Religious Education in BYU鈥檚 Prophetic Historical Context

Bruce C. Hafen

Elder Bruce C. Hafen, "Religious Education in BYU's Prophetic Historical Context," Religious Educator 21, no. 2 (2020): 1鈥19.

Elder Bruce C. Hafen is an emeritus General Authority. He served previously as president of BYU鈥揑daho and provost at BYU.

Address to the BYU Religious Education faculty and staff, 28 August 2019

Bruce C. HafenElder Bruce C. Hafen

I begin with a question of perspective about BYU. For Latter-day Saint students, is education on the three BYU campuses qualitatively different from education at a state school with a nearby Latter-day Saint institute? Many key variables are hard to measure鈥攃omparative educational quality, social opportunities (especially a temple marriage), and the likelihood of real religious growth鈥攊n both understanding Church doctrine and learning to live it. Moreover, how can one quantify the unique, multilayered effects of simply living for a few years in a Zion-like village (like Laie, Rexburg, or Provo)鈥攅xperiencing daily the spirit of 鈥渢he gathering鈥 as the Saints knew it in Nauvoo or in the early pioneer settlements? Obviously, some students will benefit more than others in such a place, depending on what a given student brings to the campus. Yet clearly many thousands of Latter-day Saint students and their families believe passionately that these qualitative differences鈥斺渢he BYU experience,鈥 whatever that is and however it is measured鈥攁re worth years of preparation and sacrifice.Dean Daniel Judd has invited me to offer a historical perspective on Religious Education within BYU鈥檚 larger historical context. In doing so, I speak more from experience than with authority, having been blessed with some opportunities to learn about the subject at fairly close range for several decades.

How have the most influential founders of the three modern BYU campuses seen these differences? By substantially enlarging all three student bodies in the last seven decades, what were they trying to create, and why? They didn鈥檛 need to invest vast tithing resources in the Church universities just because state schools didn鈥檛 have space. On the contrary, in recent years, access to US higher education has become almost universally available. To explore what may have motivated the key founders, let鈥檚 consider some historical context.

The Church鈥檚 commitment to educating Latter-day Saint youth came as a doctrinal mandate of the Restoration. For example, 鈥淚, the Lord, am well pleased that there should be a school in Zion鈥 (Doctrine and Covenants 97:3). The applications of this premise are further displayed in the impressive historical exhibit Educating the Soul: Our Zion Tradition of Learning and Faith in the Joseph F. Smith Building on the Provo campus. On this foundation, Church efforts to find the right balance between the religious and the secular in its approach to higher education have a long history.

Due primarily to inadequate public education in Utah, an influx of settlers of other faiths, and the creation of new pioneer colonies beyond the Great Basin, by 1900 the Church had created more than thirty stake academies for secondary education, stretching from Canada to Mexico. And even though the Utah Territory began establishing public schools in 1890, most of the academies continued to function as private Church schools and colleges until well into the twentieth century.[1] BYU in Provo was the only school designated as a university, a decision the Church Board of Education (鈥淏oard鈥) made in 1903.

By 1920 the Commissioner of Church Education was a young Apostle named David O. McKay. Before his call to the Twelve in 1906, he had been a faculty member and then principal of the Weber Stake LDS Academy. He recommended to the Board that the Church divest itself of all but a handful of its postsecondary schools because the Church simply couldn鈥檛 afford to provide a college education for all its members.

Then in 1926, also citing costs, Elder Adam S. Bennion went even further as Commissioner. He recommended that the Church entirely 鈥渨ithdraw from the academic field [in higher education] and center upon religious education鈥 by creating new institutes of religion near selected state colleges. The first institute began that same year at the University of Idaho in Moscow. Elder Bennion told the Board that he believed the people teaching in the state universities were 鈥渋n the main . . . seeking the truth.鈥 However, Elder McKay replied that the Church had not established Church schools 鈥渕erely because the state didn鈥檛 do it鈥; rather, he said, the Church established these schools 鈥to make Latter-day Saints.鈥 Thus, he continued, 鈥we ought to consider these Church schools from the standpoint of their value to the Church more than from the standpoint of duplicating public school work.[2]

Elder McKay later said he had therefore 鈥渧oted against . . . [giving] the Church鈥檚 junior colleges to the states of Utah, Arizona, and Idaho.鈥[3] However, the First Presidency decided in 1930 that the Church should (1) divest itself of all its colleges except BYU and LDS College in Salt Lake City (later LDS Business College and now Ensign College) and (2) expand institutes of religion on selected other campuses. For example, the Church transferred Snow, Dixie, and Weber Colleges to the state of Utah. The Church also offered Ricks College (now BYU鈥揑daho) to Idaho beginning in 1931, but the state legislature repeatedly declined, even though the Church offered to donate all of the college鈥檚 assets if Idaho would agree to operate the school. With encouragement from President McKay as a new member of the First Presidency, the Church finally decided to keep Ricks College in 1937.[4]

The institutes of religion grew during the 1930s and 1940s. Then in 1951 David O. McKay became President of the Church, and Ernest L. Wilkinson was appointed as both the president of BYU and Commissioner (then the 鈥淐hancellor鈥) of Education. During the next twenty years, President McKay actively established a new vision of Church higher education. Both BYU and Ricks College grew rapidly, and Church College of Hawaii (now BYU鈥揌awaii), was founded in 1955.

