THE NEWLY SUSTAINED PRESIDENT of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Dallin H. Oaks, offered us an address this General Conference weekend that has received a great deal of praise, including by those LDS on the political left. They breathed a sigh of relief because they perceived him as encouraging care for the immigrants rather than the projection of bigoted assumptions upon them, peace over war, and the end of the harsh rhetoric that divides people. The last seems to feel very personal to them as the current US president consistently slams the left as “evil” and “lunatics,” something Mormon MAGA and Trump-leaning LDS too often repeat. This, of course, travels the other way as well.
Yet, no one feels a sense of relief unless they have first felt stress. The placement of President Oaks in the position of prophet has created that stress. He’s a man known for his anti-LGBTQ attitudes, and those attitudes, as kindly spoken as they are, have resulted in political campaigns and legal wrangling that has harmed the LGBTQ community, both inside and outside the LDS church. Yet, in his first address, he seemingly avoided talk of religious freedom, which, for him is, at least in part, code for the pursuit of legal guarantees his church can continue to marginalize the LGBTQ community. But did he? A close reading of the speech affirms that the mantle of prophet will not broaden his ability to accept the full personhood of LGBTQ people. He can’t let it go.
Our first clue that his negative view of LGBTQ people roils beneath the surface comes early in his talk. In reference to the resurrection, he says, “The conviction that death is not the conclusion of our identity changes the whole perspective of our mortal life.” Never forget that Pres. Oaks is a master rhetorician and chooses his words carefully. Were most of us speaking of the resurrection in the same context, we’d say, “The conviction that death is not the conclusion of our lives changes the whole perspective of our mortal life.” But he didn’t express it that way. He intentionally chose to substitute the heavily weighted word “identity” for the logical word “life.” What he means is that gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender identities are not an individual’s final identity. He is teaching that, in the resurrection, LGBTQ people will be changed into cishet people. There’s no accident in his usage here, nothing new. Just the same old, “You weren’t made right for some unknown reason, but even if God can’t fix you now, He’ll fix you later.”
Herein is the problem. The LDS church takes an unequivocal stance (calling it “doctrinal”) that homosexuality of any stripe didn’t exist premortally and, therefore, won’t exist in the next life. What’s interesting, however, is that, at the start of his General Conference speech, Pres. Oaks stated that Jesus’ resurrection is “settled doctrine” because of the number of Bible and Book of Mormon passages that affirm it. Yet, there is no scripture affirming the church “doctrine” that homosexuality only exists in mortality. None. Zip. Zero. What we have instead is a set of age-advanced, patriarchal church leaders who present as cishet telling us what they were raised to believe and what they apparently all agree upon. Members have been convinced that their authority alone makes whatever they say into divine revelation. There’s never been a more clear example of circular reasoning: “He’s a prophet who speaks God’s word so I know what he speaks is God’s word.” Likewise, there’s never been a more unsettled “doctrine” than the ideas Pres. Oaks consistently relies upon to support his perspective on LGBTQ issues. Suddenly scripture doesn’t matter. I’m concerned that the church, as a body of members, accepts the unsubstantiated opinion of mortal men as eternal truth.
Granted, Pres. Oaks, in his talk, does an excellent job of preaching the first and second commandments, using both scripture and the words of church presidents who came before him. He wants us to develop agape love toward humankind. To shore up the idea, he told a story about a nurse who “despised” a bedridden, foul-mouthed patient who took a tumble in the care facility where she worked. On hearing a loud clatter from his room, she rushed to his aid, expecting to receive his usual repulsive behavior, but instead found him weeping on the floor in the midst of shards of broken glass. She took the old man into her arms like a mother would and listened as he cried that he just wanted “to go home.” Pres. Oaks, and perhaps the nurse in her original telling, seemed to suggest the old man used the phrase “to go home” to mean “to pass away,” which he did soon thereafter. But, for me, the story is just as touching to think he meant he wanted to go back to his abode, to the place he knows and the place he is known.
