Skip to content
Main Street Plaza

A Community for Anyone Interested in Mormonism.

Main Street Plaza

A Community for Anyone Interested in Mormonism.

A Silver Lining Behind Tad Callister’s No-Good, Heartless, Horrible Church News Article

@Monya_PostMo, June 3, 2021June 3, 2021

Just in time for Pride Month, a General Authority emeritus has published an article in The Church News declaiming the social safety nets because governments must ensure wickedness never was happiness.

Well, not in so many words, but it has all the unloving, racist, outdated implications you’d expect. Tad Callister says that same-sex marriage is a full-frontal attack on families; social programs are self-defeating. Such polices embrace “worldly solutions that nurture rather than nullify existing issues of immorality.” And he singles out “colonists” as valuing strong families, specifically “English, Scotch-Irish, Dutch, French, German and so on.” (Is he trolling people? Is it satire? I think not.)

As someone who left the Church decades ago, I see reasons to hope. Why? People are pushing back. I pasted the article’s url into Twitter and tallied the first 20 tweets that came up: 11 con, 9 pro. If I simply search Twitter for “Callister” (which enriches for those who don’t want to promote the article), all con. My favorite? “don’t understand how someone who believes in the same scriptures as me could write this,” from @znoyce. That’s certainly not the adulation someone like Callister might expect.

Most criticism seems to be coming from active members. A vanguard of faithful LDS millennials is openly hoping that the Church will change to become more accepting of LGBQT+ and denounce its racist past.

It’s a painful place to be; read this cri du coeur:

Why do we hurt them? Why do we hurt our queer children, friends, & congregants? Why do we abandon them? Why do we destroy their families? It’s just so senseless & cruel, that we take our most vulnerable among us and devastate them. And all for what? To belong in Christianity? Idk

— your Calvin (@calvinjburke) May 26, 2021

The most powerful Church authorities are not holding themselves accountable for hurting queer children, for abandoning our vulnerable, destroying their families or for discrimination, as when black parents couldn’t baptize their own children. So why would individual members?

Standing against hate within the Church is this increasingly visible army of compassionate faithful. They see beyond a binary choice of leaving or complying. They are calling for the Church to change. They are speaking aloud the pain the Church and its members cause, and it’s inspiring. (I’m not sure the Church is worthy of their love or heartbreak, but that’s not my call.)

Efforts to change the Church from within aren’t new; nor are stories about the pain the Church has caused. I remember 1990s Sunstone articles calling on women to have the Priesthood. Carol Lynn Pearson was a best-selling author in the 1980s. I admit, I haven’t paid much attention since the pre-Twitter days of Prop 8, when the Church battled marriage equality in California.

But the energy now feels more vibrant. In March, BYU students lit up the Y in rainbow! I see young people being told that they don’t belong, standing up and saying that they do. I see Twitter tags like BYU GAY SAYS BLACK LIVES MATTER (@BYUhasLGBTs), and it comforts my soul in a way I didn’t realize I needed.

I have no desire to rejoin this faith—I no longer believe in its literal truth. But efforts of the compassionate faithful hearten me. (That said, I hope compassionate LDS realize that they can lead happy, productive, worthwhile lives outside the Church if it stops being the right place for them.)

Somehow, their righteous efforts make my own separation less painful, and I want to say thank you.

PS: Another silver lining? I’ve found more cool people to follow on Twitter.

Abuse Homosexuality

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Harvey Milk

November 26, 2008November 26, 2008

Just in time for Thanksgiving, Hollywood is rolling out Harvey Milk, a tribute to the first openly elected gay man to a major office in the United States. The reviews of Harvey Milk are excellent. Sean Penn is supposed to be magnificent and the movie captures humanity of the gay…

Read More

Fred, Linda and Lance talk about Mormon involvement in Prop 8

June 18, 2010June 18, 2010

Fred Karger, Dustin Lance Black, and Linda Stay discuss the film 8: The Mormon Proposition and Mormon involvement in the Prop 8 campaign generally. If you’ve got 16 minutes to spare, you’re welcome to listen in. P.S. Pls don’t razz me about the graphics. It’s a radio interview. I just…

Read More

Oldies but Goodies: Testimony of a Dissident

September 10, 2009October 20, 2010

A while back another blogger asked me to submit an essay about my Mormon experience. Probably, for good reasons he changed his mind and never published it. Since it is already written and might shed some light on my argument at Times and Seasons, I might as well publish it…

Read More

Comments (2)

  1. Donna Banta says:
    June 3, 2021 at 2:33 pm

    “Most criticism seems to be coming from active members. A vanguard of faithful LDS millennials is openly hoping that the Church will change to become more accepting of LGBQT+ and denounce its racist past.”

