April 9, 2026

4 thoughts on “Letter For My Wife Rebuttal, Part 23: The Early Church – Blacks and the Church [D]

  1. Some inspired prophetic quotations to ponder about Prophets regarding this issue:

    President M. Russell Ballard:
    Too often we hear, “why do the Brethren..?”, or, “why does the Church..?” Instead of, “why do the scriptures teach..?” or, “why does the Lord say..?” We need to remember that when the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve speak with a united voice it is the voice of the Lord for that time. . . . So I am saying to you, when you step out into the noisy world, keep your eyes on us. We will not and cannot lead you astray. Do not ever follow those who believe they know more than Heavenly Father and the Lord Jesus Christ about the administration of the affairs of Their Church here upon the earth. . . .
    In every generation there are those who have partaken of the fruit, but later became ashamed of the gospel. Today is no different. To them and to us, Paul boldly declared, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth.” The Lord needs an army of faithful, dedicated, and loyal disciples who are not ashamed of the gospel of Christ and who are willing to speak and stand up for the doctrine of Christ, including all principles and practices that flow from us as announced by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints—even when the principles and practices are not popular with some who may say they are not currently politically correct. . . .
    Please remember that public opinion is not God. We must be faithful to Him. Additionally, public opinion is not our judge; God is our judge and He will stand by us. . . .
    You will be going out into a noisy world. This noisy world will have some things to say that are nice about the Church and they will have some things [to say] not so nice. There will be those who want to tamper with the doctrine, but you don’t listen to that because you stay anchored to the fundamental doctrine and gospel of Christ. May God bless you with the courage and the strength to stand wherever you are serving and whatever your circumstances may be—that you may stand never never ashamed of the gospel of Jesus Christ; never with a wonderment or concern about the leadership of the Church. We are led by a prophet; there are fifteen apostles on the earth. We meet together. And I said earlier, we cannot and we will not lead you astray. Keep your eyes upon us. (Excerpt from a Provo MTC address)

    Elder Bruce R. McConkie:
    There is a standard rule by which we understand what the doctrine of the Church is and that is to observe the practice of the Church. The practice of the Church constitutes the interpretation of the scriptures because this is an inspired Church…. Accept the practice of assuming that the Church knows what it is doing and that what it does is right.

    Elder Spencer W. Kimball (Journal, October 9, 1947):
    In the 10 o’clock meeting with the First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve the matter of the negro was brought up for discussion again. I think I felt in this meeting the spirit of revelation more pronounced than in any meeting I have attended. The spirit of unity was manifest. All the Brethren seemed to see alike through the sweet spirit throughout the meeting, and I was almost overcome with the delightful experience. The Brethren seemed unified in feeling that we could not withhold the regular gospel blessings from the colored people, and that though we were unable yet to give them the Priesthood, perhaps we should not withhold from them the other blessings of the gospel which are available to them.

    After teaching a since disavowed (non-valiance in the pre-mortal existence) theory regarding WHY black people did not have temple blessing or the priesthood in his day, Elder George F. Richards noted: “We have no definite knowledge concerning this.” In other words, he knew he was reasoning or speculating according to his own mind and was not teaching settled doctrine from the revelations. See Conference Report, April 1939, 58-59.
    https://archive.org/details/conferencereport1939a/page/n59/mode/2up?q=george+richards

    Regarding the question of WHO has been entitled to hold the priesthood throughout human history, President J. Reuben Clark Jr. of 3 former First Presidencies gave a talk in General Conference in which he explained his views in some detail. See Conference Report, October 1956, 82-86; https://archive.org/details/conferencereport1956sa/page/n83/mode/2up

    President Dallin H. Oaks:
    As believers relying on scriptural history, we can be troubled and misled by Bible-recorded scriptural directions or traditions that may be viewed as racist or discriminatory by modern definition. For example, within the tribes of Israel, only members of the tribe of Levi were acceptable for service in the temple. The Israelites were forbidden to marry the Canaanites and some others of surrounding lands. And the direction for Jews not to associate with Samaritans was because of their partial descent from non-Israelite peoples.
    Most important, the gospel was not to be taught to Gentiles—non-Israelites. Jesus Himself affirmed that restriction in strong language—“not meet to take the children’s bread, and to cast it to dogs”—but then made an exception for a faith-filled mother. During His mortal ministry, Jesus reversed the prohibition against associating with the Samaritans, and by revelation after His mortal life He revoked the prohibition against taking the gospel to the Gentiles. But these and other restrictions remain in scriptural history.
    Using current definitions, some might call such divine actions and prophet-taught principles racist, but God, who is the loving Father of all nations, tribes, and ethnicities, cannot be branded as racist for His dealings with His children. Often the reasons for His plan are not known or understandable to mortals. “For my thoughts are not your thoughts,” He said through the prophet Isaiah. “Neither are your ways my ways.”
    Some have rejected some element of God’s plan as unreasonable according to cultural norms they could understand or accept. Others who have accepted God’s plan have mistakenly relied on cultural norms to provide reasons God has not revealed. Thus both nonbelievers and believers can reject or attempt to amend divine plans by relying on cultural norms instead of the directions of God. The safest course is not to reject or supplement the divine plan by human reasoning. Those who cannot accept the prophetic decisions and practices of the past should consider Winston Churchill’s wise counsel quoted earlier: “If we open a quarrel between the past and the present, we shall find that we have lost the future.”
    “Racism and Other Challenges,” BYU Speeches, October 27, 2020.
    https://speeches.byu.edu/talks/dallin-h-oaks/racism-other-challenges/

  2. The Church reminds us to give strict obedience to the prophet because he speaks for God and is incapable of misconduct.

    No, the Church absolutely does teach either of those things

    -typo?

  3. Thank you for these posts! Very much hoping to see more posts covering the rest of the letter. Been a big help to my family.

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