960: What Happened in the Room for 1978 Revelation?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 10 ก.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 72

  • @RuthVanDerLeek
    @RuthVanDerLeek 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    From a South African person, when the ban was lifted and the African Brethren could now get the Priesthood, there was a great rejoicing amongst us, but some of the South African people left the church because of that, I think it was part of the history of the country. Personally I was really happy and some of the African Brethren who had been members for a while were also overjoyed. A few years ago I was serving in the Temple under an African Temple Presidency, except for one councilor. I know some awesome Brethren and have loved being in the church with them. I really enjoyed this interview. thank you.

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thanks for your comment. That's very interesting.

  • @ChrisRobison
    @ChrisRobison 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

    This is so good. I firmly believe that stories like this should engender more humility in our religious approaches. It's my opinion that these hardliners were so certain about what they thought was truth, that they were completely blind to the damage they were perpetuating. I agree with Matt that conversation has to start before revelation. I just wonder what they are afraid of happening if the conversation starts in say, women and the priesthood. It does seem like that topic is heating up again recently.

  • @maryannstout7600
    @maryannstout7600 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    This is all so incredibly interesting. Learning about the General Authorities of the Church and how they work together is very humbling. I had been thinking and praying 🙏 for the ban to be lifted for a long time. I remember that I was in the kitchen kneading bread when I heard it over the radio. I stopped right away and started dancing around the house laughing and crying and singing all at the same time. I was so happy. We lived on Main Street in Rome,NY and I wanted to do cartwheels down the street in front of a marching band, like in the musical The Music Man. I could envision myself cartwheeling down the street in front of Robert Preston and those Seventy-six Trombones. That’s how elated I felt.🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉

    • @gwenwilliams8117
      @gwenwilliams8117 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Interesting conversation. My reply is only about the women receiving the priesthood. As I understand what Joseph was trying to teach, is that the priesthood is given to women in the second anointing. I do not believe that this ordinance is given in the church today. Man is not without woman or woman without man in the eternal world. The first anointing is not a sealing, it is only a promise to be sealed. Hyrum Smith's wife, Mary Fielding, had this priesthood when she was crossing the plains and healed her oxen with the laying on of hands. This does not mean that we are incapable of giving our children and others a blessing and receiving revelation for ourselves.

  • @hattswank5313
    @hattswank5313 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Such a great episode. Not gonna lie, the bit about the quintessential old guy popping off at the wrong (or right, depending on your point of view) made me laugh out loud. So funny!

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  29 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Me too. That is such a funny, interesting story!

    • @matthewharris7151
      @matthewharris7151 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I have to confess that this is one of the most interesting things I found in my research!

  • @carlecarl42
    @carlecarl42 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    That was awesome. I truly enjoyed it.

  • @sammiller4321
    @sammiller4321 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    The interesting thing about history and its information is what to do with it once we have it. I find it intriguing how we can all still come up to different conclusions And then know the best way to act and use, and support and go forward with the knowledge we now have. Church history is an interesting one.

  • @mrdayyumyum3712
    @mrdayyumyum3712 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    well spoken

  • @THE_KlNG
    @THE_KlNG 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    What was it like when the first presidency discussed this with the 12?

  • @Ihaveatemple_recommend
    @Ihaveatemple_recommend 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Love this

  • @richardredick7515
    @richardredick7515 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    @Rick: Regarding women and priesthood:
    1) "All are alike unto God"
    2) Jesus is the Great High Priest for MAN, male AND female. He is the Exemplar to MAN, male AND female. He is exemplary of what we should do, and of what we will become if we follow Him. Surely, He is the example of what we may hope for as we honor and magnify the priesthood.

  • @bethsyoung641
    @bethsyoung641 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    I’ve been a member for 50 years, joined when I was in the Army. I find it harder and harder to find any relevance coming from church leadership regarding my spiritual journey. The politics, the petty meanness, the greed and arrogance, is so un-Christlike. What are we even trying to accomplish anymore?