    Change from within is tough–just ask Natasha Helfer, Kate Kelly, and Paul Toscano. That being said, this is indeed a heartening trend. Great post!

  2. chanson says:
    June 7, 2021 at 10:59 pm

    Yes, it’s definitely encouraging to see how much push-back is coming from the faithful on this. I was impressed by the response post on the faithful blog By Common Consent:

    Do I need to elaborate the many and diverse ways that colonists took jackhammers and wrecking balls to the sacred cement of societies on the African and North American continents in the course of their settlement of the United States? I mean, sure, we can acknowledge the undoubtedly sincere conviction that theirs was the Lord’s work, but at a time when the United States has yet to reckon with its colonial past and the long shadows it casts on the present, the colonists’ myopic focus on English, Scotch-Irish, Dutch, French, German families at the expense of those they imported in chains and cast out at gunpoint ought to serve at least as much as a cautionary tale as a model for the twenty-first century nuclear family.

    I wouldn’t even know where to begin with Callister’s article since it is basically wrong on every single possible level (including the meta level of people thinking this dude has anything of value to say). Which is why it takes the faithful people who care about the church to lead the thoughtful and constructive response.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Mormon Alumni Association Books

Latest Comments:

  1. Steve Pogue on Collecting Nominations for the 2025 Brodie Awards!!December 16, 2025

    Best new series - Radio Free Mormon’s series addressing the Light and Truth Letter

  2. Steve Pogue on Collecting Nominations for the 2025 Brodie Awards!!December 16, 2025

    For Best LDS-Interest Podcast Episode 2025 “Could Joseph Smith Write a Well-Worded Letter? - LDS Discussions” https://youtu.be/B1vjDGK2qas?si=C4mXeX6vWv1xLhEl

  3. Steve Eliason on Collecting Nominations for the 2025 Brodie Awards!!December 16, 2025

    I nominate Porchtime https://www.youtube.com/live/M4eigiy-Qew?si=nCWzOjbep21szT4L For the LDS Interest Discussion Group/Forum 2025 This is my favorite podcast, which I find most…

  4. Kate on Collecting Nominations for the 2025 Brodie Awards!!December 15, 2025

    Best LDS interest video channel - Generally Unquoteable

  5. Kathryn Class on Collecting Nominations for William Law X-Mormon of the Year 2025!!!December 15, 2025

    Samantha from MormwiththosewhoMormed is someone I always feel says and represents what’s on my mind so my nomination is for…

8: The Mormon Proposition Acceptance of Gays Add new tag Affirmation angry exmormon awards Book Reviews BYU comments Conformity Dallin H. Oaks DAMU disaffected mormon underground Dustin Lance Black Ex-Mormon Exclusion policy Excommunicated exmormon faith Family feminism Gay Gay Love Gay Marriage Gay Relationships General Conference Happiness Homosexual Homosexuality LDS LGBT LGBTQ Link Bomb missionaries Modesty Mormon Mormon Alumni Association Mormonism motherhood peace politics Polygamy priesthood ban Sunstone temple

Awards

William Law X-Mormon of the Year:

  • 2024: Nemo the Mormon
  • 2023: Adam Steed
  • 2022: David Archuleta
  • 2021: Jeff T. Green
  • 2020: Jacinda Ardern
  • 2019: David Nielsen
  • 2018: Sam Young
  • 2017: Savannah
  • 2016: Jeremy Runnells
  • 2015: John Dehlin
  • 2014: Kate Kelly
  • 2013: J. Seth Anderson and Michael Ferguson
  • 2012: David Tweede
  • 2011: Joanna Brooks
  • 2010: Monica Bielanko
  • 2009: Walter Kirn

Other Cool Sites!

WasMormon.org
©2025 Main Street Plaza | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes