Matthew Harris (Second-Class Saints), 7/3/24

Wednesday, Jul 03, 2024 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM

EVENING WITH THE AUTHOR
 

We are very excited to announce that Matt Harris will be here to speak about Second-Class Saints: Black Mormons and the Struggle for Racial Equality (published by Oxford University Press) on Wednesday, July 3. He will be here from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., will speak at 6:00, and answer questions and sign books before and after that time. We hope you will be able to make it that night but, if not, we can mail a signed copy or hold one here at the store for pick-up.  To RSVP on Facebook, click here.


On June 9, 1978, the phones at the headquarters of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were ringing nonstop. Word began to spread that a momentous change in church policy had been announced and everyone wanted to know: was it true? The answer would have profound implications for the church and American society more broadly.

On that historic day, LDS church president Spencer W. Kimball announced a revelation lifting the church's 126-year-old ban barring Black people from the priesthood and Mormon temples. It was the most significant change in LDS doctrine since the end of polygamy almost 100 years earlier.

Drawing on never-before-seen private papers of LDS apostles and church presidents, including Spencer W. Kimball, Matthew L. Harris probes the plot twists and turns, the near-misses and paths not taken, of this incredible story. While the notion that Kimball received a revelation might imply a sudden command from God, Harris shows that a variety of factors motivated Kimball and other church leaders to reconsider the ban, including the civil rights movement, which placed LDS racial policies and practices under a glaring spotlight, perceptions of racism that dogged the church and its leaders, and Kimball's own growing sense that the ban was morally wrong.

Harris also shows that the lifting of the ban was hardly a panacea. The church's failure to confront and condemn its racial theology in the decades after the 1978 revelation stifled their efforts to reach Black communities and made Black members the target of racism in LDS meetinghouses. Vigilant members pestered church leaders to repudiate their anti-Black theology, forcing them to live up to the creed in Mormon scripture that "all are alike unto God." Deeply informed, engagingly written, and grounded in deep archival research, Harris provides a compelling and detailed account of how Mormon leaders lifted the priesthood and temple ban, then came to reckon with the church's controversial racial heritage.


Second-Class Saints: Black Mormons and the Struggle for Racial Equality. Oxford University Press. 460 pp. Hardback, $39.95. To purchase online, click here.


Matthew L. Harris is Professor of History at Colorado State University Pueblo, where he has taught since 2005. He specializes in race and religion, civil rights, Mormon history, African American history, legal history, and American religious history.


Also by Matt Harris

The Mormon Church & Blacks: A Documentary History. University of Illinois Press. Paperback. $25.00

Thunder from the Right: Ezra Taft Benson in Mormonism and Politics. University of Illinois Press. Paperback. $27.95

Watchman on the Tower: Ezra Taft Benson and the Making of the Mormon Right. University of Utah Press. Paperback. $34.95

The LDS Gospel Topics Series: A Scholarly Engagement. Signature Books. Paperback. $19.95


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