Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Reactions to Policy Changes by the LDS Church
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Dear Bishop:

I call your attention to policy changes regarding marriage between persons of the same gender.[1] I have many thoughts, but for purposes of this letter just two things.

With regard to apostasy:
I am married and celebrate my wife, three children, and four grandchildren. If I were gay (by whatever combination of nature and nurture), subject only to finding a loving and companionate partner I firmly believe that I would also be married. I would choose to be married. I believe marriage is a moral and righteous choice, that it is good for me, for my children, and for society.
Perhaps this makes me apostate in my heart? So be it.


With regard to children: 

I believe this policy is wrong, that it is contrary to scripture and gospel teachings. Jesus said, “Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 19:14) See [http://bycommonconsent.com/2015/11/05/60188/] for further explication. If I were (once again) a bishop, I would not, I could not in good conscience, implement this policy. I urge you to consider your obligations to the children in the same way.

Peace be with you,

Christian E. Kimball.

 


[1] Many LDS sources, including the Handbook of Instructions, use the term “same-gender marriage” or “same-sex marriage” or “gay marriage.” These are all incorrect. In the legal systems I know about, including in the United States, there is no separate category marriage for same-sex couples. In every case that I know of, the correct term is simply “marriage.” This is worth calling out because it is a distinction. or non-distinction. at the very heart of litigation and legislation regarding marriage.
 
Reactions to Policy Changes by the LDS Church
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Analysis, in calmer moments . . .


An Imaginary Conversation
Note: I do not know any names or details. I know something about how decisions are made, and how groups and institutions make choices. Everything below is credible and consistent with public information, but by no means the “truth.” I use “gay marriage” for shorthand, although the adjective form is technically incorrect because the marriage is identical; as a legal matter what changes is the parties, not the marriage. Some important parts of this conversation are contrary to what I believe, except in the sense that this is all what I believe about what others believe.

Obergefell has been decided and same-sex couples will be married under civil law in the United States This is already happening in a number of states within the United States, and in a number of other countries.
So what are we going to do about this? 

Q: Do we continue to object, to fight in the courts and legislatures, to oppose civil laws regarding gay marriage?
A: We’ve been down that road with polygamy. It does not end well. Best to concede the law is what it is.

Q: At the other extreme, do we perform marriages of same-sex couples?
A: No. Absolutely not.

Q: How do we treat same-sex couples who do get married?
Option 1: Like civil marriage generally—neither explicitly approve nor disapprove? Continue to preach the importance of the sealing ordinance (and do not provide it to same-sex couples) but leave all civil marriages on essentially the same footing. A “respect” or “don’t ask don’t tell” position?
A: No. We believe that marriage is for one man and one woman. We don’t have any room in our doctrine or beliefs to treat any combination of a man and a man, or a woman and a woman, as “marriage” no matter what the law says. Besides, if we were to respect civil marriage in that way, we would be in a difficult position when laws (more likely in countries other than the U.S.) try to force us to perform those marriages.

Option 2: Case-by-case leaving it up to bishops and stake presidents?
A: It’s tempting. This works well in most cases. Our bishops and stake presidents are wonderful. When there are exceptional cases that get referred up, we can handle them on a case-by-case basis. However, marriage is a public matter, everybody will know about it, it’s an “in your face” defiance or violation of Church norms. It is hard to ignore. People will talk and compare notes. 

Option 3: Apostasy?
A: Seems like the best fit, and really the only viable option. Marriage is open defiance of the Church, of Church teachings, as well as suggesting regular and ongoing sexual activity which is prohibited. 

Q: Apostasy means excommunication. What about the spiritual, emotional and physical welfare of the individuals involved?
A: We feel for them. This is a really difficult situation with no good options and we have no answers. We can even understand that marriage and out of the Church may be happier than single in the Church, in this life. That doesn’t make it right and we cannot condone. The real point, is that however unfair and unfeeling it may sound, once we conclude that they are apostate our concern for the community, for the Church, supersedes our concern for the individual. They rest in God’s hands, but not in the Church’s.

Q: What about their families and children?
Option 1: No change, no effect. We will not “visit the sins of the fathers” on the children.
A: This seems right, doctrinally and in human caring terms. However, gay marriage is an area of concern where there is a lot of confusion, in society, among members, within families. The secular change in support for gay marriage is alarming in its speed and extent, seeming to reach all levels of society but including the young fastest. Within the Church, the families of gay members seem to be moving in support of gay marriage faster and more outspokenly than anybody else. 

