The three
preceding posts bring us to an interesting question. Although priesthood today
does not exist without the institutional Church, is priesthood the only
authority in the Church? There are two views on this. One is the perspective I
grew up with—that priesthood and authority in the Church are synonymous (in
other words, that priesthood is the only form of authority in the Church). This
view of authority is a fruit of the unique Mormon definition of priesthood as
an abstract idea, a general power that people can possess. If priesthood is God’s
authority delegated to men on earth, then what other authority can there be in
the Church? This is the perspective behind Elder Oaks’s recent general
conference talk on the authority of the priesthood, in which he gave the
following explanation:
We are
not accustomed to speaking of women having the authority of the priesthood in
their Church callings, but what other authority can it be? When a woman—young
or old—is set apart to preach the gospel as a full-time missionary, she is
given priesthood authority to perform a priesthood function. The same is true
when a woman is set apart to function as an officer or teacher in a Church
organization under the direction of one who holds the keys of the priesthood.
Whoever functions in an office or calling received from one who holds
priesthood keys exercises priesthood authority in performing her or his
assigned duties.1
I will
give some reasons why I find this explanation inadequate, or at least
incomplete, later in this post, but for now let me just say that the other view
on priesthood—the view I have come to see as more convincing—is that priesthood
is not the only authority in the Church, which may open a side door through
which we can get around the impasse we are now experiencing on this very
difficult issue.
Four Examples of Nonpriesthood Authority
Now, don’t misunderstand me. I am not saying
that priesthood is not the presiding, supervisory authority in the Church. No
one would argue this. What I am saying is that there seem to be types of
authority in the Church that, while usually created and directed by priesthood leaders,
do not seem to be part of the priesthood. Let me illustrate what I mean by
other forms of authority with some examples.
1. The
Relief Society president in my ward has authority. In fact, I would argue that
in a practical sense she has more institutional authority in our ward than I
do, even though I am a high priest. She certainly has more institutional
authority than the president of the teachers quorum, even though she does not
“hold” the priesthood or possess priesthood keys and her calling is not a
priesthood calling, as is the teachers quorum president’s. She can call
meetings, give sisters visiting teaching assignments, coordinate the care of
the afflicted, participate in ward council, and preside over Relief Society
meetings. Of course she acts and presides under the supervision of the bishop,
but so does the president of the teachers quorum. According to the first view presented
above, both of these presidents “exercise priesthood authority,” but there is obviously
a distinct difference between the two. One is a priesthood office; the other is
not.
The
relationship between Relief Society and priesthood is no simple matter,
particularly if we consider statements such as the following, which Joseph
Smith reportedly made when organizing the women’s organization: “I am glad to
have the opportunity of organizing the women, as a part of the priesthood
belongs to them.”2 What we
may be encountering here is simply a question of semantics, perhaps even
somewhat careless semantics. Joseph loved to give people authority, as long as
it was subordinate to his authority as presiding officer of the Church, and he
established a complex institutional hierarchy that required multiple levels of
authority, but he called that authority priesthood,
even when it had nothing to do with the office and ritual duties of a priest.
In the early days of the Restoration, the lesser priesthood referred only to
priests, and the high priesthood only to high priests. In April 1832, a
revelation stated that “the offices of teacher and deacon are necessary
appendages belonging unto the lesser priesthood” (D&C 84:30)—appendages,
not the essential body—and “the offices of elder and bishop are necessary
appendages belonging unto the high priesthood” (D&C 84:29). Later, as
priesthood became more an abstract principle, these offices became integral
parts of the two priesthoods, which came to be known as Aaronic and
Melchizedek. Whatever authority Joseph was intending to bestow upon the Relief
Society, however, it was suspended by his death, and when Brigham Young
resurrected the society several years later, in several ways it was not really
the same organization Joseph authorized.
