“The Storm Over the Mormons”

Time Magazine: “The Storm Over the Mormons.” Very fair overview of the LDS CHurch and look at the aftermath of Proposition 8.

But as a Mormon concern, it long predates Prop 8. For a century, the Mormon church had a rocky and sometimes bloody relationship with American culture at large; persecution by “gentiles” became key to LDS self-understanding. But thanks to their industry, optimism and civic-mindedness, many Mormons have found their place in the American fabric. Ballard says, “We’d like to be seen as mainstream–if that means being part of the national conversation about issues of morality and having our members respected as contributing members of society. But we have to hang on to what’s true, regardless of where society goes.” He adds, “We’ve never felt that we were being more understood or more appreciated, at least in my 30 years as a general authority.” Ballard helped supervise an outreach program during the heightened “Mormon Moment” of the Romney campaign as apostles fanned out to visit media editorial boards. However, he contends that the “real power” determining public perception of his faith is “when a member of the church meets his neighbor, and the neighbor sees that he has objectives to his life and is finding happiness in his field. That’s starting to happen all over” . . .

The Church has not decided on its future role in the gay-marriage debate. The heat surrounding Prop 8 may die down by next year. “Talking about what may or may not happen in 2010 would be speculation, and I wouldn’t want to do that,” says Apostle Quentin Cook. The LDS abstained from same-sex-marriage battles in Iowa and New England. But avoiding a California rematch may be tougher. Notre Dame’s Campbell says, “If it appeared that the church sat out next time because it was criticized this time, there might be a credibility question.” But given a national trend toward supporting gay marriage, he asks, “Does the church want the public to identify it primarily as a political body opposing an issue that comes back again and again?”

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  1. Jeff’s avatar

    I agree that the article was–overall–fair, although it had a slight slant toward the conservative viewpoint of the marriage equality issue.

    Given the national trend toward acceptance of civil unions and gay marriage, strong Mormon support of the anti-marriage equality movement (i.e., against gay marriage and civil unions) could have a long-lasting negative impact on how mainstream Americans view the Mormon Church and its members. Of course, it is also possible that such Mormon support will help religious conservatives embrace Milt Romney in 2012 so that Romney is the Republican nominee for president.

  2. David H. Sundwall’s avatar

    That all may be true. It will be a fascinating time to watch it all play out.

    However, I’m not sure that the national trend is towards gay marriage acceptance. Polls suggest that SSM opposition is actually ticking up and while there have been recent advances in some states, I doubt they reflect the nation’s attitude as a whole or even of those states.