In 1957 the Church announced plans to create eight additional junior colleges as potential feeder schools for BYU. Then for financial reasons, in 1963 the First Presidency dropped the junior college plan and reaffirmed its commitment to the institutes of religion.[5]

Nonetheless, the Church鈥檚 support for BYU, Ricks, and Hawaii remained strong. During the McKay presidency, BYU鈥檚 enrollment expanded from 5,500 in 1950 to 25,000 in 1971 (it is now about 32,000). In 2001, Ricks College became BYU鈥揑daho (it is now a four-year university with a current on-campus enrollment of about 19,000). BYU鈥揌awaii enrolls about 2,900.[6]

So the three BYU campuses are significant exceptions to a general policy of not providing higher education on a Church campus. The spiritual architect who most magnified the window of exceptions was President McKay, acting in his prophetic role. These three campuses are thus living monuments to his educational vision and inspiration. And what was his vision? President McKay answered that question with his entire life鈥檚 work and teachings. As he told a BYU audience in 1937,

Brigham Young University is primarily a religious institution. It was established for the sole purpose of associating with facts of science, art, literature, and philosophy the truths of the gospel of Jesus Christ. . . .

In making religion its paramount objective, the university touches the very heart of all true progress. . . .

I emphasize religion because the Church university offers more than theological instruction. Theology as a science 鈥渢reats of the existence, character, and attributes of God,鈥 and theological training may consist merely of intellectual study. Religion is subjective and denotes the influences and motives of human conduct and duty which are found in the character and will of God. One may study theology without being religious.[7]

This is an expanded version of what President McKay had told the Board in 1926: 鈥淲e established the schools to make Latter-day Saints.鈥 He also taught repeatedly his conviction that 鈥渃haracter is the aim of true education,鈥 and he believed that 鈥渕odern education鈥 gave inadequate emphasis to helping students develop 鈥渢rue character.鈥[8] He was also disturbed as early as 1926 by 鈥渢he growing tendency all over the world to sneer at religion鈥 in secular state education.[9]

I sense in President McKay鈥檚 attitudes an implicit belief that providing religious education in an institute next to a secular university would not do as much 鈥渢o make Latter-day Saints鈥 as might be possible on a BYU campus. His concept was to create a conscious integration of fine academic departments, extracurricular programs, and the teaching of the religious life鈥攁ll on the same campus, pursuing a unified vision about becoming educated followers of Jesus Christ, blessing the Church by blessing the youth of Zion. So when he said, 鈥We ought to consider these Church schools from the standpoint of their value to the Church,鈥 he was describing a religious mission, not simply an educational mission; but it is a religious mission in which higher education plays a central role.

Inspired by this vision, other Church leaders have often encouraged BYU faculty to integrate religious perspectives into their teaching. For example, when the J. Reuben Clark Law School was founded at BYU in 1973, President Marion G. Romney said the school鈥檚 purpose was to study the laws of man in the light of the laws of God. And the first of the 鈥淎ims of a BYU Education鈥 (鈥淎ims鈥), a formal part of the university鈥檚 official purpose since the early 1990s, states that 鈥渢he founding charge of BYU is to teach every subject with the Spirit.鈥 In the words of President Spencer W. Kimball, this doesn鈥檛 mean 鈥渢hat all of the faculty should be categorically teaching religion constantly in their classes,鈥 but it does expect 鈥渢hat every teacher would keep his subject matter bathed in the light and color of the restored gospel.鈥[10]

鈥淎ims鈥 goes on to say that a BYU education should be 鈥渋ntellectually enlarging鈥 with regard to intellectual skills, depth, and breadth. Yet, in describing the desired breadth of an intellectual education, 鈥淎ims鈥 states, 鈥淭he gospel provides the chief source of such breadth because it encompasses the most comprehensive explanation of life and the cosmos, supplying the perspective from which all other knowledge is best understood and measured.鈥

This approach doesn鈥檛 simply balance the sacred and the secular, or faith and reason, as if the two realms were of equal importance. Rather, President McKay鈥檚 vision consciously avoids allowing the academic disciplines to judge or stand superior to the gospel or the Church. As one Latter-day Saint scholar observed, 鈥淭here is a danger that [the] use of scholarly tools鈥攚hich requires the privileging of those tools鈥攚ill breed habits of mind that reflexively privilege secular scholarship over the gospel.鈥[11] This is a risk in some approaches to Mormon studies, which may look at the gospel primarily through the lenses of the academic disciplines.

Because of that risk, Elder Neal A. Maxwell was always dismayed by Latter-day Saint scholars and professionals who allowed the premises and perspectives of their disciplines to take priority over their understanding of the gospel. And he was disappointed by teachers who, as he put it, 鈥渇ondle their doubts鈥 in 鈥渢he presence of Latter-day Saint students who [are] looking for spiritual mentoring.鈥 Thus Elder Maxwell, like President McKay or President Romney, 鈥渓ooked at all knowledge through the gospel鈥檚 lens.鈥 They knew they 鈥渃ould integrate a secular map of reality into the broader sacred map, but the smaller secular map, with its more limited tools and framework, wasn鈥檛 large enough to include religious insights. Thus the gospel鈥檚 larger perspective influenced their views of the academic disciplines more than the disciplines influenced their view of the gospel.鈥[12]

Similarly, Elder Boyd K. Packer once urged Church Educational System (CES) faculty to avoid judging 鈥渢he Church, its doctrine, organization, and leadership, present and past, by the principles of their own profession.鈥 Rather, we should 鈥渏udge the professions of man against the revealed word of the Lord.鈥[13]

All BYU faculty enjoy full academic freedom to teach and model this expansive view of education. At most other universities, faculty are constrained by understandable academic conventions from mixing their personal religious views freely with their teaching and scholarly work. Indeed, on most campuses these days, they would probably be expected to 鈥渂racket their faith鈥 to avoid such mixing. The institutional academic freedom allowed by BYU鈥檚 explicit, written religious mission consciously removes those brackets, like taking the mute out of a trumpet. And that unmuting allows the talented trumpets of BYU faculty to give an especially certain sound while integrating their faith with their academic teaching鈥攁 fortunate quality both for BYU students and for Latter-day Saints generally.

