Monday, October 26, 2020

A Latter-day Saint Defense of the Unborn

It has become popular for people of faith to seek a middle ground in the abortion debate of being “personally opposed” while according choice to others. This is why I think that position is problematic.

(by Terryl Givens publicsquaremag.org 10-19-20)

The intellect disconnected from the heart is just an organ for winning arguments. And few arguments of our day are as disconnected from both the heart and the facts as those disputes involving “reproductive rights.” Most partisans of the pro-life and pro-choice positions are immovable in their entrenchment. I am pro-life.  I taught in a private liberal arts college for three decades, where, as is typical in higher education, political views are as diverse as in the North Korean parliament. In numerous conversations with colleagues over the years, I was consistently dismayed by the general lack of thoughtful rationales for their embrace of the pro-choice position. Frequently, I found they were uninformed, unreflective, but occasionally—very occasionally—they were surprisingly open to reconsideration upon a more honest evaluation of the facts and premises behind their positions. In the hope that some of my fellow pro-choice Saints and other readers may similarly be open to a deeper engagement with this issue, I offer the following information and discussion.

What is the legal status of abortion in the United States today?

Contrary to one of the most widely held myths in America, abortion is effectively permitted at any stage in a woman’s pregnancy for virtually any reason. 

That assertion generally meets with flat out disbelief, but the facts are plain. Roe v. Wade instituted a trimester system, allowing restrictions on 2nd and 3rd-trimester abortions in cases mandated by the mother’s “health.” However, Doe v. Bolton, a related ruling, rendered that system effectively null and void, by defining “health” to include emotional and psychological health, as well as familial situation and mother’s age. Hence, America is one of very few countries in the world that permit abortion through the 9th month of pregnancy. (North Korea and China are among the others). Many states have imposed various restrictions, but the Supreme Court is the ultimate arbiter, and consistently invalidates most such attempts. As the pro-choice Guttmacher Institute notes, “When challenged, courts have struck down laws with a blanket ban on abortion at a specific week or trimester, as well as those with extremely narrow health exceptions.” That is why the situation today is not substantially different than it was a decade after Roe v. Wade, when the Senate Judiciary Committee concluded, “no significant legal barriers of any kind whatsoever exist today in the United States for a mother to obtain an abortion for any reason during any stage of her pregnancy.” Most telling in this regard is the fact that New York just passed the Reproductive Health Act explicitly affirming abortion rights after 24 weeks with no restrictions except the carte blanche “health of the mother” wording.

Thousands of second and third-trimester abortions are performed annually.

Pro-choice advocates insist late-term abortions are “rare.” That is an astonishing defense. Current numbers are between 10,000 and 15,000 late-term abortions performed per year. That makes the total rare only by comparison with the one million annual abortions typically performed over recent decades. It is doubtful that advocates of abortion rights would consider those numbers “rare” or negligible if they pertained to other instances of horrific human suffering.

Aren’t those late-term abortions medically mandated, as defenders insist? According to one report in the United States, contrary to prevailing myth, “most late-term abortions are elective, done on healthy women with healthy fetuses, and for the same reasons given by women experiencing first-trimester abortions.” The author goes on to cite a more recent Guttmacher study focused on abortion after 20 weeks of gestation that “similarly concluded that women seeking late-term abortions were not doing so for reasons of fetal anomaly or life endangerment.

Does the aborted infant experience pain?

The womb is not a magical barrier against pain and trauma

The desperate quality of arguments against fetal pain is typified by this rationale on the website of the Guttmacher Institute (a pro-abortion advocacy institute): “Without a psychological understanding of pain … a fetus cannot experience pain.” That logic doesn’t merit rebuttal. Extensive medical research disputes these myths. One example: “It is becoming increasingly clear that experiences of pain will be ‘remembered’ by the developing nervous system, perhaps for the entire life of the individual.” Or another: “Although we do not know exactly when the fetus can experience pain, noxious stimulation during fetal life causes a stress response, which could have both short- and long-term adverse effects on the developing central nervous system” (in Mark Rosen’s chapter “Anesthesia for Fetal Surgery and other Intrauterine Procedures”). Or another: “Cutaneous sensory receptors appear in the perioral area of the human fetus in the 7th week of gestation; they spread to the rest of the face, the palms of the hands, and the soles of the feet by the 11th week, to the trunk and proximal parts of the arms and legs by the 15th week, and to all cutaneous and mucous surfaces by the 20th week.” Or another: “Fetal stress in response to painful stimuli is shown by increased cortisol and β-endorphin concentrations, and vigorous movements and breathing efforts.” Etcetera.

