The
Pain of Polygamy
By
Jill Martin Rische
The history of
American polygamy is one of great suffering and pain. Polygamy, the practice of
one man having many wives, was introduced to America as a "revelation" from
God, but its long legacy of heartbreak and despair points instead to a
thoroughly malevolent source. Insidious and ruthless, it authorized the
enslavement of women and children, the castration of rebellious young men, and
the torture and murder of those who dared to disobey.
The Revelation
On July 12,
1843, Joseph Smith formally introduced "A Revelation on the Patriarchal Order
of Matrimony" to the Latter-day Saints of Nauvoo, Illinois.1 It became known as celestial or plural
marriage and began with a warning: "For behold, I reveal unto you a new and an
everlasting covenant; and if ye abide not in that covenant, then are ye damned;
for no one can reject this covenant and be permitted to enter into my glory.."2 Salvation became contingent on the
practice of polygamy, and the Saints, or Mormons as they were commonly
called, must obey or face eternal damnation. The "divine" instructions went on
to say, "if a man marry a wife and make a covenant with her for time and for
all eternity, if that covenant is not by me or by my word.then it is not valid
neither of force when they are out of the world because they are not joined by
me, saith the Lord...."3 In a single revelation, Joseph Smith
claimed authority over every marriage that had taken place within the Mormon
Church until the time of the revelation, and over every future marriage. With
the control of marriage came the control of the home, and every individual in
it. Personal freedom and eternal exaltation were now completely subject to the
practice of polygamy. It was a formidable declaration of power by a living
"prophet" over his people, and it would change the course of thousands of
lives. Few dared to dispute Smith's authority as the anointed of God, and he
used the Old Testament patriarchs to justify the appropriateness of polygamy:
"Abraham received concubines, and they bare him children, and it was accounted
to him as righteousness.. David also received many wives and concubines, as
also Solomon and Moses my servants; as also many others of my servants, from
the beginning of creation until this time; and in nothing did they sin save in
those things which they received not of me. David's wives and concubines were
given unto him of me.."4
Interestingly
enough, the Book of Mormon flatly contradicted the new revelation, telling the
Saints that the argument of the Patriarchs was not valid: "They seek to excuse
themselves in committing whoredoms, because of the things written
concerning David and Solomon his son. Behold, David and Solomon truly had many
wives and concubines, which thing was abominable before me, saith the Lord."5 But this strong condemnation of polygamy
by a different word from God did not seem to trouble the prophet, even though
the Doctrine and Covenants supported the Book of Mormon, stating unequivocally,
"Thou shalt love thy wife with all thy heart, and shalt cleave unto her, and
none else."6 Smith proceeded with his announcement
despite the glaring contradiction, and "it fell like a thunderbolt upon the
Saints"7 though it came as no surprise to the
leadership of the Church. According to many witnesses, Joseph Smith, Brigham
Young and virtually every man of consequence in Nauvoo, practiced it secretly
long before the announcement in 1843.8 What
had been a clear command from God to live a life of monogamy was swiftly
ignored in favor of the new revelation.
The Women of the Past
For many women
caught in polygamy, life soon became unbearable. A faithful husband, pressured
by his peers and laughed at for having only one wife, soon gave in and married
another.10
A wife stopped being a helpmate and became instead a means to exaltation in the
world to come: the more children she bore, the larger her husband's kingdom.
Exaltation meant becoming a god, and she would be his spiritual wife. She could
not achieve exaltation on her own, only through her husband. He would be the
one to call her name at the resurrection. One early Mormon song exhorted the
women to actively assist their husbands in marrying other women:
Now, sisters, list to
what I say:
You can't expect to
miss them all,
Help husband get a
wife!
Now, this advice I freely give,
If exalted you would
be,
Remember that your
husband must
Be blessed with more
than thee.