One historical example of this integrated scholarly paradigm was Elder B. H. Roberts, who wrote the six-volume Comprehensive History of the Church in 1930. Some current Latter-day Saint historians consider his work 鈥渁 high point in the publication of Church history to that time. Most earlier works were either attacks upon or defenses of the Church. Although Roberts鈥檚 study was a kind of defense, he set a more even tone, a degree of uncommon objectivity.鈥[14] Roberts did write with uncommon objectivity鈥攂ut his faith was not in brackets. As Truman Madsen wrote in his biography of Roberts, 鈥淪ome of Roberts鈥檚 critics have sought to discredit the approach to history that makes it a passionate part of one鈥檚 own being鈥攍ived through鈥攁nd they make it instead a specialist鈥檚 retreat, a professional game for which only the detached are qualified. Those critics build their reputations by poking at the ashes. At his best B. H. Roberts took from the altars of the past not the ashes, but the fire. And in the pages of his best writing, the fire still burns.鈥[15]

I know it isn鈥檛 easy to emulate that example, even though it鈥檚 desirable. For my own research and writing on constitutional law and family law, I found myself instinctively looking to the gospel for the most basic premises for my reasoning鈥攂ut I also knew I had to speak the language and accept the constraints of my academic discipline if I wanted the best scholarly editors to publish my work.

The best way for a Latter-day Saint student to reconcile the competing values of faith and intellect is to be mentored by teachers and leaders whose daily life, attitudes, and teaching authentically demonstrate how deep religious faith and demanding intellectual rigor are mutually reinforcing.

Academic disciplines and individual circumstances obviously vary, but many BYU faculty today do try to see their disciplines, the world, and their students through the lens of the gospel. That鈥檚 why since the early 1990s, BYU devotional speakers now regularly include BYU faculty, not just General Authorities, as had typically been the previous pattern. That is also why the most capable BYU faculty from other academic disciplines have at times been recruited to teach religion classes on campus.

In addition, faculty whose lives reflect a completeness of heart, soul, and mind can fulfill much of President McKay鈥檚 vision by the way they mentor their students鈥攊n how they share themselves both in class and in personal interactions. Recent research among BYU students tells us that a great deal of 鈥渟piritually strengthening鈥 and 鈥渋ntellectually enlarging鈥 teaching on the campus comes from personal examples and mentoring by professors in all disciplines.

When faculty feel responsible for students鈥 personal development as well as for their cognitive education, they will find ways to let their students see how gifted Latter-day Saint teachers and scholars integrate their professional competence into their overarching religious faith鈥斺渃omplete person鈥 role modeling that those students are much less likely to find elsewhere. As BYU鈥檚 academic stature keeps growing, its faculty will feel increased pressures to be more concerned with published scholarship and national reputation than with their students. Yet at the same time, as the new CES guidelines recognize,[16] the current moment seems to pose greater challenges to students鈥 religious faith, which heightens each student鈥檚 need for informed and faith-filled mentoring.

Alan Wilkins, former BYU academic vice president, recently described the sobering implications of these competing pressures: 鈥淪ome will argue that we just have to be more scholarly in today鈥檚 context to have much influence in the larger academic community. How and whether that can be done and still strengthen our students spiritually in ways that build faith and character . . . is the most important question before us at BYU currently.鈥[17]

Expectations of Religious Education Faculty at BYU

Just last night, President Kevin J Worthen distributed to you some new 鈥淕uidelines for Strengthening Religious Education鈥 in Church-sponsored higher education adopted by the Church Board of Education on 12 June 2019. These guidelines state that the purpose of religious education is 鈥渢o teach the restored gospel of Jesus Christ from the scriptures and modern prophets in a way that helps each student develop faith鈥 in the Father, the Son, His Atonement, and the restored gospel; to help students 鈥渂ecome lifelong disciples of Jesus Christ鈥; and to 鈥渟trengthen their ability to find answers, resolve doubts, [and] respond with faith.鈥 The statement then describes the conditions that guide religion faculty hiring, work, and promotion鈥攑roviding, for example, that faculty must 鈥渂e sound doctrinally.鈥[18]

This document reaffirms principles the Board (which has always included the First Presidency) has needed to reemphasize every generation or so since BYU鈥檚 founding in 1875, primarily due to the recurring tendency of some BYU faculty to teach and write about religion from a more secular perspective.

An important early example of this tendency unfolded in the early 1900s. The Board had designated Brigham Young Academy as a university in 1903. Then, starting in 1907, President George Brimhall hired two sets of brothers, Ralph and William Chamberlin and Henry and Joseph Peterson, who had the academic credentials to help 鈥渢ransform the . . . college into a full-fledged university comparable to the country鈥檚 recognized universities.鈥[19] Three of the four men held graduate degrees in biology, philosophy, education, and psychology from the University of Chicago, Harvard, and Cornell; the other had studied at Harvard, Chicago, and the University of California.

