Third Convention
The Third Convention was a dissident group of Mexican Latter-day Saints (Mormons) who broke away from the main body of church authority in 1936 over a dispute about local governance and autonomy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Mexico.
Origin
A contributing cause of the dissension may have been the Cristero War of 1926-1929, a counter-revolutionary movement against certain anti-clerical provisions of the 1917 Mexican Constitution. These provisions had expelled foreign clergy from Mexico, resulting in isolation of Mexican Mormons from their church's headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah.[1]
As a result, a group of Mexican Mormons led by Abel Páez, first counselor of the Mexican district presidency, demanded that church leadership appoint a Mexican mission president "of pure race and blood" (de pura raza y sangre). After three rebuffs, a breakaway faction of the Mexican mission district organized what came to be known as the Third Convention, separate from and without authority from church leadership in the United States. These "Third Conventionists" (as they were known) conducted missionary activity in some small mountain villages in central Mexico.[2]
Outcome
Several members of the Third Convention were temporarily excommunicated by the LDS Church during the period in which it was active, although most of these were changed to the lesser punishment of disfellowshipment by President George Albert Smith in 1946, signaling a compromise. Rapprochement continued with President Smith's visit to Mexico that year, resulting in most Third Conventionists returning to the fellowship of the LDS Church.[1]
Current status
In 1997, anthropologist Thomas W. Murphy located an active Third Conventionist community in Ozumba, Mexico, despite the widespread understanding among scholars that such groups had disappeared. It was situated in Colonia Industrial, founded in 1947 as the community of Margarito Bautista, a prominent Third Conventionist. According to a local leader, there were 700 adherents going as "Mormons" with the institutional name of El Reino de Dios en su Plenitud (The Kingdom of God in its Fulness). The group practiced plural marriage and communal principles of the law of consecration, and seemed to be moderately affluent. They were affiliated with the Apostolic United Brethren Mormon fundamentalist church, and saw Owen Allred as a prophet. Murphy also learned about another Third Conventionist group of about 300 strong, existing in San Gabriel Ometotztla, Puebla, called La Iglesia de los Santos de la Plenitud de los Tiempos (The Church of the Saints of the Fullness of Times).[3]
See also
References
- 1 2 Tullis, F. Lamond and Elizabeth Hernandez. "Mormons in Mexico: Leadership, Nationalism, and the Case of the Third Convention." 1987. Accessed 6 April 2009 from: http://www.orsonprattbrown.com/MexicanMission/third-convention.html
- ↑ Flake, Gerry R., "Mormons in Mexico: The First 96 Years", Ensign, September 1972.
- ↑ Thomas W. Murphy (1998). ""Stronger Than Ever": Remnants of the Third Convention" (PDF). The Journal of Latter Day Saint History. 10: 1, 8–11. Retrieved 2014-01-27.
Further reading
- Paez, Gomez; Rogelio, Fernando (2004), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the Lamanite Conventions: From Darkness to Light, Mexico City: Museo de Historia del Mormonismo en Mexico.
- Tullis, F. LaMond (1997), BYU Studies, 37 (1): 127–57 http://byustudies.byu.edu/showTitle.aspx?title=134, retrieved 2014-01-27 Missing or empty
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ignored (help). - Tullis, F. LaMond (1997), "A Diplomat's Diplomat: Arwell L. Pierce and the Church in Mexico", in Bruce A. Van Orden; D. Brent Smith; Everett Smith Jr., Pioneers in Every Land, Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, pp. 113–24, ISBN 1570083061.
- Tullis, F. LaMond (1987), Mormons in Mexico: The Dynamics of Faith and Culture, Logan: Utah State University Press, ISBN 0874211301.