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− | A group of noisy and rude anti-Prop 8 protesters are shown in San Francisco. One man states that they were bussed in, and that "I heard there's people from Utah." They then show interactions with the protesters, who turn out to be the same "street preachers" that demonstrate outside of General Conference. | + | A group of noisy and rude anti-Prop 8 protesters are shown in San Francisco. One man states that they were bussed in, and that "I heard there's people from Utah." |
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| + | *The implication made by the film is that the Church sent protesters from Utah to San Francisco, however, these protesters turn out to be the same "street preachers" that demonstrate outside of General Conference. They use vulgar language and their behavior is uncharacteristic of anything representing a Latter-day Saint approach. |
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Revision as of 13:29, 22 September 2010
- REDIRECTTemplate:Test3
Claims
00:10:00
Claim
Fred Karger states that Latter-day Saints "didn’t allow blacks in the Church until 1978."
Author's source(s)
Response
- The author's claim is false
- Blacks have always been included as baptized and participating members of the church, beginning with the baptism of Elijah Abel in 1832 and extending down to the present day.
- For a period of time, beginning some time in the early 1850s, blacks of African descent were not ordained to the priesthood. In 1978, a revelation to President Spencer W. Kimball ended the restriction.
- The author of the film has obviously confused the priesthood restriction with a restriction on church membership. It is not clear whether this was a purposeful attempt at deception or just a case of very sloppy fact-checking.
- For a detailed response, see: Mormonism and racial issues/Blacks and the priesthood
00:10:52
Claim
The file states "There was a meeting held by Church President Gordon Hinckley at his estate in Hawaii where one of the Catholic cardinals came out."
Author's source(s)
Response
- The author's claim is false
- President Hinckley has never owned an estate in Hawaii.
00:16:56
Claim
A woman who is claimed to be a "former Mormon," states that "Mormons believe that their prophet literally is in communication with God, that Jesus Christ appears to their leaders in the Salt Lake Temple."
Author's source(s)
Response
- This claim is literally correct, but very misleading. Yes, the prophet is literally in communication with God — as are the Apostles, as are LDS bishops and stake presidents, as are all Mormons who pray to their Father in Heaven and receive guidance for their lives, as are all other Christians, Jews, Muslims, etc. who pray to God and have God answer their prayers. The main difference between the prophet and other members of the church is that God will not reveal his will for the direction of the church as a whole to anyone but the prophet. And, yes, God has done this many times.
- Jesus Christ may have appeared to church leaders in the temple. If so, it was a holy experience that is not talked about often. Certainly, no LDS leader has ever claimed that Jesus Christ regularly appears to them in the temple. That part of the claim is simply false.
00:17:37
Claim
A woman who is claimed to be a "former Mormon" states that in the temple "we promise to give of our means and our time to defend the Church and to forward its mission, and we're told that we will lose our eternal salvation if we don't keep that promise."
Author's source(s)
Response
- The author's claim is false
- There is no promise made in the temple that includes those words and no place where it is stated that anyone will lose their eternal salvation if they do not keep their promises. That having been said, there can be no question that to enter into any covenant with God and then to knowingly and purposely break that covenant must certainly disqualify the individual for the blessings that God has promised to the faithful.
00:19:38
Claim
The narrator claims that Mormons teach that Heavenly Father was "once a human being," and that after he died, that he "became a god where he began marrying spirit wives and having spirit offspring."
Author's source(s)
- No source specified.
- This portion of the documentary appears to draw ideas from the notorious anti-Mormon film The God Makers: Specifically, the idea that the primary goal of women in the church is to "become a goddess in heaven" in order to "multiply an earth" and be "eternally pregnant."
Response
- The author's claim is false
- The only correct parts of the statement are that Latter-day Saints believe that God was once a man, and that our heavenly parents create "spirit offspring." The remainder of the claims are incorrect.
- Latter-day Saints believe that marriage must be performed on earth, not after "becoming a god."
- Latter-day Saints believe that men and women will be resurrected. It therefore makes no sense to assume that God "began marrying spirit wives."
- For a detailed response, see: Nature of God/"God is a man"
- For a detailed response, see: Nature of God/Heavenly Mother
- For a detailed response, see: Nature of God/Deification of man
00:20:09
Claim
The narrator states that "Mormons believe we, too, can become gods on our own planets, filled with our own spirit wives and children."