2. Today
we have a highly organized Church, with a complex hierarchical pyramid of
authority that we call priesthood, but the institution—particularly the
corporate support structure that has grown up around the ecclesiastical
core—cannot easily fit within the naturally restrictive bounds of an all-male
priesthood. Similar to the Relief Society president example mentioned above,
middle managers in the departments at Church headquarters exercise authority in
a variety of ways. None of these managers, however, exercise authority as a
function of their priesthood. Indeed, some (the female managing editor of the Friend magazine, for example) do not
hold the priesthood. Rather, these individuals exercise institutional authority
in a manner very similar to that of a middle manager in any worldly
corporation. They do this under the supervision of priesthood advisers, but
they are not exercising priesthood in their jobs.
3.
Another example of nonpriesthood authority in the Church occurs in its missions.
Young male missionaries are called to be district leaders, zone leaders, and
assistants to the mission president as if these were priesthood offices, but
they are not. Missionaries called to these positions of leadership and
administrative authority are not set apart or ordained or sustained by the vote
of other missionaries. (I should add that mission president is perhaps the only
high-level calling in the Church that is not sustained by the vote of those
over whom he presides, which places it at variance with the law of common
consent.) Because so many sister missionaries are now entering the field, new
leadership positions have been created for them, called “sister training
leaders.”3 Although these new positions are of course not priesthood
offices, neither are the leadership positions occupied by male missionaries.
But they are positions of
institutional authority. Which brings up the question of why a sister
missionary could not serve as a zone leader or assistant to the president.4
The argument may be made that this would allow women in the mission to preside
over men, but we already have this arrangement in the Primary auxiliary in
almost every ward in the Church, including mine, where I answered to the
Primary president before I was recently released.
4. A final
example that is quite different but very much related to the previous three can
be illustrated by the frequent situation that occurs in part-member families
where the wife is a member but her husband is not. Who presides in the home
when a son turns twelve and is ordained to the Aaronic Priesthood? Certainly
not the twelve-year-old, even though he is the only priesthood holder in the
house. And what about six years later when that son turns eighteen, becomes an
adult, and is ordained to the Melchizedek Priesthood? In no less an official
source than “The Family: A Proclamation to the World,” we find this statement:
“By divine design, fathers are to preside over their families in love and
righteousness and are responsible to provide the necessities of life and
protection for their families.”5 This statement in no way insinuates
that the father must have the priesthood in order to preside. According to
President Joseph F. Smith, “There is no higher authority in matters relating to
the family organization, and especially when that organization is presided over
by one holding the higher Priesthood, than that of the father.”6 The
parenthetical clause here is just that, parenthetical, which means that it can
be dropped from the sentence without impairing its basic meaning. Therefore,
according to President Smith, the highest authority in any family is the
father, whether he is a baptized member or not. But how can this be possible?
The home is the fundamental unit of the Church, we are taught. How then, can
someone who is not even a Church member preside over the fundamental Church
unit, and in some cases preside over someone who holds the Melchizedek
Priesthood? Apparently, the biological (or even adoptive) authority of the
father outranks priesthood authority. And what about the situation where an
aged high priest goes to live in the home of his son who became inactive at age
fifteen and is still only a teacher in the Aaronic Priesthood. Who presides? In
this case, home ownership would probably trump priesthood rank.
This
concept of the father, or husband, presiding in the family runs into
difficulties, however, when considered in tandem with another statement in the
Family Proclamation: “Fathers and mothers are obligated to help one another as
equal partners.” How can fathers and mothers be equal partners if the father
presides over the mother? I will have more to say about the sometimes confusing
notion of presiding, in families and elsewhere, later in this series, but for
now let us merely acknowledge the very real possibility that priesthood is not
the only authority in the Church, nor does it preside in every circumstance.
