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Fundamental Mormons seek recognition for polygamy
Reuters ^ | June 12, 2007 | Jason Szep

Posted on 06/12/2007 2:31:05 PM PDT by deaconjim

CENTENNIAL PARK, Arizona (Reuters) - When Ephraim Hammon returns home from a day of working construction near Arizona's border with Utah, he's greeted by his wife SherylLynne. And then by his wife Leah.

Polygamy, once hidden in the shadows of Utah and Arizona, is breaking into the open as fundamentalist Mormons push to decriminalize it on religious grounds, while at the same time stamping out abuses such as forced marriages of underage brides.

The growing confidence of polygamists and their willingness to go public come at an awkward moment for mainstream Mormons, who are now in the spotlight as Republican Mitt Romney, a prominent Mormon, seeks the U.S. presidency.

The Salt Lake City, Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or Mormon church, introduced polygamy before the Civil War but banned it in 1890 when the federal government threatened to deny Utah statehood. Today, about 40,000 "fundamentalist Mormons" in Utah and nearby states live polygamy illegally.

Romney, whose great-grandfather had five wives and whose great-great-grandfather had a dozen, has dismissed the practice as "bizarre" -- a comment that infuriates Hammon, whose father and grand-father practiced plural marriage.

"If it was me, I wouldn't apologize for my past. My ancestors did what they did. I can't help that," said Hammon, 36, who legally married SherylLynne, 32, in 1994 and was joined with Leah, 21, a decade later as his "celestial bride" in a religious ceremony that has no legal binding.

Leah bristles at the idea of women being forced into polygamy. "The women in this society are educated," she said.

Her husband likened the struggle for acceptance with the civil rights movement. "It's like the work Martin Luther King did in relation with African Americans," he said, holding year-old Ava, one of his eight children, in the living room of his three-story home in Centennial Park, a dry, dusty Arizona town run by polygamists near the Utah border.

Excommunicated by the church, they see themselves as true believers in Mormonism as practiced by founder Joseph Smith.

Historians say Smith took at least two dozen wives, some of them before 1843, the year he announced a revelation from God saying polygamy was a crucial key to entering the Kingdom of Heaven.

"I don't think the revelation that Joseph Smith received came from Christ," said John Llewellyn, a retired Salt Lake County policeman who once practiced polygamy but now campaigns against it. "I think it came from his Y (male) chromosome."

'TERRIBLY WRONG'

Llewellyn, an author of several books on polygamy, said the mainstream church could do more to stop it. Its "Woodruff Manifesto," which banned polygamy, never revoked Smith's revelation on plural marriage, which remains in section 132 of the Doctrine and Covenants, a Mormon book of scriptures.

"We believe in this continuing flow of revelation, and it's (God's) right to authorize and de-authorize -- to turn it on or turn it off," said Elder D. Todd Christofferson, a member of the Presidency of the Seventy, a leadership body of the mainstream Mormon church.

To revive polygamy, he added, the church's 96-year-old president, regarded as a living prophet, must receive a revelation from God sanctioning it.

"That's where we think that those who have left the church to pursue a polygamous lifestyle have gone terribly wrong. They assume their right to choose that and to authorize it when there is only a divine sanction possible to authorize that."

Polygamist advocate Anne Wilde said the church has the right to its beliefs, just as polygamists should be allowed their interpretation of Mormonism without persecution.

"As consenting adults, which is the key, we ought to have that choice to live that lifestyle. We live it because of strong religious convictions," said Wilde, 71.

'BIG LOVE'

The attorneys general of Utah and Arizona said in separate interviews they had no intention of prosecuting polygamists unless they commit other crimes such as taking underage brides -- a practice authorities said was rampant in a Utah-Arizona border community run by Warren Jeffs before his arrest in August.

"We are not going to go out there and persecute people for their beliefs," said Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard.

Adds Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff: "We determined six or seven years ago that there was no way we could prosecute 10,000 polygamists and put the kids into foster care. There's no way that we have the money or the resources to do that."

The last big prosecution, in 1953, backfired. Arizona's National Guard raided a polygamist colony on the Utah/Arizona border, but images of kids split from mothers, with fathers jailed, provoked national sympathy for the polygamists.

"No matter how much persecution the people have endured because of their belief, history has borne out that it will survive," said Ephraim Hammon's mother, Marlyne, who was a four-month-old baby in the colony when it was raided.

A turning point for polygamists came in August 2003 when dozens made a public stand by showing up en masse at a "polygamy summit" in St. George, Utah, organized by the Utah and Arizona attorneys general. "Before then, we discussed all these things in private," said Hammon.

Many are finding they have an unlikely ally in Hollywood, since the start of "Big Love," HBO's series about a fictional polygamous family.

But many polygamists still live discreetly in middle-class neighborhoods next to conventional families, fearing the stigma of the practice could threaten careers and cause their children to be taunted at school.

Although encouraged by the state's reluctance to prosecute them, several expressed fears of the future and want some legal protection in case the public mood turns against them.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: marriage; mormans; polygamy; romney
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First we get same sex marriages, then group marriages, and soon we'll have people marrying animals.
1 posted on 06/12/2007 2:31:09 PM PDT by deaconjim
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To: deaconjim

I saw this coming as soon as the gays started pushing for “marriage”. I’m surprised it hasn’t moved faster towards polygamy, especially up here in Canada.


2 posted on 06/12/2007 2:32:56 PM PDT by oakcon
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To: deaconjim

Well, look at the source: al-Reuters. This is a “Romney is scary” article. Al-Reuters probably has no complaint whatever about the islamists’ polygamy practices.


