Houston Chronicle Sunday

The making of a prophet

For Mormons, succession drama is against their religion

- By Laurie Goodstein

There will be no white smoke from a chapel chimney. There will be no church convention, no lobbying and no election.

Mormons don’t do succession drama. When the head of their church dies, as Thomas S. Monson did Tuesday, the next leader is chosen from the top ranks based strictly on seniority. The system is intended to avoid any hint of instabilit­y or intrigue, but it practicall­y guarantees that the president will be elderly — even very elderly.

Monson was 90 and had served as prophet and head of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for nearly 10 years. Following a tradition that dates from the church’s early years, he is to be succeeded by the longest-serving member of a church governing body known as the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.

Right now, that man is President Russell M. Nelson, a former heart surgeon, who is 93. Next in line after him is Dallin H. Oaks, a former president of Brigham Young University and state Supreme Court justice. He is 85. You have to pass four more people in the line of succession before you get to someone born after World War II.

“It seems very predictabl­e and regular, and there’s a certain comfort that comes from that level of stability,” said Brian Q. Cannon, past president of the Mormon History Associatio­n and director of the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at Brigham Young University, the Mormon church’s flagship college.

Nelson is unlikely to deviate much from Monson’s conservati­ve course, Cannon said.

The two men are of the same generation, molded in the same culture. But Nelson’s priorities in office may be somewhat different, given his background in medicine, his experience training heart surgeons in China and his fluency in Mandarin.

“I don’t foresee any radical changes, any revolution­ary changes, but there could be difference­s in emphasis,” Cannon said.

Nelson already has used his position as the church’s senior apostle to endorse the teachings of Monson as divinely inspired. Mormons believe that the president of their church is a living prophet who receives revelation­s from God.

In an address to Mormon millennial­s in 2016, Nelson defended a controvers­ial church policy set down by Monson that declared gay Mormon couples to be apostates and barred their children from most religious rites until they turn 18.

“Prophets see ahead — they see the harrowing dangers the adversary has placed, or will yet place, in our path,” Nelson said. “Prophets also foresee the grand possibilit­ies and privileges awaiting those who listen with the intent to obey.”

Monson’s funeral was scheduled for Friday in Salt Lake City.

Over the church’s 187-year history, the president has always been succeeded by the longest-serving member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles (who is not necessaril­y the oldest apostle), church historians said in interviews.

The first time was rocky. When Brigham Young succeeded the church’s founder, Joseph L. Smith, in 1847, he assumed the presidency only after a three-year power struggle. But over time the succession process became codified to avoid anything like that happening today, church historians said.

According to the church’s website: “The appointmen­t of a new president of the Church happens in an orderly way that — remarkably in today’s world — avoids any trace of internal lobbying for position or rank. Viewed by members as a divinely revealed process, it is devoid of electionee­ring whether behind the scenes or in public.”

The gerontocra­cy at the top of the church has the advantage of experience, but there also are obvious disadvanta­ges. Some Mormon bloggers have commented in recent years that Monson appeared to be disoriente­d or gave rambling speeches in public appearance­s. The church announced in October that he was no longer coming into the office, and he did not appear that month at the church’s semiannual internatio­nal gathering, its general conference.

Nelson is older than Monson was, but observers say he is physically and mentally strong for a man of his years. “President Nelson is remarkably healthy,” Eric Hawkins, a spokesman for the church, said. “As recently as last season, he was still snow skiing.”

 ?? Rick Bowmer photos / Associated Press ?? The longest-serving member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Russell M. Nelson, right, is excpected to become the next prophet and head of the church. Nelson, a former heart surgeon, is 93.
Rick Bowmer photos / Associated Press The longest-serving member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Russell M. Nelson, right, is excpected to become the next prophet and head of the church. Nelson, a former heart surgeon, is 93.
 ??  ?? Thomas M. Monson, who served as prophet and head of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for nearly 10 years, died last week at age 90.
Thomas M. Monson, who served as prophet and head of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for nearly 10 years, died last week at age 90.

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