To
see how the Lord seems to view authority, its purpose, and its bounds, let’s
look at two passages of scripture, one from the New Testament and one from the
Doctrine and Covenants.
Not
as “the Princes of the Gentiles”
After the mother of
James and John had approached the Savior and inappropriately requested that her
sons sit on Jesus’s right and left hand in his eternal kingdom, the other
Apostles were understandably indignant. But Jesus set them straight. He
explained that even though the “princes of the Gentiles” exercised dominion and
authority over their subjects, it was not to be so among his disciples. His
kingdom was different.
“Whosoever
will be great among you, let him be your minister;
“And
whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant:
“Even
as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give
his life a ransom for many” (Matt. 20:26–28).
Even
on the surface, this is a startling statement. It runs counter to the attitudes
regarding authority we generally see in the world, and even sometimes in the
Church, where hierarchy, formal titles, reverence for position, and the act of
presiding have become crucial concepts. Some LDS practices, when we consider
them, seem to run counter to what the Savior was trying to teach his Apostles.
For instance, high councils that are assigned seats according to seniority or
whose members must exit the room in that same order are enshrining the very
sort of pecking order Jesus prohibited among his original Apostles. In our
sacrament meetings, we are also very careful about serving the bread and water
to the “presiding authority” first. Not only can this get confusing for the
deacons when visiting authority figures are in attendance, but for some reason
it is difficult to imagine Jesus insisting that he be the first served. If the
account in Matthew 20 is accurate, he would probably insist on being served
last, and not because last is the place of honor.
Although
the Savior was very clear about his own authority and the fact that he was
always in charge—preaching, inviting, commanding, reprimanding, forgiving,
sending, and so forth—his instructions to his Apostles seem specifically to forbid
among them any sort of ranking system (except perhaps an inverted ranking,
where those with the most authority were to serve rather than rule). If we can
draw a lesson from this, it is perhaps that we are not to use authority in the
Church as the world uses it. This is expressly forbidden. President David O.
McKay translated this same idea into a modern context: “We cannot run the
Church like a business.”1 This may seem obvious, but business
philosophies, practices, and structures are so pervasive in our modern
organizational world that they tend to be difficult to circumvent in the
Church, at both the individual and the institutional level.
“No Power or Influence”
Expanding
on the central principle pronounced in the Savior’s brief reprimand of his
Apostles, Joseph Smith was very explicit in the revelation/commentary published
in D&C 121 about the use of priesthood authority and how it differs from
worldly authority:
Because their hearts are set so much upon the things
of this world, and aspire to the honors of men, that they do not learn this one
lesson—
That the rights of the priesthood are inseparably
connected with the powers of heaven, and that the powers of heaven cannot be
controlled nor handled only upon the principles of righteousness.
That they may be conferred upon us, it is true; but
when we undertake to cover our sins, or to gratify our pride, our vain
ambition, or to exercise control or dominion or compulsion upon the souls of
the children of men, in any degree of unrighteousness, behold, the heavens
withdraw themselves; the Spirit of the Lord is grieved; and when it is
withdrawn, Amen to the priesthood or the authority of that man. .
. .
We have learned by sad experience
that it is the nature and disposition of almost all men, as soon as they get a
little authority, as they suppose, [that] they will immediately begin to
exercise unrighteous dominion. . . .
No power or influence can or ought
to be maintained by virtue of the priesthood, only by persuasion, by
long-suffering, by gentleness and meekness, and by love unfeigned;
By kindness, and pure
knowledge, which shall greatly enlarge the soul without hypocrisy, and without
guile. (D&C 121:34–37, 39, 41–42)
Hidden
in plain view in this inspired commentary is an insight about priesthood that
is not well understood. If we truncate verse 41 before it runs off into the
list of qualities a leader should employ in exercising priesthood authority, a
very important lesson comes suddenly into focus: “No power or influence can or
ought to be maintained by virtue of the priesthood”—period. A man cannot
maintain power or influence over somebody simply by virtue of the fact that he
holds the priesthood or occupies a priesthood office; nor should he try,
because if he does, he loses the power
of the priesthood. As the Prophet made abundantly clear in verses 36 and 37,
the priesthood of God is powerless if held over someone else’s head. Priesthood
power and influence (meaning here undoubtedly authority exercised in an
institutional setting) come only as a consequence of long-suffering,
gentleness, meekness, love unfeigned, kindness, and pure knowledge (in other
words, the spirit of serving and ministering the Savior was trying to teach his
Apostles during his earthly ministry). People will not follow if they are
pushed, coerced, controlled, threatened, or manipulated. Those being ordered
about may comply, but they will not follow. Stated another way, individuals
become leaders not merely because they occupy a position of presumed authority,
even if that office is granted by divine directive. They become leaders only
because others willingly follow them. Leadership is entirely dependent on the
willingness of the followers. Mormons are known, by and large, for their
obedience to authority. Indeed, sometimes we are rightly accused of being
blindly obedient. But sometimes that obedience is more a passive compliance
