John Sears Tanner (born 1950) is the current President of the Brazil São Paulo South Mission of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. He previously served as Academic Vice President of Brigham Young University (BYU). Tanner is the husband of Susan W. Tanner, a former general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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John Sears Tanner grew up in Pasadena, one of 13 children of gifted parents, William and Athelea Tanner. He served an LDS mission in Brazil.[1] Tanner received his bachelor's degree in 1974 from BYU. This same year he married Susan Winder after a dizzying romance. He then began studies at the University of California at Berkley where he received his Ph.D. in English in 1980.[1]
Tanner began his academic career as an assistant professor at Florida State University. He has also been a Fulbright Scholar in Brazil.[2] Bothered in Florida by the freedom feminist and atheist colleagues had to speak freely about their beliefs, while he had to hold his tongue about his, as well as by his wife's homesickness for Utah, Tanner became a member of the BYU faculty in 1982.[3] Tanner has focused much of his studies on John Milton. He wrote a book entitled Anxiety in Eden that received the Best Book Award from the Milton Society of America in 1992.[1] Tanner was also a contributor to the Encyclopedia of Mormonism.
From 1992 to 1998 Tanner was the Associate Academic Vice President for Undergraduate and International Education at BYU. In this capacity he developed the Freshman Academy program to better transition new freshmen into BYU. He was also involved with developing BYU's current policy on academic freedom.[1] Tanner also oversaw changes in BYU's General Education requirements, including a reduction in the Physical Education requirement.[4] In 2001 Paul Y. Hoskisson edited a volumne entitled Historicity and the Latter-day Saint Scriptures which included a chapted by Tanner entitled "The World and the Word: History, Literature and Scipture".
From 1998 to 2003 Tanner served as the chair of the BYU English Department. In 2004 he was made the Academic Vice President of BYU. In this position Tanner normally announced changes in the administration under him.[5]
Tanner composed the University's Educational AIMs (Spiritually Strengthening, Intellectually Enlarging, Character Building, Lifelong Learning and Service). Tanner was also involved in writing the letter LDS missionaries receive instructing them on their assignment.
In 2011 Tanner was assigned to serve as president of the Brazil São Paulo South Mission.[6] As a young missionary in Brazil from 1969-1971, Tanner spoke superb Portuguese--grand vocabulary, fine accent for an American, said most things the way Brazilians said them rather than the "Gringo-ized" way. Yet the quality of Portuguese spoken by mission presidents tends to be fair or poor. Tanner admitted years ago he rarely spoke Portuguese after his mission. How his tongue will fare this time in Brazil, only time will tell.
Tanner wrote the words to "Bless Our Fast We Pray", which is hymn # 138 in the 1985 English-language edition of the LDS Church hymnal. Tanner also wrote a "Sacrament Sonnet" that was published in The Ensign in 1981. [7]
Tanner was also involved with putting to music "Nephi's Psalm," from a chapter[8] in the Book of Mormon. The first one, "I Love the Lord" was written to the tune of "Be Still My Soul" and was sung at the Priesthood Session of the April 2007 General Conference. His other adaption, "Sometimes My Soul," is based on the American folk tune "Poor Wayfaring Stranger."[9] Tanner also wrote an article in the Ensign on the power of hymns. [10]