Option 2: Deliberate and careful screening.
A: The analogy isn’t perfect, but this seems more like the end of polygamy than anything else we’ve dealt with. The Church has a strong position, but there are differences of opinion among Church members, including differences of opinion about having an opinion. This is a fractious issue which represents danger to the body whole. We have a careful screening process with respect to polygamy and it has worked fairly well. Let’s start with that same process here.

Q: The polygamy-precedent screening process isn’t perfect in itself, and isn’t a perfect fit to the gay marriage issue. Family structures are different. The number of people involved and the dispersal through the Church is different. These are different times, including the way things are publicized and criticized. Individuals, including most notably innocent children, will feel injured immediately.
A: All true. However, the polygamy model is the best we’ve got. It has worked pretty well. It’s a reasonable starting point. Our bishops and stake presidents are truly thoughtful and caring people and where there are difficult situations they will tell us about it, will ask for exceptions, will quietly modify the rules to fit individual circumstances. If we see a pattern, we can use it to refine the process rules.

Q: In form this is all confidential, basically a communication between us and the bishops and stake presidents. But in fact there are many thousands of Church leaders with access to these instructions, the internet is available and hungry for rumor and scandal, and there is very little that can be kept confidential any more. What if this all hits the press and looks bad and people are angry?
A: Damn.
Reactions to Policy Changes by the LDS Church
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Linda's poem in which I appear. Posted with her permission:

beyond Beyond
by Linda Hoffman Kimball
Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities: for we know not what we should pray for as we ought: but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered. Romans 8:26 (KJV)

Integrity
And obedience –
Their pressures building
beyond Beyond –
Collide mid-cosmos
Shearing.

The schrapnel
Pierces us all.

The walls
Of our hearts
Rend, Rip
Ragged, shattered.
Sirens screech,
Megaphones
Skew words:
“Love” hisses;
“Protect” hits
Its bleeding targets
with precision.
“Depart!”
The harsh, rash command
from all sides.

And oh, the wailing, weeping,
Moaning
And oh, the hollow lungs
And the bones
leaking marrow.

I seek for Jesus
in the smoulder,

And my husband
Curls and cries,
Grief in his beard,
With groans
too deep for words.

Monday, August 3, 2015



Reflections on Becoming a Grandfather (again)
21 June 2015
Lincoln Bennett Kimball was born at 1 am Pacific time on June 18. I celebrate Lincoln’s arrival, I am happy for the parents Peter and Anne. I am grateful and admiring of Anne in the labor of carrying to term and delivering a healthy baby boy.
And I am proud and happy for myself. Yet I did nothing. So why am I proud and pleased?
In Korea in the ‘70s I befriended a young man (more accurately, he befriended me and he was young in reference to me today but probably 29 to my 20 at the time) who was a newly minted Mormon and an experienced and practiced 3d-dan Tae Kwon Do black belt. Jae lived at the Do Jang and taught and studied Tae Kwon Do.
Jae told me that the color belts were training ranks for beginners, with the objective of reaching the black belt, and the 1st degree black belt was really the beginning of serious Tae Kwon Do practice. He explained the training, competition, forms, and development, over years of practice, required to advance from one black belt to the next. He explained that it would take 20 or 30 years or more of even the most disciplined and successful commitment to reach the 6th-dan or 6th degree black belt, and that there were not very many and they were mostly found as the heads of the best known schools. Then he explained the 7th-dan, which he said did exist in his style or school, but with only one or two examples in the world. And what makes a 7th-dan black belt? It isn’t getting faster or stronger or jumping higher or becoming world champion. What makes a 7th-dan black belt, he explained, is to have a student who reaches the 6th-dan.
I’ve thought about all that it takes, to be good enough in one’s own skills, and good enough to teach, and good enough to attract students, and then all the subtle guides and time and luck to have a student advance in the ranks. How much personal effort, and skill on a wide variety of levels. How much luck. How much perseverance. How much has to happen with little or no control.  
Lorenzo Snow, the fifth president of the Mormon Church, is credited with teaching that “as God is, man may become”. I do not understand this teaching, and I’m not sure I believe it, at least not in any of the traditional meanings. But the idea of a 7th-dan black belt is the closest I’ve come. Perhaps even the idea of a god is not someone faster or stronger or better, but a being in a new class that depends entirely on others reaching greatness.
Becoming a grandfather feels like that 7th-dan black belt. It’s the greatest achievement of my life, with me doing almost nothing.