with edicts from authoritarian figures than an active following that leaders
have earned by their behavior. In this light, true priesthood leadership always
considers the rights, desires, development, well-being, free will, and autonomy
of the followers first. Terryl Givens refers to this paradoxical idea of
priesthood as “power with no compulsion.”2
Authority
by Consent
This
idea adds a new wrinkle to the standard LDS definition of priesthood. Priesthood is more than just an abstract agency granted
by the Lord to speak or act in his name. It is also authority sanctioned or consented
to by peers. Unless a person in a position of authority has the consent or
approval of those over whom he or she exercises authority, then that authority
lacks power—in essence, it is meaningless or empty. And this idea becomes even
more significant when we understand that the modern Church, as it was initially
established, was both a theocracy and a democracy. For instance, we read in one
of the earliest revelations to the Church: “All
things shall be done by common consent in the church, by much prayer and
faith” (D&C 26:2, emphasis added). In other words, authority in the Church
is not just an institutional authority granted to leaders through approved
priesthood channels; it is also a consensual
matter, contingent upon the approval of the rank-and-file members. We also
read, “No person is to be ordained to any
office in this church, where there is a regularly organized branch of the same,
without the vote of that church”
(D&C 20:65, emphasis added). These verses suggest that, at least in theory,
the Church is not just a top-down, authoritarian hierarchy. Indeed, the very
name of the Church suggests as much. It is the Church of Jesus Christ, but it
is also the Church of the Latter-day Saints. The name is a dual possessive.
Sometimes we just assume it is the Lord’s church and that’s all there is to it.
But it appears that he expects something more of us.
This
notion of consensual authority is central, I believe, to the whole framework of
eternity of which we are a part. This idea will come up in more detail in part
14 of this series, so file it away somewhere for future reference. In the
meantime, I’ll begin next week to address the modern LDS understanding of
priesthood and how it differs from ancient priesthood.
_______________________
1. Gregory A. Prince and William Robert Wright, David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern
Mormonism (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 2005), 150. This remark came in the context
of the Correlation movement and the organizational changes the Correlation
Committee was proposing for the Church, which included, according to Ed
Kimball, son and biographer of President Spencer W. Kimball, “applying management
practices that were standard in the American business world.” Edward L.
Kimball, Lengthen Your Stride: The
Presidency of Spencer W. Kimball (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2005), 249.
2. Terryl L. Givens, “Paradox and Discipleship,” Irreantum 11, nos. 1–2 (2009): 39.
I don't find that some implications follow from the premise at all; and many seem to be used to make the opposite point that what follows.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to me that Jesus was speaking against exercising dominion and seeking office which does not relate to any so-called pecking order.
This so-called pecking order is an "Inverted ranking system"; the junior members get to speak first when giving views or opinions.
And it's not like the sacrament is passed in order around the leaders in a sacrament meeting, after it is passed to the presiding authority, there is no ranking system order there.
And we know from record that the presiding authority only gets the sacrament first to ensure that the deacons learn to tell who the presiding authority is, which the author seems to acknowledge: "Not only can this get confusing for the deacons when visiting authority figures are in attendance"
And "but for some reason it is difficult to imagine Jesus insisting that he be the first served" - there probably would be no doubt that he was presiding, but I don't guess to know what he would direct in the sacrament which represents his body, not the bishops body- i.e. there can be no comparison or basis for guessing!
Having the sacrament first is not some aggrandizing honour; the presiding authority is also responsible for making sure the ordinance is performed correctly, it is also convenient for him to be first as it gives an opportunity to make any correction before a wider distribution.
The author seems happy with Jesus authority and what he can be imagined to do, but doesn't seem to recognize that priesthood keys are the delegated right to direct the priesthood work. The presiding authority acts by right, just as Jesus does.
I have to disagree with D&C 121 being hidden in plain view, it is the most taught doctrine in priesthood meetings in my experience.
Thanks for these points, Sam. One, though, that seems a stretch is the idea that the presiding authority is served first so that he has an opportunity to make any correction before a wider distribution. In 59 years, I've never seen a presiding authority correct a deacon on passing the sacrament before it goes out to the congregation. In fact, I can't imagine what he might find to correct in how one deacon passes the sacrament to him that would cause him to stop the ordinance and correct all the deacons before they pass it to the congregation.
DeleteAlso, I didn't imply that section 121 was hidden in plain view, only that one particular insight in that section, which I elaborate on, is apparently not that obvious.
I'll discuss priesthood keys in an upcoming post.
I wasn't referring to correcting the deacon, but on correcting the priest who spoke the words of the ordinance.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't supposed that you had thought the whole of section of 121 was hidden in plain view, it was a clumsy comment of mine, I was referring to that point that you were making from it.