Pres. Oaks tells us the nurse reported having a spiritual transformation that day as she realized that, in his need, this surly patient is a child of God and worthy of love. She hadn’t loved him until she recognized this, or, to my mind, until she truly saw him as a man with a story all his own who feels alone in an existential way. It’s a useful story, but I’m left with questions.
How did this nurse treat him before his fall? Before he had an emotional breakdown in front of her? Do you suppose the nurse returned his cruel, foul-mouthed behavior to him? Or do you think it more likely this trained nurse, living under the Hippocratic Oath, treated him with kindness? I’m betting that, anytime she was face to face with him, she screwed on a kind and gentle expression and hid what she actually thought of him, reserving that for conversations with like-minded people out of his earshot. In other words, she would’ve been kind to the awful patient because of the oath she had taken, but that kindness was not love. Not yet. She needed to hold him and listen to his soul’s yearning before she graduated to love.
Pres. Oaks’ own story tells us a truth he hasn’t yet seen. Kindness isn’t love. It can mask hate, disgust, pity, and an array of other condescending or negative feelings but it, alone, is not the equivalent of love. And treating LGBTQ people with a surface kindness only masks the disrespect carried in the heart.
President Oaks speaks of “balanc[ing] our various responsibilities” to love all individuals and to live up to the covenants that LDS people make in the temple. This is an admission that he recognizes conflict exists between Christian love and at least some aspects of those covenants and/or the commandments as taught by the LDS church. Folks can do their mental gymnastics right along with Pres. Oaks to make my last statement seem untrue, but if Pres. Oaks didn’t sense a conflict, he wouldn’t be speaking of balancing at all. To him, “covenants … inevitably position us as devoted participants in the eternal contest between truth and error.” His mistake is in deciding, without any scriptural evidence, that it can ever be an error to love. Jesus commanded us to love God and to love our neighbors. If you have to find balance between those ideas, you haven’t found love.
We learn from the nurse’s experience that love comes when we truly see a person’s heart, and we will not see that heart as long as we overlay it with our own biased attitudes.
In a real way, I am the nurse, or, rather, I was. When I was much, much younger, I might’ve argued gay marriage was an attack on the family. In fact, I signed a petition to amend my state’s constitution so that it would denounce gay marriage and only recognize marriages between a man and a woman. I admit with shame that I once pitied LGBTQ people for their “confusion.” Then social media was born, and I had enough insight to seek out people who were different from me. I listened to those I met online as they told me they just wanted to love and be loved, to be accepted for the person they are, to not be told they are afoul of God’s plan for them. Though behind a screen, I sat with them as they experienced the agony of wishing they, too, could “go home” before they offended God. I tried to build bridges, but learned too well and too abruptly that those on one side of the chasm weren’t very interested in the bridge unless it meant they could stay exactly where they were. But I had walked onto that bridge and was embraced as the broken one by those I’d once seen as broken. They healed me and taught me what love is.
All it took was a willingness to see all people as like myself, as people with the same needs and the same hopes. To recognize their love of God is real, and to feel, through our conversations, God’s love for them, to understand that God doesn’t ask them to abandon either their lives or their identities because each is the same thing. That’s when I truly knew that the surface kindnesses I had previously extended to LGBTQ people had entirely failed to meet the mark of Christlike love. That’s when I learned there can be no covenant or commandment that is in conflict with true Christian love, and that, if either a commandment or a covenant seems to be in conflict with love, that covenant or commandment is missing the mark. Love never needs to be balanced.
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The commandments, “You shall not commit adultery,” “You shall not murder,” “You shall not steal,” “You shall not covet,”[a] and whatever other command there may be, are summed up in this one command: “Love your neighbor as yourself.” Romans 13:9
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Beautiful.
You said President Oaks in the position of prophet has created that stress. He’s a man known for his anti-LGBTQ attitudes.
Maybe he has a better understanding of the real identity of all people, including those of the LGB plus TQ+++++ communities, and loves them enough not to lie to them.
