The September Six were six intellectuals affiliated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who underwent church disciplinary proceedings in September 1993, resulting in five excommunications and one disfellowshipment for conduct classified by local and general church authorities as apostasy, including the public advocacy of doctrines at variance with established teachings.[1][2]The group consisted of D. Michael Quinn, a historian known for documenting early Mormon practices including polygamy and esoteric rituals; Lavina Fielding Anderson, an editor who compiled accounts of church members' encounters with authority; Maxine Hanks, a researcher on women's historical roles and priesthood ordination; Avraham Gileadi, a biblical scholar interpreting scripture through lenses of ancient Israelite kingship; Paul Toscano, a legal scholar and playwright critiquing theological inconsistencies; and Lynne Kanavel Whitesides, an advocate for expanded lay participation in worship.[3][4] Their collective writings and presentations, often published in independent Mormon journals or presented at symposia, probed foundational church narratives, gender hierarchies, and leadership accountability, prompting local stake presidents to convene courts that prioritized doctrinal conformity over academic exploration.[5][1]These proceedings, occurring amid a broader pattern of heightened vigilance against perceived threats to institutional unity under church president Howard W. Hunter, ignited enduring contention over the interplay of scholarship and faith, with proponents of the disciplines arguing they safeguarded core beliefs against erosion, while observers noted a chilling effect on open inquiry and a exodus of talent from Mormon studies.[2][5] The episode underscored causal tensions inherent in hierarchical religious bodies, where deviations from authorized interpretations—regardless of evidentiary basis—trigger mechanisms to restore alignment, a dynamic that continues to shape discussions of orthodoxy in the church.[6][2]
The "New Mormon History" emerged in the 1970s as a cohort of Latter-day Saint academics applied professional historiographical techniques—such as documentary analysis, contextualization within broader American religious trends, and avoidance of apologetic presuppositions—to Mormon origins and development.[7] This shift prioritized empirical evidence over devotional framing, yielding studies on topics like economic communalism and polygamy's social dynamics.[8] Leonard J. Arrington's tenure as Church Historian from 1972 to 1982 epitomized this era; his division at the Church Historian's Office produced over 50 monographs and fostered archival access, though it concluded with the unit's relocation to Brigham Young University amid administrative realignments.[9]Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, operational since 1966, amplified these efforts through quarterly issues featuring essays on doctrinal evolution and institutional practices, often drawing from interdisciplinary sources.[10]Feminist intellectual currents paralleled this historical turn, as second-wave influences prompted Mormon women scholars to scrutinize gender hierarchies, including priesthood reservation for men since 1830 and temple ceremonies' symbolic inequalities.[11] By the 1980s, critiques extended to Relief Society autonomy erosion post-1970s correlations and ordination precedents in Joseph Smith's era, substantiated via archival reviews of early Relief Society minutes.[11] The Mormon Women's Forum, incorporated in 1988, institutionalized these dialogues with annual conferences averaging 200–300 attendees, focusing on scriptural exegeses of female divine imagery and policy advocacy without formal schism.[12]Key publications underscored theological probing: D. Michael Quinn's Early Mormonism and the Magic World View (1987) cataloged 19th-century New England occult residues in Joseph Smith's milieu, citing over 500 primary artifacts like divining rods and astrological talismans linked to his family.[13] Avraham Gileadi's The Book of Isaiah: A New Translation with Interpretive Keys from the Book of Mormon (1988) employed literary structures like chiasmus to decode Isaiah's oracles, positing servant figures and end-time judgments applicable to modern covenant Israel via Book of Mormon heuristics.[14] Such texts, grounded in textual and artifactual data, fueled debates on causality between cultural milieu and doctrinal innovation, diverging from prior insular interpretations.[15]
Escalating Tensions with Church Authorities
In the 1980s, LDS Church president Ezra Taft Benson repeatedly warned against "intellectual apostasy," portraying it as a form of prideful rebellion influenced by secular humanism that exalted human intellect over prophetic authority and divine revelation.[16] Benson's addresses, including those in general conferences and stake settings, emphasized that apostate ideas were infiltrating classes, publications, and discussions, urging members to prioritize obedience to church leaders as a safeguard against doctrinal erosion.[17] These pronouncements reflected a broader leadership concern that intellectual pursuits detached from orthodoxy risked promoting skepticism toward foundational narratives, such as the divine origins of the church.[18]Tensions escalated with the rise of independent forums like the Sunstone Symposia, launched in 1979 as a space for exploring Mormon history, theology, and culture beyond official channels.