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Mormon Scare Headlines from the Pew Report
The Pew Research Center report on Religion is out. http://www.pewforum.org/…/americas-changing-religious-land…/  There will be talk about what this says about Mormons.
The numbers for Mormons are small (which makes sense for a group that comprises less than 2% of the U.S. population). The survey sampled approximately 35,000 U.S. adults. Of that number, 664 were Mormon, about 26% in Utah (315 interviews, approximately 55% Mormon), about 9% in Idaho (320 interviews, approximately 19% Mormon), and many of the rest in Arizona, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming (the states where more than 2% are Mormon). Altogether, these states account for about 55% of the Mormons reporting, with the rest spread throughout the U.S. in larger states with smaller percentage numbers of Mormons.
Overall, the small number of Mormons means that the “margin of error” for numbers about Mormons is +/- 4.9 percentage points.[1]
Mormons Decline as Share of U.S. Population
1.7% in 2007 became 1.6% in 2014.
But this could be flat or up or down, within the margin of error. And could be flat or an increase or decrease in absolute numbers (given that population grew from 227 million to 245 million).
Comparison might be made to Jews, who are reported as a larger percent of U.S. population (1.7% became 1.9%), where there is no obvious reason for faster-than-population growth. But all of these numbers are small and could be reversed within the margins of error.
On the other hand, the numbers for Protestants, Catholics and Unaffiliated are much larger (absolute numbers, percentages, and amount of change). For Protestants 51.3% became 46.5%, for Catholics 23.9% became 20.8%, and for Unaffiliated 16.1% became 22.8%.
The story is mostly that Mormons are not like Protestants, Catholics or Unaffiliated.
One Third of Mormons Leave
1.7% of U.S. adults identify themselves as raised Mormon. About 1/3 of that number, or 0.6% of U.S. adults, identify themselves as having left. A similar number (0.5% of U.S. adults) identify themselves as having entered or become Mormon. The drops and adds account for the 1.6% who identify as Mormon currently. To me this is the most revealing and surprising set of numbers about Mormons in the survey, with large enough effects that there is probably something there.
Where do we go? Of the third who left, more than half (58% of 36%) identify themselves as Unaffiliated. The rest are about 17% Evangelical and the balance spread across Protestant, Catholic and Other.
Where are we coming from? Of the 31% of adults identifying as Mormon who grew up in a different tradition, slightly more come from a Catholic background that any other, but the numbers are fairly evenly spread among Evangelical (19%), Mainstream Protestant (23%), Catholic (29%), and Unaffiliated (26%), with Other (3%) trailing.
Losing the Blacks
Mormons in the U.S. are overwhelmingly White (non-Hispanic) at 86% in 2007 and 85% in 2014. By comparison, Christians overall (including Mormons) were 71% White in 2007 and 66% White in 2014.
The largest non-White group among Mormons is Hispanic (7% in 2007 and 8% in 2014). Black numbers declined, from 3% in 2007 to 1% in 2014. But I find these numbers too small to make much of a story out of. To put this in perspective, Pew talked with 664 adults who reported that they were Mormon and these numbers suggest that 6 or 7 of the 664 were black.
Losing the Women
In 2007 self-identified Mormons were 44% men and 56% women. In 2014 the numbers were 46% men and 54% women.
The change (from 46% men to 44% men) is within the margin of error. In other words, 44% men means that 292 of the 664 Mormons interviewed were men, but 4.9% more (the “margin of error) would be 306 men which would be 46% of the total.
On the other hand, there does seem to be a consistent story for Mormons and Christians generally, with large and reliable numbers, that there are more women than men self-reporting as religious.
Mormon Marriages Down (and Down More than Average for Christians)
66% of adult Mormons were married in 2014. The number was 71% in 2007. The difference is mostly in the number never married (12% in 2007 up to 19% in 2014). By comparison, among all Christians (including Mormons) the married comprised 56% in 2007 and 52% in 2014. The largest change was among the Unaffiliated, dropping from 46% married in 2007 to 37% married in 2014.
The marriage rate for Mormons continues to be higher than any other group. The second highest group was Evangelical Christians, at 59% in 2007 and 55% in 2014. However, the change supports the long observed phenomenon that Mormon marriage patterns follow the general population but with a significant lag.



[1] I am still looking for Pew’s definition of “margin of error”. It is common but not universal to use that phrase for a 95% confidence interval, or +/1 2 standard deviations.