    • @trueandfaithful
      @trueandfaithful 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @bethsyoung641 I think if you want to find relevance from the examples of church leadership in your spiritual journey, it may perhaps be in recognizing that it is indeed a journey. Both for you and the brethren. I have been taught my entire life that this mortal journey is like a refiners fire. We cannot become like Heavenly Father without the agonizing bendings, moldings, and poundings experienced in the journey. The church and its leadership are no different. We learn line upon line, and revelation for the church also comes as a result of intense opposition and trial. Church leadership are also working out their own exaltation the same way we are. And they're learning personal lessons from lessons given to them in service to the Savior in his church.
      It is my testimony that church leadership is 100% called of and by God. They were fore ordained to fill these positions here in mortality. And I know they speak the will of God. But the will of agod is not simply given to them. Revelation requires effort. Interestingly, it also requires hard lessons to be learned in the refiners' fire 🔥.

    • @maryannstout7600
      @maryannstout7600 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@bethsyoung641 I remember hearing something about the early Christian Church with original Apostles. It seems that they had serious differences of opinions about different things that Jesus said and did before he was crucified. Peter, James, and John were known as the Sons of Thunder. I suspect that means that they had short tempers. Peter cut off the ear of one of the temple guards who accompanied Judas Iscariot to the Garden of Gethsemane to arrest Jesus. Then later when asked if he was part of Jesus’s disciples. He ended up denying Jesus three times.
      I think (but not positive) that James and John also had bad tempers. After all, being called the Sons of Thunder is indicative of that. I don’t have any evidence of that except for their nickname.
      Then there’s Jesus’s own family. Not all of them accepted him as the Messiah. His brother, James, did accept him but how long did that take.
      Judas Iscariot was the treasurer but he turned Jesus in to the Jewish leaders.
      And now we come to Saul , who persecuted the saints but who had the vision of Jesus and converted. Afterwards he seemed to have difficulty finding mission companions to stay with him. He and Peter had some trouble getting along with the question of “what do we do with the gentiles”.Peter, James and John represented the church as the First Presidency. And Paul had to convince them over the gentiles and circumcision. They look like they had some of the same grievances with each other as the prophet and apostles did back in the 1950’s, 60’s, 70’s. If not the same thing then their own set of problems, prejudices, arrogance, etc.
      Let’s not forget the trials that the church endured in Kirkland, and every place that the church has settled down in since then.
      We can go on and on about how human the leaders are. It’s easy to find reasons to think badly about them and the church and each other.
      But that doesn’t get us where we should be. This is the Lord’s Church, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. We need to be cultivating characteristics emulating the Savior. I’m a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints because I believe that Jesus Christ really
      is the head of the church. I believe that we have latter day scriptures: the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants and the Pearl of Great Price? I believe that Russell M. Nelson is the Lord’s mouthpiece and prophet today, and that the other General Authorities are als

    • @maryannstout7600
      @maryannstout7600 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Oops, wrong button. I believe that the Twelve Apostles are called of God. I love the Church with all my heart. For all the human flaws there are, you can see that there is much, much more to be learned in this church. I’m grateful for my membership and thank you for putting up with this ranting.

    • @kathymunsee6468
      @kathymunsee6468 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      How long we were deceived.

  • @ericdanielski4802
    @ericdanielski4802 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Interesting interview.

  • @Pokephantom
    @Pokephantom 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Very fun and deep!

  • @rodhancock3549
    @rodhancock3549 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Doctrine and Covenants 85:6-8, Hartman Rector Jr., who was my mission president and member of Seven Presidents of Seventy said this scripture had reference to President Kimball and President Lee in conjunction to the situation of the priesthood given to all worthy male members. Is there anything to that scripture and its validity?

