Three Decades after the Equal Rights Amendment

Mormon Women and American Public Perception

J. B. Haws

J. B. Haws (jbhaws@byu.edu) was an assistant professor of Church history and doctrine at BYU when this was published.

Women unite

For Mormons who are interested in what the media is saying about their faith (meaning most Mormons!), there may have been some relief at the end of the 2012 US presidential campaign; a breather might have been welcome, so pervasive had talk of the 鈥淢ormon Moment鈥 become. Yet, as Michael Otterson, director of Public Affairs for the LDS Church, has argued, since the 2002 Olympics, interest in Mormons has really never abated.[1] It seems to be the case that Mormonism has now become a fixture on the landscape of American public consciousness.

In recent months, much of the wider attention that has been directed at the faith has been driven by larger conversations about the place of women in the LDS Church. What this brief article seeks to highlight is an earlier chapter in this ongoing story, a story of the central role that issues related to Mormon women鈥攁nd more important, women themselves鈥攈ave played in shaping public perception of the Church and its members. That earlier chapter is the campaign for and against the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) in the 1970s and early 1980s.[2]

The Equal Rights Amendment finally passed Congress in 1972, a half century after supporters had first proposed it. In its final form, the one-sentence amendment seemed innocuous and almost patently obvious to a nation more attuned to civil rights and equality than it ever had been before. When Congress sent the amendment to the states, it seemed destined for quick adoption: twenty-two states ratified it in 1972 and eight states followed suit in 1973. But then the passages slowed鈥攁nd finally stopped. With only the approval of a handful of additional states needed to make the amendment constitutional, the measure鈥檚 momentum ran out. In fact, the momentum reversed鈥攆ive states even voted to rescind their earlier ratifications.

The unexpected part of this story, especially for readers three decades removed from the action, is that the opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment was initially spearheaded by women. Phyllis Schlafly, a committed Catholic and conservative political activist, launched STOP-ERA; STOP stood for 鈥渟top taking our privileges.鈥 Schlafly argued that the ERA had the potential to strip the rights of women who wanted to be treated differently than men. She raised concerns that, under the amendment, women could be drafted into military service, or that women would no longer be eligible for alimony or child support, since there would be no unique protections or special-status recognition for women under the law.

Her message resonated with women nationwide, and the debate quickly took on religious overtones. Many conservative Christian women worried that the Equal Rights Amendment was an affront to their decisions to take on what they saw as biblically based roles of full-time wives and mothers. The Equal Rights Amendment came to represent, for them, an attack on traditional families.[3]

Latter-day Saint reaction to the Equal Rights Amendment followed many of these national patterns, but with a nuanced Mormon overlay to it鈥攎ore about eternal gender identity and less about wives submitting to husbands. Mormon opposition was slow to develop and coalesce. The first well-publicized Mormon opposition to the ERA came from speeches by Mormon women: successive general Relief Society presidents Belle Spafford in July 1974 and Barbara Smith in October 1974. Spafford and Smith鈥檚 comments came after the Idaho legislature, with a number Mormons in its ranks, had already ratified the amendment in 1972. Spafford and Smith feared that the brevity of the amendment belied its potential disruptive power. They worried, like so many other women, that the amendment would give the Supreme Court too much interpretive license to change the definition of marriage, for example, or expand abortions-on-demand鈥攁nd after the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, the ERA and the accessibility of abortions were inextricably linked. Many of the ERA鈥檚 most liberal proponents celebrated these potential societal disruptions; concerned opponents recoiled against them.[4]

What should not be missed in this history is the agency of women. After Barbara Smith spoke publicly against the ERA, she approached President Spencer W. Kimball to ask his opinion about the appropriateness of her remarks. President Kimball鈥檚 biographer notes that President Kimball鈥檚 journals 鈥済ive no indication how he felt about the issue or how his attitudes may have developed.鈥 But the Church News ran an editorial against the ERA just a few months after Barbara Smith鈥檚 address. Within two years, the First Presidency officially expressed its opposition to the ERA, noting that while the Church lamented many of the gender inequities in society, it did not think the broadly ambiguous amendment was the solution.[5]

Thousands of Mormon women mobilized in response to the Church鈥檚 invitation to express their opposition to the amendment. And, as the media reported it, these Mormon women had measurable effects on the way legislatures voted in Nevada, in Virginia, and in Florida.

