Last week I wrote about Joanna Brooks’s then-upcoming appearance on The Daily Show, arguing that the increasing prominence of liberal Mormons is good for the institutional church, even if the mainstream doesn’t realize it.
She appeared Thursday night, and the next morning the Bloggernacle, and particularly the Bloggernacle-adjacent forums, were a-chatter. It’s hard to distill the flurry of opinion into a single statement other than to say something that isn’t news: Joanna is controversial, yo. Her interview re-ignited debates about authenticity, honesty, and loyalty to the institutional church that have been raging ever since she and other liberal Mormons arrived on the national scene.
So this week I want to address a different, and to my mind more important, question. Forget about the institution; is the rise of liberal Mormons helping individuals, or is it doing them harm?
I want to look at this question from a purely utilitarian perspective. I don’t care if you think liberal Mormonism isn’t real Mormonism, or if you find liberal Mormonism no more tenable evidentiarily than mainstream Mormonism. Beliefs, true or false, are not harmful or helpful per se. I also don’t care what you think of Brooks and the others personally — whether you think they are exploiting the “Mormon Moment” for professional or pecuniary gain. I only want to examine how liberal Mormonism impacts the well-being of those who encounter it.
Let’s start with where we are most likely to agree: Mormonism, as an institution, causes harm to individuals. In particular, this harm is rooted in the institution’s reactionary policies. Women are marginalized, intellectuals and skeptics are subject to pressure, and LGBT individuals are rejected outright. If Mormonism weren’t a reactionary institution — if it liberalized at the same rate as the rest of society — it wouldn’t be the specific cause of this type of suffering. (Of course this isn’t all Mormonism does, and it isn’t even primarily what it does. Mormonism does plenty of good. And I’ll even concede that there are aspects of conservative Mormonism that do good — albeit mostly for white, heterosexual, middle-to-upper-class men.)
Given the above, the question can be rephrased this way: To what extent does the increasing prominence of liberal Mormonism check the institution’s reactionary tendencies, and to what extent does it enable them?
I’ve heard plenty of people, mostly disaffected and former Mormons, argue the latter. I have to confess that I have plenty of respect for Brooks and other liberal Mormons; I don’t share their beliefs, but I almost invariably find them to be intelligent, authentic, and honest. So it’s tempting to write off their criticisms as nothing more than the knee-jerk anger of those who have concluded that Mormonism is Categorically Bad, and that anything that benefits the institution is also Bad.
However, many of the criticisms have merit, and arguments motivated by anger aren’t necessarily unsound, so I’ve summarized the ones I find most compelling. (I encountered most of these on forums with privacy agreements; it wouldn’t be Kosher for me to quote verbatim. I’ve also reworded the arguments to make them more convincing.)
- Liberal Mormons misrepresent Mormonism to the public. Listening to Brooks on The Daily Show, you’d get the impression that it’s unremarkable for Mormons to question the institution, to espouse feminism, or to support LGBT rights. But most Mormons, and certainly most Mormons of influence, do not believe this way. She minimizes the extent to which lived Mormonism is reactionary, which gives the church cover to persist in being reactionary without suffering the PR consequences.
- Liberal Mormonism isn’t going to affect the institution’s policy. Take the rescinding of the priesthood ban as an example. The church didn’t change its mind because liberal Mormons were able to exert their influence. It did so because it suffered a decade of devastating external pressure. The institution tolerates its liberal members as much as it has to, but it doesn’t embrace them, and it certainly doesn’t heed them on policy.
- Even if liberals do manage to influence church policy, all they accomplish is to help the church survive. Institutional Mormonism is inherently conservative, and all its liberalization has ever done — from ending polygamy to rescinding the priesthood ban — is make the church just liberal enough to fit within the political mainstream. Upon liberalization, Mormonism remains reactionary, but it lives to fight another day. On balance it would be better to let the institution languish in its radicalism, suffer a major loss in membership and influence, and no longer have the power to hurt so many people.
These are fair criticisms, but I don’t think they bear scrutiny. Said scrutiny is therefore applied:
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Misrepresentation: In her interview, Brooks makes it clear that she’s among a 20 percent minority of (politically) liberal Mormons, and she’s explicit about the tension between liberals — whose goal is simply to “get along” — and the conservative mainstream. I suspect that her increasing prominence mostly alerts the public to the existence of liberal Mormons. Before, if they ever bothered to think about it, the average member of the public might assume that Mormons are lockstep in their social and political conservatism. Now — again, if they bother to think about it! — they realize that there’s a minority who dissent from the mainstream.
But even if the public overestimates the degree to which liberal Mormons represent the mainstream, it puts the institution in a bind. If Mormonism is perceived publicly as tolerant, every reactionary move costs the institution more political capital than it otherwise would. Liberal Mormons give the institution cred that it has to give up explicitly in order to take a stridently conservative stance. I visualize Liberal Mormons staring the institution down, saying, “Look at the goodwill we’ve brought your way. We dare you to retrench now.”
