In September 1993, six noted Mormon intellectuals and feminists were expelled from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the LDS Church). The Salt Lake Tribune dubbed these individuals the "September Six," an alliterative name which was commonly used in the media.
While the LDS Church publicly announces when a person has been excommunicated, the church refuses to discuss details about why the person was excommunicated, even if details of the proceedings are made public by that person. The church's point of view is missing, therefore, as to why each of the September Six were excommunicated. Based on many of their own comments, and other sources, the following describes what is known or believed about the individuals' reasons for excommunication and their current relationship to Mormonism.
Whitesides has not returned to activity in the church again as of 2004. Reports state that she has pursued a personal spiritual growth by searching for a more feminine conception of God.
Gileadi has been re-baptized, and is an active member of the Church. He has since written Isaiah Decoded, a book now carried by the church owned Deseret Book chain.
Toscano has stated that he lost his faith and said he feels remorse only for being so angry at the LDS Church. His wife Margaret Toscano was excommunicated in November 2000, her story can be found on the Sunstone Magazine website Tidying Up Loose Ends?: The November 2000 Excommunication of Margaret Toscano 2001 Salt Lake Sunstone Symposium.
Hanks had been researching, writing and lecturing on Mormon history and women's topics since 1975. Mormon studies continued as her area of scholarly work after the excommunication, expanded by religious and liturgical studies. Privately, she pursued Gnostic worship, and was ordained minor clergy in the Ecclesia Gnostica in 1999.* She continues her work with women's studies in religion, particularly Mormon, Christian and Gnostic traditions.
Anderson still attends LDS church services as a non-member. She continues to write on Mormon issues, including editing the multi-volume Case Reports of the Mormon Alliance, an ongoing collection of interviews with Mormons who believe they were unfairly disciplined by the Church.*
A few years after his excommunication, Quinn announced that he was gay. However, there is no evidence that sexuality was an issue in his excommunication.
Quinn has since published several critical studies of Mormon Hierarchy, including his two-volume work, that starts with his dissertation The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power and a companion volume The Mormon Hierarchy: Extensions of Power, a third volume is forthcoming from Signature Books in 2007. He also authored the 1996 book Same-Sex Dynamics Among Nineteenth-Century Americans: A Mormon Example, which argues that homosexuality was practiced among early Mormons.
Despite his excommunication and critical writings, Quinn remains a believing Latter Day Saint. For further information on Quinn see, Lavina Fielding Anderson's article, "DNA Mormon: D. Michael Quinn." in Mormon Mavericks: Essays on Dissenters, edited by John Sillitoe and Susan Staker, Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 2002, pp. 329-363.
This climate produced a rising Church concern about defining and maintaining orthodoxy. The Church attempted to quell dissent by warning those whom it saw as testing the boundaries -- scholars, feminists and ultraconservatives -- to abandon their dissent or face church discipline. This approach was seen by dissenters as coercive and repressive, and resulted in criticism and defensiveness on all sides.
Dissenters were unwilling to back down, bringing an institutional reaction that reverberated through all segments of Mormonism, as some BYU professors lost their jobs and LDS stake presidents began holding disiplinary councils for selected scholars and femininsts. Rather than quiet the dissent, the public reaction was intense (and unending to this day). While some Church leaders felt the excommunications were necessary, other leaders and members voiced deep disappointment; some church members protested by leaving the church.
In addition to the "Six," a larger number of scholars and feminists were questioned or threatened with discipline at that time. Some were successful in renegotiating their church memberships or delaying discipline, while others were excommunicated less visibly, after the initial shock wave. Those excommunicated after September included Brent Metcalf, David Wright, Janice Allred and eventually Margaret Toscano.
Feminists were challenging the male dominant theology in the Church, which only recognizes male deity and male priesthood. Some feminists suggested that Mormon women have an historical access to priesthood, and that Mormonism's inherent feminine theology needs expression and practice. Feminist scholars, such as Quinn, Hanks, the Toscanos, Allred, Anderson, and Whitesides, challenged sexist beliefs and assumptions, arguing for a more democratic approach to Mormon worship.
Feminists point out that a Heavenly Mother is implicit in Mormon theology, as seen in the 1845 hymn O My Father by Eliza R. Snow which mentions her briefly. Even the 1995 LDS Church statement The Family: A Proclamation to the World makes explicit reference to the existence of the human race's "heavenly parents."
Worship of the "Heavenly Mother" is generally eschewed on the grounds that scriptural sources (ranging from the Bible, to the Book of Mormon, to statements by official Church leadership) mention worship only of the Heavenly Father. Some Mormons believe that the role and nature of the Heavenly Mother will be expanded or revealed later, while others are content to leave her in a protected, unelaborated place.
Quinn, Anderson and Gileadi seemed to challenge official church positions, by publishing research that questioned official views of Mormon history. Toscano directly challenged church leadership, to change.
Most of the September Six, especially Quinn, Toscano and Anderson believe that a handful of General Authorities, notably LDS apostle Boyd K. Packer, orchestrated the excommunications. Anecdotes from individuals who attended excommunication council hearings suggest that stake presidents received directives from leaders above them to discipline theologically liberal individuals and intellectuals as if it were a local decision. Some speculate that the apparantly synchronized buildup of warnings and councils over the summer of 1993 suggested that LDS Apostles conceived of and oversaw the disciplinary measures.
However, this event had repercussions for liberal scholarship and feminism in the contemporary LDS community, greatly discouraging liberals, feminists and "critical" scholarship, while spurring conservative apologetics.
The September Six event echoed the 1979 excommunication of feminist and ERA activist, Sonia Johnson and appeared to deliver a message about how the Church views feminist critics within the Church. Members were advised by the Church in 1989 to exercise caution in reading publications or attending symposia not sponsored by the Church itself.*
More recently, however, dialogue has increased between liberal, conservative, moderate, apologetic and critical views on the Internet, as well as at academic and independent conferences.
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