Krakauer writes how "Mormonism is a patriarchal religion" where "dissent isn't tolerated."

Date
Jun 8, 2003
Type
Book
Source
Jon Krakauer
Critic
Non-LDS
Hearsay
Direct
Journalism
Reference

Jon Krakauer, Under the Banner of Heaven (New York: Anchor), 33

Scribe/Publisher
Anchor
People
N. Eldon Tanner, Jon Krakauer
Audience
Reading Public
Transcription

Mormonism is a patriarchal religion, rooted firmly in the traditions of the Old Testament. Dissent isn’t tolerated. Questioning the edicts of religious authorities is viewed as a subversive act that undermines faith. As the eminent LDS first counselor N. Eldon Tanner famously declared in the official church magazine, Ensign, in August 1979, “When the prophet speaks, the debate is over.” Men, and only men, are admitted to the priesthood and given positions of ecclesiastical authority, including that of prophet. And only prophets may receive the revelations that determine how the faithful are to conduct their lives, right down to the design of the sacred undergarments individuals are supposed to wear at all times. All of this holds true in both the mainstream LDS Church and in the Fundamentalist Church, although the fundamentalists take these rigid notions— of obedience, of control, of distinct and unbending roles for men and women— to a much greater extreme.

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