The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has instructed local church leaders that same-sex couples are apostates and that children living with them can’t take part in church activities until they’re adults and leave home, the church told NBC News on Thursday night.
The policies are included in revisions of the Church Handbook of Instructions that were implemented Thursday and sent to leaders of local Mormon congregations, or stakes.
The revisions were approved by the church’s Council of the First Presidency and its Quorum of the Twelve Apostles to clarify how stake leaders should proceed after decisions in the last year legalizing same-sex marriages by the U.S. Supreme Court and high courts in other countries.
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Church critics blasted the hard-line approach.
“It is astounding and deeply disturbing for me to see the LDS church list legal same-sex marriage … as a sin comparable to murder, rape, sexual abuse, spouse abuse,” said John Dehlin, a gay-rights advocate and podcaster who was excommunicated earlier this year.
“What’s even more disturbing about this new policy change is that the children of LDS murderers and rapists can still get baptized, but children of legally same-sex married couples cannot. This is troubling even by Mormon standards.”
Eric Hawkins, a spokesman for the church, which is based in Salt Lake City, Utah, told NBC News that the revisions had been in the works for some time and that their issuance Thursday was unrelated to the election of Jackie Biskupski as the city’s first openly gay mayor this week.
“The church has long been on record as opposing same-sex marriages,” Hawkins said. “While it respects the law of the land and acknowledges the right of others to think and act differently, it does not perform or accept same-sex marriage within its membership.”
The revisions add those who are “in a same-gender marriage” to the list of apostates — that is, those who are considered to have turned their backs on their churches.
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A separate section of the handbook includes new language instructing local leaders that a child — biological or adopted — of parents living in a same-gender relationship may not receive the church’s blessing, begin training to become missionaries, or be baptized, confirmed or ordained without permission of top church leaders.
Even then, such approval would be allowed only if the child is 18 or older, leaves home and “specifically disavows the practice of same-gender cohabitation and marriage,” according to the revisions.
The Mormon church typically baptizes children at age 8, and it has said that children so young aren’t old enough to understand that their parents’ relationship is contrary to the church’s interpretation of God’s laws.