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  5 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      The context of D&C 85 is this:
      "Revelation given through Joseph Smith the Prophet, at Kirtland, Ohio, November 27, 1832. This section is an extract from a letter of the Prophet to William W. Phelps, who was living in Independence, Missouri. It answers questions about those Saints who had moved to Zion but who had not followed the commandment to consecrate their properties and had thus not received their inheritances according to the established order in the Church."
      The verses you mention reference the "one mighty and strong." This is an oft-used scripture when a new fundamentalist Mormon prophet proclaims himself "the one mighty and strong."
      Now, should we try to be like Nephi, and liken the scriptures unto ourselves? I suppose. But to do so is to take it out of context (which I'm guessing you would agree that the fundy Mormon prophets are doing.) I suppose I can see some parallels with Kimball and Lee, but if you're trying to imply that Lee "shall fall by the shaft of death, like as a tree that is smitten by the vivid shaft of lightning." And Kimball is "one mighty and strong, holding the scepter of power in his hand," well, that's pretty dang harsh towards Lee. I wouldn't want to make that judgment.
      I've heard others make the comparison. Perhaps that is what Rector is saying. (I don't know. I wasn't there. I only know what you told me.) But I think so suggest that about Lee might make oneself "smitten by the vivid shaft of lightning." I'm not sure that's something I would want to say in Church, that's for sure. I would expect pushback from the Lee family for sure, as well as a lot of other Church members.
      Maybe I'm completely misinterpreting what you were saying too.

    • @rodhancock3549
      @rodhancock3549 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@GospelTangents thank you for your comment.

    • @rodhancock3549
      @rodhancock3549 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@GospelTangents I believe what Rector was saying that President Lee was much younger than Kimball and was thought to have outlive Kimball but his days were shortened so Kimball could proceed unabated with the priesthood change.

  • @alexdsr1
    @alexdsr1 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Though this video is interesting, it pretends to know what happened in a room in 1978.
    How do we really know when it’s hard to know the truth what happened a week ago on the news.
    It’s been shown that people who witnessed an accident often give different perspectives of what happened.
    I find the video interesting but I take it with a grain of salt as to its accuracy. Just saying.

    • @matthewharris7151
      @matthewharris7151 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      It's not hard to know the truth if you have access to the best sources: diaries, meeting minutes, letters, etc. Because I had access to the Spencer W. Kimball Papers and other sources, I was able to construct a rich narrative about what happened in the room on June 1 and June 8. I would encourage you to get my book. One of the limitations of a podcast is that listeners can't see the sources I use. But in the book it's different. I have hundreds and hundreds of end notes, so you can see exactly where I glean my material. Read my book and I think you'll have a different view about what I've presented in the podcast.

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I was going to say the same thing! Marion Hanks was in the room and details what was said when he heard about the revelation. So we get to find out what Hanks wrote, and he was in the room.

    • @Qckid1
      @Qckid1 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Listening to this reminded me of my days sitting in rooms with multiple PHD's discussing various topics while watching them go at it over all kinds of things. This reminded me of that, not because their was any contention or rancor, but because the Scholar giving the interview clearly colors his conclusions with his own feelings and emotions. In fact, I've never seen scholarship or research that wasn't biased, colored or interpreted by scholars or researchers. While earning my masters degree in biology and then my doctorate, my skepticism increased dramatically.

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Are you a vulcan with no emotions? Do you prefer the teacher in Ferris Beuhler's Day off? "Buehler, Buehler, Buehler."

    • @jb512
      @jb512 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Women already have priesthood power they just aren’t ordained to priesthood offices. They are able to enter the temple and participate in priesthood ordinances, so it isn’t exactly the same as the race issue

  • @Freedom0rBust
    @Freedom0rBust 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    24:30 Women do the hold the priesthood. They do not hold priesthood offices. Women when they go through their endowments are pronounced clean, whereas men are pronounced clean through their faithfulness.
    Hence, the reason that women are not called to priesthood offices because priesthood offices are used to help men become "clean from the blood and sins of this generation".
    Equating a black priesthood ban and women priesthood ban is clear doctrinal misunderstanding.

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  26 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Your explanation is a clear doctrinal misunderstanding. It's a policy, not a doctrine.

    • @Freedom0rBust
      @Freedom0rBust 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@GospelTangents Where in the scriptures does God call women to offices in the priesthood? I"ll wait...

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  26 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@Freedom0rBust Where in the scriptures does it say it is a doctrine that women can't hold priesthood? I'll' wait....

  • @robcat2075
    @robcat2075 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    15:50 I was a teen at the time and "negro" had certainly fallen out of favor in popular culture but I knew older (well-meaning liberal) adults then who were still uncertain about the transition to "black". "Negro" and "colored" had been the polite terms since forever and they were no more comfortable saying "black" than they were saying "groovy" or "fuzz" or "hang loose".
    When they did say "black" you could hear the quotes around it to signal that this was a foreign modernism to them, even into the 1980s and 90s.
    It is completely plausible that the memo on "Black is Beautiful" had not made it to the upper reaches of the LDS.

    • @lukeslc-xd8ds
      @lukeslc-xd8ds 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Negro means black. Que no?

  • @mauricetwitchell6413
    @mauricetwitchell6413 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I just want to say I believe that God band the priesthood to the blacks and the atonement of Christ removed that band

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  วันที่ผ่านมา

      I believe God had nothing to do with the ban and Matt's book proves that.

  • @kathymunsee6468
    @kathymunsee6468 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Why was Hugh B Brown dropped?

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      We answered that in a couple of videos. Check these out: th-cam.com/video/023tWoriAqA/w-d-xo.html
      th-cam.com/video/G9C2No5bfVY/w-d-xo.html

  • @alexdsr1
    @alexdsr1 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    I like the joke if women have the priesthood the men would have nothing to do. LoL 😂
    Like all jokes there’s a kernel of truth to that.
    In the temple, we do see the priesthood in a fuller display of things to come.
    Having said that there is a difference between men and women like there should be.
    Being equal is not being the same.
    The saddest thing today is how many members downplay the role and power that women play in bringing life into this world.
    They are influenced by the spacious building of neo- feminist.
    Yes, there are some women who can’t have children but the promise is there that someday they will. We live by the rule not the exception. Just like we don’t quit wearing seatbelts because someone survived when they weren’t wearing it.
    It is important for men to play the role and responsibility of leading the family. There is a great misandrists attitude happening in the world today.
    It is part of the goal of destroying the basic family unit and replacing it with a central world power.

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Conflating priesthood with motherhood is a silly trope that I get tired of addressing. Motherhood is similar to fatherhood. FULL STOP. Priesthood is the power to act in the name of God and has nothing to do with motherhood.