Not to be missed, though, is that the Church鈥檚 strong anti-ERA stand also alienated many Mormon women who felt that many of society鈥檚 injustices could be remedied with the power the amendment would give to lawmakers and to the courts. Some Mormon women felt that the Church鈥攚hich, they noted, historically had been an advocate of education for women, and theologically had departed from many traditional Christian positions about the culpability of Eve in the Fall鈥攚as giving in to a retrograde, Victorian-era view of women鈥檚 roles. Church leaders said that members could vote their consciences on this matter, yet some Mormon women and men wondered if the 1979 excommunication of Sonia Johnson belied that expressed toleration of political dissent. Johnson began making headlines with her 鈥淢ormons for ERA鈥 position in the late 1970s. Her group鈥檚 tactics included public protests at general conferences and the Seattle Temple open house, as well as well-publicized media appearances in print and on television. She argued that Church leaders demonstrated 鈥渟avage misogyny鈥 (although she noted that this statement was taken out of context), and she recommended to the American public that they not allow Mormon missionaries into their homes until the Church reversed its ERA stand.[6]

Johnson鈥檚 excommunication for apostasy (鈥減erhaps the most conspicuous media event in [LDS] Church history鈥 to date, one observer called it)[7] and her vocal complaints about the political influence of Mormon money and out-of-state letter-writers introduced a new dimension into the media鈥檚 treatment of Mormons鈥攐r, perhaps more accurately, revived a dimension that had characterized reporting on Mormons a century earlier. That dimension was fear鈥攆ear of Mormon political ambitions, and fear of a Church whose centralized hierarchy could wield enormous influence in the lives of devoted, but mostly unthinking, disciples.[8]

The ERA was never ratified, and many policy-makers felt that the main anti-ERA argument, that women鈥檚 needs could be better served by specific piecemeal legislation, proved persuasive enough to effectively dull public interest in the amendment. But pro-ERA activists鈥 complaints about Mormon power did not disappear or dissipate, and in fact continued to color media portrayals of the Church well into the 1980s, just as other groups鈥攍ike evangelical Christians and academics within and without the Church鈥攅xpressed renewed concern about Mormon growth and Mormon intolerance of dissent.

Three decades later, the place of women in Mormon media is still being discussed. In July 2014, A Mormon columnist in the New York Times proclaimed that the 鈥淢ormon Moment鈥 was over when Ordain Women鈥檚 Kate Kelly was excommunicated. The writer felt that the excommunication signaled the end of what many observers had noted in recent Mormondom, and that was the prominence of a diversity of voices and faces in, say, the 鈥淚鈥檓 a Mormon鈥 campaign, as well as the world of social media. Yet Kelly鈥檚 excommunication, the columnist feared, would change all of that鈥攊t was evidence of a 鈥渃rackdown鈥 that would 鈥淸mark] the end of . . . a distinct period of dialogue around and within the Mormon community.鈥[9]

Others, however, have not been so sure.[10] While it is far too early to know how this will play out, one thing that does feel different today is that attention to Mormon women seems to be highlighting important Mormon diversity as much as, or even more than, perceived Mormon authoritarianism鈥攁nd this is a theme that seems to have momentum in the national media. Recent coverage of the place of women in the LDS Church has carried signals to those outside and inside the faith that there is no one 鈥渧alid鈥 Mormon viewpoint, but rather there are many. One case in point: In a spring 2014 New York Times series on changes in the sister missionary program鈥攁nd the attendant changes of the place of women in the Church generally鈥攖he following women were quoted: Linda Burton (general Relief Society president); Neylan McBaine, identified in the article as a moderate Mormon; Kate Kelly; Joanna Brooks; and, significantly, Maxine Hanks, identified with this telling line: 鈥淢axine Hanks, one of the excommunicated feminist scholars, recently rejoined the church because she sees 鈥榮o much progress鈥 for women, she said in an interview.鈥[11] Such diversity of opinions is certainly a notable change in the media coverage of the Mormon community.

Part of this surely has come about because the nature of media coverage in today鈥檚 world has changed, in that social media platforms have exponentially multiplied the number of potential media commentators. This means that a variety of Mormon women, in their own voices, are able to describe their experiences in, concerns with, and hopes for a Church to which they are deeply committed. This accessibility makes snap judgments鈥攖hat split the camps into 鈥渇aithful鈥/鈥漸nfaithful鈥 sides鈥攃ome off as unfair and unreflective of reality. Instead of only being polarizing, then, attention to these issues now seems to be opening space for productive conversations. Part of that space, too, seems to have been opened by institutional initiative on the part of the Church to reflect the richness and complexity of its own history and within its own people. What these current conversations might therefore do is sensitize Latter-day Saints and outside observers to additional layers in the 鈥淢ormons and the ERA鈥 story and its aftermath, and warn all sides against easy assumptions: it would be just as wrong, we begin to see, to assume that every Mormon woman who favored the ERA rejected outright the idea of prophetic direction, as it would be to suppose that every Mormon woman who opposed the ERA was subservient and unthinking. These current conversations can prompt us to listen to each other more.

