| [Back to Articles]
"Lives of the Saints"
January 21, 2002, The
New Yorker
When the 2002 Olympic Winter Games open in Utah next month, the
world will be greeted by a young, well-scrubbed, and ingratiating
religion. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has its
headquarters in Salt Lake City, and although its leaders have taken
pains to keep the event from being called the Mormon Olympics, they
view this as an unprecedented opportunity to make the acquaintance
of billions of prospective converts.
Mormonism, which entered the twentieth century as the most persecuted
creed in America, begins the twenty-first century as perhaps the
countrys most robust religion. During the past thirty years,
the number of its adherents in the United States has increased by
nearly two hundred and twenty-five per cent, to more than five million.
(In the same period, the ranks of Southern Baptists, the other fast-growing
major denomination in the country, have swelled forty per cent,
to sixteen million.) At the same time, the memberships of older,
more mainstream denominations, such as Methodism and Episcopalianism,
have sharply declined.
The number of Mormons throughout the world may soon equal that
of Jews, and, indeed, many see a parallel between the two faiths.
Harold Bloom, the Sterling Professor of the Humanities at Yale,
who has written about Mormonism in his book "The American Religion,"
observes that "Mormons have repeated in a deep sense the pattern
of the Jewsthey are a religion that has become a people."
Like the Jews, the Mormons undertook an exodus that forged their
early identity as a scorned people; and they believe that they are
Gods chosen. They divide the worlds population between
themselves and "gentiles"a category that, for Mormons,
includes Jews. Unlike the Jews, however, the Mormons are a missionary
people, and the majority of them today are first-generation converts.
Worldwide, according to the Church, the number of Mormons has grown
by nearly four hundred per cent during the past thirty years, to
more than eleven million. In "The American Religion,"
Bloom speculates about a time when American Mormons are so numerous
and so wealthy "that governing our democracy becomes impossible
without Mormon cooperation."
In 1847, Mormon pioneers followed Brigham Young across the Great
Plains into what was then the northern extension of Mexico. They
dreamed of creating their own theocratic empire, in a land they
called Zion. That vision was eroded by the ceding of the Utah Territory
to the United States in 1850, after the Mexican War, and by the
subsequent admission of Utah as a state, in 1896. Yet it is striking
how much of the dream has been achieved. Mormons constitute sixty-three
per cent of Utahs population. (The figure includes non-practicing
Mormons.) Virtually all statewide elective offices, from the governor
down, are held by Saints, as Mormons call themselves. The state
legislature is overwhelmingly made up of white Mormon Republican
males. Three-fourths of the state judiciary is Mormon. The entire
United States congressional delegation from Utah is Mormon. School
boards, city councils, municipal agencies, and mayors offices
are dominated by Mormons. "The fact is we live in a quasi theocracy,"
James E. Shelledy, the editor of the Salt Lake Tribune, told me.
"Eighty per cent of officeholders are of a single party, ninety
per cent of a single religion, ninety-nine per cent of a single
race, and eighty-five per cent of one gender."
The major secular institutions in the state often have a parallel,
Church-owned counterpart. There is the University of Utah (the "U")
in Salt Lake City, and there is Brigham Young University (the "Y")
in Provo, which is the largest religiously sponsored school in the
country. The non-Mormon Tribune is the states principal newspaper,
but the second-largest one is the Church-affiliated Deseret News.
Church affiliates also own the states biggest television and
AM radio stations. Most public junior high and high schools have
a Mormon seminary available for religious study. The Mormon majority
tends to perceive institutions that are not owned by the Church
as anti-Mormon, especially in Salt Lake City, the only major city
in Utah where Mormons are a minority (about forty-five per cent
of the citys population). "This causes some cultural
and religious divisions that are not present in the rest of Utah,"
Shelledy said. "Its frustrating for the non-Mormon majority
in the city, because the cultural boundaries are already set, and
there is little opportunity for their input." The citys
energetic mayor, Rocky Anderson, a former Mormon who left the Church
at the age of eighteen after what he said was "an intense period
of self-examination," has made bridging the divide between
non-Mormons and Mormons a priority of his administration. "I
believe wed have a far better community," he told me,
"if people could break out of their isolation on both sides."
Saints compare their headquarters in Salt Lake Cityan imposing
complex of buildings set against the Wasatch Mountainsto the
Vatican. Brigham Young, who founded Salt Lake City, mandated that
streets be numbered according to their distance from the pale neo-Gothic
granite temple that stands at the center. Youngs regimented
thoroughfares are a hundred and thirty-two feet widewide enough
to turn around a train of oxen, he decreedso there is a lot
of high-desert sky between buildings. In this setting, the handsome
state capitol nearby looks a bit captive.
Temple Square, the ten-acre heart of Mormonism, is a serene enclosure.
The Tabernacle, home to the celebrated choir, stands in the middle
of the complex, facing the multi-spired Temple. Simplicity is the
sensibility at work in this cloister. Although Mormon temples are
often impressive pieces of architecture, the icons and crucifixes
and frescoes that adorn many Christian churches are notably absent
hereas if decoration were an affront to the pragmatism that
Mormons pride themselves upon. Even the occasional stained-glass
window shies away from depictions of religious passion in favor
of geometric patterns. Across North Temple Street is a new conference
center, a million two hundred thousand square feet in sizenearly
ten times as large as the old Tabernaclewhich can seat more
than twenty-one thousand people.
Salt Lake City is a pleasant town that is often ranked as one of
Americas best places to live; its clean, has a low crime
rate, and provides ready access to ski slopes and wilderness areas.
The extremes of wealth and poverty that characterize most American
cities are not evident in Salt Lake City, in part because of the
Mormons emphasis on frugality and charity.
Some Mormons regard the forthcoming Olympics as the fulfillment
of a prophecy. "We shall build a city and a temple to the Most
High God in this place," Young told his followers. "Kings
and emperors and the noble and wise of the earth will visit us here,
while the wicked and ungodly will envy us our comfortable homes
and possessions." But the International Olympic Committees
choice of Salt Lake City for the 2002 Games was accompanied by less
welcome news. First came the revelation that members of the Salt
Lake Bid Committee had boosted its candidacy by dispensing more
than a million dollars in cash and gifts to members of the I.O.C.
The United States Attorneys office indicted two of the Salt
Lake committees leaders, David Johnson and Thomas Welch, both
prominent members of the Church, on bribery and other charges. It
was expected that their trial might implicate other leading members
of the Mormon establishment, including Michael O. Leavitt, the governor
of Utah. Last August, however, the federal judge in the case, David
Sam, who is also a Mormon, threw out the key charges, calling them
an "uninvited federal intrusion" into the states
affairs. Johnson and Welch faced additional charges of conspiracy
and fraud, but the case was dismissed by Judge Sam last November.
The federal government has appealed the decision.
In the meantime, the Church was obliged to revisit the most horrific
episode in its history. In 1857, a wagon train of migrant families
heading to California was massacred in southwest Utah. A hundred
and twenty people were murdered in a grazing spot called Mountain
Meadows. The Church had long denied any responsibility for the massacre,
blaming a few renegade Mormons and a band of Paiute Indians, whom
the Church accused of killing the women and children. In 1999, at
the request of the descendants of the victims, the Church rebuilt
a small monument at the site. The gesture became a public-relations
disaster when construction workers discovered a number of bones
that seemed to indicate that the women and children had been shot
at close range, apparently by Mormons, rather than killed by the
arrows, clubs, and knives of the Indians.
The traditional Mormon practice of polygamy, which the Church officially
banned in 1890, also became a subject of renewed controversy when
the Tribune published a series of articles about child abuse and
welfare fraud in polygamous families. The articles revealed, among
other things, that polygamous marriages were still flourishing in
various parts of the state, and in greater numbers than ever. When
Tom Green, a man with five wives and thirty children, flaunted his
life style on talk showshe was eventually tried and convicted
on charges of bigamy and criminal non-supportthe Church was
obliged, once again, to try to come to terms with its most vexing
legacy.