    • @ggrace1133
      @ggrace1133 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      With all due respect to your well written comment, I believe fathers and mothers are parents…..Parenthood comes to the vast majority of humankind, but only about 1/10 of 1% are members of the church, so about half that 1/10 hold the priesthood. It seems kind of irrational/illogical equating motherhood as the female equivalent to the priesthood and fatherhood as priesthood, and then cloaking that paradigm as divine gender roles. 99.9 percent of the fathers on this planet and throughout history have had zero priesthood power, but they’re still fathers without it just as mothers are mothers without it. But both parental roles are essential to raising children.
      I do believe men and women are happily, but challengingly different. Further, priesthood is not male only, for we know women are to become priestesses. The question is when?
      I’m old. I’m grateful to have been a mother, but have mourned with the many single women and infertile wives who have lived long lives childless. Promising them motherhood in the next life falls flat because all worthy single men and infertile husbands can hold priesthood power…..in this life. They do not have to wait for the next.
      I cannot express enough how much I would have loved to have joined my husband in being able to administer to a child at two in the morning. Those blessings never happened because my husband was considerate did not want to get another priesthood holder out of bed. That was sad for our children. I would have loved to have laid my hands on our children’s heads when Dad gave father’s blessings on the eve of a new school year and other important occasions…we could have given parent’s blessings. I would have loved to have given blessings to those I was a visiting teacher to when they had health issues not thought proper to tell men about in my day. So they just went without.
      Please, I hope you can discern that righteous feminism is born of women who desire equal rights and equal opportunities, and to have our dreams deemed as valuable, worthy, supported, and sacrificed for as we have our husbands.’ When I was a child, women were to obey and follow their husbands because they were actually deemed smarter, less emotional-as if emotions are negative and make a person weaker or less than. Women were deemed as too illogical and irrational to make important decisions at home or in society. Righteous feminism is seeking to make the world a better place for half the population. It is not about devaluing motherhood, or hating men, or trying to become men. It’s not even about becoming..like..men. We honor womanhood. Full stop. We want men to understand such righteous and holy desires of the daughters of God.
      Of course, the world’s view of feminism has been infiltrated with the adversary’s predictable evil influences and corrupted twists. He did this with the many historical endeavors in a male dominated world of allowing women to inherit, to own property, to vote, to serve on a jury, to be witnesses in court, to go to college, to choose their own spouse, the civil rights issues, racial issues in the church, having a career, being protected from domestic violence, sexual assault, and marital rape. It has been less than two hundred years of the six thousand total time to overcome the adversary’s twisted paradigms that all these rights, privileges, and blessings were going to ruin women and destroy families.
      Women have been disempowered for millennia. Many still are catastrophically in the world today. There is much work to be done still. Consider that we even stigmatized women in my day in church culture for not wanting 8-10 children, for using birth control when they were mentally and physically maxed out, for wanting college degrees, for divorcing, for having a career, or for even working a part-time job outside the home. We socially and spiritually “stoned” them if they dared say aloud that they’d like to hold the priesthood someday. Such were on the road to apostasy and damnation and must be quieted at all costs. Then, they began having sisters with post grad degrees and careers speak at BYU Women’s Conference in the 90’s! These women did not heed the counsel of the living prophets and were there in front of thousands on the covenant path being introduced with all their accomplishments and accolades outside of the home and motherhood! We celebrated, even as we wept because we did heed the counsel and gave up on our promptings and our dreams, for these were surely of the devil. Women in the church were only to dream of being wives and mothers. Because, you know, “motherhood is your priesthood.” When I asked, “then what is fatherhood?” no one could answer except to say it’s being a parent and the head of the household. Just like it is for the 99%.
      So, if you’re still reading, I send this message in love and with an earnest plea to please consider a paradigm shift. Even a small bit of considering and understanding some of these points may help bring more light into the world. I’m truly not intending to talk down to you, but to reach across the table of opinions and ask that you hear mine with an open heart. I’ve heard yours and honor your right to have it and hold it close to your heart. I know you mean no ill will at all. Neither do I. May God bless us to keep growing and learning, improving and reaching upward to him.

  • @lukeslc-xd8ds
    @lukeslc-xd8ds 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

    In Spanish "negro" is the word for "black". Is that an issue?

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It isn't for English speakers. I don't know about Spanish speakers.

  • @lemjwp1756
    @lemjwp1756 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    "Tom" Monson and "Jim" Faust? lol

    • @carygrantrocks
      @carygrantrocks 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @lemjwp1756 I have long found it amusing the formality with which church members "enforce" a leadership "name protocol". Even using "James Faust" instead of "James E. Faust" might get you puzzled looks or mild pushback.