But is the child-in-utero a “person”?

The only differences between the pre- and the post-natal individual are ones of degree

Some abortion-rights advocates try to differentiate between “human beings” and “persons” by inventing differentiators, as does Elizabeth Harman, who requires “consciousness” as an attribute, or my religion professor colleague who argued that only insertion in a web of human relationships qualifies one for “personhood.” The problem with all such moral inventions is not only that they are arbitrary categories of ad hoc design, but that they provide no qualitative threshold—any more than the Roe v. Wade tragic litmus test of “viability” does (which is so obviously an index of our technology, not of the child’s humanity). 

Other abortion advocates concede the distraction and futility of such gestures and admit that nothing other than the killing of a real person is at stake. Thus the pro-choice feminist writer Naomi Wolf acknowledges that  “Clinging to rhetoric about abortion in which there is no life and no death, we entangle our beliefs in a series of self-delusions, fibs, and evasions…. [We] need to contextualize the fight to defend abortion rights within a moral framework that admits that the death of a fetus is a real death.”  Feminist icon Camille Paglia says more bluntly, “I have always frankly admitted that abortion is murder, the extermination of the powerless by the powerful. Liberals, for the most part, have shrunk from facing the ethical consequences of their embrace of abortion, which results in the annihilation of concrete individuals and not just clumps of insensate tissue.”  Cecilia Konchar Farr, a BYU professor whose firing was so controversial, stated publicly that “whether or not the embryo is a life” was a “secondary question.” Quoting Catherine MacKinnon she asked, “why should not women make life or death decisions?” 

Doesn’t Latter-day Saint doctrine affirm the sacred gift of individual agency, i.e., “choice”?

Agency pertains to one’s own body, not another’s.

No serious argument has ever been maintained that pregnancy does not involve two discrete organisms. Mother and child have separate nervous systems, organs, and DNA. They can even be of different races or ethnicities. Surrogate motherhood has served to highlight the potentially radical disconnectedness of mother and child in every way except temporary biological dependence.

Can’t I be personally pro-life but politically pro-choice

If abortion is wrong, it is wrong because it involves the intentional destruction of another human being. This is really the heart of the matter. You must ask yourself, why are you personally opposed to abortion? I am not personally opposed to abortion because of religious commitment or precept, because of some abstract principle of “the sanctity of life.” I am personally opposed because my heart and mind, my basic core humanity revolts at the thought of a living sensate human being undergoing vivisection in the womb, being vacuum evacuated, subjected to a salt bath, or, in the “late-term” procedure, having its skull pierced and brain vacuumed out. (I have spared the reader the clinical descriptions of those procedures, although I think those who support abortion rights while willfully avoiding direct confrontation with the specifics of what they countenance are in an indefensible position). According to the Mayo Clinic, an infant in the womb has a beating heart by 5-6 weeks of pregnancy. The first electrical brain activity also appears at this point. Well over two-thirds of abortions are performed at that stage or later. And as we saw above, at a very early, undefined moment in the child’s development, a nervous system responds to the horror of such inflicted suffering. There is no more ethical or logical sense in being “personally opposed, but pro-choice” than in being personally opposed to sex trafficking, slavery, or child abuse, “but” pro-choice regarding the adult’s prerogatives in those cases. Abortion is not like heavy drinking or pornography or blaspheming, where one deplores the action but accords another the right to act immorally. Abortion is of that class of wrongs that entails the willful infliction of pain or killing on another human being.

Ultimately, the pro-life position is not a commitment predicated on sectarian values or God’s precepts. It is the fruit of a more universal commitment to protect the most vulnerable and voiceless. It is a commitment to the most fundamental obligation we have as part of the human family: to defend the defenseless.

Don’t you trust the mother to make the right decision?

Abortion has nothing to do with trust and everything to do with life.

