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Very interesting…
SALT LAKE CITY (RNS) Mormon President Thomas S. Monson, his two right-hand men and 12 apostles will take to the podium at this weekend’s (April 2-3) General Conference and offer sermons that many Mormons will treat like faxes from God.
Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints consider these 15 men “prophets, seers and revelators” and look to them for divine guidance on issues as profound as the role of the Holy Spirit and as seemingly trivial as using “thee” and “thy” in prayers.
Mormons don’t use the term “infallibility” to refer to their leaders and readily acknowledge that they are imperfect men. In practice, though, Mormon belief comes awfully close to that standard.
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For their part, Mormon leaders know they are fallible.
“Forget everything I have said, or what … Brigham Young … or whomsoever has said … that is contrary to the present revelation,” the late apostle Bruce R. McConkie once preached. “We spoke with a limited understanding.”
When asked about his statement discounting that man would ever reach the moon, former church President Joseph Fielding Smith said, simply, “Well, I was wrong.”
Indeed, biblical history is full of imperfect prophets. Moses killed a man and later met God face to face. King David committed adultery and then murder. In Mormonism, LDS prophet Brigham Young expressed racism, and a decade before his 2008 death, LDS President Gordon B. Hinckley confessed that “adulation is a disease I fight every day.”
“I’m grateful to know this and more,” said Molly Bennion, a Mormon in Seattle. “Their very fallibility gives me hope that I can overcome and that God might forgive me.”