The Leader
The president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
is a ninety-one-year-old man named Gordon B. Hinckley. Ivisited
Hinckley in his spacious, sun-filled office in Temple Square, which
is comfortably but plainly furnished. Hinckleys manner is
more corporate than pastoral. He has a round face with a genial
expression, and eyes that dance about smartly behind trifocals.
Among his followers, his youthfulness and energy are legendary,
as is his vinegary humor. "All writers should be put in a box
and thrown in the sea," he said as he rose to greet me. Like
every other man I had seen in the Temple complex, he was wearing
a black suit, a white shirt, and a dark, narrow tie. His office
was full of Americana and personal mementos: a bust of Lincoln;
a portrait of the Churchs founder, Joseph Smith; a photograph
of Hinckley at the White House handing Ronald Reagan a set of Mormon
scriptures; another of him with the talk-show host Larry King. On
a shelf behind Hinckleys desk was a buffalo skull, an ancient
coin that he described as a "widows mite" ("to
remind me of where the Churchs money comes from"), and
a slab of wood from a black-walnut tree he had planted more than
thirty years ago, which was used for the pulpit in the new conference
center. "Im a farmer at heart," he said. "Never
a spring has passed that Ive not planted some trees."
Seated behind a massive wooden desk, which was covered with correspondence
and reports, Hinckley told me, "I dont think the Church
has changed so very much as the perception of the Church has changed."
He has been instrumental in that shift, having modernized the Churchs
vigilant public-relations department, in the nineteen-thirties.
As I placed my tape recorder on his desk, three smiling dark-suited
men from the P.R. office placed tape recorders beside it.
Before assuming the top job, in 1995, Hinckley was the acknowledged
power behind the throne. He is by no means the oldest man to lead
the Church. David O. McKay led it from 1951 until his death, in
1970, at the age of ninety-six. McKays successor, Joseph Fielding
Smith, died at ninety-five. The Church is run by the Quorum of the
Twelve, also known as the apostles, and by a three-man group known
as the First Presidency. The longest-serving apostle ascends to
the presidency upon the death of the leader. The system may help
resolve disputes over succession, but it has also resulted in a
gerontocracy whose leaders have sometimes been physically or mentally
incapacitated. Hinckley, however, is constantly flying around the
globe, visiting missions, dedicating temples, writing books, giving
speeches, and holding press conferences. He is widely regarded as
the most accessible and capable leader the Church has had in decades.
"Im the third generation in this Church," he told
me. "My grandfather joined the Church in his late teens in
Nauvoo." Nauvoo, Illinois, was a refuge that the Mormons created
in 1839, following an order by the governor of Missouri to run them
out of the state. But Illinois soon proved to be worse than Missouri.
In 1844, after an anti-Mormon mob murdered Joseph Smith and his
brother Hyrum, the Mormons headed west. Hinckleys grandfather
Ira was among them. Thousands died on the trek across the Great
Plains, including Iras wife and his stepbrother, Joel, who
both died of cholera on the same day in 1850.
Hinckley showed me a small bronze figure of a pioneer standing beside
a grave. "Heres a little statue somebody made of that
event, portraying my grandfathers burial of his wife in a
coffin he made somewhere, we know not where. And afterward he picked
up his eleven-month-old daughter and carried her to this valley."
Hinckleys voice grew thick. "Now, thats my background
in this Church, and its real, and its pragmatic, and
its Mormonism."
In the Mormon scheme, every person is a potential divinity. The
adage "As man now is, God once was; as God now is, man may
be" expresses the Mormon belief that God was once a human being,
with a wife and children. But Hinckley did not seem interested in
discussing matters of theology. When I asked him to characterize
Gods connubial relationship, he replied, "We dont
speculate on that a lot. Brigham Young said if you went to Heaven
and saw God it would be Adam and Eve. I dont know what he
meant by that." Pointing to a grim-faced portrait of the Lion
of the Lord, as Young was called, he said, "There he is, right
there. Im not going to worry about what he said about those
things."
I asked whether Mormon theology was a form of polytheism.
"I dont have the remotest idea what you mean,"
he said impatiently.
"More than one god."
"Yes, but thats a very loose term," he replied.
"We believe in eternal progression." By that he meant
that human beings can evolve toward godhood by following the Mormon
path. "You want to be a reporter always?" he said. "You
want to be a scrub forever, through all eternity? We believe that
life, eternal life, is real, that its purposeful, that it
has meaning, that it can be realized. I wouldnt describe us
as polytheistic."
I asked Hinckley what role the Church planned to take during the
Olympics. There would be no proselytizing of visitors to the Games,
he assured me. "We intend to be gracious hosts," he said.
"Were not bad people, and we do things in a pretty decent
way, when all is said and done." When Ibrought up the bribery
scandal, his tone hardened. "I just regret very much that this
has occurred, but the Church has not been a party to it in any sense
whatsoever," he said. Of the two men under indictment, he said,
"I dont keep track of every member," and added,
"Certainly we believe in the concept of youre innocent
until proven guilty."
As I was leaving, Hinckley cautioned me against speaking with the
Churchs many critics, who, he said, are not a part of the
"life of the religion." He said, "Im a living
part of it. These men"he indicated his public-relations
officials"are a living part of it. They know why this
thing ticks. They know why this is the fastest-growing religious
element in the United States and in the world, almost. They know
why were able to send out sixty thousand missionaries. They
know why we can build meetinghouses all across the world, four hundred
a year. It is an absolute miracle what this Church is doing."
Revelations in Gold
In 1820, in the little town of Manchester, New York, a fourteen-year-old
named Joseph Smith had a visitation. It was a fertile and turbulent
time in American religious history. Old beliefs were losing their
influence, and new ones were arising that were more responsive to
Americas revivalist spirit. The upstate region where Smith
was living was known as the "burnt-over district," because
of the religious fevers that continually swept through it. One morning,
Smith, who was trying to sort out the claims of truth that each
denomination put forward, went into the woods to pray for guidance.
He had no sooner knelt than he sensed the presence of a higher power,
and felt himself surrounded by darkness. "Just at this moment
of great alarm, I saw a pillar of light exactly over my head, above
the brightness of the Sun, which descended gradually until it fell
upon me," he wrote in a brief memoir. Out of the light stepped
two "personages," hovering in the air, whom he took to
be God and Jesus"beings of substance, of form, and of
personality," as Hinckley described them to me. Smith managed
to ask these beings a question: Which of all the sects was right?
"I was answered that I must join none of them, for they were
all wrong; and the personage who addressed me said that all
their creeds were an abomination in his sight, " he wrote.
A moment later, he found himself lying on his back, gazing up at
the empty sky. He went home and told his mother, "I have learned
for myself that Presbyterianism is not true."
Three years later, Smith had another visitation, this one from
an angel, called Moroni, who revealed to him that an ancient book
written on golden plates was buried nearby on a hill called Cumorah.
Smith began making annual pilgrimages to Cumorah, waiting for a
further sign. In 1827, he eloped with a young woman, Emma Hale.
In September of that year, he returned to Cumorah and again he encountered
Moroni. This time, the angel entrusted the golden plates to him,
along with a pair of "seeing stones," called the Urim
and Thummim, which permitted him to translate the strange language
inscribed on the plates (identified by Smith as "reformed Egyptian").
In 1830, Smith published the five-hundred-and-eighty-eight-page
Book of Mormon. It was prefaced by the statements of eleven witnesses
who claimed to have seen the golden plates and, in eight cases,
to have actually "hefted" them. The plates themselves,
however, were no longer available for examination. With the "translation"
finished, Moroni had reclaimed them and taken them back to Heaven.
