaffection and disaffiliation from the church because of the ways in which their dissent has been handled by local leaders." Robert Rees, a former LDS bishop in California, says he has not witnessed this much divisiveness in the church over a political issue in the last 50 years. Whatever the vote's outcome, Rees says, "it will take considerable humility, charity and forgiveness to heal the wounds caused by this initiative."

Latter-day Saints are free to disagree with their church on the issue without facing any sanction, said L. Whitney Clayton of the LDS Quorum of the Seventy. "We love them and bear them no ill will." Still, he emphasized that most Mormons in California support the church's efforts on behalf of the initiative. "Our doctrine affirms that marriage is important to Heavenly Father's plan of action on Earth," he said. "It is the center of religion. We also believe [traditional] marriage is good for society." In 1999, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints joined other churches in California to promote Proposition 22, which also prohibited gay marriage. Mormons canvassed their neighborhoods and completed other assignments in support of the initiative, which passed. The California Supreme Court overturned it in May, however, and the move to up the ante with a constitutional amendment took hold.

Many opponents choose to keep quiet at church, while seeking kindred spirits online. "We wanted to provide information and fact check the claims, and we wanted it to be provided by people who are still active and involved," said Laura Compton, one of the site's managers. "We get between 400 and 800 hits per day." Compton's views are well known in her LDS ward, but she and her husband, LDS writer Todd Compton, have not been pressured at all. Their leaders have done a good job, she said, of keeping politics out of church. She knows, though, that the conflict has taken its toll on California Latter-day Saints. "Our wards are falling apart," Compton said. "But we still have to sit next to each other after the election." It's especially painful for Mormon gays. "How is the church going to minister to them when such operations are guaranteed to alienate them and their families?" Thurston asked. "Most of the gay members were orthodox Latter-day Saints in their teens and many went on missions. But eventually they found there was no place in the church for them and they went elsewhere." by Salt Lake Trib.

5 comments:

  1. I don't think my ward is falling apart but I think that is because most people are supporting Proposition 8, and those who are not are not actively opposing it. I think most people are trying to be sensitive and loving towards those they know/believe may have homosexual feelings. I think the church has loving home and visiting teachers that can be especially supportive of people with homosexual leanings during this time and be good ministers to their families also. We also have the full-time and ward missionaries. Plus, our bishops and stake presidents have repeatedly offered to meet with anyone who is struggling with supporting this proposition for any reason.
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  2. Why are members surprised? Haven't they ever read the Proclamation on the Family? Nothing hateful has ever been said about homosexuals in our ward and stake, it has been about the importance of marriage.
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  3. You have go to be kidding me! What if the church proclaimed against something from pulpit that was important to you? Would you feel accepted? NO! You would be hurt and would wonder if there was ever going to be a place for you at the chapel.
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  4. I'm very much in to politics and I have very strong beliefs in certain issues. One such issue is my extreme dislike for socialism and anything that leads to it. But if the first presidency came out and said we need to support any legislation that leads us to socialism I would do just that! My opinions no matter how stongly I believe in them will never trump the Lord's chosen prophets. It's not blind faith, it's just faith.
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  5. I read this article a week or so ago, it breaks my heart.
    The Church has made hell on gay lds members testimonies, and their families.
    Not to mention those non-members who now have even more reason to speak out against the church, after it had advocated to "politically neutrality"

    ... not to mention

    D&C 134:9 - We do not believe it is just to amingle religious influence with civil government
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