[19] By the late 1980s, these gatherings drew criticism from apostles such as Dallin H. Oaks, who in 1989 highlighted the risks of "alternative voices" that amplified dissent and challenged authoritative interpretations of scripture and history.[20] Church statements increasingly framed such symposia as venues where unorthodox views—often rooted in historical critiques or calls for doctrinal evolution—threatened communal unity, prompting warnings against participation that could foster division.[21]The 1985 exposure of Mark Hofmann's forgeries amplified these frictions, as the scandal involved counterfeit documents purporting to reveal embarrassing early church details, such as an 1830 "Salamander Letter" depicting Joseph Smith's prophetic call in folk magic terms, which church officials had briefly authenticated before the forgeries unraveled amid Hofmann's bombings.[22] This episode, detailed in Oaks' 1987 remarks on the disproportionate media focus on unverified claims versus their debunking, fostered greater leadership caution toward historical scholarship that echoed similar challenges to orthodox accounts, reinforcing perceptions of intellectuals as vectors for narrative disruption.[23] In its wake, the church adopted a more defensive posture on historiography, with local stake disciplinary councils empowered to address publications or teachings seen as promoting faith-undermining revisions, as evidenced by heightened scrutiny of revisionist works in the ensuing years.[24]
Profiles of the Individuals
Lynne Kanavel Whitesides
Lynne Kanavel Whitesides (1952–2025) was a convert to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the 1970s and emerged as a prominent voice in Mormon feminist activism during the 1980s and early 1990s. She contributed articles and editorial content to Exponent II, a quarterly journal founded in 1974 that served as a platform for Latter-day Saint women to discuss gender roles, theology, and church practices from a feminist perspective. Through her writings and involvement, Whitesides advocated for expanded participation of women in priesthood ordinances, decision-making processes, and public worship, emphasizing historical precedents from early Mormonism where women exercised informal spiritual authority.[4][25]Whitesides focused much of her public discourse on the underemphasized doctrine of Heavenly Mother, the eternal companion of God the Father in Latter-day Saint theology, as referenced in hymns and 19th-century church teachings. She participated in symposia, workshops, and informal gatherings where she encouraged devotion to the divine feminine, including explorations of prayer addressed to Heavenly Mother, without producing extensive scholarly treatises or direct challenges to core doctrines. Her approach highlighted experiential and communal aspects of faith, such as identifying women's embodied experiences with divine maternity, rather than academic deconstructions.[26][27]This activist orientation, centered on practical advocacy and theological reflection within feminist networks like the Mormon Women's Forum, positioned Whitesides as a bridge between lay devotion and intellectual inquiry. Unlike contemporaries who authored books questioning churchhistoricity or authority, her pre-1993 contributions emphasized dialogue and ritual innovation to address perceived gender imbalances in contemporary practice. On September 14, 1993, she received a disfellowshipment—the mildest formal censure—aligning with her profile of public engagement over doctrinal scholarship.[28][29]
Avraham Gileadi
Avraham Gileadi, a scholar of ancient Hebrew texts, focused his research on the Book of Isaiah, developing interpretations that integrated Latter-day Saint scriptures to reveal eschatological prophecies applicable to modern events.[30] His analyses employed literary devices such as chiasmus and typology, arguing that Isaiah's writings contain layered meanings obscured in standard translations, with keys from the Book of Mormon unlocking references to latter-day restoration themes.[31]In 1988, Gileadi published The Book of Isaiah: A New Translation with Interpretive Keys from the Book of Mormon, providing a Hebrew-informed English rendering that links Isaianic passages to Book of Mormon narratives and posits typological fulfillments in contemporary LDS contexts, such as an end-time "Davidic servant" figure central to divine covenants.[32][33] These readings suggested prophetic patterns extending beyond traditional church doctrines, including hierarchical oppositions between seraphim and cherubim archetypes applied to latter-day leaders and adversaries.[34]Gileadi maintained that his insights derived from guided study rather than formal ecclesiastical endorsement, a stance that church leaders viewed as potentially subordinating collective prophetic authority to personal interpretive claims, contributing to accusations of doctrinal deviation.[1] He was excommunicated for apostasy on September 15, 1993, primarily due to these theological emphases on apocalyptic Isaiahexegesis.[35] Following a period of reflection, Gileadi was rebaptized and restored to full membership in the church on March 6, 1996.[36]
Paul Toscano