The Book of Mormon purports to be the history of two tribes of
Israelthe fair-skinned, virtuous Nephites and the dark-skinned,
conniving Lamanites. The Nephites and the Lamanites battle for centuries,
eventually carrying their feud into North America. In the midst
of their warfare, the resurrected Jesus suddenly appears in the
New World, demanding repentance. He teaches the Nephites the Lords
Prayer and delivers a discourse similar to the Sermon on the Mount.
The two tribes are temporarily reconciled. But, four hundred years
later, the Nephite leader Mormon is slain, with hundreds of thousands
of his people, in the final triumph of the Lamanites. Mormons
son, Moroni, survives to record this last event on the golden plates,
which are then buried on Cumorah.
Written in a florid styleMark Twain called it "chloroform
in print"the narrative was compelling to many who read
it, and even to many who only heard about it. The idea of a new,
homegrown faith that posited the divinity of the individual struck
a chord in a young country whose settlers believed, in Harold Blooms
words, that they were "mortal gods, destined to find themselves
again in worlds as yet undiscovered." In Smiths vision,
the New World became the new Holy Land, and he located the Garden
of Eden near Independence, Missouri, close to the center of the
continent.
By the time he was in his mid-twenties, Smith had become one of
the most controversial men in America. Tall and fair, with a slight
limp from a childhood operation, and sharp, rather feminine features
that contrasted with a powerful build, he was a fascinating figure.
The Book of Mormon, along with continuing revelations reported by
the young prophet, formed the basis of a new faith. From the beginning,
it was a missionary creed, and Smith sent emissaries throughout
America and abroad. Thousands of followers were drawn to his ministry,
including Brigham Young, a young carpenter in upstate New York,
who became one of the greatest colonizers of the West. The Mormons,
at first derided as cranks, were soon objects of fear and hatred,
not just because of their heretical beliefs but also because of
their communal economy, their monolithic politics, and, eventually,
their practice of polygamy. In the nine years that remained in his
brief life, Smith and his disciples were driven from one settlement
after another, in what was an unparalleled assault of religious
persecution in America. The epic migration of Smiths followers
to Utah produced a people who were at once self-reliant and wary"a
sociological island of fanatic believers dedicated to a creed that
the rest of America thought either vicious or mad," the novelist
Wallace Stegner, an admirer, wrote of them.
In 1857, ten years after their arrival in Salt Lake City, the Mormons
found themselves on the verge of war with the United States. A column
of federal soldiers was advancing on the Utah Territory to unseat
Brigham Young, the areas defiant and dictatorial governor.
Young declared martial law and prepared his followers to burn down
their homes and retreat to the mountains for guerrilla warfare.
Meanwhile, a wagon train consisting of thirty well-to-do families,
mostly from Arkansas, and a large herd of cattle, horses, and oxen
entered Utah on the way to California. The Mormons viewed the newcomers
with hostility, partly because of the recent news that one of the
Churchs apostles, Parley Pratt, had been murdered in Arkansas.
Despite calls by some Church leaders for revenge, the wagon train
was able to traverse nearly the entire state without serious incident,
until they reached Mountain Meadows.
The events that led to the massacre have been a subject of historical
dispute for nearly a hundred and fifty years. Mark Twain accused
Brigham Young of ordering the killings. The Mormon historians James
B. Allen and Glen M. Leonard, in the official history of the movement,
"The Story of the Latter-day Saints," exonerate Church
leaders and attribute the slaughter to "a band of Indians and
a few ill-informed and overzealous settlers." According to
the jailhouse confession of John D. Lee, who was an adopted son
of Brigham Young and who was later executed by the government for
his part in the incident, a band of Paiute Indians, three to four
hundred strong, took the initiative, attacking the wagon train and
then harrying it for four days. In Lees account, the standoff
was finally broken when he approached the wagons at the head of
a squad of Mormon militia under a flag of truce and laid out what
he said were the Indians terms for surrender. The besieged
families agreed to put down their arms in return for safe escort
to Cedar City, about thirty-five miles away. Once disarmed, the
men marched single file behind the women and children and the wagons
bearing infants and the wounded. At a prearranged signal, the Mormons
turned on the male captives and shot them all, leaving the women
and children for the Paiutes to kill with knives and hatchets. In
the end, only seventeen were spared, all of them children. Twain
believed that the "Indians" involved were actually Mormons
wearing war paint, which conforms to accounts given by surviving
children.
News of the massacre prompted members of Congress to call for the
elimination of the Church. A lurid report to Congress written by
a United States Army officer, Brevet Major James H. Carleton, who
arrived on the scene a year and a half later to bury the remains,
further inflamed national feeling against Mormons. "The scene
of the massacre, even at this late day, was horrible to look upon,"
Carleton wrote. "Womens hair, in detached locks and masses,
hung to the sage bushes and was strewn over the ground in many places.
Parts of little childrens dresses and of female costume dangled
from the shrubbery or lay scattered about; and among these, here
and there, on every hand, for at least a mile in the direction of
the road, by two miles east and west, there gleamed, bleached white
by the weather, the skulls and other bones of those who had suffered."
Brigham Young managed to forestall a federal investigation into
the massacre by agreeing to step down as the territorial governor.
It now seems likely that Lee was made a scapegoat to appease public
opinion and the forces in Congress opposed to Utahs bid for
statehood. A Tribune columnist named Will Bagley, who is writing
a book about the massacre, has found contemporary diaries which
he believes demonstrate that Young ordered the killings and supervised
a coverup.
For the Church, the execution of Lee put the incident to rest,
until the construction workers came upon the bones of the victims
two years ago. The practice of polygamy proved to be a bigger burden,
which kept alive the hostility of Victorian America toward the sect.
Writers such as Twain and Arthur Conan Doyle described the Mormons
in terms similar to those the press uses to describe the Taliban
today. Curiously, the Book of Mormon is replete with denunciations
of plural marriage, as the arrangement is often called. Indeed,
throughout Smiths life monogamy was the official doctrine
of the Church. He himself, however, seems to have been a compulsive
philanderer, and rumors circulated about his multiple "marriages."
"What a thing it is for a man to be accused of committing adultery,
and having seven wives, when I can find only one," he said
in 1844, but by then it was known that he had taken more than thirty
wives, and perhaps twice that many, with whom he "sealed"
himself in secret ceremonies, "for time and all eternity."
Some of the brides may have been as young as fourteen, and at least
eleven of them were already married to close associates. Some he
married after dispatching their husbands to the mission fields.
A definitive tally of Smiths wives may never be established,
but it is clear that in the last years of his life he was in a kind
of marital frenzy, taking an average of one new wife per month,
at the same time that he was building a spiritual and temporal empire,
fielding his own army, and announcing his candidacy for President
of the United States.
Emma Smith denied that her husband had made multiple marriages,
even though she is reported to have chased one of Josephs
wives out of the house. Urged by his brother Hyrum to seek divine
guidance concerning plural marriage, Smith produced a revelation
in July, 1843: "I reveal unto you a new and an everlasting
covenant; and if ye abide not that covenant, then are ye damned,"
the Lord warns. He goes on to say that "if any man espouse
a virgin, and desire to espouse another, and the first give her
consent," it is not adultery in Gods eyes, even "if
he have ten virgins given unto him by this law." God then addresses
the beleaguered Emma by name: "And I command mine handmaid,
Emma Smith, to abide and cleave unto my servant Joseph, and to none
else. But if she will not abide this commandment she shall be destroyed."
Evidently cowed by this injunction, Emma kept her peace. Meanwhile,
some members of the inner circle were appalled at Smiths behavior
and told him so. William Law, a Nauvoo businessman, begged his leader
to abandon his polygamous ways. Smith responded by excommunicating
Law and his brother. The Laws then set up a paper called the Nauvoo
Expositor, which published an exposé of multiple marriages
within the Mormon hierarchy. Smith, who was the mayor of Nauvooat
that time one of the largest settlements in Illinoisconvened
a town-council meeting, in which it was resolved that the Expositor
was a public nuisance and must be shut down.