3 posted on 06/12/2007 2:34:11 PM PDT by hsalaw
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To: deaconjim

I’ve seen real polygamists on TV. The women are usually on the high side of three bills and ugly as hell.


4 posted on 06/12/2007 2:36:22 PM PDT by lesser_satan (FRED THOMPSON '08)
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To: deaconjim
There's no such thing as a "fundamentalist Mormon". There are ex-Mormons and never-been-Mormons. AFAIK, the great majority of the polygamists are in the second category.

Calling these polygamists "Mormons", of any stripe, is no more accurate than someone from Venezuela calling himself "American". It's just not true.

5 posted on 06/12/2007 2:37:15 PM PDT by TChris (The Republican Party is merely the Democrat Party's "away" jersey - Vox Day)
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To: hsalaw

I did note the reference to Romney, but I’m more concerned about the damage being done to society by the anything-goes crowd than I am about Romney’s campaign. Romney knew before hand what kind of problems his church could cause him, and he accepted the risk.


6 posted on 06/12/2007 2:37:54 PM PDT by deaconjim (Because He lives...)
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To: oakcon
Polygamy is forbidden by the Bible, Matthew 6:24 where it says "No man can serve two masters . . ."

But why is Romney even a keyword in this article? Ted Kennedy or Bill Clinton would be more appropriate since they were diddling with office staff while married.

7 posted on 06/12/2007 2:39:09 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Are there any men left in Washington? Or are there only cowards? Ahmad Shah Massoud)
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To: TChris
Calling these polygamists "Mormons", of any stripe, is no more accurate than someone from Venezuela calling himself "American". It's just not true.

Not to dispute the point you were making, but technically people from Venezuela are just as "American" as we are.
8 posted on 06/12/2007 2:40:46 PM PDT by deaconjim (Because He lives...)
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To: Vigilanteman
But why is Romney even a keyword in this article?

Only because he was mentioned by name in the article.
9 posted on 06/12/2007 2:41:54 PM PDT by deaconjim (Because He lives...)
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To: deaconjim
Jacob was a polygamist too. It's hardly the same as homosexual "marriage."

ML/NJ

10 posted on 06/12/2007 2:42:26 PM PDT by ml/nj
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To: TChris

I would think as followers of Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon that they possibly have as much right to it as you do.

Besides, they are following Mormonism the way it was taught by Brigham Young and Joseph Smith, and maintain that it was the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints who corrupted the “true” religion.

Which has more authority to claim themselves Mormon....LOL


11 posted on 06/12/2007 2:42:49 PM PDT by colorcountry ( We need to move away from the Kennedy Wing of the Republican Party. (Duncan Hunter))
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To: Vigilanteman
Polygamy is forbidden by the Bible, Matthew 6:24 where it says "No man can serve two masters . . ."

BWAHAHAAA!

Outstanding, VM.

12 posted on 06/12/2007 2:47:16 PM PDT by Enosh (†)
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To: deaconjim

>>>Romney knew before hand what kind of problems his church could cause him, and he accepted the risk<<<

Well, not really his church. That’s like saying being a Catholic is held against you because of what went on with the Inquisition. There’s not a single Mormon alive today whose polygamous marriage was graced with the church’s approval.

I guess you can say that there are those who hold the Inquisition against Catholics, but they’re only doing that because they’re looking for reasons to say that they hate Catholics.


13 posted on 06/12/2007 2:48:12 PM PDT by CheyennePress
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To: TChris
Well....the elders in Salt Lake City better find a way to discourage the media from calling these nuts Mormons....even "fundamentalist Mormons"....

all most people hear is "Mormon"......the fundamentalist (lunatic) part does not compute.

Soon Mormons and Mohammedans will be the same in most people's mind....and it will be a "media delight"....

they (the media) are trying mightily

14 posted on 06/12/2007 2:50:00 PM PDT by B.O. Plenty (Give war a chance...)
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To: deaconjim
Not to dispute the point you were making, but technically people from Venezuela are just as "American" as we are.

Not in the way the word is understood. That was the point I was making.

15 posted on 06/12/2007 2:53:14 PM PDT by TChris (The Republican Party is merely the Democrat Party's "away" jersey - Vox Day)
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To: deaconjim
How is they can call themselves Mormon when they live their lives against Mormon Doctrine?

They are like Catholics who support abortion.
16 posted on 06/12/2007 2:54:15 PM PDT by elizabetty (Perpetual Candidate using campaign donations for your salary - Its a good gig if you can get it.)
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To: oakcon

Polygamy is practiced and condoned by numerous and past cultures, sodomy is not. So why is the US freaking out over the prospect of polygamy and silent on the legalization of sodomy.


17 posted on 06/12/2007 2:55:10 PM PDT by Fee ( R)
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To: deaconjim
Well I have to wonder which is worse. polygamy or homosexual marriage. I think I could tolerate the former before the latter.
18 posted on 06/12/2007 2:56:26 PM PDT by Khepera (Do not remove by penalty of law!)
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To: deaconjim

You are far closer than the slight sarcasm in your post would indicate!

Seriously - There are people out there pushing for “gay marriage”, not because they are gay, but because they know that no rule regarding who (or what) you can marry will be able to stand.


19 posted on 06/12/2007 2:56:56 PM PDT by TheBattman (I've got TWO QUESTIONS for you....)
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To: deaconjim

Santorum Alert!


20 posted on 06/12/2007 3:00:15 PM PDT by TheDon (The DemocRAT party is the party of TREASON! Overthrow the terrorist's congress!)
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