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Eliminating Racism Among Latter-day Saints—From Speech to Action; Trump’s team stalls in LDS outreach

Eliminating Racism Among Latter-day Saints—From Speech to Action; Trump’s team stalls in LDS outreach

The Mormon Land Newsletter is the Salt Lake Tribune’s weekly newsletter in and about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Join us Patreon and receive our full newsletter, podcast transcripts, and access to all of our religious content.

The rot of racism

They have published pleadings for racial harmony on news sites. They have preached against prejudice from the pulpit. They have Partnerships with leading civil rights organizations.

But could and should the church’s top leaders, led by President Russell Nelson, do more to truly “eliminate racism,” in the words of his top adviser, Dallin Oaks?

Blogger Exponent II Mimi offers these steps—from top to bottom to bottom to top—to remove the sin of racism from the ranks of the faith:

• The church, as an institution, should apologizes for his former priesthood/temple ban against the Black Latter-day Saints. In addition to helping “black members feel heard/seen,” she writes, “it might also help white Sunday school elders recognize that the church wasn’t always perfect.”

• Leaders should appoint more members of color to high-level positions in the church.

• Local leaders should “shout and talk about” racism. “Subject”, Mimi argued“it might become less taboo and we might try to get to the root.”

• Latter-day Saints should put aside their fears of “backlash” and openly discuss this bigotry. “The backlash hurts because it’s hard to realize that people in your community are racist,” the blogger says, “but I think those little comments will eventually help create change.”

The latest “Mormon Land” podcast: The temple gambit

(Salt Lake Tribune; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Church President Russell M. Nelson, center, surrounded by newly built temples in Utah, Wyoming and Argentina.

President Nelson is betting big that the temple building boom will cement more members into the faith. Historian Benjamin Park, author of “American Zion: A New History of Mormonism,” discusses the church’s temple blitz—how it compares to the past, what it means now, and what it may portend for the future.

Listen Podcasting.

Trump’s team stalls in LDS outreach

(Rick Bowmer | AP) President Donald Trump stands with Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, in 2017. The Trump campaign courted Latter-day Saint voters in battleground states.

Here are some words of wisdom for Donald Trump’s campaign as it courts members in vital states like Arizona and Nevada:

First, don’t sell “Latter-day Saints for Trump” coffee mugs or koozies. (They are not best suited for the java-shy and abstinent believers.)

Second, don’t hold a canvassing event on General Conference weekend. (You must be outmatched by guys named Nelson, Oaks, and Uchtdorf, and women named Freeman, Yee, and Browning.)

Third, don’t schedule a Mormon rally on a Sunday. (Rest as many godly Latter-day Saints do on their Sabbath.)

The Republican presidential camp has committed these and several other head-scratching missteps in dealing with Latter-day Saint voters — as documented this week by McKay Coppins of the Atlantic.

Sermon by the mountain

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Brazilian Apostle Ulisses Soares speaks next to the iconic Cristo Redentor, Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro. The recording of his remarks was part of the October 2024 Youth Worldwide Broadcast. The photo is a screenshot from the broadcast.

In the shadow of Rio de Janeiro’s famous Christ the Redeemer statue, Brazilian apostle Ulisses Soares encouraged young Latter-day Saints to be “beacons of hope and examples of Christlike love” in a broadcast worldwide Sunday.

“This magnificent work of art is a reminder to all of us that Jesus Christ and His gospel are not meant to be hidden under a bouquet,” Soares said of the 98-foot-tall hilltop landmark. “Rather, like the statue, Jesus Christ and His gospel are placed on a hill where they cannot be hidden.”

In addition, the website, album and poster are ready for the 2025 youth theme: Look to Christ.

From the Tribune

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Jared Oaks, music director for Ballet West, rehearses with the orchestra in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024.

• Anti-LGBTQ rhetoric, warns the gay grandson of the apostle Dallin Oakscreates “an environment conducive to violence”.

• Church leaders have repeatedly encouraged members to be civilians. Does it work in this presidential election?

• President Nelson is scheduled to dedicate THE Deseret Peak Temple on November 10.

The 72,000-square-foot, three-story, single-spire building in Tooele will be the faith’s 200th temple worldwide and one of 31 existing or planned Utah temples.

(Randy Hulme) This choir, which consists of singers from a wide range of Christian faiths, performs regularly at the Hyde Park Latter-day Saint meeting house, in addition to other churches around the community.

• From Chicago to Memphis to Provo, Latter-day Saint congregations are strengthening ties with the surrounding communities.

• Tribune guest columnist Eli McCann he’s a brand new dad, and oh boy, it’s exhausting — and exhilarating.

(Natalie Green) This drawing by Natalie Green depicts Eli McCann’s extended family.