Paul Toscano, an attorney specializing in securities law and a vocal Mormon theologian, co-authored Strangers in Paradox: Explorations in Mormon Theology with his wife Margaret Toscano, published in 1990 by Signature Books.[37] The volume comprised essays probing doctrinal paradoxes, such as the interplay between divine omniscience and human agency, and the evolving nature of priesthood authority, which challenged centralized correlations that prioritized obedience over independent scriptural interpretation.[38] These arguments posited that rigid ecclesiastical structures stifled theological inquiry and fostered unquestioning loyalty, potentially at the expense of authentic spiritual discernment.[39]Through essays and dialogues in Sunstone magazine, Toscano critiqued the church's emphasis on prophetic infallibility, advocating instead for an acknowledgment of leaders' human limitations to encourage reasoned faith rather than rote submission.[40] In a July 1993 Sunstone article titled "Dealing with Spiritual Abuse," he examined how hierarchical power dynamics, including enforced confidentiality in disciplinary councils, enabled misuse of authority and suppressed dissent, urging procedural reforms to align practices with principles of accountability and fairness.[41] As a lawyer, Toscano highlighted legal vulnerabilities in these secretive processes, suggesting that demands for transparency could invoke civil remedies to prevent potential abuses, though he did not file suit himself prior to his discipline.[42]Toscano's public calls for doctrinal openness and structural changes were interpreted by church authorities as efforts to erode apostolic leadership, culminating in his excommunication for apostasy on September 18, 1993.[43] The stake disciplinary council cited his writings and speeches as promoting views incompatible with sustained covenant membership, particularly those questioning the binding nature of prophetic counsel on obedience.[44]
Maxine Hanks
Maxine Hanks specialized in feminist scholarship examining women's roles in Mormon theology and history, with a focus on historical evidence for female spiritual authority. Her research highlighted primary sources, including journals and records from early Latter-day Saint women, to argue for expanded interpretations of women's priestly functions and connections to the divine feminine.[45][46]In 1992, Hanks edited the anthology Women and Authority: Re-Emerging Mormon Feminism, published by Signature Books, which compiled essays by various authors on topics such as the Heavenly Mother doctrine and women's priestesshood within the Relief Society and temple contexts. These contributions posited that early Mormon women exercised forms of spiritual authority, including anointing and healing rituals, supported by archival evidence from the 19th century, though such interpretations diverged from contemporary church emphases on male priesthood hierarchy.[46][47]Hanks' publications and public advocacy for reevaluating women's doctrinal status culminated in her excommunication on September 19, 1993, as one of the September Six; church disciplinary councils cited her promotion of feminist theological views—particularly on divine feminine roles and priestesshood—as apostasy conflicting with official correlated teachings on priesthood authority.[35][48]
Lavina Fielding Anderson
Lavina Fielding Anderson (born August 23, 1944) was an American scholar, editor, and writer specializing in Latter-day Saint history and women's issues, holding a Ph.D. in English from the University of Washington.[49] She began her professional career in Mormon publishing in 1973 as a member of the editorial board for the Ensign magazine, the official periodical of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, serving in that role for eight years.[50] Later, she edited the Journal of Mormon History and co-edited volumes such as Sisters in Spirit: Mormon Women in Historical and Cultural Perspective (1992), which examined women's roles through primary documents and historical analysis.[51][52]Anderson's scholarly contributions included critiques of official church historiography, arguing that selective narratives obscured complexities in Mormon origins and practices; for instance, her essays questioned idealized portrayals of early leaders by highlighting discrepancies in archival records and personal accounts.[53] She also analyzed temple rituals, welcoming 1990 revisions to the endowment ceremony that eliminated veiling of women and other elements viewed as subordinating; she stated these changes restored "renewed joy" to her temple participation, addressing long-standing concerns among female participants.[54]A pivotal aspect of her work was her documentation of tensions between church leadership and intellectuals, culminating in the "Anderson Memorandum," a 1992 Sunstone Symposium presentation later expanded into a 57-page article, "The LDS Intellectual Community and Church Leadership: A Contemporary Chronology," published in Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought (Spring 1993).[55][56] This chronology compiled 133 cases of alleged ecclesiastical discipline against scholars, feminists, and critics from the 1950s onward, drawing on personal testimonies, leaked documents, and public records to outline patterns of investigation, surveillance, and punishment for promoting historical revisions or doctrinal questions.[57] Anderson framed these as systemic abuses, including unauthorized monitoring of private correspondence and disproportionate penalties for public dissent, evidenced by specific incidents like the 1960s purges of BYU faculty and 1980s excommunications.[56]Her excommunication on September 23, 1993, for apostasy stemmed directly from this compilation, which church authorities viewed as fomenting disloyalty by publicizing internal disciplinary histories and challenging hierarchical control over narrative.[53][58] As one of the September Six, Anderson's efforts highlighted empirical patterns in church responses to intellectual autonomy, prioritizing archival evidence over institutional reticence.[6]