Pete Buttigieg has scored rhetorical points for his appealing mantra, “The dialogue has gotten so caught up in where you draw the line. I trust women to draw the line.” His approach is powerful because it seemingly empowers women while completely begging the question: Is this a line any human being has the right to draw when another human life is at stake? The issue has nothing at all to do with trust, and everything to do with the rights of the developing child. As social critic Caitlin Flanagan has remarked with irresistible truth: “The argument for abortion, if made honestly, requires many words…. The argument against it doesn’t take even a single word. The argument against it is a picture.”

Doesn’t even the Church of Jesus Christ allow some abortions?

The Church does countenance the possibility of exceptions to its pro-life position

The Latter-day Saint position, in addition to the principle of respect for the sanctity of life, puts agency front and center in the issue. Ironically, as leaders have argued, a genuine regard for agency entails the recognition that true freedom means the freedom to experience the consequences of one’s choices.

In fact, early Latter-day Saint understanding of the War in Heaven saw the assault on agency in just those terms: a ploy to absolve humans of the fruits of our own choices, thus obviating most human suffering. (Hence its appeal to one-third of heaven’s hosts). Genuine respect for “choice” means we accept responsibility for the natural consequences of choices willfully made. Rape and incest do not represent a conception that was in any sense of the word chosen, and responsibility for that conception is not therefore the mother’s. Here (as in threat to the mother’s life), we do find a genuine conflict between a woman’s sovereignty over her body and another body’s life. That is why the Church accords such women the possibility, though not automatic dispensation, for abortion. As the church handbook states, “Even these exceptions do not automatically justify abortion. Abortion … should be considered only after the persons responsible have consulted with their bishops and received divine confirmation through prayer.” 

Further Consideration

Some objections may arise at this point. First, is the state really the most effective instrument for curbing the terrific toll on human life? Does legislation make a real difference? A few simple facts dispel the mythology that Roe v. Wade did not increase abortions, only made them “safe and legal”: Barnard Nathanson was the co-founder of what became the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL), the nation’s premiere pro-abortion rights organization, instrumental in the passage of Roe v. Wade. In regard to the purported thousands of illegal abortions and frequent deaths of the mother occurring before 1973, Nathanson later said: “We fed the public a line of deceit, dishonesty, a fabrication of statistics and figures. We succeeded because the time was right and the news media cooperated. We sensationalized the effects of illegal abortions. We unashamedly lied, and yet our statements were quoted [by the media] as though they had been written in law.” In actual fact, “In 1972, the year before Roe, there were only 39 deaths from illegal abortions, and in 1973, there were still 25 deaths from legal abortions.” Equally striking is the fact, as Nathanson reports, that “the annual number of abortions has increased by 1,500 percent since legalization.” 

Second, we hear the related concern: don’t we need to change hearts and minds through non-coercive means short of legislation? This is a canard similar to the “you can’t legislate morality” mantra. As if laws are instituted for any other purpose! Until we attain to a society in which goodness and compassion prevail universally and spontaneously, legal strictures exist to preserve the rights of those who are vulnerable to actions that are not constrained by conscience.

Another complaint often takes this form: Would not genuine respect for the principle of human life demand more support for women and children in crisis? Of course, it does. That is why those most devoted to the cause, as so many of the people I know, put their time and resources and politics behind their compassion; they work in crisis centers, support or themselves provide adoption services, and agitate for more government support of women and children in crisis. Whatever hypocrisies may exist on the part of individuals or parties does not diminish the rights of an individual to life, however disadvantaged it may turn out to be. If one’s right to life is adjudicated based on our perceptions of its future quality, we are half-way to a dystopian nightmare. 

Similarly, I have heard abortion advocates insist that my position on life would preclude support of the death penalty, which most conservatives endorse. Is this not a contradiction? Indeed, it is. The vast majority of pro-life individuals I have known, like myself and contrary to popular myths, are opposed to capital punishment for that reason (and others). The real contradiction lies on the other side of the issue. Persons who devote their resources and energies to preserving the lives of convicted serial killers are perfectly silent in the face of a holocaust of millions, whose innocence was never in dispute. 

