micah,
I sincerely wish God’s peace to you too.
Manifesto is an example of change within Mormon doctrine of which I was speaking
God’s peace
micah
The manifesto is not a change in Mormon doctrine, but rather a change in Mormon practice. Regarding polygamy, the Book of Mormon in Jacob 2:26-30 (with verse 30 referring to polygamy without specifically using the word) states:
26 Wherefore, I the Lord God will not suffer that this people shall do like unto them of old.
27 Wherefore, my brethren, hear me, and hearken to the word of the Lord: For there shall not any man among you have save it be one wife; and concubines he shall have none;
28 For I, the Lord God, delight in the chastity of women. And whoredoms are an abomination before me; thus saith the Lord of Hosts.
29 Wherefore, this people shall keep my commandments, saith the Lord of Hosts, or acursed be the land for their sakes.
30 For if I will, saith the Lord of Hosts, raise up seed unto me, I will command my people; otherwise they shall hearken unto these things.
So, Mormon belief is that God can command the practice of polygamy if He sees fit to do so. In these last days God introduced and initiated the practice via Joseph Smith and ending it via Wilford Woodruff. No doctrine changed when Wilford Woodruff declared God’s commandment to end polygamy.
Regarding the term “revelation”, perhaps we are speaking past each other per RebeccaJ’s recent comment. For LDS, revelation is any time knowledge is divinely communicated to an individual. Revelation can be a thought placed in someone’s mind by the Holy Ghost to help someone in need, it can be a vision, it can be a dream, and it can be new guidance and/or doctrine from God to the entire Church via the Prophet. If the revelation you’re referring to is the Church-wide type then I agree that there may be times when God directs his Church to change course. The Bible recounts various course corrections based on the condition of the people.
Finally, regarding the Wilford Woodruff comment from 1869, I’d say that’s his opinion and God later corrected his. In explaining the 1890 Manifesto to the Latter-day Saint Wilford Woodruff wrote this:
"The Lord has told me to ask the Latter-day Saints a question, and He also told me that if they would listen to what I said to them and answer the question put to them, by the Spirit and power of God, they would all answer alike, and they would all believe alike with regard to this matter.
The question is this: Which is the wisest course for the Latter-day Saints to pursue—to continue to attempt to practice plural marriage, with the laws of the nation against it and the opposition of sixty millions of people, and at the cost of the confiscation and loss of all the Temples, and the stopping of all the ordinances therein, both for the living and the dead, and the imprisonment of the First Presidency and Twelve and the heads of families in the Church, and the confiscation of personal property of the people (all of which of themselves would stop the practice); or, after doing and suffering what we have through our adherence to this principle to cease the practice and submit to the law, and through doing so leave the Prophets, Apostles and fathers at home, so that they can instruct the people and attend to the duties of the Church, and also leave the Temples in the hands of the Saints, so that they can attend to the ordinances of the Gospel, both for the living and the dead?"
I hope this help. I’m probably in somewhat over my head now!