    • @lemjwp1756
      @lemjwp1756 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I see it as a sign of respect for the office they hold. Being too casually familiar with those you don't personally know is odd. Exmos like to call Pres. Nelson "Rusty" in a form of derision. The New Testament also says those in leadership are worthy of "double honor." 1 Tim 5:17

    • @matthewharris7151
      @matthewharris7151 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@lemjwp1756 I mean no disrespect, so forgive me. Ninety-nine percent of the time I used proper titles. You caught me on the 1 percent. Why did I use Tom and Jim? Simply put, it's because I've read dozens of letters of theirs in which their friends called them Tom and Jim. It's just ingrained in my head. Again, no disrespect intended.

    • @lemjwp1756
      @lemjwp1756 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      No offense taken!

  • @WalterReade
    @WalterReade 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I have a different take about women and the priesthood. I'd like to see it flipped for the next 200 years, so just the women have the priesthood. I think that's the least likely option, but it's interesting to think about.

    • @ggrace1133
      @ggrace1133 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I’ve considered this as well. Here’s some insights for the switch from a mother’s perspective. Of course, men would have to really step up to domestic duties, more fatherhood hours while mother is away at church meetings and assignments, getting the kids fed and ready for bed on their own, getting them ready for church by themselves, sitting at church with them if mother is in the bishopric, getting used to being called the Stake President’s husband, the Mission President’s companion, the Temple President and whatever the male counterpart of Matron is, not having time for coaching the kids or going golfing as often…other hobbies. He’d be a “church widower.” He’d have to just about lose his ego.
      I think a lot of guys would love it, thinking they could veg out watching sports or playing video games. But homework has to be supervised, dinner stuff cleaned up, walk a crying baby, projects helped with, backpacks to get ready, diapers changed, lunches premade, baths and showers completed without flooding the bathroom, referee umpteen squabbles and the occasional bloody fist fight, clean up vomit and/or diarrhea from the car or floors, take the dog for a walk, say prayers, read scriptures, have bedtime talks for individual child anxieties and concerns, and likely do at least one load of laundry. Oh, and don’t forget to pick up the kids at a friend’s house. Oh, Oh, and it’s your turn to provide three dozen cookies-preferably homemade-for the school party tomorrow (you just found out at 9:00), while also providing team snacks at another child’s soccer game tomorrow evening. Btw, did I forget to mention all the practices and orthodontic appointments the kids have to get to before dinner? And what’s for dinner? Your priesthood blessed wife will be starving when she gets home and only has time for a quick bite before her evening duties at church. Headaches, sore backs, being sick, and utterly fatigued must be totally ignored and overcome without slowing down or the household and you will pay dearly if you do. But!….at least you’ll never have cramps or morning sickness to deal with during all this! And don’t forget to exercise and keep dieting because you still have 50 lbs. to lose from the last two cabbies and you don’t want your wife to get a wandering eye. Be sure you are dressed spiffy with neatly trimmed beard and hair when you appear at church and school functions so your wife and kids won’t be embarrassed. (Hint: cargo shorts and a t-shirt won’t cut it.) And you have to memorize that this is your priesthood. It’s fun. It’s rewarding. It’s essential. It’s your role. Isn’t it great?! Hope you don’t get bored or depressed. Hope you don’t become so tired you lose your libido. Hope you don’t feel unappreciated or invisible. Hope you don’t feel hopeless at times.
      And I especially hope you don’t feel lonely…
      But honestly, it’s all part of the incredible challenges of being the parent at home. After all, it’s your role and should be fulfilling and all you could ever want to do in your adult life. (PS: it’s 24/7/365/50-70 years. It all goes on vacation with you too.)

    • @WalterReade
      @WalterReade 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@ggrace1133 Indeed. Life is often grueling. And I think both sides would be shocked if they believe the grass is greener on the other side.

    • @ggrace1133
      @ggrace1133 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@WalterReade totally agree.

  • @roughout
    @roughout 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

    When women are ordained to the Priesthood there will no longer be a need for men in the Church. We'll just let the women do it.

    • @GospelTangents
      @GospelTangents  26 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      You mean like ancient Christianity and the Community of Christ, and other mainline denominations?