I have not even touched on the gravest of misrepresentations regarding the interests of women in these debates. Pro-abortion rights advocates take it as a given that they are working in the interests of the woman and that opponents advocate for the child in utero, against the woman. But that is to ignore the enormous spiritual, emotional, and health costs of abortion that the practice imposes on the woman. Abortion is not an unmitigated benefit to those who undergo the procedure. True advocates of women’s interests would be attuned to facts such as these: The 2008 report of the American Psychological Association’s Task Force on Mental Health and Abortion concluded that “it is clear that some women do experience sadness, grief, and feelings of loss following termination of a pregnancy, and some experience clinically significant disorders, including depression and anxiety.” Two years after their abortions, a number of women in the study “had all the symptoms for abortion-specific post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).” Compared to initial reactions, the participants in the study “had significantly rising rates of  depression and negative reactions and lowering rates of positive reactions, relief, and decision satisfaction.” More dramatic was a study by the British Psychiatric Association that found “Women who had undergone an abortion experienced … increased risk of mental health problems… attributable to abortion.” Critics site contrary findings, but credible longitudinal studies of post-abortion repercussions are rare because of the high attrition rate of participants (itself suggestive of the trauma of the abortion). Bottom line: the British study “offers the largest quantitative estimate of mental health risks associated with abortion available in the world literature” and while “calling into question the conclusions from traditional reviews, the results revealed a moderate to highly increased risk of mental health problems [including suicide] after abortion.” 

I do not see reproductive rights and female autonomy as simple black and white issues. Hard cases exist; unwanted children are a tragedy; many women understandably demand the opportunity to enjoy sexual activity as unmoored from personal accountability as men have always enjoyed. Finally, electing “pro-life” presidents and legislatures has proved no panacea to the tragedy I have described. At a minimum, Saints should deplore the current amoral regime in which even the most minimal appeals to humanity have been obliterated in the name of “reproductive freedom.” One of America’s most prominent public edifices, the World Trade Center, was illuminated in 2019 in vibrant pink—in an obscene celebration of New Yorkers’ legislatively mandated, express right to destroy the life of a child even after the age of viability (24 weeks). Is it really sufficient, in the face of such sacrilege we have made acceptable, to say, “I am personally opposed, but…?”

https://publicsquaremag.org/editorials/a-latter-day-saint-defense-of-the-unborn/

 

 

 

Sunday, October 11, 2020

Apostolic asides: 29 brief insights from footnotes Latter-day Saint leaders added to conference talks

In their footnotes, the apostles share personal observations and data about the church, refer to research and reveal details about church policies and practices.

(by Tad Walch deseretnews.com 10-9-20)

Yes, Latter-day Saint leaders chiefly use footnotes to their general conference talks to cite scriptures they used, but they also make personal observations, share data about the church, refer to research or describe details about church policies and practices.

There is a lot to learn in these apostolic asides. Here are 29 brief observations culled from the footnotes of the talks by leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints at last weekend’s 190th Semiannual General Conference.

1. Among the publications cited by church leaders in their footnotes for this conference, in addition to the scriptures and church magazines, were The Wall Street Journal, Foreign Affairs, the Economist, The Atlantic, Christianity Today, the Babylonian Talmud, The New Strong’s Expanded Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, the Deseret News, CNN.com and the European Journal of Population and Church News.

2. President Russell M. Nelson wrote one of the footnotes that best qualifies as an apostolic aside: “I have spoken of Israel in at least 378 of the more than 800 messages I have delivered during my 36 years as an apostle,” he wrote in the first footnote to his Sunday morning talk, “Let God prevail.”

3. In the talk itself, President Nelson mentioned that “let God prevail” is one meaning of the word Israel that he learned from Hebrew scholars. He added a footnote to point out that the word Israel appears more than 1,000 times in the scriptures. Then he added that “its scriptural use applies to people who are willing to let God prevail in their lives.”

4. To his statement that the gathering of Israel is a “pivotal work,” President Nelson added this footnote: “The Lord has a wonderful way of describing those being gathered. He refers to us collectively as his ‘peculiar treasure,’ as his ‘jewels’ and as a ‘holy nation.’”

