Okay, why all the hubbub, from the standpoint of the use of Catholic records. First of all, the LDS have compiled a great many Catholic sacramental records.
(1) Some of these records (such as those for Quebec) were obtained many years ago because of local laws. These laws mandated that, since the Catholic baptismal, matrimonial, and sepultre records were the only records of their area they were, therefore, public records.
(2) Some of these records, such as in Chicago and Saint Louis, were compiled by the local ordinary being offered a free-of-charge microfilming program, out of which an archival quality film record would be given to the diocese. The microfilming contracts stated that the film could be used by the LDS. Maybe no one in the chancery read it closely enough to find out for what purpose the film was going to be used. And,
(3) Some of these records were obtained by direct purchase as antiquarian manuscripts when Catholic leaders were foolish enough to let them out of Church custody.
It is essential for LDS belief that the temple-worthy engage in their rituals. Failure to do so means that hopes for the eternal (exaltation = godhood) are stagnant. I subscribe to traditional Catholic belief that the proxy LDS rituals have no effect whatsoever on our faithful departed, not even that of normal prayer. Why, then, the fuss?
Because the LDS publish, or have in the past published, the rosters of individuals for whom the “proxy work” has been done and who are now declared to be on the path to exaltation themselves. It is claimed the “work” has the ability to change the fate of the individual in the afterlife. This is absolutely wrong. At the hour of death, a soul’s fate is judged. All souls in Purgatory are bound for heaven. No soul can be changed from damnation to salvation by any amount of indulgenced prayer; we can merely, through suffrage, speed those detained on their way.
Because General Authorities of the LDS church have emphasized, time and again, that by engaging in the rituals the LDS people are “saviors on Mount Zion”, e.g. surrogates for Christ in the work of redemption. Some General Authorities in the past have even claimed that those who perform the proxy work exert a sense of “ownership” over the souls of those thus serviced. Eternal slavery. Hoo boy. This is a status never claimed even for the Mediatrix of All Graces, the only Catholic who even comes close. We as members of the Body of Christ are bound to each other in charity; all our vicarious works are those of the grace of God through the treasury of merit of Christ and the saints; not of our own efforts are we or anyone else saved.
Because the one or two or three common members of an immediate family (which might be “done” by a well-meaning LDS relative) pale in insignificance and number to the work of “controlled extraction,” or wholesale data-entry, which has been going on from historical sources since 1969. Every type of source from the colonial vital records of Massachusetts to the medieval parish records of England to the 1880 census have been used as feeder data for the controlled extraction program. Visit
www.familysearch.org and take a look at the records available and indexed there. Each and every source with a name readable index has been extracted, and the names in it are in the queue for potential proxy baptism &c.
Because there is duplicity with regard to data disclosure (see below).
Because the LDS church really does not care who your ancestor was or what they believed. All they want is the name. “Names for temple work” has been a rallying cry since the founding of the Genealogical Society of Utah.
Should the Church have a problem with this? Yes! The LDS church has not requested our records, they have demanded them. They, as the “one true church,” have the obligation, and the right, to these records (paraphrased from Joseph Fielding Smith), and the Catholic Church has no right to withhold them, because God has inspired us Catholics to write the names down for them. Uh-uh. We are entitled to privacy in our sacraments and devotions, as were our fathers in faith before us.
It should be noted that in the recent past the names of submitters to the LDS temple system were made no longer available. If one is clever and cultivates friendships with LDS members, these can eventually be culled out. It should also be noted that the defunct “International Genealogical Index,” for LDS the same source as the “Ordinance Index,” no longer makes readily available to the public the dates and places where this “work” is being done. This is a double standard which is intolerable.
In the New Family Search computer system, the one you’re reading about in reference to Elie Wiesel and Anne Franck this week, there is NO affirmative mechanism for blocking a name from names processing. The name is removed from the database. That means the next person to add it has nothing to stop them from doing it again, and again, and again. When it comes up anew, it will register as “READY.” On my genealogy blog last year I recounted the saga of a certain young lady of ancient Hebrew origin whose work was done, yet again, in 2010…on the feast of her Immaculate Conception, no less.
What is needed is a very, large red flag called “UNCLEARED” that can be posted for all to see, LDS and non-LDS alike. At that point I would gladly contribute my family’s names to the LDS databases, if I could be assured they were blocked from processing for time and eternity. Unfortunately, because each of us has had their names entered in many, many public records over the years, from birth to marriage to death and in census, Social Security, land and probate records, it is almost a certainty that the LDS will try to “catch us all” eventually.
Just not from my parish records, please.