Los Angeles Times

Top Mormon leader

- news.obits@latimes.com

Mormon leader L. Tom Perry, a member of the faith’s highest governing body, died Saturday at his home in Salt Lake City, church spokesman Eric Hawkins said in a statement.

Perry was 92. He was diagnosed with cancer in late April after being hospitaliz­ed with breathing trouble. He began receiving radiation treatment and brief ly returned to work as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a group modeled after Jesus Christ’s apostles that serves under the church president and his two counselors.

On May 29, church officials announced the cancer had spread aggressive­ly, reaching Perry’s lungs.

Perry was the oldest member of the church’s top 15 leaders and was the quorum’s second-most-senior member. He wrote a book in the mid-1990s titled “Living With Enthusiasm.”

He spoke regularly at church conference­s and was one of four leaders to meet with President Obama during his recent Utah trip.

Perry was in attendance when Mormon leaders and state lawmakers introduced a landmark bill in March that bars discrimina­tion against gay and transgende­r people while protecting the rights of religious groups and individual­s.

He was greeted warmly by LGBT advocates that day but drew their rebuke in early April when he spoke at a semiannual church gathering in Salt Lake City about the faith being a leading advocate for traditiona­l families and opposing “counterfei­t and alternativ­e lifestyles.”

A replacemen­t will be chosen by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints President Thomas S. Monson, considered the religion’s prophet.

Some former quorum members have been moved up from another governing body, the Quorums of the Seventy, while others have come from leadership posts at church-run universiti­es.

Perry was born Aug. 5, 1922, in the northern Utah city of Logan.

After a Mormon mission, he served in the Marine Corps and went to Japan after World War II.

He earned a degree in finance from Utah State University and went on to be a vice president and treasurer in retail businesses in Idaho, California, New York and Massachuse­tts before being chosen for the quorum in 1974.

Perry dealt with hardship during his midlife years: His first wife, with whom he had three children, died in 1974, and their daughter died in 1983. Perry remarried in 1976.

As a church leader, Perry became known for his affability and optimism and for being unpretenti­ous, said Matthew Bowman, a history professor at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. He asked that people call him Tom rather than “Elder Perry,” Bowman said.

One of his most wellknown quotes came during the 1998 semiannual church conference, where he said: “The almost universal gift everyone can develop is the creation of a pleasant dispositio­n, an even temperamen­t.”

Perry was a tall, athletic man who played sports as a youngster and was wellknown for exercising and staying in shape throughout his life.

Richard Bushman, a Mormon historian and emeritus professor at Columbia University, recalled Perry as a jovial man with a big grin and booming voice.

Bushman, who served under Perry when he was a regional church leader in Boston in the early 1970s, re- called how efficientl­y Perry ran meetings. He demanded that people bring not only problems but solutions, and made quick and firm decisions, Bushman said.

“I’ve never seen a person run a meeting as carefully and quickly as he did,” Bushman said.

 ?? Rick Bowmer AP ?? APOSTLE Perry was known as affable, optimistic and
unpretenti­ous.
Rick Bowmer AP APOSTLE Perry was known as affable, optimistic and unpretenti­ous.

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