By Carrie Sheffield on 2.4.08 @ 12:07AM
Gordon B. Hinckley tried to mold how the world views Mormonism.
As members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on
Saturday laid to rest their leader of 13 years, Gordon B. Hinckley,
they bid farewell to a devoted and energetic man whose vigorous
public relations outreach helped pluck his religion from the
obscurity of the Intermountain West and bring it to international
prominence, despite opposition from religious and secular foes.
The funeral for the 97-year-old man, whose followers deemed a
"prophet, seer and revelator," was translated into 69 languages and
beamed by satellite from downtown Salt Lake City to some 6,000
local LDS Church buildings around the world. Hinckley had spent his
life encouraging his flock to "to live a little better," and
bantering with members of the media in hopes of improving Mormonism
in the eyes of the public. In many ways, he succeeded, though
there is much work left for his surviving colleagues.
President George W. Bush and his wife Laura sent a message of
condolence, read during the memorial service by Hinckley's likely
successor, Thomas Monson. Bush, who in 2004 awarded Hinckley the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, remarked on Hinckley's seven decades
of service in the church, saying he "demonstrated the heart of a
servant and the wisdom of a leader."
The funeral drew a bipartisan political crowd that included
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, GOP presidential candidate Mitt
Romney, and Health and Human Services Secretary Michael
Leavitt.
In an age when many churches face declines in membership,
Hinckley was able to oversee a wide expansion. Nearly a third of
today's church members were baptized under Hinckley's tenure, which
also saw the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, the
construction of some 75 new temples, millions of dollars sent from
the church to various humanitarian crises, and the creation of the
Perpetual Education Fund offering educational and work
opportunities for poor young men and women from developing
nations.
During his tribute to Hinckley, Earl C. Tingey, a senior member
of the Church's Quorum of the Seventy, called the man a "great
communicator" (borrowing the title from Ronald Reagan), a testament
to his writing and oratorical skills, which were honed during his
time as a young missionary preaching from a soapbox in London's
Hyde Park.
After his mission, Hinckley, who had aspired to be a journalist,
was instead called by then-prophet Heber J. Grant in the mid-30s to
head up the church's fledgling public affairs department. This was
before the field of public relations had solidified, and Hinckley
enjoyed the challenge, churning out reams of pamphlets, essays, and
speeches.
His skills were noticed and Hinckley rose through the ranks of
church leadership before taking its helm in March 1995. His
extraordinary efforts to mold how the world views Mormonism were a
mixture of success and heartbreak.
HINCKLEY'S DETRACTORS point to his involvement in the Mark Hofmann
forgery scandal that culminated in the murder of
two people in 1985.
Reports from that time indicate that Hinckley was among the
church leaders who were swindled by Hofmann, an antique dealer and
a man raised as a devout Mormon who later fell away. Posing as a
mild-mannered, pious Mormon, Hofmann convinced Hinckley and his colleagues that he
possessed damning letters that would cast doubt on LDS Church
founder Joseph Smith and his faith's origins.
One of the phony letters contained an account by Martin Harris,
a close friend and follower of Smith who said the church leader had
claimed that a supernatural white salamander had led Smith to find
the gold plates Smith claimed contained the original text of the
Book of Mormon.
Using $15,000 in church funds, Hinckley, a counselor in the
First Presidency, the church's highest governing body, engineered
the purchase of one letter Hofmann claimed showed Smith was
involved in necromancy as a young man. Church leaders squirreled
away these purchased letters into a vault, worried their disclosure
could damage the church's reputation. When Hofmann realized his
forgeries had been discovered, he created bombs that killed two
people he feared would expose his secret.
The Hofmann tragedy caused a crisis of faith for some members,
who couldn't understand why church leaders, who teach members they
can receive personalized revelation from God to guide their
lives, had failed to recognize the deception. They also questioned
why leaders, who publicly taught a set of history and doctrine at
odds with the letter's contents, would give such credence to the
documents' claims.
Church leaders since have been fairly tight-lipped about the
scandal. When they have talked, they've pointed out that Hofmann
beguiled numerous scholars and antiquities experts, including a
document handler who exposed a forged diary supposedly belonging to
Adolf Hitler.
Hinckley also grappled with the issue of historical racism from
past LDS prophets and a church policy that excluded blacks from
holding the priesthood from 1830 until 1978. When asked about this
policy, Hinckley told
Mike Wallace on 60 Minutes in 1996, "It's behind us.
Look, that's behind us. Don't worry about those little flicks of
history."
Of course, the LDS Church is not alone in its offensive beliefs
about blacks -- the Southern Baptist Convention didn't apologize
for its affinity for slavery until 1995, nearly 20 years after the
LDS ban was lifted. Critics of the LDS church usually don't mention
that the Mormon community has made great strides in the
African-American community as well as on the African continent,
enough so that Hinckley was awarded the Distinguished Service Award
by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
and in 1997 was the first LDS leader to address that group.
The LDS church has struggled for acceptance among both the
religious -- Smith's teachings were heretical to most mainstream
Christians -- and the secular -- Smith did not have the luxury of
thousands of years buffering his claims and thus they are more
susceptible to modern scrutiny. Bi-annual conferences held by the
church in Salt Lake City routinely attract hordes of protesters who
label the church a cult and sometimes resort to offensive
tactics.
"We are not a weird people," Hinckley told Wallace during his
1996 interview. "The more people come to know us, the better they
will understand us."
AND YET, MANY people still don't understand, or are troubled by
members of Hinckley's faith. Their suspicion of the religion has
consistently haunted Mitt Romney in his quest for the Oval Office.
One poll conducted last summer found that as many as 43 percent of Americans
would not vote for a Mormon president. We don't know what this
figure would have been like prior to Hinckley's dedication to forge
ties across racial, religious, and international boundaries.
As Monson, Hinckley's lyrical replacement, said on Saturday,
Hinckley "was an island of calm in a sea of storm." His optimism,
stalwartness, and missionary zeal have helped solidify the church's
place as a major world religion. He laid the groundwork for a
continued dialogue between Mormons and their non-Mormon, "Gentile"
neighbors. It remains to be seen whether this conversation will
continue.
topics:
Education, Harry Reid, Religion, Africa