The new faculty all believed they had successfully reconciled the modernist ideas they had encountered in graduate school with their religious faith; indeed, they were convinced that their enlarged intellectual perspectives would enrich the 鈥渋deal of education which had [always] been cherished in the Church鈥 by harmonizing all knowledge 鈥渨ithin an institution devoted primarily to religious education.鈥[20] Thus they embarked on a well-intentioned campaign to 鈥渆nliven [BYU] students academically by introducing the latest developments鈥 in the major disciplines.[21] As it turned out, however, their views essentially 鈥渄iscounted the historical reality of any scripture.鈥[22]

In a 1909 article in BYU鈥檚 student newspaper, for instance, Ralph Chamberlin 鈥渄rew a sharp distinction between history and legend,鈥 because 鈥history countenances only such reports as are [empirically] verifiable.鈥[23] Thus such early Hebrew stories as the Tower of Babel, the Flood, and Jonah are best understood as legends and poetic myths, he said, because 鈥減oetry is a superior medium for religious truth.鈥[24]

Initial student reactions to these ideas were positive, partly because the new professors were 鈥渄ynamic, articulate, and very popular.鈥 One student later said she had initially been disturbed to learn that 鈥渢he [story] of Adam and Eve and the Garden of Eden may not be literally true,鈥 but she, like most other students, had tried to be open to the enlightened modern views. Indeed, when President Brimhall was later threatening to release three of the new professors, a petition signed by over 80 percent of the BYU student body supported the professors.[25]

By 1911 reports from disturbed local Church leaders and parents led Horace H. Cummings, superintendent of Church education, to investigate. After finding that most of the students and many of the faculty were accepting the new theories, Cummings reported to the Board that the new professors were teaching BYU faculty to apply secular theories to Church teachings 鈥渋n such a way as to disturb, if not destroy, the faith of the pupils.鈥[26] Noel Reynolds has aptly summarized Cummings鈥檚 report:

The inspiration for the 鈥渕odernist鈥 views came directly from higher criticism of the Bible as articulated in the writings of Lyman Abbot, who regarded the Bible as a collection of myths and folklore. Christ鈥檚 temptation was regarded as allegory; John the Revelator was not literally translated. Sin was redefined as ignorance. . . . Visions and revelations were mentally induced; the literal reality of Joseph Smith鈥檚 visions was questioned. The application of the theory of evolution required new characterizations of the fall and Christ鈥檚 atonement. . . . Proponents argued that rather than downgrading the scriptures, this enlightened understanding made [them] 鈥渕ore dear and more beautiful, . . . being broader in their applications.鈥 These avant-garde professors also enjoyed the clear support of many [other] LDS intellectuals.[27]

President Brimhall, who was originally sympathetic toward the new faculty, was troubled when he heard some students say they had stopped praying. Then he had a dream that convinced him Cummings was right. In the dream he saw a group of BYU professors casting, as if fishing, some kind of bait into the sky where a flock of snow-white birds were happily circling. When the birds took the bait, they fell to the earth and turned out to be BYU students who said to President Brimhall, 鈥溾楢las, we can never fly again!鈥 Their Greek philosophy had tied them to the earth. They could believe only what they could demonstrate in the laboratory. Their prayers could go no higher than the ceiling. They could see no heaven鈥攏o hereafter.鈥[28]

A special committee that included several members of the Twelve verified the findings in the Cummings report. The Board accepted these conclusions, resolving 鈥渢hat teachers appointed in Church schools must be in accord with Church doctrine. The three professors were given the choice of conforming or resigning.鈥[29] All three left BYU, along with a few other professors.[30] Some who disagreed with this outcome were distressed, believing that the Board鈥檚 approach meant BYU would never be able to teach essential academic subjects with the depth and rigor required of a legitimate, let alone a superior, university and that students would not be allowed to explore the ambiguities sometimes found in biblical and Church history and doctrine. However, experience since then on both counts resoundingly shows otherwise.

Then in the years after the first institute of religion was founded in 1926 at the University of Idaho, a number of institute teachers and BYU religion teachers left Utah to seek advanced degrees in religion at noted universities in an effort to 鈥渟et an academic standard in theology.鈥[31] Some of them, such as Sidney B. Sperry, returned with superb graduate school training guided by bedrock faith that enabled a lifelong contribution of teaching and scholarship to BYU鈥檚 mission in religious education.

Indeed, Sperry鈥檚 experience at the University of Chicago Divinity School was so successful that Apostle (and then Commissioner of Church Education) Joseph F. Merrill invited several professors from the Chicago Divinity School to teach at BYU鈥檚 summer school in the 1930s[32]鈥攅choing a pattern from the 1920s, when other prominent non鈥揕atter-day Saint Bible scholars had been invited to lecture at BYU鈥檚 Summer School on religious education and how to teach the Bible.[33]

Building on this 鈥淐hicago connection,鈥 the Church encouraged a number of Latter-day Saint graduate students to seek divinity school training there and elsewhere, as Elder Merrill and the Brethren wanted to bolster the ranks of qualified teachers of religion for both BYU and the emerging institutes of religion.