Women and Authority
What is
the difference, then, between priesthood authority and these other possible types
of authority in the Church? One of the primary differences is that performing
certain ordinances is limited to the priesthood (the only function the word itself
actually suggests). But, as mentioned in a previous post, even this was not
always as strictly defined as it is today. Women and girls at an earlier time,
for instance, were allowed to prepare the sacrament for church meetings and
perform other tasks that are now the domain of priesthood holders.7
And for decades after the establishment of the Church, women also laid hands on
the sick and afflicted and blessed them. They performed these healings not
through the priesthood but through their faith, in harmony with this declaration
in the Book of Mormon: “And these signs shall follow them that believe—in my
name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall
take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them;
they shall lay hands on the sick and they shall recover” (Mormon 9:24). We
might well ask how laying hands on the sick and healing them through faith in
Jesus Christ can be construed as not
“acting in the Lord’s name,” which again illustrates the difficulty associated
with the abstract definition of priesthood we embrace today. We might also ask
how, in a more official ritualistic capacity, women are permitted to officiate
in certain temple ordinances? How can they perform priestly functions without
holding an authority we define as priesthood?
One
answer is to insist that women do indeed exercise priesthood authority, but
without actually having the priesthood. If we accept the idea that priesthood
is the only authority in the Church, this explanation does indeed have some merit.
But it leaves too many questions unanswered and even creates new questions that
are very difficult to answer.
I don’t
want to be difficult here, and I don’t want to openly argue with an Apostle,
especially Elder Oaks, who has always been one of my favorite Genera
Authorities. I realize that his assertion (that anyone who receives a calling
from someone with priesthood keys is exercising priesthood authority) is a
generous gesture toward women in a spirit of inclusion, but in the attempt to
make space for women under the umbrella of priesthood authority, this assertion
actually expands our already nebulous definition of priesthood and creates
further ambiguity. If that is all priesthood is—the performance of a necessary
function under commission from someone who holds priesthood keys—then everyone
who performs any function in the Church, from the lowliest Primary teacher to
the general president of the Relief Society, exercises priesthood authority in
their calling. But this is where an expanding definition gets us into murky
waters and can bruise already tender feelings. Regardless of how broadly we try
to define priesthood, female Primary teachers, sister missionaries, and Relief
Society general presidents know that they do not actually have the priesthood, an abstract authority that is bestowed on men
and boys through ordination and that
enables them to perform priesthood
functions, such as baptizing, blessing the sacrament, and anointing the sick.
If sister missionaries are really exercising priesthood authority in their
labors, why then are they not allowed to baptize their investigators who desire
to join the Church? If they really do have priesthood authority (you can’t
exercise it without having it), it is difficult to understand why they should
not be able to baptize under the keys held by the mission president. But they
cannot, which means, quite plainly, that they do not have priesthood authority,
and to tell them they do in an effort to smooth over troubled waters may only
make things worse and bring a new level of confusion to the issue.
This
notion (that anyone who has received an assignment from a priesthood leader is
exercising priesthood authority) is also undermined by the status of black male
members of the Church before 1978. Some of them served in their wards and
branches in various nonpriesthood capacities. They received these callings from
priesthood leaders. According to this reasoning, these black men were
exercising priesthood authority by teaching Primary, leading the music, and
coaching Young Men’s basketball teams. But according to teachings of Church
leaders at the time, they were “denied the priesthood; under no circumstances
[could] they hold this delegation of authority from the Almighty.”8 Any
attempt to explain to them that they were actually exercising priesthood
authority while being specifically denied that authority would have been
confusing at best, offensive at worst. So why is this reasoning deemed
acceptable when addressing questions about women and the priesthood? This is
perplexing.
As suggested
above, many women do have some sort of unnamed, undefined institutional
authority, but I would argue that it is not priesthood. Consequently, all our
attempts to try to include female Church members in the priesthood in some
indirect or tangential way only end up offending and alienating many of them,
because there are so many things this oblique “exercise” of priesthood does not
include. If we are really serious about claiming that priesthood is the only
authority in the Church and that anyone who fulfills a calling under priesthood
direction is exercising priesthood authority, reason suggests that we simply
make this official by ordination. Otherwise, we find ourselves in increasingly troubled
definitional waters with no clear way to resolve the confusion created by our
problematic priesthood lexicon.
