Benjamin Park Profile picture
Aug 23, 2019 16 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Hey Mormons: can we talk about this for a bit? Because not only does the "Columbus was a man of God" narrative need to stop, but it is a perfect example of how we read racism into the scriptures and, simultaneously, our culture. /1 universe.byu.edu/2019/08/22/edu…
First of all, we should recognize that the sanctification of Columbus in Anglo-American thought was a cultural construct: early Americans were searching for a "founder" that was distinct from the British, from whom they just seceded. /2
But beyond being non-British, Columbus also represented another ideal: the European colonization of and domination over American lands and indigenous people. Columbus represented power & justified expansion. /3
Ever since the beginning, though, Native voices have rightly decried this veneration, highlighting the hypocrisy of worshipping a man who represented colonization, slavery, and death. Columbus's arrival marked the decimation of millions. /4
Further, Columbus was himself a *horrible* individual when it came to how he treated indigenous people. I mean, it's hard to put his atrocities into words. He was so bad that Spanish rulers punished him. Given what they justified, that's bad! /5
This is why many Americans have finally wisened up and tried to erase Columbus celebrations, including re-naming his holiday to "Indigenous Peoples Day." /6 teachingchannel.org/tch/blog/un-co…
So with that context out of the way, let's dig into why this Mormon reading of Columbus is especially problematic, because this is a textbook example of how a colonialist reading of scripture perpetuates serious problems within the community. /7
Hinckley, like many LDS, is basing this on 1 Nephi 13, which refers to someone being called by God & crossing the waters.

However, the language itself probably reflects Joseph Smith's day--when they started venerating Columbus. So this interpretation is not fully required. /8
But, since he *does* connect this passage to Columbus, thereby making Columbus a "chosen" vessel of God, suddenly everything Columbus did was divine. His "discovery" of America, for instance, did not wipe out civilizations, but instead lead to glorious globalization! /9
Or, perhaps more egregious, look at how he celebrates the creation of a "new race."

This is a very creative way of describing forced colonization, pillage, and rape. This "new race" was the result of dominating, expelling, and erasing whole civilizations. /10
And then there's connecting Columbus to the proliferation of religious liberty. Columbus himself would have scoffed at this--one of his goals was to enrich the Catholic empire so they could crush all other religious sects. He was not the figure of toleration. /11
Finally, and most importantly, to claim that Columbus "did more to prepare the way for the last dispensation" is to pretend that all his horrible actions--actions that enslaved, tortured, and killed thousands--were justified. That's colonialist theology. /12
Here's another example of that theology: people who claimed that slavery, though horrible, was able to "bring millions to America and Christianity." That used to be a talking point in the Church, too, and it echoes that same "God's hand in everything" providentialism. /13
This has real implications, too. If we believe in a God who could overlook the oppression of many in the past, then why wouldn't God do that today? Justifying historic colonization allows present injustice. /14
As a global church, the LDS faith still has to reckon with the legacies of colonialism. That's a dangerous process, of course, because it strikes at the privilege at the heart of many cultural beliefs, like venerating Columbus. But it's necessary. /fin
Oh hey, look at these fun responses.

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More from @BenjaminEPark

Sep 17, 2023
The Tim Ballard saga—especially reactions from his defenders like Glenn Beck—is an important reminder of a particular type of Mormon dissent.

Namely, the prevalence of conservative schism, and how it differs from progressive critique. /1
1st, let me make clear: I’m not saying conservatism leads more to dissent than liberalism. I’ve no idea the quantitative difference. Nor do I care. (I assume most who go inactive do so not purely for ideological reasons.)

Rather, I’m saying they react to dissent differently. /2
The long tradition of progressive Mormonism—“Liahona Mormons”—have devolved a language of prophetic fallibility that allows them to deal w/leaders who do things they consider wrong. They’ve built a framework for sustaining leaders with whom they disagree. (To a point, anyway.) /3
Read 8 tweets
Sep 15, 2023
LDS Church denounces Tim Ballard for using Apostle Russell Ballard's name and alleged support. The OUR founder “betrayed their friendship, through the unauthorized use...for Tim Ballard’s personal advantage and activity regarded as morally unacceptable.” vice.com/en/article/bvj…
Here is the full statement from the church. For those who follow this kind of stuff, it is *very* rare to get this kind of explicit denunciation from LDS authorities.
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For those who might wonder where OUR got its information for where and how to run their operations?

Well, prosecutors discovered 10,000 pages of psychic readings where a medium received information from NONE OTHER THAN BOOK OF MORMON PROPHET NEPHI.
Read 4 tweets
Dec 16, 2022
There's a lot of talk about the new Chat GPT and how it will affect writing assignments, so I thought I'd jot down some ideas about what it is, why it's seen as a threat, and some measures for what to do. /1
If you haven't noticed, a company released Chat GPT, an advanced chatbot designed to answer questions with human-like responses. It's leagues beyond anything that's been available before. And it's free! chat.openai.com/chat /2
You can ask specific questions with precise parameters, like, "In 2,000 words, what is..." The unique answers are drawn from data canvassed across the internet. And they're pretty good. Here's the answer to "How did FDR's New Deal help America escape the Great Depression?" /3 Image
Read 13 tweets
Dec 16, 2022
We're three days--seriously, THREE DAYS--away from @signaturebooks publishing #DNAMormon. So let's highlight another chapter!

The always brilliant @CristinaMartaR wrote on Quinn's contributions to the study of fundamentalist Mormonism. /1 ImageImage
First, Rosetti details how Quinn came to become interested in the topic. All scholarly projects have roots in questions. Quinn was struck by post-manifesto polygamy for both personal & historical reasons, especially since 1970s-80s was a boom for fundamentalism. /2
The LDS church's response to the rise of fundamentalist conversions was to deny post-manifesto polygamy existed. Yet Quinn's research soon demonstrated the story was *much* more complicated...and fascinating. /3
Read 6 tweets
Dec 15, 2022
We're FOUR days away from @signaturebooks releasing #DNAMormon, so time to highlight another chapter.

Today I'm overviewing Ian Barber's engagement with Quinn's famous EARLY MORMONISM AND THE MAGIC WORLD VIEW. /1
Quinn published the first edition of MAGIC WORLD VIEW in 1987. It was a climactic moment for the field of Mormon history: just a couple years removed from the Mark Hofmann bombings, and in the middle of the tense internal debates over the field. /2
It was into that realm that Quinn lobbed his first monograph, which also turned out to be one of his most controversial. He was forced to resign from BYU the next year. The book argues that early Mormonism was steeped in & drew from early America's magic culture. /3
Read 6 tweets
Dec 14, 2022
We're FIVE days away from the release of #DNAMormon (@signaturebooks), so time to highlight another chapter.

The legendary @patrickqmason and his student Hovan Lawton dug into Quinn's fascination with LDS leadership, and offer a compelling & surprising conclusion. /1 ImageImage
This chapter kicks off the second section of the book. The first section, comprised of the chapters I've already covered, treated Quinn as a historical figure. This and the next three chapters cover his historiographical contributions. /2
Quinn is perhaps most famous for his MORMON HIERARCHY series, a trilogy of books that explore LDS leadership. This grew out of his PhD dissertation and culminated with his final book, so the interest spanned his entire career. /3
Read 7 tweets

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