Then, oh, let us say,
God bless the wife
that strives,
And aids her husband
all she can
To obtain a dozen
wives.11
This
indoctrination, combined with the fear of retribution from the Mormon
"Heavenly Father," produced a powerful incentive to obey. Such an enormous
amount of spiritual supremacy allowed men to manipulate and control women,
quickly reducing them to the level of slave. In 1857, former Mormon elder John
Hyde wrote of Brigham Young's wives, "They content themselves with his
kindness, as they cannot obtain his love. Not being allowed to be happy, they
try to be calm.because their hearts may not feel, therefore they freeze their
hearts, and not being permitted to be women, they try to convince themselves
that it is God's will for them to be slaves."12
Factored into
all of this was the confusing doctrine of marriage for time and eternity, with
all of its earthly and eternal ramifications.13 A woman could easily be married to
two and even three men-all at the same time. She may or may not have
sexual relations with all three men, depending on what her husbands decided.
Mary Elizabeth Rollins Lightner was married to Joseph Smith for eternity,
Brigham Young for time, and also to her legal husband, whom she lived
with in Salt Lake City.14 It was her husband in eternity that
would call her forth on the day of resurrection to father her children
eternally on whatever planet he ruled as a "god." Considering the astounding
number of marriages and divorces in Salt Lake City during the time of Brigham
Young, keeping track of every change in the time and eternity commitments must
have been a logistical nightmare.15 Many women did not even know who had fathered
their children, let alone who would ultimately call them forth at the
resurrection.16
"Sensual salvation" was rampant among the Mormons, making it difficult at times
to determine who had fathered whom. It was common practice for a Mormon elder
to go on a required mission for several years at a time, leaving his wives in
the care of an "agent" or "proxy" he appointed before he left. This man would
stand in for him until his return, adding more children to the missing elder's
eternal kingdom!17
The Price of Polygamy
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Joseph Smith's new revelation,
albeit from a somewhat confused deity, threw open the lid on the proverbial
Pandora's Box, and everyone became preoccupied with the rituals
of courtship and marriage. Old men pursued girls thirteen and fourteen years
old-and their mothers-often forcing young women to marry the first available
young man as quickly as possible. Although some women were not averse to
marrying elderly Apostles in order to gain prestige in the next world, too
often girls were married with little concern for their feelings. The majority
of the settlers in Salt Lake City were immigrants, alone, penniless, and very
far from home. It was a common occurrence for an older, powerful man in the
Church to meet a wagon train in order to select a new spiritual. It
rarely mattered if she was promised to someone else, or married to someone
else; a sudden need for a mission to some remote destination could always be
arranged.18
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Every Saint
was instructed from childhood in his or her respective spiritual place, and a
strong emphasis was placed on the male worth. Men were for ruling, women for
breeding. Should this intense indoctrination fail and result in rebellion,
Mormons were powerless-in most cases-to change the course of their lives. Men
who defied the Church were mutilated or killed.19 Women could not leave Salt Lake City
without permission, and they certainly could not take their children. And even
if they managed to escape, there was simply nowhere to go. They were a thousand
miles from the nearest place of safety, and the Church had a very long arm. If
they defied their husbands, they defied the leadership of the Church, which was
a very dangerous thing to do.20 A charge of adultery was a death
sentence-"blood atonement" for the sin of turning against Mormonism.21 The Church
controlled everything and everyone, and if a husband decided to "live his
religion" and take another wife-or even two-the first wife learned submission.