5. Elder Quentin L. Cook of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles mentioned in his talk on unity that Latter-day Saint congregations are determined by geography or language, not race. He cited a scripture that “every man shall hear the fullness of the gospel and in his own language,” then added, “Accordingly, language congregation units are usually approved.”

Elder Cook spoke on Saturday. On Sunday, the Pacific Area Presidency held a special meeting to organize a Māori-speaking congregation in the Kaikohe New Zealand Stake, according to ChurchofJesusChrist.org. The Te Peka o Ngapuhi Branch is the first in 70 years to make Te Reo Māori its principal language.

“A new day begins and with it comes an opportunity for Te Reo Māori speakers to express their feelings in the language of their heart,” said the Pacific Area president, Elder Ian S. Ardern. “From this pulpit will be heard expressions that some may have had difficulty to express in any language other than Māori and we applaud that opportunity. The Lord understands Māori and will welcome your prayers, the blessing of the sacrament and your testimonies in Te Reo Māori.”

6. Elder Cook declared that the gospel of Jesus Christ is the foundation of the church’s culture, referring in his talk to Paul’s epistle to the Romans, the early church members who were Jews and Gentiles influenced by Greek culture. In a footnote, he wrote that the restoration illuminates two doctrines, “a true understanding of faith and the elaboration of the purpose of Jesus Christ’s Atonement. Romans contains the only mention of the Atonement in the New Testament. I came to appreciate the epistle to the Romans for unifying diverse people through the gospel of Jesus Christ when I served as a stake president with members from numerous races and cultures speaking many different languages.”

7. In his address, “We Talk of Christ,” Elder Neil L. Andersen of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles noted that nearly every page of the Book of Mormon testifies of Christ and his mission. He cited Susan Easton Black’s “Finding Christ Through the Book of Mormon,” which his footnote says found 101 different names for Christ and a reference to him in every 1.7 verses. In the same footnote, he included a quote from President Nelson’s October 1996 conference talk in which he said any form of atone or atonement appears once in the King James Version of the New Testament but 35 times in the Book of Mormon.

8. Elder Dale G. Renlund of the Twelve taught that Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ do not want their children to be tormented by mistakes from which they have repented, “thinking of them as wounds that never heal ...” In his footnotes, he quoted an April 2015 talk by President Boyd K. Packer: “... when the repentance process is complete, no scars remain because of the Atonement of Jesus Christ. ... (T)he Atonement ... can wash clean every stain no matter how difficult or how long or how many times repeated. The Atonement can put you free again to move forward, cleanly and worthily, to pursue that path that you have chosen in life.”

9. I noted in a previous column that Elder Gerrit W. Gong, a member of the Twelve, provided a statistic I’d long tried to obtain, the number of nations and territories with members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He said the number is 196, and his footnote said those nations and territories include entities such as Guam, Puerto Rico and American Samoa. For perspective, the United Nations has 193 member states while another footnote provided by Elder Gong mentioned Pew research conducted in 230 countries and territories.

10. Elder Gong’s footnotes elaborated on statistics about church membership that he shared in his talk. After he said there are three countries with more than 1 million church members — the United States, Mexico and Brazil — he also said 23 countries have more than 100,000 members. In his footnotes, he listed them — the United States, Mexico, Brazil, Philippines, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Guatemala, Ecuador, Bolivia, Colombia, Canada, United Kingdom, Honduras, Nigeria, Venezuela, Australia, Dominican Republic, Japan, El Salvador, New Zealand, Uruguay, and Nicaragua.

11. The next country to reach 100,000 church members may be Paraguay, he said in the same footnote, which now has 96,000 church members.

12. To teach how God uses adversity to bring about his purposes, Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf of the Quorum of the Twelve shared the history of how the pioneers hid the Salt Lake Temple site from a U.S. Army, only to uncover it later and discover cracks in the initial sandstone foundation. They replaced the sandstone with granite to last for generations. His footnote points out that the stone used in the temple’s construction that Latter-day Saints commonly refer to as granite actually is quartz monzonite.