Presiding and Nonpresiding Positions
Because
of our abstract definition of priesthood, exercising this authority in
Mormondom involves more than just performing ordinances; it also encompasses
the right of presidency, or the right to preside. All presiding positions at
the general Church level and in all major subdivisions of the organization
(stakes, missions, districts, wards, and branches) are reserved for priesthood
holders—for men.9 But what about nonpresiding positions? Is there
any apparent reason why women could not be called as, say, high councilors or clerks,
which are not priesthood offices and really have nothing to do with presiding?
And what about a presiding position such as Sunday School president, which is
not a priesthood office?
Interestingly,
when we move past the “important” leadership positions, there are other
presiding positions in the Church that seem almost of a different species. For
instance, presiding positions in ward priesthood quorums or groups are, in
practice, very similar to presiding positions in auxiliary organizations,
especially Relief Society and Young Women. Thus, at lower levels in the Church
hierarchy, there seem to be presiding positions for men and presiding positions
for women. Both types are positions of authority, but only one is called
priesthood, even though they are quite analogous in practice. I will explore
the differences and similarities between these two types of presiding positions
later in the context of priesthood keys and quorums.
In
conclusion, the only acceptable avenue out of this increasingly confusing maze
of explanations regarding priesthood and authority in the Church seems to be
the admission that priesthood is only one kind of divine authority and that
there are, in fact, other kinds. This admission may lead us to consider new possibilities,
such as the validity of the ancient scriptural notion that priesthood and
authority are distinct concepts, that priesthood is linguistically and
logically connected to officiating in priestly rituals, and that priesthood and
institutional leadership may not necessarily be coterminous. These are
certainly radical ideas, but they have a fairly solid basis in the Bible and
the Book of Mormon.
What I
have tried to point out in this post and the previous three is that our unique
definition of priesthood leaves us
somewhat in no-man’s land.10 We are stuck somewhere between a rather
restrictive scriptural/historical idea of priesthood as merely the capacity of
being a priest (performing the ritualistic functions that a priest performs)
and the more expansive (and apparently expanding) modern idea of priesthood as
the institutional authority that enables a person to lead or speak or act in
the Church in an official or governing capacity. The idea that there are other
types of authority in the Church that are not designated “priesthood”
illustrates the problematic nature of a priesthood that is neither completely
restrictive nor completely expansive.
________________________
1. See Dallin H. Oaks, “The Keys and Authority of the
Priesthood,” Ensign 44, no. 5 (May
2014): 51.
2. Sarah Granger Kimball, “Auto-biography,” Woman’s Exponent 12, no. 7 (September 1,
1885): 51.
3. “Church Adjusts Mission Organization to Implement
‘Mission Leadership Council,’” Newsroom, The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, http://www.mormonnewsroom.org/article/church-adjusts-mission-organization-implement-mission-leadership-council.
4. I heard recently of a mission in which the mission
president organized an entire zone of female missionaries, complete with female
district and zone leaders. It is significant to note that these female leaders
did not preside over any male missionaries.
5. The First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve
Apostles, “The Family: A Proclamation to the World,” https://www.lds.org/topics/family-proclamation.
6. Joseph F. Smith, Gospel Doctrine (Deseret Book Company, 1968), 286–87. Father,
Consider Your Ways, a pamphlet published by the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles in 1973, concurs: “Fatherhood is leadership, the most important kind
of leadership. It has always been so; it always will be so. Father, with the
assistance and counsel and encouragement of your eternal companion, you preside
in the home.” Pages 4–5, quoted in Ezra Taft Benson, “To the Fathers in
Israel,” Ensign 17, no. 11 (November
1987): 49. See also Dallin H. Oaks, “Priesthood Authority in the Family and the
Church,” Ensign 35, no. 11 (November
2005): 24–27, where Elder Oaks explains why his single mother presided in the
home even when he was ordained a deacon.