- Affecting policy: I do consider it unlikely that liberal Mormonism will ever have much success changing policy. The closest thing to a counter-example is Lester Bush’s celebrated 1973 Dialogue article, but, given how long the leadership had already been agonizing over the issue, I consider it more likely that Bush’s article facilitated the rescinding of the priesthood ban than effected it. The leadership already wanted to rescind the ban, and Bush’s article provided a way for them to do so while saving face. That’s not a seat at the decision-making table, to be sure, but it’s a necessary role. If Mormonism ever recognizes same-sex unions or grants women the priesthood, it likely will brandish similar justifications provided by its liberal intellectuals. In the meantime, individual members liberalize, and the harm of the institution’s reactionary nature is diluted in the tolerance of its members.
- Survival: Again I agree in part with the critics. Mormonism isn’t likely to stop being conservative anytime soon, and as long it’s a powerful institution it’s likely to do some harm. However, it isn’t clear to me that the liberalization of policy has all that much impact on the numerical success of the church. The 1970s saw the church at its most reactionary, and yet it was a fantastically successful time for Mormon missionaries. My in-laws — recovering hippies starting a family and looking for stability — joined the church in the late 70s in spite of the priesthood ban, and they certainly weren’t alone. Leaving it to its own reactionary devices won’t give the institution enough rope to hang itself; it’ll just mean that only the lynch mob is making decisions.
Mormonism isn’t going anywhere, and it’s not going to stop being a conservative institution. But Brooks and other liberal Mormons aren’t enabling Mormonism’s reactionary side. They give the church PR cover only to the extent that it tolerates their liberalism, showing the membership — and leadership — that one can get away with (measured) dissent from the orthodoxy. It’s not as much as one might hope for, but it helps far more than it harms.
Cool cool.
Brooks has produced a very personal narrative about her experience. To the extent that it might show an example of someone approaching their faith with good intent, but a determination to follow their conscience and own path, I think her story embodies some powerful concepts that are often lacking in Mormon worship and may be very healing to individuals. I think those aspects of her story, more than whether or not the church allows her dissent, are important.
Great post Matt, and good point Heidi :)
By and large, I loved the article…don’t really find much to disagree with…so I’ll reach deeper to try to engineer something to disagree with.
I think your survival point misses a lot. OK, so, I think there is something in saying that conservative, reactionary religions and organizations tend to be robust (at least more so than liberal ones)…but one criticism that could be made about JB and the rest is that they try to create ways for non-conservative and unorthodox people to stay in a church environment that may be hostile to them.
This is something that John Dehlin, for one, has shifted positions drastically one over the years. At first, he had a spirit of saying, “Hey, anyone can find a way to make staying in the church work for them! We can accept the church, warts and all, but see enough good to stay.” This (predictably) pissed off a whole bunch of ex-, former and post-Mormons.
(I think this is also how things like StayLDS *began*.)
What you’ve seen over time is people realizing that maybe it’s better for some folks to leave. Maybe it isn’t the best to try to find a way to stay in the church, no matter what. Maybe the church as an institution, as you state in your article, actually *does* cause harm to individuals.
(So, i think the shift for things like MS and stayLDS is that now, the various parties associated with these groups are pretty clear that they are destination-neutral…they aren’t trying to pull people out, but they aren’t trying to keep people in.)
Well…anyway, I think that certain contingents of liberal Mormonism aren’t destination neutral. I mean, if you just listen to any random Mormon Matters podcast, then I think in 4/5 of them, you’ll have Dan Wotherspoon point out that he would really really really like everyone to stay. It is true that the Mormonism he advocates is considerably different (to the extent that you have non-Mormons like Tim McMahan at LDS & Evangelical Conversations arguing that Dan isn’t really advocating Mormonism at all anymore)…but in the process, this approach keeps people in who probably should leave. People want to think that they can be just like Dan (when, from most signs, Dan doesn’t seem to have as much “pain” in his navigation of church as others might).
I guess I’ll put it like this: think of all of these folks in mixed orientation marriages…Josh Weed, Joshua Johanson…whatever. They might explicitly state that their path isn’t for everyone, but their articles effectively make more people think that a mixed orientation marriage is something that more people should try (because, I guess people want to believe that those experiences are generalizable…or that THEIR gay friend is the one in one hundred who may be able to pull this off.)
In the mean time, people who otherwise might simply leave the church will continue attending, paying tithing, denying their doubts, etc., to try to “make it work” like Joanna has.
I like to differentiate between (upper-case) “Church” and (lower-case) “church”, kind of like Andrew has. Is Brooks (or anyone else fighting for big tent Mormonism) really trying to directly impact the Church (official policies and doctrines of TCoJCoLDS)? Or are they more concerned with improving the church (their own wards and Sunday School classes)? Sure, having an indirect influence on the general direction of the Church is a nice thought, but I think most activists are focusing on the church.
Does this cause some people to stay active when they should simply leave instead? Maybe in the short run. But I really believe that lots of people who are leaving today could find a healthy, positive fit in the church if they just knew more like-minded people, had some mentors, and gave it a little more time. And I’m completely in favor of that. :)