Tuesday Jul 18, 2023
020 1852 and The Beginnings of the Priesthood-Temple Ban in the Church
The historical record shows that Joseph Smith did not implement or endorse any practices or policies which specifically prevented Church members with black African ancestry from fully participating in priesthood offices or temple worship. But in 1847, only three years after Joseph’s death, attitudes and teachings of some church leaders began to shift away from full inclusion of blacks, to partial exclusion—until only five years later, in 1852, President Brigham Young first publicly articulated a priesthood restriction on blacks in the church.
In today’s episode of Church History Matters, we probe what exists in the historical record to learn what happened between 1847 and 1852 to precipitate this divergence in attitudes and teachings about blacks away from Joseph Smith’s more inclusive teachings and practices.
We’ll then look at the context and content of Brigham Young’s first public articulation of the priesthood restriction and attempt to answer the very important question, “Was Brigham Young inspired by God to institute the priesthood ban, or is this an example of an uninspired error?”
For show notes and transcript for this and other episodes go to https://doctrineandcovenantscentral.org/church-history-matters-podcast/
Comments (2)
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Thanks for that feedback, much appreciated
Wednesday Mar 20, 2024
Great episode, very informative! My only critique is that you seem to go farther than the Brethren in labeling the priesthood ban to be an uninspired error. They nor the Church have ever stated that. While they have denounced the racist justifications given for the policy, they’ve never denounced the policy itself. And that’s an important distinction, because the Lord can and does direct us at times to do things without providing any explanation. (See for example Moses 5:6.)
Friday Mar 08, 2024
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