I separate them as the LGB community separates them, as the TQ+++++ denies the LGB and majority community, that their identity matters. Lets not make this about any other identity other than what a loving God has for us.
All have an eternal identity. Unfortunately, people change the meaning of words and confuse what God has stated from the beginning.
I accept there is gender dysphoria, I accept people are different. Just because God states there are 2 sexes and 2 genders: being directly related as such, does not mean that God doesn’t love everyone. It doesn’t mean that because people have a different understanding of our nature and not the eternal nature.
We all existed as spirit children of Heavenly Parents, a Father and a Mother. We had a family relationship: all brothers and sisters. Not husbands and wives: all brothers and sisters.
When we end this life, the only relationships that exist will be to return back as all brothers and sisters, or if we keep the covenants, then we can become exalted and become a Joint Heir with Christ, meaning we become Gods as Husband and Wife. We can become like our Heavenly Parents. We create our own universe and have children and give them a chance just as our Heavenly Parents did for us.
There are only eternal marriages as God has defined, because it is necessary for Eternal Progression.
God loves us enough to want that for all his children, but they have to understand and learn his path, his way, not ours.
You talk about people wanting love. All people can love, regardless of what identity they adapt. God does not stop that. However, if we are talking about physical intimacy, that’s a different thing. That is to do with controlling our lust to abide by Gods will.
Should people be treated with love and respect? yes. Should they be accepted for who they are? yes. Should we accept everything that they want to do is right? No.
You talked about the “bedridden, foul-mouthed patient”. The nurse did not like or feel comfortable with his behaviour, but she did her duty as a nurse. Yes she needed to see the old man as a person. However he needed to show her this person too.
I wouldn’t let someone I didn’t trust, to have looked after my kids when they were younger: Would you? So yes we have to discern the credibility of people we have in our lives. That has nothing to do with having to love everyone regardless of how they act.
It is a 2 way street. There are LGB persons who identify themselves as the identity that God gave them. They accept the male and female sex and identity and also that they have same sex/identity attraction. There are some who have gender dysphoria and feel in the wrong body. They still need to know they are loved for who they are, and yes, God has a plan for them. There are also those who wish to remain in God’s church, because they believe God, love Christ and want to be like him.
Regardless of the challenges in their lives, they still must follow God’s will. Yes, they can love and be loved, but they are still required to live God’s law of chastity. Let’s separate what you are saying. Sex is not love. Intimacy is a God given gift.
I desire that intimacy, but I have been divorced for over a decade and still must abide by the same law of chastity until I can be married again.
To love God takes, away the pain of lack of sex. There are blessings beyond what someone’s opinion of their sexual orientation. God blessings will more than compensate what loses we sustain in this life.
Alma 42:13, discusses the balance of justice and mercy, stating that if God were to deviate from perfect law, “God would cease to be God.”
To violate the law of Chasity, God would cease to be God, so why would you want to follow a God if you do not want to follow the most fundamental reason for God to live his way.
God set marriage to be between a biological male: a man and a biological female: a woman. These identities are fundamental. Only such Eternal Marriages exist in the next life. All others are single and separate, brothers and sisters as from the beginning.
You want to disrupt an eternal law. It isn’t going to happen.
There are many traditional as well as non-traditional people, who live without sex: but they can still have love one for another. The law is the same for everyone. Do you want the blessings for living God’s Law, given by God’s prophets from all time, or not.
Don’t apply your objective morality to God’s morality, the two are not consistent. It isn’t about perceived genders, it’s about God’s love for each person to let them be who they were meant to be regardless of the trials of their faith and life.
If I want those eternal blessings, I need to do what Christ wants, not what I want. Do I feel left out, suffer pain and loss? Yes, but I need to learn to trust God. So does everyone else. Do you know what, everyone will thank Christ for loving them enough to tell them the truth, to save them from this temporal existence, for an eternal glory.
Stop playing the victim card.
Teach people to learn to love themselves, to love God and seek his comfort. This will do them more good than your negative approach to God’s plan.
Yes, we still need to change many attitudes within the church too. Don’t confuse the issues though.