A number of these teachers returned fortified with Sperry-like attitudes and training. Several others, however, were overly influenced by their graduate school religion professors who, like those three BYU faculty in 1910, reflected the growing academic secularism of their time. As later described by Elder Boyd K. Packer, himself a career religion teacher before his call as a General Authority, 鈥淎 number of them went [to graduate programs in religion in the 1920s and 鈥30s]. Some who went never returned. And some of them who returned never came back.鈥 A few of these actually left the Church, and 鈥渨ith each [of these] went a following of [their] students鈥攁 terrible price to pay.鈥[34] Elder John A. Widtsoe agreed: 鈥淗eaven forbid that we shall send our men away again to Divinity schools for training. The experiment, well intentioned, did not work out.鈥[35]

These unfortunate developments became the catalyst for what may be the most influential discourse on Church education in the last century鈥斺淭he Charted Course of the Church in Education,鈥 delivered by President J. Reuben Clark Jr. to Church religion teachers at Aspen Grove in 1938. (For example, I heard President Marion G. Romney put aside his own notes and quote this entire talk as his message to the BYU faculty in the early 1970s.) President Clark paid tribute to the faculty鈥檚 loyalty, sacrifice, faith, and righteous desires. He asked God to bless them with 鈥渆ntrance to the hearts of those you teach and then make you know as you enter there that you stand in holy places.鈥 He praised the youth of the Church, saying they 鈥渨ant to gain testimonies of [the gospel鈥檚] truth,鈥 adding soberly that these youth are 鈥渘ot now doubters but . . . seekers after truth, [and] doubt must not be planted in their hearts. Great is the burden and the condemnation of any teacher who sows doubt in a trusting soul. These students fully sense the hollowness of teachings that would make the gospel plan a mere system of ethics.鈥

A generation later, when Boyd K. Packer was the supervisor of Seminaries and Institutes, he heard some local Church leaders report that members of their stakes had 鈥渓ost their testimonies studying religion at Church schools,鈥 because some faculty were teaching 鈥渢he unusual things they had discovered in their academic wanderings.鈥 As had happened in 1911 and in 1938, these concerns led the First Presidency in 1954 to send Elder Harold B. Lee, assisted by other General Authorities, to instruct and correct all of the Church鈥檚 religion teachers during five weeks of summer school at BYU.

In 1959 the faculty in BYU鈥檚 Division of Religion successfully petitioned the Board to be designated the 鈥淐ollege of Religious Instruction鈥 and to be authorized to grant graduate degrees in religion as part of their effort to 鈥渆levate religion . . . to a higher level of academic respectability.鈥[36]

However, in 1972, during President Dallin H. Oaks鈥檚 first year as BYU president, he felt a need to review a broad range of issues in religious education. So he asked me (I was then his assistant) to help research and evaluate those issues. In addition to extensive historical research and selected in-depth interviews, we invited written comments from all religion faculty.

After the Board considered President Oaks鈥檚 findings and recommendations, they made some important changes that sent messages reaffirming familiar historic principles. For example, graduate degrees in religion were eliminated. As Elder Packer later explained, the Brethren hoped the nonreligion faculty at BYU would lead the world as authorities in their disciplines. But in the field of religion, 鈥淚t is not to a university that the world must turn for ultimate authority.鈥 Rather, the First Presidency and the Twelve are those who have ultimate religious authority in the Church.

Moreover, the title 鈥淐ollege of Religious Instruction鈥 was replaced by 鈥淩eligious Education.鈥 One of the messages here was that religious education shouldn鈥檛 be limited to one college; rather, all BYU academic colleges should contribute to and draw from religious education. Aligning with this direction, President Oaks initiated a process to select carefully a number of faculty from the other colleges whom he then invited to teach a Book of Mormon class on a continuing basis. To underscore his commitment, he assigned himself to teach one of those classes. In addition, the Board wanted to signal that the faculty from all disciplines should feel responsible for 鈥渢he spiritual development of their students.鈥 Another implicit message, Elder Packer later said, was that the typical assumptions behind 鈥減ublish or perish鈥 shouldn鈥檛 apply in the same way to religion faculty as they might in other academic colleges.

In a meeting held two years after these changes were announced, Elder Packer delivered a key discourse on the history of Church religious education, some of which I have quoted today. The occasion for that meeting was the retirement of Dean Roy W. Doxey and the introduction of Jeffrey R. Holland, then thirty-three years old, as the new dean of Religious Education at BYU. It was an appropriate time for reflection and recalibration. I recommend President Packer鈥檚 talk for frequent rereading.

Later on, my assignments at BYU鈥揑daho and then at BYU in Provo required my attendance at twice-monthly meetings around a conference table with the Church Board of Education and its executive committee. Listening to the Brethren in those small-scale settings for fourteen years taught me volumes about how the First Presidency and the Twelve have consistently viewed religious education and faculty issues at BYU. The priorities I heard during those meetings are completely consistent with the guidelines we were given last night鈥攁nd those given and repeated since 1910.

During the 1970s and 鈥80s, BYU took an astonishing leap forward in the quality of its teaching, learning, and scholarship. The higher education community began to see the university in an increasingly favorable light. A national U.S. News poll in the mid-1990s ranked BYU among the country鈥檚 top twenty-five undergraduate teaching universities.

These decades ran parallel with a general cultural revolution that had been ignited on college campuses by student free-speech protests at Berkeley in 1964鈥攁 movement with vague but multiple causes that spread and eventually shook the very foundations of American education, challenging traditions and institutional authority at every hand. The momentum of the student movement was accelerated by perceived overlaps with such broader public causes as the campaign for racial equality and opposition to the war in Vietnam. It also fueled, and was fueled by, growing secularization and a passionate emphasis on individual rights.