The governor of Illinois, Thomas Ford, called Smiths conduct
"a very gross outrage" and said that he should stand trial.
Smith thought of fleeing, but eventually he and Hyrum turned themselves
in at a jail in the non-Mormon town of Carthage. A mob burst past
the nonresisting jailers and shot the Smiths in a second-floor bedroom.
According to a witness, Smith uttered his last words"Oh,
Lord, my God"as he fell from the window onto the street.
There he was propped up against a well and shot again by a four-man
firing squad.
Smiths death did not bring an end to polygamy. In 1866, Brigham
Young declared, "The only men who become gods, even the sons
of God, are those who enter into polygamy." He set an example
by marrying perhaps fifty-five women, an aspect of his life that
is ignored in an official church biography, published in 1997. Throughout
the nineteenth century, it was popularly assumed that Mormon women
were little more than sex slaves, even though the women occasionally
pointed out that they had chosen polygamous marriages. Moreover,
Young encouraged women to take up the professions of law and medicine,
and, as governor, he allowed them to vote, long before women elsewhere
in the United States enjoyed such privileges.
In the nineteenth century, more than a thousand Mormon men went
to prison for polygamy-related offenses, and many families fled
to Canada and Mexico. In 1890, the United States Supreme Court sanctioned
the nationwide confiscation of virtually all Mormon property, essentially
authorizing that the movement be crushed. That year, the Churchs
president, Wilford Woodruff, received a revelation that inspired
him to declare, in what is called the 1890 Manifesto, that plural
marriage was no longer officially allowed. As Gordon Hinckley told
me, "Polygamy came by revelation, and it left by revelation."
A Beehive
A paradox of Mormonism is that a faith with such an embattled history
has fostered a community whose members are ostensibly so conventional.
Mormons have managed to make themselves into an ethnic group without
any of the usual markers of ethnicityno distinctive language
or accent, no special foods or music.
Mormons think of themselves as a people chosen by God to lead the
rest of humanity to salvation. Submission to authority is an essential
part of the religion. Mormons aim at being what they call themselves:
saints. Charity, integrity, decency, courtesy, and clean living
are the fundamental ingredients of the Mormon personality. Thanks
in part to the Churchs efforts to promote an image of worldly
success, Mormons also think of themselves as being unusually industrious"perhaps
the most workaddicted culture in religious history," Harold
Bloom says. Stephen Covey, a management consultant and the author
of "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People," who
is descended on both sides from Mormon pioneers, told me, "There
is a heavy emphasis in Mormonism on initiative, on responsibility,
on a work ethic, and on education. If you take those elements together
with a free-enterprise system, youve got the chemistry for
a lot of industry." The symbol of the state of Utah is a beehive.
By far the most successful Mormon business venture is the Church
itself. Among its largest holdings are the Beneficial Life Insurance
Company, which has more than two billion dollars in assets, and
the Bonneville International Corporation, a media company with eighteen
radio stations concentrated in Chicago, San Francisco, St. Louis,
and Washington, D.C. The Church reportedly owns more than a million
acres of land in the continental United States (the equivalent of
the state of Delaware), on which it operates more than a hundred
and fifty ranches, farms, and orchards. It runs the largest cattle
ranch in the United States, Deseret Cattle & Citrus, near Orlando,
Florida. Although the Church is secretive about its empire, Time
surveyed its assets in 1997 and calculated its net worth at a minimum
of thirty billion dollars and its annual income at about six billion
dollars, which, if it were a corporation, would place it in the
middle of the Fortune 500 list. (In a letter to Time, the Church
said that the figures were "greatly exaggerated.")
Saints are required to tithe in order to attend temple. They also
fast one Sunday a month and give the money they would have spent
for food to those in greater need. "We ask, in effect, between
fourteen and fifteen per cent of peoples income, including
tithing and other things," one of the governing apostles, Neal
A. Maxwell, told me. "We are equally demanding of time."
In many respects, being a Mormon is like holding down a second job.
Saints are routinely called upon to spend a Saturday making cheese
in the storehouse of the local bishop or to take a year off from
their regular job to work as a guide at one of the many Mormon historical
sites. The Church runs one of the largest private welfare operations
in the country, producing everything from granola to detergent under
its own brand names. Almost all these goods are made by volunteers.
"The practice goes back to the thirties, when Church leaders
were worried as much about idleness as about the lack of resources,"
Harold Brown, the managing director of L.D.S. Welfare Services,
told me. "We typically try to take care of our own. We believe
the poor will be better blessed if they do as described in our doctrine:
specifically, they should work for what they receive. The bishop
may suggest that you help a widow down the street who has a yard
she needs weeded. You can receive according to your need, but you
are expected to work according to your ability."
Underlying Mormonisms cultivation of middle-class normality
and hardheaded pragmatism is a deep core of mysticism. When Mormon
children come of age, they are taken to a patriarch in the Church,
who bestows a blessing that foretells their future. These prophecies
are kept on file in the Church archives. At the age of eleven, Gordon
Hinckley received a blessing: "Thou shalt grow to the full
stature of manhood and shall become a mighty and valiant leader
in the midst of Israel. . . . The nations of the earth shall hear
thy voice and be brought to a knowledge of the truth by the wonderful
testimony which thou shalt bear." Mormons are taught to pray
for a "testimony" whenever they encounter doubts about
the truth of their religion, and they look for guidance to their
president, whom they also call a "prophet," "seer,"
and "revelator," because he is assumed to be in direct
communication with God. "We believe in the principle of continuous
revelation," Hinckley told me. "To me, its so perfectly
clear and understandable that the God who revealed himself in the
comparatively simple days of the Old West would not fail to reveal
himself in the very complex times in which we now live."
When I asked him to describe his own revelations, Hinckley demurred.
"Theyre very sacred to me. Theyre the kind of things
you dont want to put before the world," he said. But
he added, "Theres no doubt in my mind weve experienced
a tremendous undertaking in the building of temples across the world,
having just dedicated the hundred-and-second working temple of the
Church. I believe the inspiration to move that work forward came
from the Almighty."
Sunday-morning worship takes place in ward housesthe Mormon
equivalent of neighborhood churchesand anyone is welcome to
attend. A ward is part of a larger "stake," which is akin
to a diocese. There is no separate clergy in Mormonism, and the
officers are drawn from the membership. During worship, all Saints,
including children, are called upon to give testimony in affirmation
of their faith. All Mormon males can become "priests"
at the age of sixteen, and when they become missionaries they graduate
to the higher order of "elders." Only Mormons who have
been approved by the bishop of their ward and the president of their
stake are allowed to enter a temple. During Hinckleys tenure,
temple attendance has increasingly come to define a good Mormon.
It is in the temples that weddings and sacred rituals, such as the
Baptism for the Dead, take place.
Mormons believe that the dead can achieve salvation through proxy
baptisms, and this accounts for their keen interest in genealogy.
If dead souls accept the invitation to become Latter-day Saints,
they can be united with their families in the hereafter. "Baptism
for the Dead is one of the most appealing doctrines there is,"
Stephen Covey told me. "How can you possibly reconcile the
justice of God with the idea that only through Christ can you be
saved? Most of the world lives and dies and never even hears of
Christ. There has to be some mechanism set up for all those who
have ever lived to have an opportunity to hear of Christ."
In practice, teen-agers line up in the temple to be baptized as
proxies for dead people whose names appear on a computer screen.
"We also have people who are called extraction missionaries,
Elbert Peck, the former editor and publisher of the Mormon intellectual
magazine Sunstone, told me. "They basically go to their little
stake center and sit down at a microfilm machine and take these
names and put them into our computer database." According to
Richard E. Turley, Jr., the managing director of the Family and
Church History Department, in Salt Lake City, as many as two hundred
million dead people have been baptized as Mormons, including Buddha
and all the popes, Shakespeare, Einstein, and Elvis Presleywhat
Peck dismissively calls "celebrity work for the dead."