"Mormonism never forgives," wrote Hyde, "although it often delays
the blow."22
The first wife had to learn to live with the new spiritual wife, forced
not only to share her husband and her home, but also to give the new wife to
her husband as part of the marriage ceremony. She did the cooking and cleaning
for the wedding, and watched while her husband took a younger, prettier
spiritual to his bed. In the end, she invariably lost her husband to the
new spiritual. "I will say this much," wrote one first wife, "that Satan
himself could not devise any worse tortures than women experience in the
infernal system called 'Celestial Marriage.'"23
If a young woman persisted in
rebellion and a young man refused to go on a mission, castration was a
punishment the Church did not hesitate to employ:
Bishop Warren Snow of Manti, San Pete County, although the
husband of several wives, desired to add to his list a good-looking young woman
in that town. When he proposed to her, she declined the honor, informing him
that she was engaged to a younger man. The Bishop argued with her on the ground
of her duty, offering to have her lover sent on a mission, but in vain. When
even the girl's parents failed to gain her consent, Snow directed the local
Church authorities to command the young man to give her up. Finding him equally
obstinate, he was one evening summoned to attend a meeting where only trusted
members were present. Suddenly the lights were put out, he was beaten and tied
to a bench, and Bishop Snow himself castrated him with a bowie knife. In this
condition, he was left to crawl to some haystacks, where he lay until
discovered.[he] regained his health but has been an idiot or quiet lunatic ever
since. And the Bishop married the girl.24
But it was not
only the Mormons who suffered under polygamy. Anyone not a member of the Mormon
Church was called a Gentile, and considered fair game when it came to lying,
stealing or murdering.25
This was called, "milking a Gentile" and was thought to be
commendable-something God would approve. It was not sinful because the acts
were carried out against a Gentile. One certain way for a Gentile to gain the
attention of the Mormon leadership was to make the mistake of falling in love
with a Mormon girl. Some Gentiles became Mormons in name only, faithfully
paying their tithes and hoping to fool the leadership; few were ever successful
at it, and some died trying.26 Jesse Hartly, a young lawyer from the East, was
one of these men. Handsome and charismatic, he fell in love with a Mormon girl
and married her. He tried to fit in with the Saints for his wife's sake, and
seemed to succeed for a short while, but as he gained their trust he began to
see what was happening inside the Church, and was appalled by it. He started to
compile evidence for an expose of the Latter-day Saints, until the day Brigham
Young discovered his intent and denounced him from the Temple pulpit. Shortly after
this, Jesse Hartly was brutally murdered-shot in the back while trying to
escape Salt Lake City. He left a widow and young son. His experience with the
Saints was not uncommon. Brigham Young ruled the Mormons and "they learned to
dread his iron hand and were daunted by his iron heart."27
It was this
iron heart that ensured the success of polygamy. The devaluation of women
became a cultural norm, with elders like Heber Kimball referring to his wives
from the pulpit of the tabernacle as "my cows"28 and Brigham Young expounding from the
same pulpit that, "my wives have got to do one of two things, either round up
their shoulders to endure the afflictions of this world and live their
religion, or they may leave, for I will not have them about me.I want to go
somewhere and do something to get rid of the whiners."29
After Brigham
Young's death, however, the Mormon God appeared to change his mind once more
and the Saints were no longer required to "live their religion". On
September 26, 1890, President Wilford Woodruff issued the Manifesto,
officially repealing the revelation of polygamy. It seemed that divine law
could not withstand the pressure from the United States government. Utah was
eventually admitted into the Union, despite the fact that secret polygamous
marriages were conducted in Mexico (with the full knowledge and authorization
of the LDS Church President) and U.S. Marshal's regularly ambushed polygamists
sneaking home to visit wives.30 It was the end of public polygamy and
the beginning of private polygamy for the Saints.
What does the Bible say
about Polygamy?
Is polygamy
truly a revelation from almighty God? Polygamists invoke the Old Testament
Patriarchs in defense of the practice, but what does the Bible say? Before God
called Abraham, he lived as the other people around him lived, and polygamy was
an accepted way of life. There are several examples of it throughout the Old
Testament, but according to Jewish scholars, "if it was not forbidden it was
not directly sanctioned [and] as the civilization of the people reached a
higher form, especially under the teaching of the prophets, and their moral and
religious consciousness developed, the polygamous system gradually declined." 31
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Emma
Smith (Source: Utah State Historical Society).