In this environment, BYU鈥檚 increased academic quality attracted many able new faculty whose graduate school training often reflected the new individualistic, anti-institutional assumptions. Still, most of these new professors felt downright liberated by BYU鈥檚 religious atmosphere, because nearly all of them were devoted Latter-day Saints who welcomed the freedom鈥攏ot allowed elsewhere鈥攖o include their religious beliefs in their teaching. As the number of new faculty grew, so did the number of gifted students. Their presence and their curiosity enriched both the intellectual and spiritual quality of campus-wide conversations. They wanted to know how to articulate and how to exemplify BYU鈥檚 educational vision in ways that would enliven its spiritual foundations while helping the university contribute seriously to a society riven with intellectual confusion and growing moral decay.

However, as had happened in prior generations, a few of the faculty attracted by BYU鈥檚 increased stature felt more allegiance to the secular and sometimes politicized values of their graduate school disciplines than they felt toward the traditional religious values of the campus. As the university鈥檚 provost from 1989 to 1996, I saw repeatedly what happened when the values of these few faculty clashed with the expectations of the Board, other faculty, students, and the larger BYU community. In some ways those days felt like a sequel to the Brimhall era of 1910. Yet the 1990s version was more subtle and complex because faculty and student attitudes ranged across a broad spectrum of mostly desirable values and attitudes, rather than fitting into neat black-and-white compartments that asked for a simple choice between intellectual and spiritual values.

These circumstances required the Board and BYU to clarify鈥攐nce more鈥攕ome key concepts and relationships among faculty, students, administration, and the Board about the very idea of BYU. We needed a meeting of the minds; we needed to become of one heart. And our resolution needed full participation by the faculty and the Board, with a written set of principles that would bless both us and those who came after us with clarity, harmony, and shared purpose.

In a story too long to recount here, the administration appointed a faculty committee on academic freedom chaired by John S. Tanner of the English Department and assisted by James D. Gordon of the Law School. Over the course of many demanding months, the committee drafted and redrafted a twenty-five-page policy statement that defined and integrated the roles of both individual faculty academic freedom and the university鈥檚 institutional academic freedom as a Church-sponsored university.

As eventually approved by both the faculty and the Board, this statement鈥攕till official BYU policy鈥攔epresents an informed consensus that blends individual and institutional academic freedom into a harmonious reaffirmation of BYU鈥檚 character and mission鈥攊n President McKay鈥檚 familiar words, a 鈥渞eligious institution . . . established for the sole purpose of associating with facts of science, art, literature, and philosophy the truths of the gospel of Jesus Christ.鈥

A key portion of the policy is based on past Board guidelines, applying them in more specific terms:

The exercise of individual and institutional academic freedom must be a matter of reasonable limitations [on individual freedom]. In general, at BYU a limitation is reasonable when the faculty behavior or expression SERIOUSLY AND ADVERSELY affects the University mission or the Church. . . . Examples would include expression with students or in public that:

  • contradicts or opposes, rather than analyzes or discusses, fundamental Church doctrine or policy;
  • deliberately attacks or derides the Church or its general leaders; or
  • violates the Honor Code because the expression is dishonest, illegal, unchaste, profane, or unduly disrespectful of others.

Reasonable limits are based on careful consideration of what lies at the heart of the interests of the Church and the mission of the university.[37]

The decades from the early 1990s until today then ushered in the digital age, which has introduced totally unforeseen and massive challenges (and opportunities) for religious education everywhere. As President M. Russell Ballard said to all CES religious educators in 2016,

It was only a generation ago that our young people鈥檚 access to information about our history, doctrine, and practices was basically limited to materials printed by the Church. Few students came in contact with alternative interpretations. Mostly, our young people lived a sheltered life.

Our curriculum at that time, though well-meaning, did not prepare students for today鈥攁 day when students have instant access to virtually everything about the Church from every possible point of view. Today, what they see on their mobile devices is likely to be faith-challenging as much as faith-promoting. Many of our young people are more familiar with Google than they are with the gospel, more attuned to the Internet than to inspiration, and more involved with Facebook than with faith.

Therefore,

Gone are the days when a student asked an honest question and a teacher responded, 鈥淒on鈥檛 worry about it!鈥 Gone are the days when a student raised a sincere concern and a teacher bore his or her testimony as a response intended to avoid the issue. Gone are the days when students were protected from people who attacked the Church. . . .

You can help students by teaching them what it means to combine study and faith as they learn. Teach them by modeling this skill and approach in class.[38]

As part of its response to this need, in 2015 the Church posted eleven new Gospel Topics Essays on churchofjesuschrist.org, providing thorough, well-documented articles on many of the topics that had attracted the most interest and visibility by anti-Church websites, podcasts, and blogs鈥攕uch as plural marriage, race and the priesthood, gender, the Mountain Meadows Massacre, Heavenly Mother, and Joseph Smith鈥檚 translation of the Book of Mormon and the Book of Abraham.

All of these and similarly controversial topics had been described in detail for years by Latter-day Saint scholars鈥攁s reflected, for example, in the impressive four volumes of The Encyclopedia of Mormonism jointly published by the Macmillan Company and BYU in 1992. But until the advent of the internet, encyclopedias, like typical anti-Church literature, had remained buried in accessible but little-used libraries.