In the early nineties, some Mormons were moved to baptize victims
of the Holocaust. The practice caused a great deal of friction with
Jewish genealogists, who now monitor Mormon baptismal lists to make
sure that Jews are not included.
The most distinctive badge of Mormonism is the sacred garment that
adults are supposed to wear under their clothes at all times. In
the early days of the Church, sacred garments resembled long underwear,
but they have changed to accommodate modern styles. At some point
early in the twentieth century, the undergarments were modified
into "a kind of Calvin Klein jumpsuit sort of thing,"
as one historian describes it. Now short-sleeved two-piece garments
are commonly worn, but they are still cut in a fashion sufficiently
distinctive so that its possible to spot a Mormon by the lines
under his or her clothing. (Non-Mormon lawyers have been known to
wear similar undergarments in an attempt to influence Mormon juries.)
There is considerable folklore about the protective powers of the
garmentsstories about people whose underwear enabled them
to survive wars or car wrecks. In 1977, a Wyoming beauty queen,
Joyce McKinney, kidnapped a twenty-one-year-old Mormon missionary
and handcuffed him to her bed in an attempt to become pregnant.
His garments, he later said, kept him chaste. The garments lend
themselves to such magical interpretations because they are discreetly
embroidered with symbols derived from Freemasonry. "Most Mormons
would say that the garments are a spiritual protection and a shield,"
Peck told me. "They remind us of our covenants, which keep
us safe and clean and pure from the world."
Mormons think of themselves, in a larger sense, as Christians. They
take Communion (usually Wonder bread and water); they celebrate
Christmas and Easter. They regard the Bible as sacred but incomplete;
the Book of Mormon, they say, is "another testament of Jesus
Christ." To some other Christian denominations, however, Mormonism
is essentially an overgrown cult. The Southern Baptists, who often
find themselves on the side of the Saints in their campaigns against
such issues as abortion and gay rights, have called Mormonism "counterfeit
Christianity." Even the more accommodating Presbyterians have
condemned Mormonism as a polytheistic heresy. "That just hurts
us to the core," Peck told me. "To say were not
Christiansoh, that just makes us cry."
Soldiers of the Faith
Salt Lake City is the official headquarters of the Church, but the
spiritual home of the religion is in Provo, the site of Brigham
Young University and of the Churchs Missionary Training Center.
Provo is the West Point of Mormonism; it is where the leaders of
the Church are made.
On the day that I visited the M.T.C., a number of Mormon families
were dropping off their children, nearly all of them teen-age boys
in dark suits and narrow ties. Women can volunteer for missionary
work at the age of twenty-one, but all young Mormon men are encouraged
to give two years of their lives to the mission fields. From the
moment they arrive at the Provo center, or at one of fourteen other
missionary-training facilities around the world, until the day they
return home, they are subject to rigorous strictures on their behavior.
They cannot call home except on Mothers Day and Christmas,
and can write letters only once a week. No dating. No television
or radio. As I watched parents saying goodbye to their sons, Church
officials circulated among them, passing out tissues.
More than half the missionaries are sent abroad, and fifty languages
are taught at the M.T.C. When they arrive at their destination,
they are expected to spend six days a week knocking on doors and
presenting prepared lectures on Joseph Smith and the Mormon message.
Two years ago, sixty thousand missionaries signed up two hundred
and seventy-four thousand converts worldwidean average of
fewer than five converts per missionary. "You tend to internalize
the values," Ronald W. Walker, a professor of history at B.Y.U.,
who served his mission in Georgia and Alabama, said to me. "The
kids go out and may convert a few here and there, but, more important,
they convert themselves."
The experience of having doors closed in ones face day after
day leaves a lasting impression. "Its funny how people
who served as missionaries often say it was the most difficult two
years of their lives, and also the best," Mitt Romney, the
head of the organizing committee for the Salt Lake City Olympics,
told me. Romney served his mission in Paris and Bordeaux. He is
the scion of one of the most famous Mormon political families; his
father, George Romney, was the Republican governor of Michigan for
three terms beginning in 1962, and a Presidential aspirant in 1968.
"As you can imagine, its quite an experience to go to
Bordeaux and say, Give up your wine! Ive got a great
religion for you! he said. "It was good training
for how life works. I mean, rejection of one kind or another is
going to be an important part of everyones life. Here Id
grown up as the son of a governor, from a wealthy home. No one had
asked me about my religion, or cared, and now I was on the street,
lower than a Fuller Brush salesman, in a place where Americans were
not particularly liked, where I couldnt speak the language
very well, and where selling religion, particularly Mormonism, was
going to be very painful."
Romney, who was tapped by Governor Leavitt to take over the Games
after the bid scandal, is a successful venture capitalist in Boston
and a centrist Republican who ran a strong Senate race against Edward
M. Kennedy in 1994. A tall, distinguished-looking man with his fathers
lantern jaw, he has proved to be a capable but controversial choice
for the Olympics job. Non-Mormons, along with Church members who
were worried about the appearance of cronyism, criticized Romneys
appointment as an invitation for the world to view the Winter Games
as the Mormon Olympics. James Shelledy, the Salt Lake Tribune editor,
said to me, "The Governor conducted an exhaustive forty-eight-hour
search for the best B.Y.U. graduate available."
In the ideal Mormon world, the youthful missionaries return to Provo
after their service to attend B.Y.U. and to find a mate. The concentration
of missionaries, students, and young families has made Provo the
youngest city in America. It is beautifully situated, on the western
slope of the Wasatch Mountains, but it lacks the usual bars and
coffeehouses, the slouchy funkiness of a college town.
A powerful denominator of Mormonness in Provo is Diet Coke. Joseph
Smith included the consumption of "hot drinks" in his
list of vices that Mormons should avoid, along with alcohol and
tobacco; as a result, coffee and tea are forbidden on campus. Soft
drinks, however, pose a theological puzzle. Some Mormons believe
that the injunction against hot drinks should include any beverage
with caffeine. President Hinckley said as much on the Larry King
show a few years ago, alarming many members of the faith who had
grown accustomed to taking their caffeine cold. The Diet Coke advocates
pointed out that the presidents statement was not issued as
a divine revelation, so there was still no official ruling on the
matter, but caffeinated soft drinks disappeared from campus. Recently,
however, the university has been embroiled in a dispute over whether
the student paper should accept ads even for decaffeinated Diet
Coke, which is seen as a dangerous substitutelike candy cigarettes.
In the religion department at B.Y.U., I found only one professor
who admitted to being a Diet Coker, but later that afternoon I joined
members of the sociology department as, plastic mugs in hand, they
headed for an off-campus convenience store.
During that outing, Tim Heaton, a professor of demographics, explained
the "four Cs" that distinguish Mormons from
other Americans: chastity, conjugality, chauvinism, and children.
A premium is placed on sexual purity, and Church studies show that
among Mormon high-school seniors only ten per cent of boys and eighteen
per cent of girls say that they have had sexual relationsrespectively
seven times and three times lower than comparable national figures.
"Mormons are more likely to marry in their early twenties,
whereas the national average is around twenty-six or twenty-seven,"
Heaton said. Family violence is at about the national average, but
there is a marked difference in attitude about parental roles, with
Mormons inclining toward more traditional ideas about the father
as the head of the household and the mother not working outside
the home. The Mormon birth rate is about fifty per cent higher than
the national average.
Utah has been called the land of milk and cookies, because of the
vast consumption of these products (although Jell-O was recently
voted the official state snack food). Perhaps because of the Mormons
lower consumption of alcohol and tobacco, their life spans are as
much as eleven years longer than the American average. (Only the
largely vegetarian Seventh-Day Adventists live longer.) On the other
hand, Utah reportedly leads the nation in the use of antidepressants;
Prozac prescriptions, for instance, are about sixty per cent above
the national average. Death rates from cancer and heart disease
are lower than in the rest of the country, but diabetes is higher.