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In the beginning, as recorded
in the Genesis narrative, God established the pattern for human marital
relations with the creation and union of one man and one woman. As Dr. Walter
Martin often pointed out, "God made them Adam and Eve, not Adam, and Eve, and
Eliza, and Mary.."32
God may have permitted polygamy under the directive to "replenish the earth,"33 but He
was also quite clear on the consequences of it. That polygamy was
responsible for much bitterness and strife can be seen in the story of Sarah
and Abimelech34
and in the necessity of instructing men in Leviticus 18:18 not to
marry their wife's sister during her lifetime. In the case of Jacob,
Scripture specifies the reasons why he had more than one wife, and
this is also the case with the relationship between Abraham and Hagar. In
Genesis 16, the Hebrew goes into minute and eloquent detail regarding the
emotional pain and suffering experienced by both Sarah and Hagar-again
emphasizing the painful price of polygamy. It could be argued that the size
of King David's polygamous family caused the rape of Tamar, Absalom's
rebellion against the throne, and ultimately, his death. Solomon's weakness
and alienation from God was specifically blamed on his wives.35 Though
Mosaic Law did not criticize polygamy, it made it quite clear that life was
considerably more complicated because of it.36 After Israel's Return from Exile,
polygamy declined and "throughout the Talmudic age not one rabbi is known to
have had more than one wife. Monogamy was held to be the only ideal legal
union; plurality of wives was a concession to time and condition."37
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But the most
compelling biblical argument against polygamy is found in the New Testament
portrait of marriage. Jesus states quite clearly in Matthew 19:5-6 in reference
to Genesis 2, "For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be
united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh. So they are no longer
two, but one." The Apostle Paul is quite specific in his instructions to the
Church in I Corinthians 7:2, "But since there is so much immorality, each man
should have his own wife, and each woman her own husband." He also reminds the
Ephesians of Jesus' words, "For this reason a man will leave his father and
mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh."38 The
comparison Paul makes between marital love and the love Christ has for the
Church, illustrates the quality of love God requires in marriage: a
selfless, sacrificial love. "In this same way, husbands ought to love their
wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself."39 The Apostle
Paul makes it clear that a leader in the Church is to be the husband of just one
wife and that he is to love that wife as much as he loves himself. 40 This selfless love is the antithesis
of polygamy. John Hyde Jr., in his poignant 1857 eyewitness account of life in
Salt Lake City under Brigham Young, testified that this selfless love was missing
in polygamy: "To sacrifice one's self, to a most trivial extent, for a wife is
esteemed as beneath manly dignity...It is impossible for any man to equally
love several different women; it is quite possible, however, for him to be
equally indifferent about any number."41
Polygamists
insist that God is the author of the principle of plural marriage, but the
Bible is clear that although God allowed polygamy at one time-as he allowed
Israel its kings-this was not the best choice. God's idea of what the marriage
relationship should be is found in the selfless example of Christ's love for
the Church.
The Women of Today
The painful
story told by Vicky Prunty of Tapestry Against Polygamy is all too familiar to
researchers of early Mormon history. It could easily be taken from the journal
of a plural wife of Brigham Young or Heber Kimball-so closely does it reflect
the testimony of the first Mormon wives.
Prunty met her
husband when she was eighteen years old and they were both students at Brigham
Young University. "My husband was seven years older and he seemed like the
perfect guy. The scriptures were literal to me. I knew from the very beginning
that he had more power; he had the priesthood." It was this balance of
spiritual power that would play a key role in their choice of a
polygamous lifestyle. After seven years of marriage, both felt there was
something missing in the Mormon Church. "We started investigating the early
teachings of Mormonism; we were trying to find out why the teachings were so
different. I saw some hypocrisy within the scriptures-a void of spirits-and at
that time I felt the Church was in apostasy because they weren't living a
higher love. God is the same. If the principle were an everlasting principle,
why would it suddenly be taken from God's people?" They ended up
living-literally-in a rock in southern Utah, and polygamy soon became a way of
life. When her husband took his second wife, Prunty "gave" her to him in the
marriage ceremony. "I realized shortly afterward: How could I give something
that wasn't even mine? But I believed in keeping your covenants: divorce was
not an option. If my husband were wrong, God would set him in order." And
Prunty's husband promised her that when it came to the everlasting principle of
polygamy, they would "live it the right way."