It says something that Neylan McBaine, characterized as 鈥渁n orthodox believer鈥 by one of her book鈥檚 endorsers, could write in her new book, Women at Church: Magnifying LDS Women鈥檚 Local Impact, that 鈥渢he truth is found not in sweeping these tensions under a rug or bundling them into tidy packages of platitudes; it is in wrestling with them outright.鈥 And it says something that McBaine鈥檚 book carries endorsements from Camille Fronk Olson, chair of the Ancient Scripture Department at BYU; from Juliann Reynolds, cofounder of FairMormon; and from Lindsay Hansen Park, founder of the Feminist Mormon Housewives Podcast.[12] It seems to say, at the very least, that there is room in the contemporary Church for a variety of voices and viewpoints, that Matt Bowman was right when he told National Public Radio in the fall of 2012 that coverage of Mitt Romney鈥檚 campaign had struck at the prevalent 鈥渕yth鈥 of Mormonism-as-鈥渕onolith.鈥[13] It also says, and forcefully so, that the agency of Mormon women is being better recognized than ever before in the role such agency has had鈥攁nd will have鈥攊n shaping the meaning of 鈥淢ormon,鈥 both in terms of a clearer public understanding and adherents鈥 self-understanding. Finally, it seems to say that the aspirations of Church members to rise to new heights are driven by the ideals of equality for which the Church itself stands. 鈥淲e can be encouraged,鈥 McBaine writes, 鈥渂y the ways our doctrine opens doors to theological possibilities and potential that are not options in other faith communities.鈥 The question she therefore asks is worthy of repeated reflection: 鈥淎re we practicing what we preach?鈥[14]

Notes

[1] Michael Otterson, interview, September 9, 2011, interviewed by author, transcript in author鈥檚 possession, 4.

[2] For studies of Mormon involvement in the Equal Rights Amendment campaign, see Martha Sonntag Bradley, Pedestals and Podiums: Utah Women, Religious Authority and Equal Rights (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 2005); D. Michael Quinn, 鈥淎 National Force, 1970s鈥1990s,鈥 in The Mormon Hierarchy: Extensions of Power (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1997); and J.B. Haws, 鈥淭he Politics of Family Values: 1972鈥1981,鈥 in The Mormon Image in the American Mind: Fifty Years of Public Perception (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).

[3] See Daniel K. Williams, God鈥檚 Own Party: The Making of the Christian Right (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), 108鈥111.

[4] See Jane J. Mansbridge, Why We Lost the ERA (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1986), 5.

[5] See Edward L. Kimball, Lengthen Your Stride: The Presidency of Spencer W. Kimball (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2005), 176鈥178. The First Presidency鈥檚 statement is reprinted on pages 177鈥178.

[6] See 鈥淎 Savage Misogyny: Mormonism vs. Feminism and the ERA,鈥 Time, December 17, 1979, 80: 鈥淸Johnson] explains that the phrase was directed at Mormon culture in general.鈥 Sonia Johnson argued later that the way she used the phrase in her speech was misappropriated by a reporter who applied the charge of misogyny specifically to Mormon leaders, whereas Johnson asserted she was speaking about all of Western culture: 鈥淚t was inexplicable to me why they persisted in believing their misquote of the UPI misquote over evidence that proved without a doubt that I have never attributed 鈥榮avage misogyny鈥 to either church leaders or Mormon culture.鈥 Sonia Johnson, From Housewife to Heretic (Albuquerque, New Mexico: Wildfire Books, 1989), 334. On refusing the missionaries, see Diane Weathers and Mary Lord, 鈥淐an A Mormon Support the ERA?,鈥 Newsweek, December 3, 1979, 88.

[7] Stephen W. Stathis, 鈥淢ormonism and the Periodical Press: A Change is Underway,鈥 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 14, no. 2 (Summer 1981): 48鈥49.

[8] One Mormon woman who added her name to a 1979 pro-ERA pamphlet, 鈥淎nother Mormon View of the ERA,鈥 said that she worried her signature 鈥渨ould either get me exed [excommunicated],鈥 or that her husband would lose his job at a Church university. 鈥淏ut,鈥 she said, 鈥渘obody bothered with me, we were overreacting I suppose.鈥 Nancy Kader to J.B. Haws, email, December 11, 2014.

[9] Cadence Woodland, 鈥淭he End of the 鈥楳ormon Moment,鈥欌 New York Times, July 14, 2014, http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/15/opinion/the-end-of-the-mormon-moment.html?_r=0.

[10] See Nate Oman鈥檚 blog post, 鈥淒iscussion, Advocacy, and Some Thoughts on Practical Reasoning,鈥 Times and Seasons, June 24, 2014, http://timesandseasons.org/index.php/2014/06/discussion-advocacy-and-some-thoughts-on-practical-reasoning/.

[11] Jodi Kantor and Laurie Goodstein, 鈥淢issions Signal a Growing Role for Mormon Women,鈥 New York Times, March 1, 2014, . See also the roundtable of Mormon responses published in connection with the article.

[12] Neylan McBaine, Women at Church: Magnifying LDS Women鈥檚 Local Impact (Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2014), 6. The 鈥渙rthodox believer鈥 description comes from Lindsay Hansen Park鈥檚 blurb inside the book鈥檚 cover.

[13] Quoted in Liz Halloran, 鈥淲hat Romney鈥檚 Run Means for Mormonism,鈥 National Public Radio, November 1, 2012, .

[14] McBaine, Women at Church, 61, 176.