"Sugar is our great vice," Heaton said.
Secrets of the Mummies
At Brigham Young, the study of religion is divided into Ancient
Scripturewhich includes the Bible, the Book of Mormon, and
other Mormon textsand Church History and Doctrine. These departments
are housed in the handsome Joseph Smith Building. In an atrium,
behind a pane of glass, is a statue of the ecstatic teen-age founder
receiving his vision in the grove. It is one of the few pieces of
permanent art on campus. When the universitys art museum sponsored
a travelling exhibition of Rodin a few years ago, "The Kiss"
was hidden away in a basement.
I was curious why people who are so outgoing and capable would choose
a faith that imposed such restrictions on their lives. I spoke to
Robert Millet, a former dean of religious education at B.Y.U., and
asked him if there was anything about Mormonism that he had difficulty
accepting. "I think each of us would have our unresolved issues,"
he said. "For example, I doubt that any of us have all the
answers on issues like plural marriage. We have what we call some
shelf doctrinesthings we put aside for the time
being. But being a Mormon is really a matter of faith, in that we
accept the historicity of Smiths first visionthe angel,
the plates, and so onand go from there."
When I noted that Smiths veracity about the revelations might
be questionable, given that he had lied about his polygamy, Millet
replied, "The issue for us is do we apply the same kind of
standards to the Bible and Biblical figures as we do to the Book
of Mormon and Joseph Smith. Clearly, the Christian faith is dependent
upon acceptance of a divine miracle that took place on Easter morning,
for which there is no evidence. Would you do a similar critique
of Abraham, who, presumably, lied here and there? Or of Jacob, who
took more than one wife? I mean, if you were a believer, youd
come at this from the perspective that the Lord is behind all this,
and the deception, if there be any, is by design."
Across the campus from the Smith Building is a small house where
the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies has its quarters.
It is a controversial organization even among Mormons. The aim of
the foundation is to demonstrate the historical truth of the Book
of Mormon and other documents that Smith produced. Here I met with
several professors, including Hugh Nibley, who is the most venerable
figure in Mormon scholarship, although he is little known outside
it. At the age of ninety-one, he was at work on his "fourteenth
or fifteenth" book.
The Book of Mormon poses formidable problems for scholars. After
many decades of research, not a single person or place named in
it has been shown to exist. If Nephite civilization once covered
the continent, where are the ruins? Nowhere in North America is
there evidence of an ancient civilization that had, as Smith describes
it, wheeled transportation or the capacity to make steel weapons,
or a written language that corresponded to Egyptian. "People
underestimate the capacity of things to disappear," Nibley
wrote in 1957. Nor has DNA testing supported the Mormon belief that
the Lamanitessupposedly a Semitic raceare the ancestors
of Native Americans.
"Well, if it was all pure fiction, who on earth had ever done
anything like that?" Nibley said with some asperity. "This
is the history of a civilization, with all its ramifications having
to do with plagues and wars. The military passages are flawless.
Could you please tell me any other book like that?"
Even more troubling for Mormon scholars is a document called the
Book of Abraham. In 1835, Joseph Smith, who was then living in Kirtland,
Ohio, bought a wagonful of Egyptian mummies from a man named Michael
Chandler. Inside two of the mummy cases, wrapped in linen, were
scrolls of papyrus covered with hieroglyphs. Smith gave the mummies
to his mother, who charged visitors a quarter to see them. Meanwhile,
he undertook a translation of the scrolls. Before long, he was telling
fellow-Mormons that the scrolls contained the writings of two Old
Testament patriarchs, Abraham and Joseph.
In 1842, Smith published the Book of Abraham. It purports to be
an unfinished fragment of Abrahams autobiography, the very
material from which the Book of Genesis was drawn. At the time that
Chandler visited Kirtland, no scholar in America believed that it
was possible to translate hieroglyphs; news had not yet reached
America of the discovery of the Rosetta stone or of Champollions
success at rendering the hieroglyphic language into French. The
Book of Abraham is disconcerting, not only because its dubious authenticity
reflects on Smith and the Book of Mormon but also because of what
it actually says.
The book describes a multiplicity of gods and posits the preëxistence
of souls, and also delves into the subject of race. Pharaoh, Abraham
says, was descended from Ham, whose line was cursed with black skin,
and for that reason "he could not have the right of Priesthood."
On the basis of this statement, the Church denied priesthood to
black members until 1978.
After Smiths death, the papyri were sold to a collector, and
for many years it was thought that they had ended up in the Wood
Museum, in Chicago, which was destroyed in the great fire of 1871.
Then, in 1966, a retired professor of Middle Eastern studies from
the University of Utah, Aziz S. Atiya, who was doing research at
the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, decided to take a closer
look at some fragments of papyri in one of the document cases. He
said he realized at once that he had found the original scrolls
for Smiths Book of Abraham. (Museum officials maintained they
knew that the papyri had belonged to Smith, and said they granted
Atiya access to them in the hope that he would convey them to the
Church.) When the Church showed the documents to four distinguished
Egyptologists, however, each of them came to the same conclusion:
the papyri were ordinary Egyptian funerary documents and had nothing
at all to do with Abraham.
This disclosure brought forth various defenses by Nibley and other
Mormon scholars, who said, in effect, that not all the papyri had
been recovered. They proposed that the Book of Abraham was more
an inspired reading than an actual translation, but the fact that
Smith had also produced a "grammar" of the Egyptian language
weakened the theory. Gradually, the protests died down, largely,
perhaps, because few members actually resigned from the Church over
the issue. Today, even Nibley seems weary of the effort to authenticate
the Book of Abraham. In his view, the controversy is of a piece
with the entire Judeo-Christian tradition. "Very few scholars
even believe that Abraham ever lived," Nibley said.
An Abundance of Wives
Mormons who condemn the legacy of polygamy tend to speak openly
and sympathetically about it as a practice that was part of their
ancestors trials of faith and survival. "Among my great-grandparents,
we had at least two who were polygamous," Mitt Romney told
me. One of them, a woman named Hannah Hood Hill, wrote a memoir
in which she described the difficulty of sharing her husband with
another woman. "She talks about how she and her husband wept
together when he was asked by Brigham Young to marry another woman,"
Romney said. "My great-grandmother prepared a room for this
new wife and knitted her a rag rug. Brigham Young ultimately asked
him to take five additional wives. It was the great trial of the
early Mormon pioneers." Romney told me that when his father
ran for President his friends kidded him that there wouldnt
be enough room in the White House for a family gathering. "My
dad had something like two hundred and thirty-two first cousins,"
Romney said.
Although Romney, like other Mormons, defends the practice of polygamy
in the early days of the Church by pointing to a surplus of women
in Utah, census reports for the time show roughly equal numbers
of men and women. Church leaders were told to take multiple wives
and "live the principle." In religions where polygamy
is still practicedfor example, in Islamthe number of
wives is usually a reflection of the husbands wealth; the
currency behind Mormon polygamy, however, seems to have been spiritual.
Only men are given the priesthood power of salvation, and through
them women gain access to the celestial kingdom. Faithful women
were naturally drawn to men who they believed could guarantee eternal
life; in fact, Brigham Young authorized women to leave their husbands
if they could find a man "with higher power and authority"
than their present husband. Apparently, many of them did, as shown
by the rate of divorce at the time.
After the 1890 Manifesto officially ended plural marriage, thousands
of Mormons in good standing, including a number of apostles, continued
to marry multiple wives in secret. When Congress demanded that furtive
polygamists be rooted out, Joseph F. Smith, who was a nephew of
the founder and became president of the Church, issued a Second
Manifesto, in 1906, in which he declared that anyone who participated
in the practice would be excommunicated. Nonetheless, Smith himself
continued to perform secret plural marriages. In 1933, the Churchs
president, Heber J. Grant, began a determined policy to eradicate
polygamy altogether.
