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Xmoe
Guest
That is not correct.He can fight his own battles on that.
I will agree with you to a point on JS. (not completely)
He did ordain Elder Abel, but then I believe it was revoked by Brigham Young, and never to be reinstated.
Elder Abel kept the priesthood, and his membership in the quorum of the 70s, until the end of his life. Quorum of the 70 was the LDS equivalent of a Catholic Cardinal.
On the sad side, Brigham Young kept sending Elder Abel on missions to Canada, and many LDS folks speculate that no one in Utah would notice there was a black priesthood leader.
Joseph Smith was also the first white American recorded to have attempted to adopt a black person as his own child. (I learned that from a non-LDS source, a seminar on the history of race in family law). He also personally ordained Elijah Abel to the priesthood.
In my opinion, Brigham Young was less open-minded with regard to African-Americans than his predecessor, Joseph Smith.
If youāre interested in Elijah Abel, I reccomend the wikipedia article for starters: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elijah_Abel
Back when I was LDS, I once challenged Dale Lebaron, the first mission president to Africa after the 1978 revelation, to show any evidence that Brigham Young or any priesthood leader had even claimed a revelation to take the priesthood away from blacks. Brother LeBaron (who was giving a seminar on the topic at BYU Education week!) was unable to cite any reference, and admitted that heād looked carefully for such information. But he felt confident that Brigham Young would not have taken such action without a revelation. Iām less confident. And a growing number of LDS folks share my opinion, and are willing to say, āBrigham Young and some other leaders made a mistake and thank God for correcting us.ā