D. Michael Quinn
D. Michael Quinn, a Yale-trained historian of Mormonism, drew on extensive primary sources from church archives and nineteenth-century records to document esoteric practices in early Latter-day Saint history. His 1987 publication Early Mormonism and the Magic World View analyzed folk magic traditions prevalent in Joseph Smith's New England environment, citing evidence such as the Smith family's involvement in treasure-seeking expeditions, use of divining rods and seer stones, and ritualistic artifacts like parchments and talismans recovered from family possessions.[13][59] Quinn argued these elements reflected a broader cultural worldview where supernatural influences were empirically observable through contemporary accounts, including affidavits from Palmyra residents detailing Smith's money-digging activities between 1820 and 1827.[60]In the Mormon Hierarchy series, commencing with Origins of Power (1994), Quinn utilized archival ledgers, correspondence, and ecclesiastical records to trace the institutionalization of authority structures from 1830 onward, incorporating early magical motifs like visionary experiences and hierarchical priesthoods as extensions of folk traditions.[61] Subsequent volumes, Wealth and Corporate Power (1997) and Extensions of Power (2017), extended this analysis with quantitative data on church finances and leadership networks, revealing patterns of centralized control emerging from decentralized prophetic origins.[62]Quinn's interpretations, grounded in over 1,500 primary documents, portrayed Joseph Smith's prophetic claims as intertwined with magical epistemologies, such as scrying and astrology, evidenced by artifacts like the Jupiter talisman allegedly carried by Smith until his 1844 death.[63] This research challenged orthodox narratives by emphasizing empirical continuities between pre-Mormon folk practices and foundational events, including the 1823 Moroni visitation paralleling treasure guardian lore.[64]Amid these scholarly pursuits, Quinn disclosed his homosexuality in 1993, which church leaders viewed as compounding deviations from doctrinal standards alongside his historical revisionism.[65] His excommunication on September 26, 1993—the concluding action in the September Six proceedings—centered on charges of apostasy for promoting views that undermined faith in core doctrines, as determined in absentia after he declined to attend the stake disciplinary council.[66][67]
Disciplinary Actions
Church Procedures and Timeline
In 1993, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints handled charges of apostasy through formal membership councils as prescribed in the Handbook of Instructions, which required such proceedings for members engaging in repeated, deliberate public opposition to church leaders or persisting in teaching as doctrine positions contrary to established church teachings.[68][69] These councils aimed to assess the individual's spiritual welfare and church standing, emphasizing repentance where possible, but mandating discipline for unrepentant apostasy to safeguard the faith community.[70]For male members endowed with the Melchizedek Priesthood—Avraham Gileadi, Paul Toscano, and D. Michael Quinn—disciplinary councils were convened by the stake president in conjunction with the stake high council, consisting of the stake presidency and twelve high councilors, who deliberated as a judicial body.[70] Female members—Lynne Kanavel Whitesides, Maxine Hanks, and Lavina Fielding Anderson—faced councils conducted by their ward bishoprics, comprising the bishop and his two counselors.[71] All councils operated under strict confidentiality, excluding public attendance, legal counsel, or recording devices; the accused received advance notice of charges and an invitation to appear, present evidence or witnesses, and speak in their defense, after which the council voted on outcomes such as no action, disfellowshipment (restricting certain privileges while retaining membership), or excommunication (loss of membership and priesthood ordinances).[70] Results were conveyed privately via letter from the presiding authority, with no public announcement unless the individual chose disclosure.[68]The six cases unfolded in quick succession during September 1993, reflecting coordinated local implementation of church policy amid heightened scrutiny of intellectual dissent. Avraham Gileadi's stake high council met on September 1, followed by Paul Toscano's on September 11. Lynne Kanavel Whitesides appeared before her bishopric on September 14, Maxine Hanks on September 22, Lavina Fielding Anderson on September 23, and D. Michael Quinn before his stake high council on September 26.[3][35] This compressed timeline, spanning less than four weeks, underscored the church's directive for prompt resolution of apostasy matters to limit broader influence.[71]