Author's source(s)
Response
00:20:24
Claim
The film claims that "when a gay child enters the picture, who can't have children biologically and doesn't want to marry someone of the opposite sex, it not only upsets the Mormon definition of the family, but disturbs the entire Mormon concept of the afterlife."
Author's source(s)
Response
- Nothing biological stops a gay son or daughter from having children.
- It is true that some will some may not want to marry in this life, but those who do not marry and have children for this reason do not "disturb the Mormon concept of afterlife" anymore than a straight child who can't have children for biological reasons or who doesn't want to marry for any reason. Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, who was interviewed for the PBS special "The Mormons," stated, speaking of the problems of same-sex attraction, "I do know that this will not be a post-mortal condition. It will not be a post-mortal difficulty."[1] Same-sex attraction is not directly related to the afterlife.
00:21:12
Claim
"Mormon pioneer Frederick Granger Williams" is said to have had three wives, and that as a result of this that his family was "chased across the United States and finally into Mexico by mobs of evangelical Christians."
Author's source(s)
Response
FAIR WIKI EDITORS: Check sources
00:26:18
Claim
It is claimed that some Church leaders (bishops and stake presidents) brought members' tithing records to their homes and told them, ""This is how much you make. This is how much we think you can give. Give this much money, give this much time or you face disfellowshipment. You might lose your callings. You might lose your membership."
Author's source(s)
Response
- The author's claim is false
- No such practice was suggested by the church and, in most wards and stakes, nothing like this happened. It is possible (though we know of no such incidents) that some bishops, acting on their own, may have met with members individually and, based on their incomes and situations, suggested an amount that they might voluntarily donate. But no bishop could have threatened anyone with disfellowshipment, loss of callings, or loss of membership over this. Either the authors of the film made this up or they were lied to by their interviewees and did not bother to check the facts.
00:27:35
Claim
It is claimed that families "dug into their retirement funds" and "used their kids' college funds" to support Prop 8. One example is given of a family in Sacramento that "gave $50,000" by closing out their college fund for their "five small children, all under the age of nine."
Author's source(s)
Response
FAIR WIKI EDITORS: Check sources
00:29:14
Claim
The Church is claimed to have "set up a specific post-office box for all the Mormon money to go to" in order to "bundle all the contributions together so they could actually check off to make sure that everyone had given what he committed to give."
Author's source(s)
Response
- The author's claim is false
- All money that was donated by members was given directly to the ProtectMarriage.com organization. This money did not pass through the Church.
- The individual wards and stakes did ask for a report of funds that had been donated by members to ProtectMarriage.com. It can be assumed that this information was sent to the Church. It is not known whether or not the Church "checked off" to make sure that members donated per their commitment.
- We are not aware of any actions or repercussions suffered if it was determined that a member did not donate what they said they would.
- For a detailed response, see: Where did the money come from?
00:33:58
Claim
It is claimed that LDS advertisements were "designed to mislead and misinform" and that they were "designed to recruit people of other faiths."
Author's source(s)
Response
- The advertising messages created for the "Yes on 8" campaign were based on case law and real-life situations. However, a rebuttal to an anonymously written "Yes on 8" document called "“Six Consequences . . . if Proposition 8 Fails” was written by LDS lawyer Morris Thurston. [2] This document was used by "No on 8" supporters to show that even LDS realized that lies were being promoted. Thurston's points were contested by another LDS attorney, Blake Ostler. [3] Upon discovering that the "No on 8" campaign was making use of his comments, Thurston issued a press release which pointed out that "A press release dated October 19 from a public relations firm representing 'No on 8' is inaccurate and misleading," and that he was "erroneously cited as having 'debunked' new California Prop 8 ads."
- For a detailed response, see: California Proposition 8: The ads
00:35:33
Claim
In demonstrating that "religions can set their own rules," the film states that "the LDS church can still ban African-Americans from their temples."
Author's source(s)
Response
- The claim is misleading
- African-Americans have been able to attend the temple since 1978. This has not changed. The statement made implies that the Church continues to ban them from the temple.
- For a detailed response, see: Mormonism and racial issues/Blacks and the priesthood
00:37:06
Claim
It is claimed that during the last week of the Prop 8 campaign, that "over $3 million came in from Utah alone to influence this California election."