Today, the Church regards anyone living in polygamy as no longer
a Mormon. Those who do live in plural marriages often call themselves
"fundamentalist" Mormons. Their number is a matter of
speculation, since polygamists are generally reluctant to identify
themselves. It is estimated that there are between forty thousand
and a hundred thousand people living in polygamous situations in
Utah, Idaho, Nevada, Arizona, and California. In the Salt Lake City
area, the Allred clan is said to have more than three thousand members.
Another well-known Salt Lake clan, the Kingston family, is thought
to include about two thousand people. The Kingstons reputedly favor
intermarriage between near relatives, in order to keep their line
pure.
There are also uncounted numbers of "independents." Some
of them live in trailer parks and wear long-sleeved shirts and old-fashioned
dresses, conforming to the stereotype of zealots who reject the
modern world and its trappings. The majority of them mingle easily
in commerce and society. The Kingston patriarchs do so in a Lear
jet.
Owen Allred, the eighty-seven-year-old patriarch of the Apostolic
United Brethren, a fundamentalist order of Mormons, lives in the
semirural community of Bluffdale, south of Salt Lake City. "I
proposed to one woman when I was twenty-three, and shes been
mine for sixty-five years," he told me. "Ive never
proposed to another, and Ive got eight living wives."
"So they proposed to you?" I asked.
Allred nodded. "See that home over there?" he said. "That
one, this one, and the two more along the way belong to the wife
that lives in it." Allred claims twenty-three children and
two hundred and six grandchildren. "I love those kids,"
he said. "A lot of times their mothers will say, Leave
Grandpa alone, and I say, No! Let them come to me.
Precious little darlings.
In 1998, a woman named Vicky Prunty paid a visit to Utah State Senator
Scott Howell. Prunty had been to see him a couple of years before,
when she was living with five of her six children in a shelter for
battered women after leaving a polygamous relationship. Howell had
helped her find another place to live. Now Prunty had a larger purpose:
she wanted the state to crack down on polygamy.
"I was basically a foster, orphan-type kid that really wanted
to be a part of an eternal family," Prunty told me recently.
She had gone through a typical Mormon courtship, having met her
future husband, Gary Batchelor, at B.Y.U. when she was eighteen.
A convert to the religion at seventeen in his native England, Batchelor
had just returned to college after two years of missionary service
in Italy. He and Prunty were married in the temple in 1981, and
they soon began having children. "For about seven years, we
lived a very mainstream, monogamous life," Prunty recalled.
"Then our life took kind of a turn."
Prunty, who is a reflective, matronly woman of thirty-eight with
bright-blue eyes, said that she and her husband began to read early
teachings of the Church that linked godhood to plural marriage.
In the course of their reading, they also learned that the tenets
of an experiment in communal living, which Smith had called the
United Order of Enoch, were being followed by a variety of colonies
in the state. Prunty and her husband pledged themselves to one such
group, called the Rockland Ranch, near Moab. Batchelor stayed in
Salt Lake City during the week, selling cars, and his wife and children
moved into a sandstone cave.
In 1988, Gary Batchelor met a nineteen-year-old legal secretary
and student of broadcast journalism named Mary Morrison. During
his visits to his wife and children, he began to talk about taking
"the next step"marrying a second wife. Prunty had
her doubts"I believed that plural marriages couldnt
be lived in this lifetime," she saidbut she felt that
it wasnt her place to question her husband. At his urging,
she wrote a letter to Mary and invited her "into the family."
Morrison, who had been reared in a monogamous family, was at first
appalled. "I basically wrote her back and told her to take
a hike," she recently told me. Prunty answered her with, in
Marys words, "a really kind letter, which impressed me."
During the next several months, Morrison fasted and prayed for a
testimony about whether plural marriage was right for her. By the
spring of 1989, she had become "adamant" that it was,
but she remained uncertain about the Batchelors as an appropriate
family. She continued to pray. In October, she paid a visit to the
Batchelors. She was greeted by Vicky, who was noticeably pregnant,
and by a child who was hanging on her mothers skirt. Warmed
by the sight, she "fell in love" with the whole family.
"I was walking on air," she recalled. The plural marriage
took place that December in a secret ceremony. Vicky was seven months
pregnant with her fourth child. She took Marys hand and gave
it to her husband, symbolizing the familys step away from
monogamy and into polygamy.
During the womens first year as "sister wives,"
Vicky had the upstairs bedroom and Mary had a room downstairs. "It
worked pretty well," Prunty said, but she felt an "unreality"
about the arrangement, even though Gary was careful to treat both
women equally. At night, he would sit between Vicky and Mary, watching
television and holding hands with both of them. "Wed
act like brother and sisters until a certain time," Vicky said.
"Then hed either go upstairs or downstairs. There were
times when I made myself put her laundry on her bed just to see
his robe on her bedpost. That made it real for me." The fact
that Gary loved Mary, and was not just having sex with her out of
some kind of religious obligation, unsettled Vicky. Ten months after
the marriage, Mary gave birth to her first child; a second one was
born fourteen months later. Meanwhile, Vicky had her fifth child.
In the third year of the relationship, Gary stopped having sex with
Vicky. "He told me I had already committed spiritual
fornication against him," she said. "I guess he
meant that I was rebelling against his authority." She asked
him for a divorce. "He put his hand to the square, like they
do when theyre casting out evil spirits," she recalled.
"He started praying for my death. I dont even know what
he was saying, whether he was speaking in tongues or what."
One afternoon, she dropped off her oldest son at a karate lesson,
then drove over to the house of another polygamous family and asked
if she could join them. The husband agreed. "I thought it would
be easier being the third wife than the first wife," she told
me. "I thought that, with a different husband, maybe I could
live the principle better."
Pruntys new relationshipit was never formalized in a
marriage ceremonylasted only a few months before the man broke
it off. "Basically, he sat us all down and said he never did
believe in polygamyhe just did it to have sex with more than
one woman," she recalled. She appealed to Gary to take her
back, but he refused. (They were divorced in 1993, and he contributes
to the support of their children.) When she tried to reconcile with
the other man, he became violent, and she fled with her children
to the shelter.
Scott Howell was shocked by Pruntys story. Since leaving the
shelter, she had met other women like her, and she told Howell about
the existence of incestuous clans, in which birth defects were common.
With the Winter Olympics four years away, Howell foresaw a huge
public-relations problem. "I didnt want to make this
the No. 1 issue for foreign journalists coming into Utah,"
he told me. The solution, he decided, was to eliminate polygamy
by 2002.
In Utah, polygamy abides in a legal fog. In 1935, the legislature
passed an unenforceable law that made it a felony to cohabit with
"more than one person of the opposite sex"a statute
that could conceivably criminalize anyone living in anything but
a convent, a monastery, or a homosexual relationship. Howells
first act was to offer a bill that would raise the marriageable
age, for girls, from fourteen to sixteen. A year earlier, a similar
measure had been defeated by conservative lawmakers who were worried
that it would encourage pregnant teen-agers to seek abortions in
lieu of marriage. But Prunty proved to be a brilliant lobbyist.
She formed a group of women who had been involved in polygamous
families called Tapestry Against Polygamy, and she filled the gallery
of the legislature with teen-age girls in wedding gowns. A compromise
version of the legislation passedgirls could now marry at
fifteen, with a judges approvaland the state attorney
general appointed a "polygamy czar."
To Mary Batchelor, Pruntys former sister wife, these developments
seemed to be "modified ethnic cleansing." She and two
other women, Anne Wilde and Marianne Watson, set about collecting
positive stories of polygamous marriages, which they compiled into
a book entitled "Voices in Harmony," which was published
in 2000.