13. Elder Uchtdorf’s footnote portrays his strong belief that youth and young adults have a terrific role model in the Biblical story of Joseph sold into Egypt. In his talk, he briefly recounted how Joseph was “thrown into a pit, sold into slavery, betrayed and abandoned.” God used that adversity “to strengthen “Joseph’s character and put him in a position to save his family.” Elder Uchtdorf elaborated in two apostolic asides. The first said that Joseph was perhaps as young as 17 when sold into slavery by his brothers, and 30 when he entered Pharaoh’s service. Then he noted personally: “Can you imagine how difficult it was for a young man in his prime to be betrayed, sold into slavery, falsely accused and then imprisoned? Joseph certainly is a model for not only the youth of the church but to every man, woman and child who desire(s) to take up the cross and follow the Savior.”

14. His second footnote on Joseph shares an alternate translation of Psalm 105:17-18, which changes the phrase about Joseph’s feet being bound in iron to this: “They have afflicted with fetters his feet, iron hath entered his soul.” Elder Uchtdorf again added a personal aside: “To me, this suggests that Joseph’s hardships gave him a soul as strong and resilient as iron — a quality he would need for the great and unimaginable future the Lord had in store for him.”

15. Relatedly, President Nelson provided his own apostolic aside about adversity in a footnote to his Sunday morning talk, noting that “Being of Israel is not for the faint of heart. To receive all the blessings that God has in store for Abraham’s seed, we can each expect to be given our own unique ‘Abrahamic test.’ God will test us, as the Prophet Joseph Smith taught, by wrenching our very heartstrings.”

16. Church leaders spoke of the ebbing tide of faith in Jesus Christ in the world. Four of them mentioned it, with three citing research in their footnotes.

17. Some 30 million people have stepped away from belief in the divinity of Jesus Christ over the past 10 years, Elder Andersen said in his talk. One of his footnotes cited Pew Research Center data that 65% of American adults describe themselves as Christians, down 12 percentage points in the past decade. Conversely, the share of the religiously unaffiliated has grown from 17% to 26%.

18. In a second footnote, he showed the differences between generations — 84% of the Silent Generation call themselves Christians, as do 76% of baby boomers, while only 49% of millennials do so. “In the days ahead, those who believe in Jesus Christ will need the friendship and support of one another,” he said in his talk. “As the world speaks less of Jesus Christ, let us speak more of him.”

19. Elder D. Todd Christofferson of the Twelve also addressed the subject in his talk, saying, “A growing number of people consider that belief in and allegiance to God are not needed for moral uprightness in either individuals or societies in today’s world.” He cited a new “Foreign Affairs” article titled “Giving Up on God: The Global Decline of Religion.”

20. Both Elder Christofferson and Elder Gong also cited Pew research with some positive insights about global belief. In his footnotes, Elder Gong noted Pew data that showed 5.8 billion people were religiously affiliated as of 2010; that was 84% of the world’s population of 6.9 billion at the time. Elder Christofferson cited new Pew research published this summer that majorities in emerging economies still connect belief in God to morality.

21. Though it wasn’t in a footnote, Elder David A. Bednar of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles made a similar clear statement about pressing forward during what he described as an age of “widening divergence between the ways of the Lord and the world” and increasing polarization. “Faithfulness is not foolishness or fanaticism,” he said. In the same vein, President Nelson on Saturday night said, “Our ultimate security comes as we yoke ourselves to Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ! Life without God is a life filled with fear. Life with God is a life filled with peace.”

22. While Elder Christofferson catalogued some of the sustainable values that religion instills in societies, Elder Gong added a list of them in his footnotes. Here’s what he wrote there: “Religious virtues and values anchor and enrich civil society; inspire community, civil engagement, social cohesion, service and volunteerism; foster justice, reconciliation and forgiveness, including helping us to know when and how to hold on and to let go, to know when and what to remember and to forget.”

23. President Dallin H. Oaks, first counselor in the First Presidency, delivered a muscular rebuke of both historic and current American racism. He said that Black Americans today have suffered injustices in racist public actions and personal attitudes and said Latter-day Saints “must do better to help root out racism.” He said peaceful protest is a constitutional right but denounced violence and property damage and theft by protesters and quoted Joseph Smith’s teaching about love, “It is a time-honored adage that love begets love. Let us pour forth love — show forth our kindness unto all mankind.”

