
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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|q=How is a disciplinary council different from a “church court”? | |q=How is a disciplinary council different from a “church court”? | ||
|a=“Church court” is an older terminology for the same thing. | |a=“Church court” is an older terminology for the same thing. | ||
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+ | |q=What is the purpose of a disciplinary council? | ||
+ | |a=Disciplinary councils have three purposes: | ||
+ | #to save the soul of the transgressor; | ||
+ | #to protect the innocent; | ||
+ | #to safeguard the Church’s purity, integrity, and good name.<ref name="ballard">{{Ensign1 | author=M. Russell Ballard| article=[https://www.lds.org/ensign/1990/09/a-chance-to-start-over-church-disciplinary-councils-and-the-restoration-of-blessings?lang=eng A Chance to Start Over: Church Disciplinary Councils and the Restoration of Blessings]|date=September 1990|start=12|}}</ref> | ||
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* Transgression involving someone who is a predator and thus a danger to others<ref>''Handbook 1: Bishops and Stake Presidents'' (2010), 6.7.3.</ref> | * Transgression involving someone who is a predator and thus a danger to others<ref>''Handbook 1: Bishops and Stake Presidents'' (2010), 6.7.3.</ref> | ||
− | |quote= | + | |quote=:The First Presidency has instructed that disciplinary councils must be held in cases of murder, incest, or apostasy. A disciplinary council must also be held when a prominent Church leader commits a serious transgression, when the transgressor is a predator who may be a threat to other persons, when the person shows a pattern of repeated serious transgressions, when a serious transgression is widely known, and when the transgressor is guilty of serious deceptive practices and false representations or other terms of fraud or dishonesty in business transactions. |
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+ | :Disciplinary councils may also be convened to consider a member’s standing in the Church following serious transgression such as abortion, transsexual operation, attempted murder, rape, forcible sexual abuse, intentionally inflicting serious physical injuries on others, adultery, fornication, homosexual relations, child abuse (sexual or physical), spouse abuse, deliberate abandonment of family responsibilities, robbery, burglary, embezzlement, theft, sale of illegal drugs, fraud, perjury, or false swearing.<br>— Elder M. Russell Ballard, Quorum of the Twelve Apostles<ref name="ballard"></ref> | ||
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If you have a question about the whys, hows, or wherefores of Church Discipline in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, our FAQ has the answer.
Whenever this [stake high] council convenes to act upon any case, the twelve councilors shall consider whether it is a difficult one or not; if it is not, two only of the councilors shall speak upon it....But if it is thought to be difficult, four shall be appointed; and if more difficult, six; but in no case shall more than six be appointed to speak. The accused, in all cases, has a right to one–half of the council, to prevent insult or injustice. And the councilors appointed to speak before the council are to present the case, after the evidence is examined, in its true light before the council; and every man is to speak according to equity and justice. Those councilors who draw even numbers, that is, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12, are the individuals who are to stand up in behalf of the accused, and prevent insult and injustice.
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