In 2016, however, Elder Ballard counseled Church religion teachers to 鈥渒now the content in these [Gospel Topics] essays like you know the back of your hand. If you have questions about them, then please ask someone who has studied them and understands them. . . . You should also become familiar with the Joseph Smith Papers website and the Church history section on LDS.org and other resources by faithful LDS scholars.鈥[39]

This general context helps to explain why the new 2019 鈥淕uidelines for Strengthening Religious Education鈥 include among the purposes of religious education, 鈥渟trengthen[ing] [students鈥橾 ability to find answers, resolv[ing] doubts, respond[ing] with faith, and giv[ing] reason for the hope within them in whatever challenges they may face.鈥 It may also help explain why Saints, the new official history of the Church, is written not as a scholarly treatise but in narrative language and personal stories that are accessible to younger readers, while providing the natural historical context for previously less-understood issues.

Another development that has been hastened by the digital age is the emergence of academic Mormon studies programs at several leading universities, headed by either Latter-day Saint or other scholars. Mormon studies is 鈥渢he interdisciplinary academic study of the , , and of those known by the term Mormon.鈥[40]

The Mormon studies movement is in many ways beneficial for the Church, having considerably increased awareness of the Church鈥檚 doctrines, history, and culture among many secular university students and faculty鈥攂oth a cause and an effect of the Church鈥檚 having come increasingly 鈥渙ut of obscurity鈥 (Doctrine and Covenants 1:30) in recent decades.

At the same time, writing and teaching from a Mormon studies perspective poses special challenges for Latter-day Saint teachers, especially faculty at Church-sponsored campuses, because the general conventions of academic study typically expect participants to 鈥渂racket their faith鈥 and to reason from secular, not religious, premises. In other words, Mormon studies scholars are expected to look at Church doctrine and history through the lens of their academic discipline鈥攁s opposed to looking at their disciplines through the lens of the gospel, as contemplated in President McKay鈥檚 vision of BYU.

Elder Jeffrey R. Holland addressed these risks in a significant discourse to the faculty and staff at BYU鈥檚 Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship in 2018. Speaking on behalf of BYU鈥檚 Board of Trustees, Elder Holland said that, for one thing, the term Mormon studies was no longer appropriate for use by the Maxwell Institute, given President Nelson鈥檚 recent counsel about the use of Mormon by Church members.[41]

Regarding secular premises, Elder Holland acknowledged that Mormon studies programs elsewhere are normally 鈥渙riented toward an audience not of our faith and not for faith-building purposes.鈥[42] And while these programs may provide 鈥渁 thoughtful consideration of the Restoration鈥檚 distinctive culture and convictions,鈥[43] such secular premises for teaching and writing by Latter-day Saints for Church audiences or on the BYU campus would be 鈥渃ertainly . . . troubling鈥 to the BYU trustees.[44]

As for BYU faculty who 鈥渂racket their faith鈥 for the sake of Mormon studies expectations, Elder Holland said that 鈥渁ny scholarly endeavor at BYU . . . must never be principally characterized by stowing one鈥檚 faith in a locker while we have a great exchange with those not of our faith.鈥[45] He quoted Elder Maxwell鈥檚 comment, 鈥淪ome hold back by not appearing overly committed to the Kingdom, lest they incur the disapproval of . . . peers who might disdain such consecration.鈥[46] Elder Holland added that one who 鈥渟tudiously pursues strict neutrality by 鈥榖racketing鈥 will miss the chance for genuine, even profound dialogue on matters of common interest鈥濃攁n approach that 鈥渉as cost scholars credibility with readers because . . . no one knows鈥 where the authors stand.[47]

So, to come full circle on the matter of the Board鈥檚 expectations of BYU religion faculty, the history of BYU is pretty clear that the guidelines President Worthen gave us last night are indeed a restatement of principles and values the Board has upheld since 1910鈥攃onsistently applying those principles as needed to the changing circumstances of the times.

Notes

[1] Harold R. Laycock, 鈥淎cademies,鈥 in Encyclopedia of Mormonism, ed. Daniel H. Ludlow (New York: Macmillan, 1992), 1:11鈥13.

[2] The quoted language is from an unpublished report by a committee appointed by the Church Board of Education in 1964; emphasis added. See 鈥淭o Labor in the Most Honorable Cause,鈥 unpublished talk to the BYU Religious Education faculty in 1990 by Bruce C. Hafen, then provost of BYU.

[3] Gregory A. Prince and Wm. Robert Wright, David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 2005), 196.

[4] Negotiations between the Idaho legislature, local college leaders, and the Church continued throughout the difficult Great Depression years of 1931 to 1937. In 1934 David O. McKay was called into the First Presidency and became 鈥渢he dominant educational advisor in the church. His influence was evident鈥 when the college finally received 鈥渢he welcome news that Ricks was to be maintained as a Church school.鈥 David L. Crowder, The Spirit of Ricks: A History of Ricks College (Rexburg, ID: Ricks College, 1997), 142. For a complete account, see 109鈥51.

[5] See report cited in note 2. See also President McKay鈥檚 diary entry in Prince and Wright, David O. McKay, 196鈥97.

[6] Current enrollment estimates are from the websites of the respective three campuses.

[7] David O. McKay, 鈥淭he Church University,鈥 (Provo, UT) Messenger, remarks delivered at BYU, October 1937, https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/3e/2a/7e333e2f49aba476da6a9041fdfb/the-church-university-david-o-mckay.pdf; emphasis added.