During the legislative session of 2001, Prunty lobbied for another
bill, this one aimed at the leaders of the polygamous clans. The
bill, sponsored by State Senator Ron Allen, would have made it a
third-degree felony for a parent to allow a minor child to enter
into an unlawful marriage or for any person to knowingly "solemnize"
the union of a woman with a man who was already married. Anyone
who "encouraged" or "promoted" such activity
would also be subject to criminal charges. The state senate passed
the Allen bill unanimously. It then went to the state legislatures
judiciary committee, whose members decided to hold an open hearing
on the bill.
When the committee opened its doors on the morning of February 14th,
about a hundred polygamists showed up, a few with their children,
and demanded to be heard. What followed was by far the largest public
hearing in Utahs history in which polygamists aired their
views openly. They were not advocating for the right to turn their
daughters into child brides; in fact, some of them said that the
marriageable age ought to be raised to eighteen. But they viewed
marriage between consenting adults as a different matter. Owen Allred
got up and said, "The man who wants several women to be his
sexual partners can have children by them, and the state will support
those children. He remains free of any legal accusationuntil
he marries more than one wife. Marry them, and he becomes a criminal.
It is the marriage that becomes the crime."
Vicky Prunty reminded the committee of the dangers of incest. She
said that one girl had come to Tapestry because she had been forced
to marry her own father at the age of twelve. But many of the polygamists
in the room said that they were opposed to incest and wanted to
see it vigorously prosecuted. "The people here are not the
guilty parties," Anne Wilde said. Mary Batchelor urged the
committee to strike the words "encourage" and "promote"
from the bill, "so that it couldnt be construed to make
the teaching of our religious beliefs to our children a crime."
The committee scratched that part of the bill.
After the hearing, the polygamists claimed victory. The lawmakers
had modified the existing law by reducing the proposed penalty for
performing illegal marriages, downgrading it to a misdemeanor. The
polygamists seemed a little dazzled by what they had achieved. "This
is a major day," Anne Wilde said. "Its the first
time in a hundred years that this many people have come out in a
public gathering in favor of a polygamous life style."
In any event, nobody was talking any longer about eliminating polygamy
before the Olympics. "Its just too extensive," Ron
Allen said later. "Weve let this go on too long."
How big a fold?
A disproportionate number of Mormons have been elected to higher
office in America; although Mormons account for only 1.8 per cent
of the countrys population, five of the hundred United States
senators are Latter-day Saints. The Church made a decisive entry
onto the national political scene in 1976, when it launched a five-year
campaign against the Equal Rights Amendment. (The Church feared
that it would lead to a "unisex" society.) The Church
is now conducting a similar campaign against same-sex marriage.
Two years ago, Church members in California were instructed to vote
in favor of Proposition 22, which upheld the ban against same-sex
marriage, and in some cases members were directed to donate specific
amounts of money to the cause. Church-supported prohibitions against
gay marriage also passed in Hawaii and Alaska. Two years ago, the
Church threatened to withdraw its support of the Boy Scouts of America
if the organization allowed gay scoutmasters. Since the Church sponsors
more scouting units than any other comparable institution, the threat,
if acted upon, might have ended the scouting movement in the United
States.
Mormon theology played an unexpected role in the recent debate over
federal support for stem-cell research. Although the Mormons
usual partner in the culture wars, Roman Catholics, categorically
condemned experimentation with human embryos, the five Mormon senators
lined up on the side of science. "I believe that human life
begins in the womb, not in a petri dish or a refrigerator,"
Utahs Senator Orrin G. Hatch said in a hearing in July. For
Mormons, human life is just one phase of existence. They believe
that everyone has a pre-incarnate life as a "spirit child,"
during which each awaits his or her opportunity to begin a human
term on Earth. Among Mormons, the moment when the spirit child enters
its mortal body is uncertaina theological nicety that has
enabled them to be somewhat flexible on the issue of abortion. The
Church opposes abortion except when a pregnancy is caused by rape
or incest, when the life of the mother is endangered, or when the
childs survival is unlikely.
In recent years, the Church has become more flexible on matters
of race. It was clear, following the Civil Rights Act of 1964, that
it could not exist in America if it continued to practice racial
discrimination, and yet the issue of extending priesthood to blacks
was not resolved until 1978, when the Mormons president, Spencer
W. Kimball, expanded the eligibility rule to "all worthy males."
That statement enabled Mormonism to become a truly international
religion. There are now more than a hundred and fifty thousand Church
members in Africa. According to Jan Shipps, a prominent non-Mormon
historian of the religion, race is no more a problem in Mormon circles
than it is in any other major religion. At Mormon headquarters,
however, all the top executives are still white men.
In 1993, a leading apostle, Boyd K. Packer, spoke, with alarm, of
the "major invasions into the membership of the Church"
by feminists, homosexuals, and scholars and intellectuals. A few
months later, five Mormon intellectuals were excommunicated and
one was "disfellowshipped," in part for their involvement
with womens issues. Since then, dissent within the Church
has been subdued. Mormon women are generally cautious about labelling
themselves as feminists. The basic unit of salvation in Mormonism
is the family, not the individual, and for many women in the Church
the emphasis on eternal family unity is deeply appealing. "About
eighty-five per cent of Mormon women are perfectly happy with who
they are," Shipps maintains. "Its only an extremely
vocal minority who feel that their position is not fully equal in
the Church."
Those who are willing to speak out maintain that the standing of
women in the Church is in decline. "I believe that womens
participation in the Church will become even more limited,"
Lynn Matthews Anderson, a Mormon who is a freelance writer and editor,
told me. She maintains that Church leaders have discouraged women
from becoming missionaries. "The Church for Mormon women is
entirely different from the Church for Mormon men," she said.
Many Mormon intellectuals seem unconcerned with the question of
whether Joseph Smith was a genuine prophet or a confidence man.
"The starting point is that I am a committed Mormon,"
Ken Driggs, a Mormon historian and a lawyer in Atlanta, told me.
"I cant imagine anything else. Once you make that decision,
nothing knocks you awry. I am aware of the conflicts; I know the
Book of Mormon doesnt stand up to historical examination.
But for me to decide that the problems are insurmountable would
mean walking away from five generations of people before me. What
really clicks, what really keeps us there, is the culture."
There are now more Mormons outside the United States than within
it. This phenomenon may be the response to an appeal that goes beyond
matters of religious truth. "Essentially," the historian
D. Michael Quinn says, "the Mormon message attracts people
who want to become Americanized."
Leo Tolstoy is said to have called Mormonism "the American
religion." Travelling on a train in Switzerland in 1857, he
had met a Mormon man, probably a missionary, who had given him a
favorable impression of the new religion. Thirty years later, one
of Brigham Youngs daughters, Susa Young Gates, sent Tolstoy
an admiring biography of Joseph Smith by George Q. Cannon and a
copy of the Book of Mormon. "I read both the Mormon Bible and
the life of Smith and I was horrified," Tolstoy wrote in a
diary entry. "Yes, religion, religion proper, is the product
of deception, lies for a good purpose. An illustration of this is
obvious, extreme in the deception: The Life of Smith; but also other
religions, religions proper, only in differing degrees."
Five years later, Andrew D. White, an American diplomat in Russia,
had a conversation with Tolstoy about Mormonism, in which the great
novelist reportedly said that "on the whole he preferred a
religion which professed to have dug its sacred books out of the
earth to one which pretended that they were let down from Heaven."
Forty-five years later, a Mormon writer told the story with embellishments
that were no doubt more appealing to his audience. In this account,
Tolstoy told White, "The Mormon people teach the American religion;
their principles teach the people not only of Heaven, and its attendant
glories, but how to live so that their social and economic relations
with each other are placed on a sound basis. If the people follow
the teachings of this Church, nothing can stop their progressit
will be limitless."
|