Author's source(s)
Response
- The amounts contributed to both sides were very high. It is reasonable for "No on 8" supporters to question why their greater contributions to defeat Proposition 8 didn't carry the vote as they expected.
|
In-State Donations |
Out-of-State Donations |
Total Donations |
For Proposition 8 |
$25,388,955 |
$10,733,582 |
$36,122,538 |
Against Proposition 8 |
$26,464,589 |
$11,968,285 |
$38,432,873 |
Totals |
$51,853,544 |
$22,701,867 |
$74,555,411 |
Source: Tracking the money, Los Angeles Times |
00:38:12
Claim
A group of noisy and rude anti-Prop 8 protesters are shown in San Francisco. One man states that they were bussed in, and that "I heard there's people from Utah."
Response
- The implication made by the film is that the Church sent protesters from Utah to San Francisco, however, these protesters turn out to be the same "street preachers" that demonstrate outside of General Conference. They use vulgar language and their behavior is uncharacteristic of anything representing a Latter-day Saint approach.
00:49:05
Claim
Bruce R. McConkie "made a statement several years ago to the youth of the Church that it would be better to be dead than to be homosexual."
Author's source(s)
Response
- We do not know the source of this statement. It may be based upon the following:
"Better dead clean, than alive unclean. Many is the faithful Latter-day Saint parent who has sent a son or daughter on a mission or otherwise out into the world with the direction, 'I would rather have you come back home in a pine box with your virtue than return alive without it' "
Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, Second Edition, Page 124.
00:49:15
Claim
Utah is claimed to have "one of the highest suicide rates in the world." It is stated that a "disproportionately large number" of these are gay Latter-day Saints.
Author's source(s)
Response
00:55:42
Claim
It is claimed that are taught by their church leaders that they are not gay, just tempted, and that they can be
"fixed."
Response
- The author's claim is false
- The Church does not teach no one is gay nor that you can fix your temptations.
Claim
- The following quote by George Q. Cannon is displayed:
"How will these be stopped? Only by the destruction of those who practice them. The only way is...for the Lord to wipe them out."
George Q. Cannon, Mormon Apostle
Author's source(s)
- Source not provided in the video.
- The quote is found in Conference Report, October 1897, Afternoon Session
Response
- The quote in context with the portions used in the film highlighted:
In England a short time ago a man who had posed in society as a man of culture and of taste, and who lectured upon esthetics, was found to be guilty of a most abominable crime a crime for which under the old law the penalty was death; a crime which was practiced by the nations of old, and caused God to command their destruction and extirpation. This crime was proved against this man, and some of his associates were what are called noblemen. He was sent to prison. His term of imprisonment having expired, he comes from prison, and is now engaged, it is so published, in writing a book, and, we suppose is received into society, though guilty of this nameless crime. And is this common; If we may believe that which is told to us, without going into researches ourselves, it and other kindred wickedness, is far too common. The same sin that caused the utter destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah! This and other abominable crimes are being practiced. How will these be stopped? Only by the destruction of those who practice them. Why, if a little nest of them were left that were guilty of these things, they would soon corrupt others, as some are being corrupted among us. In coming to these mountains we hoped to find a place where we could live secluded from the abominations of Babylon. But here in this secluded place wickedness intrudes itself, and is practiced in this land which we have dedicated to the Lord as a land of Zion! How can this be stopped? Not while those who have knowledge of these filthy crimes exist. The only way, according to all that I can understand as the word of God, is for the Lord to wipe them out, that there will be none left to perpetuate the knowledge of these dreadful practices among the children of men. And God will do it, as sure as He has spoken by the mouths of His prophets. He will destroy the wicked, and those who will be left will be like the Nephites after the wicked were all killed off; they were righteous men and women who lived for over two hundred years according to the law of heaven.
- Elder Cannon refers to "it and other kindred wickedness, is far too common. The same sin that caused the utter destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah!"
- Note the omission of the phrase: "The only way, according to all that I can understand as the word of God,is for the Lord to wipe them out." The omitted phrase makes it clear that Elder Cannon was offering his own opinion based upon his understanding of the scriptures, and not claiming to be the voice of God on the matter.
Endnotes
- [note] A transcript of the interview is available on-line at http://www.pbs.org/mormons/interviews/holland.html
- [note] Morris Thurston, A Commentary on the Document “Six Consequences . . . if Proposition 8 Fails”
- [note] Blake Ostler, Prop 8 comment (that is now a Prop 8 post) (Oct. 20, 2008)