In his footnote to that teaching, President Oaks quoted Martin Luther King Jr.: “Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding a deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”

24. C.S. Lewis was quoted in a talk footnote by Sister Michelle D. Craig, the first counselor in the Young Women general presidency, who spoke about how faithful people can follow Christ’s example and really see others — “their needs, their faith, their struggle and who they can become.” Her footnote was a quote from Lewis’ 1949 book, “The Weight of Glory”: “It is a serious thing to live in a society of possible gods and goddesses, to remember that the dullest most uninteresting person you can talk to may one day be a creature which, if you saw it now, you would be strongly tempted to worship. ... There are no ordinary people.”

25. President Nelson offered insight into church policy and practice about patriarchal blessings in a separate footnote to his Sunday morning talk: “Each faithful member may request a patriarchal blessing. Through the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, the patriarch declares that person’s lineage in the House of Israel. That declaration is not necessarily a pronouncement of his or her race, nationality, or genetic makeup. Rather, the declared lineage identifies the tribe of Israel through which that individual will receive his or her blessings.”

26. The church has published 192 million copies of all or part of the Book of Mormon in 112 languages, Elder Gong said in his talk. In his footnote, he added, “Additional translation languages continue the promise that every man and woman will ‘hear the fulness of the gospel in (their) own tongue ... and ... language.’ (Doctrine and Covenants 90:11)

27. Elder Gong showed the mural by Greg Newbold formed by the covers of the four volumes of “Saints,” the new, official narrative history of the church. Two of the four volumes have been published, and Elder Gong’s footnote shared the titles of each volume and their source: “The titles of the four volumes of ‘Saints’ come from the inspired testimony declaration of the Prophet Joseph in the Wentworth letter — ‘The Standard of Truth’; ‘No Unhallowed Hand’; ‘Boldly, Nobly, and Independent’; and ‘Sounded in Every Ear.’”

28. “A place of security is anywhere you can feel the presence of the Holy Ghost and be guided by him,” President Nelson said during the women’s session Saturday night. “When the Holy Ghost is with you, you can teach truth, even when it runs counter to prevailing opinions.” He added this in a footnote to the first of those sentences: “Eliza R. Snow taught that the Holy Ghost ‘satisfies and fills up every longing of the human heart. ... When I am filled with that Spirit, my soul is satisfied, and I can say in good earnest, that the trifling things of the day do not seem to stand in my way at all. ... Is it not our privilege to so live that we can have this constantly flowing into our souls?’”

Elder Scott Whiting, a General Authority Seventy, taught a clear sermon on how to begin “a thoughtful, deliberate and intentional pursuit of becoming” like Christ. In doing so, he pointed out the footnote attached to Matthew 5:48 in the Latter-day Saint edition of the King James Version of the Bible that shows alternate Greek meanings for perfect: completed, finished, fully developed. In his footnotes, Elder Whiting quoted an 1896 Christian novel, “In His Steps,” by Charles M. Sheldon: “If our definition of being a Christian is simply to enjoy the privileges of worship, be generous at no expense to ourselves, have a good, easy time surrounded by pleasant friends and by comfortable things, live respectably and at the same time avoid the world’s great stress of sin and trouble because it is too much pain to bear it — if this is our definition of Christianity, surely we are a long way from following in the steps of him who trod the way with groans and tears and sobs of anguish for a lost humanity; who sweat, as it were, great drops of blood, who cried out on the upreared cross, ‘My God, my God, why has thou forsaken me.’”

BONUS NOTE: I looked up the first time that footnote to Matthew 5:48 was mentioned in general conference, and it turns out that it was first noted by then-Elder Russell M. Nelson in an October 1995 talk in which he said he recently had studied the Greek edition of the Bible. He said “perfect” was “translated from the Greek teleios, which means ‘complete.’ Teleios is an adjective derived from the noun telos, which means ‘end.’ The infinitive form of the verb is teleiono, which means ‘to reach a distant end, to be fully developed, to consummate, or to finish.’” He said it implies “achieving a distant objective.” Christ’s final words on the cross were, “It is finished.” President Nelson said, “Not surprisingly, the Greek word from which finished was derived is teleios."

https://www.deseret.com/faith/2020/10/9/21504576/mormon-lds-general-conference-footnotes-latter-day-saint-leaders-talks-apostles