[8] David O. McKay, 鈥淭rue Education,鈥 quoted in Prince and Wright, David O. McKay, 160鈥61.

[9] Church Board of Education minutes, quoted in Ernest L. Wilkinson, ed., Brigham Young University: The First One Hundred Years, 4 vols. (Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 1975), 2:75.

[10] Spencer W. Kimball, 鈥淓ducation for Eternity,鈥 address to BYU faculty and staff, Provo, UT, 12 September 1967, in Educating Zion, ed. John W. Welch and Don E. Norton (Provo, UT: BYU Studies, 1996), 54.

[11] Nathan Oman, 鈥溾極ut of Zion Shall Go Forth the Law鈥 (Isaiah 2:3),鈥 FARMS Review of Books 12, no. 1 (2000): 132.

[12] Bruce C. Hafen, A Disciple鈥檚 Life: The Biography of Neal A. Maxwell (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2002), 166鈥67.

[13] Boyd K. Packer, 鈥淭he Mantle Is Far, Far Greater than the Intellect,鈥 BYU Studies 21, no. 3 (1981): 1.

[14] Douglas D. Alder, 鈥淐omprehensive History of the Church,鈥 in Ludlow, Encyclopedia of Mormonism, 303.

[15] Truman G. Madsen, Defender of the Faith: The B. H. Roberts Story (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1980), 366.

[16] Church Educational System, 鈥淕uidelines for Strengthening Religious Education in Institutions of Higher Education鈥 (unpublished document, 12 June 2019).

[17] Alan L. Wilkins to Bruce C. Hafen, email, 23 December 2016; emphasis added.

[18] Church Educational System, 鈥淕uidelines for Strengthening Religious Education,鈥 1鈥2.

[19] Wilkinson, Brigham Young University, 2:409.

[20] Ralph Chamberlin, Life and Philosophy of W. H. Chamberlin (Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press, 1925), 137.

[21] Richard Sherlock, 鈥淐ampus in Crisis: BYU鈥檚 Earliest Conflict between Secular Knowledge and Religious Belief,鈥 Sunstone, May 1985, 30; emphasis added.

[22] Noel B. Reynolds, 鈥淭he Coming Forth of the Book of Mormon in the Twentieth Century,鈥 BYU Studies 38, no. 2 (1999): 20.

[23] Sherlock, 鈥淐ampus in Crisis,鈥 31; emphasis added. 鈥淭he fundamental issue here is not the conclusion that Chamberlin comes to . . . but his insistence that the study of the Bible must be governed by the same canons of historical proof and evidence that are basic in historical research generally.鈥 Sherlock, 鈥淐ampus in Crisis,鈥 34n7.

[24] Sherlock, 鈥淐ampus in Crisis,鈥 31.

[25] Sherlock, 鈥淐ampus in Crisis,鈥 33.

[26] Boyd K. Packer, 鈥淭he Snow-White Birds鈥 (Brigham Young University Conference address, 29 August 1995), https://speeches.byu.edu/talks/boyd-k-packer/snow-white-birds/.

[27] Reynolds, 鈥淐oming Forth,鈥 21.

[28] As told to Horace Cummings, recorded in his autobiography. See Wilkinson, Brigham Young University, 2:421鈥22.

[29] Sherlock, 鈥淐ampus in Crisis,鈥 32.

[30] Reynolds, 鈥淐oming Forth,鈥 22.

[31] Boyd K. Packer, 鈥淪eek Learning Even by Study and also by Faith,鈥 in 鈥淭hat All May Be Edified鈥: Talks, Sermons & Commentary by Boyd K. Packer (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1982), 43.

[32] Packer, 鈥淪eek Learning,鈥 44.

[33] Packer, 鈥淪eek Learning,鈥 43.

[34] Packer, 鈥淪eek Learning,鈥 43鈥44.

[35] John A. Widtsoe, as quoted in Wilkinson, Brigham Young University, 2:455.

[36] Packer, 鈥淪eek Learning,鈥 47.

[37] 鈥淎cademic Freedom Policy,鈥 Brigham Young University, https://policy.byu.edu/view/index.php?p=9.

[38] M. Russell Ballard, 鈥淭he Opportunities and Responsibilities of CES Teachers in the 21st Century鈥 (address to CES religious educators, 26 February 2016), https://churchofjesuschrist.org/broadcasts/article/evening-with-a-general-authority/2016/02/the-opportunities-and-responsibilities-of-ces-teachers-in-the-21st-century.

[39] Ballard, 鈥淥pportunities and Responsibilities.鈥

[40] 鈥淢ormon Studies,鈥 Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormon_studies.

[41] Jeffrey R. Holland, 鈥淭he Maxwell Legacy in the 21st Century,鈥 2018 Annual Report (Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship), 14.

[42] Holland, 鈥淢axwell Legacy,鈥 15.

[43] Terryl Givens, David Holland, and Reid Neilson, External Review of the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, December 2014, 6, as quoted by Jeffrey R. Holland in 2018 Annual Report, 15.

[44] Holland, 鈥淢axwell Legacy,鈥 15.

[45] Holland, 鈥淢axwell Legacy,鈥 16.

[46] Neal A. Maxwell, 鈥淒iscipleship and Scholarship,鈥 BYU Studies 32, no. 3 (1992): 8.

[47] Holland, 鈥淢axwell Legacy,鈥 16.