7. Many of the duties associated today with Aaronic
Priesthood offices evolved over time and were not institutionalized until as
late as the 1950s. Of course, at one time youth were not given the priesthood
at all, and adults were ordained to the Aaronic Priesthood offices. For a
recounting of the evolution of the Aaronic Priesthood and a listing of current
priesthood duties that do not actually require the priesthood, passing the
sacrament among them, see William G. Hartley, “From Men to Boys: LDS Aaronic
Priesthood Offices, 1829–1996,” Journal
of Mormon History 22, no. 1 (1996): 117–18, 129–31. This article is
reprinted in William G. Hartley, My
Fellow Servants: Essays on the History of the Priesthood (Provo, Utah: BYU
Studies, 2010), 37–86. Hartley quotes President Heber J. Grant saying that
“there was ‘no rule in the Church’ that only priesthood bearers could carry the
sacrament to the congregation after it was blessed” (130).
8. Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, 2d ed. (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1966), 527.
9. Some would bring up the general auxiliary
presidents in this context, but the Relief Society General President no longer
presides over the Churchwide Relief Society. Ward Relief Society presidents are
presided over by their bishops, not, I should add, by their stake Relief
Society presidents. This fruit of Correlation creates the strange situation in
which we have presidents who do not preside. General and stake auxiliary
presidents function more in the mode of consultants, not file leaders.
10. It is tempting to render this idiom “no-woman’s
land” here, but I’m sure any attempt at either humor or political correctness
would be offensive to someone, so I will resist the temptation. By the same
token, “no-man’s land” will probably offend others, so I’m in a no-win
situation. Nevertheless, the term is exactly right, regardless of its sexist
overtones, so I will use it.
This was a fascinating post: Well reasoned and appreciated. I believe I see the contradiction in claiming that women and males of African descent prior to 1978 act with the authority of the priesthood whenever they are called to serve by those with priesthood authority to preside, while simultaneously denying each demographic the authority to officiate in the ordinance of the priesthood.
ReplyDeleteIn my mind, only one single theological distinction differentiates the priesthood authority a male exercises from the priesthood authority a female exercises, since Elder Oaks must be correct when he states that: "but what other authority can it be? ... Whoever functions in an office or calling received from one who holds priesthood keys exercises priesthood authority in performing her or his assigned duties." The alternative -- that Elder Oaks is mistaken -- cannot really be taken seriously.
For me, that distinction is that only males -- by virtue of having the priesthood conferred upon them when ordained to an office and quorum of that priesthood, are eligible to receive priesthood keys -- either by ordination (Apostle), by setting apart (Stake President, Bishop, et al.), or by delegation (Temple Sealer). Those callings that do not receive priesthood keys when set apart (Relief Society President, High Priest Group Leader, Temple Ordinance Worker, et al.) are those who act, as stated by Elder Oaks, under the authority of the priesthood of the one who holds those keys. No one who was ordained to any office of either the Aaronic or Melchizedek Priesthoods in the church can officiate in ANY ordinance of the priesthood that is a matter of church record (which exempts father's blessings and anointing the sick, etc.) unless the the one who holds the keys authorizes that person to officiate in that ordinance. You cannot bless the Sacrament for your own family nor baptize your own child without getting the Bishop's approval, just as you cannot participate in the ordinances of the temple without a recommend signed by those that hold the keys to preside in both the ward and stake in which you reside. In other words, a male Melchizedek Priesthood holder has barely any more authority to use what we colloquially would call "his priesthood" than a female who has not been ordained: Essentially zip! To me the most significant distinction is that the male can receive priesthood keys by virtue of his calling, while the female can only receive a priesthood calling without keys.
-- Richard K.