Thank you for your two cents, so what PeterJohn metioned earlier about unmarried women being sealed to married men is untrue or no longer a practice?
The LDS theological thinking goes like this:
Any ordinances necessary for whatever degree of Exaltation one might attain need to be performed in this life. When it comes to Eternal marriage in particular Mormons are quick to cite Jesus’ affirmation that “In the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage.” Anyone who will have full status as an Eternally Married recipient of Celestial Glory (as compared to those unmarried who enjoy Celestial glory but lacking an Eternal spouse have no Eternal Increase) must have the ordinance of Eternal Marriage performed before the resurrection.
Women who die unmarried through no lack of effort of their own are promised that they will not lose any Eternal Blessings because of this. They will still have the opportunity to complete a Celestial marriage before the resurrection, but that marriage will have to be performed on Earth in mortality.
Culturally, men are held more responsible for failing to marry than are women – not necessarily doctrinally, but culturally. Around 1988 Ezra Taft Benson gave a discourse essentially slamming the returned missionaries who had been back for a long time and remained single. There is an LDS cultural bias that in general men stay single out of choice and women for lack of opportunity to marry --and I emphasize in general. It is the lack of opportunity that God will not penalize someone for.
Regarding the things I stated on performong marriages for the unmarried, I should have clarified that all those I read about years ago were for women who were already LDS when they died, they just had not been married. They were all sealed to general authorities. I apologize that I do not recall the specific sources on this.I had taken LDS seminary as a a teen, did well on the tests but rarely completed the assignments. This would have been among the things I read when I began taking my religion more seriously in the years before my mission.
It was 30 years ago (and we had no Internet then). My main resources were the stacks of books my grandfather (a 1959 convert to Mormonism) had received as a branch president from mission presidents Truman G. Madsen, Boyd K. Packer, and Paul H. Dunn, as well as those he had ordered. I had my father’s full set of Joseph Smith’s History of the Church (something rare to find in the East then), selections of Brigham Young’s Discourses, but not the whole Journal of Discourses (20 some-odd volumes as I recall), McConkie’s “Mormon Doctrine” (Bruce’s Bible) about 20 years of LDS periodicals, manuals, the Church News, and when I could afford it I ordered books myself.
This was somewhere amidst all of those. I apologize for not remembering where specifically to verify, and I hope I have been clear that this is the best I can remember, so I cannot qualify how authoritative the source would be.
With that clarification, I think ParkerD will confirm that the LDS doctrine is (or at least has been in the past) that all ordinances need performing to receive blessings associated with them, and that this must happen before the resurrection. Therefore, for anyone to receive the Celestial Kingdom with full priveleges and benefits (so to speak) the ordinance of marriage in the temple needs to be performed for them at some time before their resurrection whether they were actually married in this life or not.
In the concept of the Temple work to be done during the Millennium, additional resources will be available for sorting these out, as heaven and earth will be in closer proximity.