April 11, 2026

19 thoughts on “A Look at the Church’s Change of Policy on Same-Sex Couples and their Children

  1. Or maybe revelation is more colored by the experience and views of an individual than we commonly recognize, despite the calling of said individual.
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    Author responds: Yes, all revelation is certainly filtered through a mortal individual, and this will affect its expression, etc. This idea can be taken too far, I think, by deciding that God is unable to be sufficiently clear, or that prophets are just using “their own best judgment”–something which President Nelson emphatically denied. – GLS

  2. Thank you for taking the time to write this very thoughtful article and for sharing your experience and POV. Very helpful.

  3. Thank you for using your own experiences to illustrate. For those of us never privvy to the inner workings (so to say!) it can be difficult to comprehend how this all really comes together.

    Even though we sustain the revelation and the prophet, it can still be rather puzzling as to the timing, or the how, of something like yesterday’s announcement!

    Taking my vitamins, loving the love!

  4. A very thoughtful and well researched article. One that explains the why’s and wherefore’s on the subject.

  5. I’m trying to maintain belief but I admit it’s very difficult. I just don’t see how truth can be eternal and even have much change in policy, or revelation. Lives were lost over this matter I just wish the whole situation could have been avoided.

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    Author replies:

    A key principle when confronted by such difficulties is that revelation adapts to the circumstances in which the Church, its members, its leaders, and the world find themselves.

    This should surprise us less than it sometimes does. The Book of Mormon begins with such things: God tells us “thou shalt not kill” and “thou shalt not steal”. Yet, Nephi is commanded by revelation to both kill Laban and abscond with the brass plates.

    This is not the place to enter into a discussion about suicide, but this claim is not supported by the literature on suicide generally, or the data on Utah in particular, despite the fact that it is accepted wisdom in some quarters.

    https://dev.fairlatterdaysaints.org/blog/2017/10/11/gay-youth-suicides-utahu

    https://dev.fairlatterdaysaints.org/blog/2017/11/03/lgbt-youth-suicides-needs-change

  6. Thank you for the explanations of policy, revelation, and change. Too often in the church, we confuse policy and practice with “doctrine.”

    While I think that church leadership has learned much in the last four years regarding the policy on LGBTQ, couching it as merely a tool to understand the issue better is quite optimistic. Had it been implemented as “Just call us if you have this or that situation arise so that we can learn more,” the results would have been much different.

    The following statement in the article presents a dualism that may not be particularly helpful for situations like this:
    “Some will use the policy change to claim that the Church is not led by revelation, or that policies with which they disagree are not inspired. Others will have a witness of their own that the leaders are led by God, and be moved to sustain them.”

    The extent of revelation is limited by our ability to understand it and implement it, this is implied when the article suggests that leaders must study the issues. I like that the same obligation is imposed on the subordinates. This also allows for each to come to a different conclusion.

    I posit that a revelation can be received and implemented and also be “wrong,” not because the intent of the inspiration was wrong or even that the implementation was necessarily done incorrectly, but because we weren’t quite ready receive the “right” message.

    I don’t doubt that the original policy was implemented with all of the right intentions and that the leaders were inspired to do so with the knowledge and understanding that they had at the time. But, like Elder Holland’s talk few years ago, sometimes we are inspired to go down the wrong road so that there is no doubt about the right one.

    I also allow for occasionally just messing it up, both with myself and with my leaders. I sustain them with patience and hope that the same patience is extended to me.

  7. I have seen comments from people drawing parallels between the Priesthood ban and the 2015 Gay policy in terms of leaders making their decisions based on their biases, prejudices and attitudes instead of revelation. I don’t think they are parallel cases because the 2015 policy started from revelation to First Presidency and Quorum of Twelve and ended the same way. It is clear the Priesthood ban started from the attitudes and prejudices of Brigham Young and others. It evolved into later Prophets expressing the need for revelation to reverse the ban. A strong argument can be made that it could have been reversed without the need of revelation because revelation didn’t start the policy. Prophets and Apostles make both inspired and non-inspired decisions. They make mistakes and do great things. Ultimately, personal confirmation from God is the best way to sustain Priesthood leaders.
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    Author replies: Yes, I think you’re right. And, it was always anticipated that the ban would be lifted at some point, if only in the Millennial years (even by Brigham Young). A few prophets before Pres Kimball expressed the view that it could change if the Lord commanded.

    This is quite different from the same-sex acts prohibition, which many have said emphatically will not and cannot change. I think members who communicate (either explicitly or implicitly) to gay members that the doctrine will eventually change in fact do an unwittingly-cruel disservice. To say something will come, and then to never have it come, promotes frustration and anger, and search for someone or some group to blame because they’re “holding back” what is supposed to happen.

