Question: Were Joseph Smith and other nineteenth century Mormons not strenuously opposed to same-sex acts or intimacy?

Revision as of 17:12, 13 November 2010 by GregSmith (talk | contribs)

  1. REDIRECTTemplate:Test3

This article is a draft. FairMormon editors are currently editing it. We welcome your suggestions on improving the content.

==

Questions

==

Critics claim that Joseph Smith and other nineteenth century Mormons were not strenuously opposed to same-sex acts or intimacy, and that the modern Church's opposition to homosexual conduct is a later aberration.

To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, [[../CriticalSources|click here]]

==

Detailed Analysis

==

Historian D. Michael Quinn's book, Same-Sex Dynamics Among Nineteenth-Century Americans: A Mormon Example is almost solely responsible for this claim. Quinn's methodology and conclusions are shoddy, and have been severely criticized by LDS and non-LDS historians.

The FAIR wiki contains an analysis of this book's claims, with links to further reviews and resources: here.

==

Answer

==

The evidence does not suggest that nineteenth-century Mormons regarded homosexual acts with anything but abhorrence. Attempts to prove otherwise seem largely founded on agenda-driven writing and a distortion of the historical evidence.

== Notes == None

Further reading

FairMormon Answers articles

Template:SSA wiki

FairMormon web site

Template:SSA FAIR

External links

Template:SSA links

Printed material

Template:SSA print