
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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|link=Joseph Smith/Polygamy/Illegal in Nauvoo | |link=Joseph Smith/Polygamy/Illegal/Illegal in Nauvoo | ||
|subject=Was plural marriage, as practiced by the Mormons, illegal in Nauvoo in the 1840s? | |subject=Was plural marriage, as practiced by the Mormons, illegal in Nauvoo in the 1840s? | ||
|summary=Under Illinois law, Joseph Smith and the Saints were not guilty of a crime due to their private practice of plural marriage. In fact, the Illinois legislature would later alter their laws precisely because they feared that their current law would allow Mormon polygamy. | |summary=Under Illinois law, Joseph Smith and the Saints were not guilty of a crime due to their private practice of plural marriage. In fact, the Illinois legislature would later alter their laws precisely because they feared that their current law would allow Mormon polygamy. | ||
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Joseph Smith era:
Post-Joseph Smith:
Post-Manifesto–present |
To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, [[../CriticalSources|click here]]
The Church believes in honoring and sustaining the law, but it does not believe that members must surrender their religious beliefs or conscience to the state. Not surprisingly, the question comes down to whether Joseph was a Prophet and whether God commanded his actions.
Just because some members have come up with uninformed opinions about plural marriage, is this the Church's fault? The Church doesn't include any of these claims in its manuals.
Critics charge that the Church and its members participated in polygamy in violation of both state and federal laws. It is therefore argued that the Church abandoned its commitment to “obeying, honoring, and sustaining the law.”8 Critics, however, make such arguments without a full understanding of the legal considerations of the day and without understanding how civil disobedience plays into the picture.
This is hardly new information, and Church members and their critics knew it. Modern members of the Church generally miss the significance of this fact, however: the practice of polygamy was a clear case of civil disobedience.
Elder James E. Talmage taught that members should obey the law, unless God commanded an exception:

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