Jane Doe, thank you for your patience with people here.
You’re welcome. And thank you for your continual thoughtful and respectful posts: I really enjoy reading them.
I have a question that is rather different, but referring back to the OP’s original question. Can you speak to your own experience about Mormons addressing cultural issues? I read Jana Riess quite a bit, as well as Joanna Brooks, and both are becoming more vocal on gender, sexuality concerns. And from what I understand, the voices behind these issues within the LDS church are not asked to be silent as much as in the past. Is there room for more discussion? Changes in priesthood or in gender roles?
I love Joanna Brooks’ writing! Jana Riess is a more mixed hit-or-miss for me.
You’re touching on 3 different categories of things here: culture, policy, and doctrine. I’ll talk in general first, then each individually, and then specific case studies in my next post.
In general: yes, there is a significant variety in individual Mormon beliefs, though they all have common core. This is not seen as a bad thing at all. Something fairly unique about Mormonism though, is that which congregation you attend is assigned according to geographical borders, which prevents stratifying congregation according to different social/theological/economic or other lines.
Culture: yes, the culture of the church is rapidly diversifying in recent years, as members join from diversified backgrounds. Additionally, the internet has allowed small minorities to combine voices to be louder than before (this also applies to the world at large). Thirdly, LDS folks are definitely starting to embrace the diversity more, and feel less obligated fit the Utah “mold” (this shift is facilitated grassroots style and from church leaders themselves). Example of culture things would be dress styles, lingo, foods, backgrounds, etc.
Policy: Policy are those logistical-how-to-run-the-church protocols which are needed, but not divine revelation at all. Examples would be meeting schedules, organization structure, paperwork, etc. Majority of these are decided top down, but can change (they’re just standardized protocols).
Doctrine: These things are dictated by God. An example: scripture. More Truth and scripture can be revealed to us, but it is not for men to decide what or when.
Case study of gender roles and priesthood: Some things on this are changing/have already changed, versus some would require a dictate from God. Some sub-examples:
(to be continued)