    Such a stance also tends to communicate the idea that “this isn’t really that big a deal; get married as a same sex couple. At the worst, you’ll simply be ahead of the curve, doing what will someday–soon, they hope–be endorsed or celebrated by the Church. Thus, if it’s sin at all, it isn’t much of one.” That message has obvious downsides if same sex acts simply cannot be consistent with the gospel covenants.

    Plus, the priesthood ban always stuck out as an aberration (hence the appeal to ‘premortal’ factors to explain what on its face seemed incredibly unjust). Putting same sex marriage into the doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ, however, would destroy a great deal of how we see the premortal, mortal, and postmortal worlds.

  8. I should say that I don’t think informing the leaders was its only purpose. I always say, God is the ultimate multi-tasker! 🙂 I think it is one salutary effect, and one reason why the revelation now can be different–but the problem with “call us if you have questions” initially is that there were local leaders who were quite willing to act as if there was no concern with a same-sex married couple in terms of their membership at all. The policy sent an unmistakable message–which is partly why so many were angry about it.

    And, I really don’t think anyone was sure what the legal environment would look like. (For example, would a heterosexual parent taking a child of divorce to a meeting where his same-sex married parent’s marriage arrangements were said to be sinful cause custody issues in court?) It’s always easier to lighten a restriction than to tighten it later. So, I believe there were lots of factors, and probably some I have no clue about. 🙂

  9. Very thoughtful article.
    (Just a note to proofread the first indented quote by Elder Packer.)

  10. I sustained the First Presidency when the policy was announced in 2015. I understood what the reasons were before the actual explanations were given. And I sustain the First Presidency in this new policy. I do not yet understand the reasons behind it but I agree with Brother Smith’s assessment that the experiences with the 2015 policy have led to this change.
    I have not been paying much attention to the situation, but was the policy pertaining to children of polygamous unions also changed?

    Glenn
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    Author replies: Not to my knowledge. On the other hand, we have a far longer track record with that sort of set up, so one would think that the current policy represents as sort of “equilibrium” on that front.

  11. My personal belief is that it was divine evelation in 2015 and 2019

    I’m a very poor LDS gospel historian. My question is, has this situation ever happened either in the historic Church or after the Restoration?

    Perhaps there are those struggling to understand all this like me, because there is no historic scriptural or gospel equipment…Yet?
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    Author replies: I think there are many scriptural examples. For example, the Law of Moses was implemented as “a law forever,” and yet it was ultimately superseded by Christ’s teachings. As the Lord put it, “Wherefore I, the Lord, command and revoke, as it seemeth me good” (D&C 56:4).
    ).

    The Lord commanded Zion’s Camp to assemble and march to liberate the lands in Missouri (D&C 101:55-56); the Lord soon revoked this command as the situation on the ground changed (D&C 105:9). These commands were separated by far less time than the policies here under discussion.

    The Book of Mormon starts with Nephi being given a command that contravenes the “thou shalt not kill” and “thou shalt not steal” commands. Yet he is told to both kill Laban and use guile to steal the plates of brass.

    Plural marriage was both commanded and then later revoked.

    If prophets cannot and do not adapt policy and instructions based on changing circumstances in the Church and the world, they seem to me to have little help for us. This is how the Church is governed–by revelation adapted to the needs and circumstances in which we find ourselves.

  12. Gregory, what are your thoughts about what Prince had to say about the origins of the ban, as detailed in this podcast. I haven’t read Prince’s book. https://www.sltrib.com/religion/2019/04/10/mormon-land-lds-churchs/
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    Author replies: Sorry, I haven’t heard it. What I have read of Prince seems to me to be fundamentally misguided. He has said, for example, that the biological origins of homosexuality make the ban on same-sex acts indefensible, and he clearly thinks this should and will change.

    Personally, I’ve never understood why a biologic or genetic tendency to same-sex acts can say anything about their morality. You can’t get ought from is. (If we truly believe that the “natural man is an enemy to God,” then our natural or instinctual desires certainly can’t be trusted to accord with God’s purposes.)

    I have a biologic predisposition to violence–the majority of violent crime in every society is caused by men aged 15-30 years old. The Y chromosome and testosterone are clearly, unmistakably linked with violence. Y chromosome bearers are something like 40x more likely to commit a sexual assault.

    Despite these facts, violent crime is an immoral act.

    Men are also more likely to be competitive and engage in status seeking versus other men, and testosterone levels correlate with this tendency. As a male, I’m quite inclined to such things–but the gospel of Christ requires that I master them.

    There have been repeated statements that the Church’s stance on the sinfulness of same-sex acts can’t and won’t change. I think all sides of the debate need to reconcile themselves to those realities. There are difficult choices to be made in this and many other areas. We do no one any favors by acting as if they will be or can be subject to change when they won’t.

  13. Elder Maxwell s comment at the very end brought tears. Thank you for this well thought out comment.

  14. Elder Maxwell’s quote near the end brought tears. Thank you for this well thought out article. I learned some things that have really helped me.

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