Mormon Alliance
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The Mormon Alliance was founded on July 4, 1992 by Paul Toscano to counter spiritual and ecclesiastical abuse in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and to protect the Church against defamatory actions.[1] During the next few months, the trustees established a broad range of supporting purposes: providing a comprehensive definition of spiritual abuse, working to reconcile leaders and members who were out of harmony, establishing a Members’ Bill of Rights,[2] providing a forum for a reasonable and tempered discussion of governance in the Church, critiquing general conference, and identifying and documenting cases of spiritual and ecclesiastical abuse. Janice Merrill Allred and Lavina Fielding Anderson, two of the trustees, became co-chairs of the Case Reports Committee in the fall of 1992 and still serve in those positions. Toscano and Fielding Anderson were excommunicated by the Church following their actions.[3][4]
The current activities of the Alliance including publishing a quarterly newsletter, publishing an annual Case Reports volume, and sponsoring four quarterly meetings: in January, April, August, and October. The April and October meetings are scheduled for the first Monday after general conference and are devoted to a critique of the general conference just concluded.[5] The August meeting is held in conjunction with the Sunstone symposium held in Salt Lake City, Utah.
[edit] References
- ^ Peggy Fletcher Stack (1993-05-08). Alliance Counters 'Spiritual Abuse'. The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved on 2008-03-17.
- ^ Peggy Fletcher Stack (1992-10-03). Mormon Faction Discusses 'Bill of Rights'. The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved on 2008-03-17.
- ^ Two Excommunicated by Mormon Church. The Boston Globe (1993-09-21). Retrieved on 2008-03-17.
- ^ Lynn Smith (1993-12-30). Whatever Happened to... 1993. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2008-03-17.
- ^ Faith in Action. The Salt Lake Tribune (2007-10-05). Retrieved on 2008-03-17.