Specific Charges and Proceedings
The charges against the six individuals, conducted through separate stake-level membership councils in September 1993, uniformly invoked apostasy under church guidelines, which encompassed public advocacy of doctrines opposing established teachings and persistent support for publications or statements undermining priesthood authority.[69] These councils, presided over by local stake presidents, followed standard procedures requiring written notification of allegations and an opportunity for response, with outcomes determined by majority vote among council members and no formal right of appeal beyond the stake presidency's discretion.[72]Avraham Gileadi's council cited apostasy via false teachings, particularly his scriptural interpretations positing personal revelations exceeding those of church prophets, as detailed in his Isaiah-related publications.[48]D. Michael Quinn was charged with apostasy and conduct unbecoming a member, linked to historical research alleging early church involvement in folk magic, financial irregularities, and internal dissent, which leaders deemed as promoting unauthorized narratives.[72] Paul Toscano faced apostasy allegations for writings and talks decrying hierarchical authoritarianism and doctrinal rigidity, including claims that priesthood authority enabled coercive control rather than spiritual guidance.[73]Maxine Hanks and Lynne Kanavel Whitesides were disciplined for feminist advocacy challenging gender roles; Hanks for compiling Women and Authority, which argued for re-emerging priestly functions among women, and Whitesides for televised remarks portraying church policies as subordinating women and neglecting the divine feminine aspect of deity.[74][75] Lavina Fielding Anderson's charges centered on apostasy through her Dialogue essay documenting "ecclesiastical abuse" via case studies of punitive actions against dissenters, interpreted as systematically opposing church disciplinary processes.[6] All proceedings concluded without publicized transcripts, relying on verbal presentations and submitted materials, with finality at the stake level absent higher intervention.[53]
Church Rationale
Emphasis on Doctrinal Orthodoxy
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints maintains that doctrinal orthodoxy, defined as strict adherence to truths revealed through authorized prophets, forms the bedrock of ecclesiastical discipline and spiritual preservation. This principle derives directly from Doctrine and Covenants 21:4–5, which commands Church members to receive the prophet's words and commandments "as if from mine own mouth, in all patience and faith," thereby establishing prophetic counsel as the authoritative conduit for divine will and requiring alignment to avoid deviation from covenantal obligations.Apostle Boyd K. Packer articulated this emphasis in his 1981 address to Church educators, "The Mantle Is Far, Far Greater Than the Intellect," wherein he prioritized priesthood governance over unchecked intellectual inquiry, warning that some historically accurate details could erode faith if disseminated without regard for their spiritual impact. Packer employed the metaphor of drawing protective circles around the doctrinal "flock" to shield it from external or internal challenges, underscoring that orthodoxy functions as a boundary—much like fences—to contain and nurture fidelity to revealed principles rather than permitting scholarly pursuits to supersede prophetic direction.[76]From a governance standpoint, this orthodoxy serves as a causal bulwark against faith erosion, as evidenced by historical patterns in other traditions where doctrinal dissent precipitated fragmentation. Scholarly examinations of American Protestant denominations from 1890 to 1990 reveal that internal challenges, particularly when linked to liberal influences, elevate schism rates, leading to multiplied entities—estimated in the thousands globally—that dilute collective adherence to originating tenets and foster doctrinal variance.[77][78] The LDS approach, by contrast, posits centralized prophetic fidelity as essential to averting such outcomes, ensuring that discipline reinforces unity under revealed truth as the primary mechanism for ecclesiastical stability.
Protection of Church Unity and Authority
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints maintains that preserving unity requires subordinating individual intellectual endeavors to the authoritative guidance of prophets, as divisions undermine the collective covenantal commitments essential to its mission. This principle draws from New Testament admonitions against schisms, such as in 1 Corinthians 1:10–13, where Paul urges believers to "speak the same thing" and avoid factions that exalt personal or intellectual allegiances over Christ-centered cohesion. Similarly, LDS doctrine emphasizes prophetic authority as a bulwark against fragmentation, arguing that unchecked criticism or alternative interpretations erode trust in revelation and invite secular influences that dilute sacred ordinances.Historical precedents within the Church illustrate this imperative, particularly during the transition from plural marriage in the late 19th century. Following the 1890 Manifesto issued by President Wilford Woodruff, which declared an end to new polygamous unions to comply with U.S. law and avert institutional collapse, the Church excommunicated or disfellowshipped members who persisted in unsanctioned plural marriages, thereby enforcing doctrinal alignment and preventing splinter groups from destabilizing the unified body.[79] By 1904, under President Joseph F. Smith, a second manifesto reinforced this by mandating excommunication for any new plural marriages, prioritizing communal survival over dissent that threatened legal standing and internal harmony.[79]In the context of the September Six disciplines, Church leaders applied these scriptural and historical rationales to counter writings and public statements perceived as fostering division through advocacy for doctrinal revisions or critiques of authority. Elder Dallin H. Oaks articulated that even truthful criticism of leaders is inadvisable, as it impairs their prophetic effectiveness and sows discord, necessitating discipline to safeguard the organization's revelatory core against intellectual challenges that could fragment adherence to covenants. This approach aligns with causal dynamics in religious communities, where unresolved internal dissent historically correlates with reduced cohesion, as observed in the post-Manifesto era's stabilization after purges of nonconformists.[79]
Criticisms and External Reactions
Allegations of Suppression and Authoritarianism
Members of the September Six and their supporters alleged that the church's disciplinary actions in September 1993 represented a coordinated purge aimed at silencing intellectual dissent and critical scholarship within Mormonism.[80] Lavina Fielding Anderson, excommunicated on September 23, 1993, for publishing accounts of alleged child sexual abuse cover-ups by church leaders, described the proceedings as part of broader tensions over loyalty and orthodoxy, echoing concerns raised in her 1992 Dialogue essay on institutional secrecy.[81] Paul Toscano, disfellowshipped on September 18, 1993, explicitly attributed his discipline to critiques of authoritarian structures in church priesthood authority, claiming it prioritized control over open discourse.[73]These allegations highlighted the secretive nature of stake disciplinary councils, which lacked transparency, formal appeals processes, or public accountability, drawing comparisons to historical inquisitions where dissent was quashed without due process.[81] Dissenters and allies at Sunstone symposia in the ensuing years framed the events as an effort to suppress feminist and historical inquiries, with gatherings featuring September Six speakers decrying the actions as a clampdown on independent thought.[82] Critics pointed to the rapid succession of councils—five occurring within three weeks—as evidence of orchestration from higher church levels to enforce conformity.[2]Contemporary media coverage amplified claims of an anti-intellectual backlash, with the Salt Lake Tribune reporting the disciplines as a "crackdown" or "purge" targeting scholars exploring sensitive topics like church history and gender roles.[83] Outlets portrayed the actions as reflective of institutional intolerance for nuance, contrasting with the church's public emphasis on faith-promoting narratives.[80] Supporters of the disciplined argued that such measures deterred future scholarship, fostering a climate of self-censorship among Mormon intellectuals.[5]
Media and Academic Responses
The New York Times reported on September 19, 1993, that church leaders had penalized at least six Utah-based members for publicly challenging doctrines, resulting in excommunications or loss of privileges, framing the actions as responses to outspoken dissent on issues like feminism and historical scholarship.[84] An October 2 follow-up article described the September events as a "purge" according to affected individuals, occurring amid the church's global expansion and rising internal critiques from scholars and feminists who questioned policies on gender roles and priesthood authority.[80] These reports emphasized themes of intellectual suppression, portraying the disciplines as efforts to curb unauthorized inquiry rather than isolated local proceedings.Church-affiliated outlets like the Deseret News covered the disciplines as standard responses to apostasy, aligning with official statements that rejected claims of a centralized purge and instead highlighted individual accountability for promoting views contrary to established teachings.[1] Such coverage underscored the church's position that the actions preserved doctrinal purity, contrasting with secular narratives that invoked free speech concerns.In academic circles, particularly among Mormon studies scholars, responses centered on the potential erosion of rigorous historical research. Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought featured Lavina Fielding Anderson's "Freedom of Conscience: A Personal Statement" shortly after her September 23 excommunication, where she affirmed ongoing loyalty to core faith principles while decrying the equation of critical scholarship with disloyalty, noting the six cases as emblematic of broader tensions between inquiry and orthodoxy.[85] Contributors argued that the disciplines threatened the viability of independent Mormon intellectual work, with the journal serving as a forum for dissecting the balance between personal conviction and institutional demands without endorsing outright opposition to church leadership.
Defenses and Internal Perspectives
Arguments for Necessary Discipline
Defenders of the church's actions, including apologists associated with FAIR Latter-day Saints, emphasize that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints operates as a voluntary religious association with the inherent right to enforce its membership standards. Doctrine and Covenants 134:10 explicitly states that "all religious societies have a right to deal with [their] members... according to the rules and regulations of such societies, to the extent consistent with the civil rights of the citizens," underscoring the church's authority to discipline members who publicly challenge core doctrines, as this preserves the voluntary covenant entered into through baptism and temple ordinances.[86] In a lay-led organization reliant on member consensus for unity, allowing sustained public dissent risks eroding the shared commitment that sustains communal worship and missionary efforts, justifying removal to safeguard the group's self-defined boundaries.[69]Church leaders articulated this necessity in a January 1994 statement from the First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, affirming their "responsibility to preserve the doctrinal purity of the Church" amid intellectual challenges that could foster widespread doubt. Apologists argue that the disciplines addressed specific instances of advocacy for positions incompatible with orthodoxy, such as questioning foundational historical events or prophetic authority, thereby preventing the amplification of disunity through scholarly platforms and publications. This approach aligns with empirical patterns in other religious bodies; for instance, evangelical congregations, as documented in Baptist traditions, routinely apply discipline for doctrinal deviations to maintain confessional integrity, with historical records showing such measures correlating with sustained membership cohesion rather than collapse.[69][87]Proponents from church-affiliated scholarship, including analyses tied to Brigham Young University contexts, contend that timely intervention curbed potential escalation into broader apostasy movements, as evidenced by the absence of subsequent mass scholarly defections or schisms comparable to earlier 19th-century fractures. By enforcing boundaries on public criticism, the church prioritized long-term institutional stability over individual academic pursuits, reflecting a pragmatic realism that voluntary associations must self-regulate to endure external and internal pressures.[48][69]
Historical and Scriptural Justifications
Defenders of the church's disciplinary actions invoke Doctrine and Covenants 134:10, which affirms that religious societies, including The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, possess the authority to address disorderly conduct among members in accordance with their own regulations, provided such measures align with principles of equity and the common good.[86] This revelation, received in 1835, underscores a foundational limit to tolerance within the church: while individual conscience is respected in civil matters, internal challenges to core doctrines or leadership warrant corrective measures to preserve institutional integrity.Historical precedents from Joseph Smith's era illustrate this principle in practice, as early church leaders excommunicated individuals whose public criticisms eroded communal cohesion, such as the 1837 Kirtland crisis where dissent over financial and doctrinal issues prompted the removal of figures like Warren Parrish and other apostates who formed rival factions.[88] Similarly, Oliver Cowdery's excommunication in April 1838 stemmed from his resistance to church directives amid rising internal discord in Missouri, demonstrating that unchecked opposition historically invited broader instability.Biblical parallels drawn from the Pauline epistles reinforce this doctrinal enforcement, particularly Galatians 1:8–9, where Paul declares that any preacher altering the gospel— even if an angel—should be accursed, a stance interpreted by church advocates as mandating swift separation from those propagating teachings divergent from established revelations. This mirrors causal logic in maintaining orthodoxy: permitting false doctrines risks cascading erosion of faith, akin to Paul's warnings against divisive influences in communities like Corinth.In the 1830s Missouri conflicts, internal dissent exacerbated external hostilities, as groups like the Danites initially formed to counter both apostate Mormons and non-Mormon aggressors, highlighting how unaddressed factionalism within the church contributed to violent escalations, including the 1838 Mormon War; proponents argue that preemptive discipline averts such causal chains by reinforcing unified adherence to prophetic guidance.[89]
Aftermath and Individual Outcomes
Immediate Consequences for the Six
Following their disciplinary actions in September 1993, the five excommunicated members—D. Michael Quinn, Lavina Fielding Anderson, Paul Toscano, Maxine Hanks, and the fifth individual among the group—lost full church membership, including eligibility for temple recommends that barred participation in sacred ordinances such as endowments and sealings.[90][69] Avraham Gileadi, who was disfellowshipped rather than excommunicated, retained nominal membership but faced similar restrictions on temple access and full participation in church ordinances, with the lesser sanction still signaling reduced standing and potential social repercussions within local congregations.[90][69]D. Michael Quinn, excommunicated on September 26, experienced immediate professional isolation from LDS-affiliated institutions, having already resigned from Brigham Young University years earlier amid prior tensions; he did not contest the council and proceeded with independent historical research outside church structures.[6] Lavina Fielding Anderson, excommunicated on September 23, continued attending her local ward meetings despite the loss of membership privileges, maintaining some community ties while shifting focus to documenting church disciplinary patterns through her editing and writing.[2][91]Paul Toscano, excommunicated on September 19 alongside his advocacy for doctrinal critiques, persisted in his Salt Lake City legal practice and began producing works challenging church authority on issues like priesthood and revelation, independent of official endorsement.[73] Maxine Hanks, excommunicated the same day for her feminist scholarship on women's roles, redirected efforts toward theological explorations of Mormon women's history, forming part of emerging affinity groups among like-minded intellectuals excluded from church forums.[90][35]These outcomes fostered immediate community fractures, with some mutual acquaintances and supporters withdrawing contact to evade local leader scrutiny, while pockets of sympathizers coalesced into informal networks for discussion and mutual aid, though without institutional backing.[90][3]
Reinstation and Later Developments
Avraham Gileadi was rebaptized into full fellowship with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in early 1996, approximately two and a half years after his excommunication, by the same stake presidency that had disciplined him.[36] Following his reinstatement, Gileadi resumed scholarly publications on the Book of Isaiah, aligning them with church-approved interpretations that emphasized the primacy of prophetic authority.[69]Maxine Hanks, excommunicated for her feminist writings, sought readmission and was rebaptized in 2012 after a two-decade period of independent theological reflection and chaplaincy work.[92] Lynne Kanavel Whitesides, who had been disfellowshipped rather than excommunicated, also regained full membership status, though the specific date of her restoration remains undocumented in public records.[26]Lavina Fielding Anderson, who continued her editorial work on historical documents such as the journals of George Q. Cannon post-excommunication, applied for rebaptism in 2019 but was denied by the First Presidency without stated reasons.[58] She died in 2022 still excommunicated; however, in November 2024, the First Presidency approved her posthumous rebaptism and restoration of temple blessings at her family's request.[93]D. Michael Quinn remained excommunicated until his death on April 21, 2021, at age 77, despite maintaining personal belief in core Latter-day Saint doctrines.[67] Paul Toscano, who persisted in publishing on temple symbolism and Godhead theology after his excommunication, offered reflections on the events in interviews marking anniversaries, such as the 10-year mark in 2003, without regaining membership.[94]
Long-Term Impact and Legacy
Effects on Mormon Scholarship and Intellectual Life
Following the September 1993 church disciplinary actions against the six intellectuals, observers in independent Mormon scholarship circles described a "lost generation" of potential contributors to the field, characterized by talented scholars who either self-censored controversial inquiries or redirected efforts to non-contentious topics to avoid professional and ecclesiastical repercussions at institutions like Brigham Young University (BYU).[5][2] This purported chilling effect manifested in reduced output on bold historiographical topics, such as critical examinations of church authority or historical discrepancies, with BYU and correlated publishers like Deseret Book prioritizing safer, orthodoxy-aligned narratives in the years immediately after.[5][3]In parallel, church-affiliated entities responded by bolstering faithful scholarship as a counterweight to perceived secular influences. The Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship at BYU, building on the earlier Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS), intensified apologetic efforts in the post-1993 era to defend scriptural historicity and doctrinal integrity against external and internal critiques, including reviews of works challenging LDS origins.[95] This institutional emphasis contributed to a surge in publications affirming traditional interpretations, such as detailed analyses of the Book of Mormon’s ancient provenance, though later shifts around 2010 moderated the tone toward broader "faithful scholarship" without abandoning defensive aims.[95]Persistent independent venues have since emerged to navigate tensions between critique and fidelity. The Interpreter Foundation, founded in 2008 as a nonprofit, has published peer-reviewed journals and essays that rigorously engage scholarly debates while explicitly upholding LDS orthodoxy, often addressing gaps left by more cautious academic outputs and critiquing both anti-Mormon polemics and overly conciliatory approaches within the faith community.[96][97] These developments reflect an overall empirical pattern of diversified but bounded Mormon intellectual production, with multidisciplinary expansions in areas like theology and archaeology by the 2000s, even as core historical inquiries remained constrained relative to pre-1993 levels.[5]
Reflections on the 30th Anniversary (2023)
In 2023, marking the thirtieth anniversary of the September Six excommunications, publications such as Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought hosted panel discussions and a limited podcast series exploring contemporary perspectives on the events, featuring scholars like Amanda Hendrix-Komoto and Patrick Q. Mason who examined the interplay between intellectual inquiry and church discipline.[98] These forums debated whether similar disciplinary actions remain feasible amid ongoing tensions, including scrutiny over the church's Gospel Topics Essays addressing historical issues like polygamy and racial policies, which some view as partial responses to earlier criticisms but insufficient for full transparency.[99]Critics, including contributors to the Salt Lake Tribune, argued that the 1993 actions exemplified a pattern of suppressing dissent that continues to hinder scholarly progress within Mormon studies, potentially deterring open historical research and fostering a climate of caution among academics.[90] In contrast, defenders highlighted the church's sustained institutional stability and doctrinal orthodoxy as factors enabling growth, pointing to empirical membership data showing no mass exodus following the events; total membership rose from 8,696,224 in 1993 to over 17 million by 2023, with annual growth rates averaging 1-2% globally despite periods of slower convertible baptisms.[100][101]These reflections underscored enduring lessons on balancing fidelity to core teachings with intellectual freedom, with analysts noting that while the church has since engaged more directly with historical complexities through official essays, the absence of widespread defections post-1993 challenges narratives of the excommunications as a catalyst for systemic decline, instead attributing long-term vitality to maintained unity.[90][3]