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The image projected by
polygamists via the media is one of placid smiles and contentment chillingly
similar to that of the Stepford Wives. But what really happens when a
man chooses to "live his religion?" When asked if the smiles were real and
these women truly content with their lives, Prunty exclaimed, exasperated,
"How can you be happy with your husband going into the next bedroom and
sleeping with your sister-wife? How can you be happy being the sole parent
raising your children? It's like you're a single mother who is a mistress.
People delude themselves into feeling good about getting little brownie
points in heaven, but if you take that religion away from them, they wouldn't
be doing it. It's the religion that keeps them in bondage."
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An
antique postcard, sold in the past in Utah, featuring portraits of Brigham
Young and his nineteen wives (Source: Utah State Historical Society).
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It seems
impossible to believe that a woman would willingly admit another "sister-wife"
into her home, but the reality of it is this: she believes she has no choice.
The motivation to obey is based on faith that this principle of celestial
marriage is indeed from God, and God has given her husband the priesthood.
Therefore, to disobey her husband is to risk damnation. "He kept on giving me
more scriptures to read-Joseph Smith and the early prophets. These scriptures
talked about a woman's place: she was not to question her husband. A plural
wife was not to whine, she was to be supportive of her husband. In a way, I
totally brainwashed myself into believing this religious dogma. I was the one
who gave the new wife to my husband in the wedding ceremony. But after you give
this virgin to your husband, it is a done deal. It is an eternal covenant and
those covenants are binding forever."
Vicky Prunty
suddenly found she was no longer a partner in her own marriage. "To have my
husband sleeping with another woman, and not truly understanding why
inside my heart, was very difficult." She eventually left the marriage to
become the plural wife of another man, but that relationship soured after
several months of marriage. "He sat all of his wives down one day and told us
he had married us for the sex. He kept his first wife and told the rest of us
to leave. I felt so dirty. I wanted to run into the shower and scrub and
scrub." It was a nightmare, and Prunty decided to get out. She took her
children and left polygamy for good.
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Old
cartoon satirizing Brigham Young's wives.
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Although the Mormon Church
officially rescinded the revelation of polygamy in the Manifesto of 1890 many
of its members still practiced it, despite the threat of excommunication. It
continues to thrive into the new millennium. Estimates vary, but today as
many as 60,000 to 100,000 or more men, women, and children, are involved in
polygamous relationships throughout the United States and Canada.42 Prunty
considers this number to be conservative because the majority of polygamists
are secretive about the practice. Until recently, the LDS Church and
government officials in Utah turned a blind eye to it, despite the fact that
it is a third-degree felony. It took the severe beating of a sixteen-year-old
girl to motivate the authorities in Utah to act.
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In 1997, John
Daniel Kingston gave his fifteen-year-old daughter to his brother in marriage
as his fifteenth wife. When the girl rebelled, repeatedly running away from
home, her father took her to a remote piece of property and brutally beat her.
Rowenna Erickson, a former member of the Kingston group and a founding board
member of Tapestry says, "She kept running away so John Daniel [allegedly] beat
the daylights out of her to make her do what he wanted her to do. You beat them
up and threaten them. That's what polygamy's about-coercion, fear and abuse.
It's a question of power and control and a lot of sex. Polygamists are not as
spiritual as you're led to believe-there's wife swapping, ménage à trois,
use of pornography. There's no end to it. Polygamy is abuse. It is not of God."43
Christian Polygamy?
Although
Mormonism is the first religion that comes to mind when American polygamy is
mentioned, several groups practicing it today claim to be Christian.
Rev. Steven John Butt recently made headlines around the world with his
polygamous lifestyle, and he claims to adhere to fundamental Christian
doctrines. He argues that, "The only correct position for a free society to take
in this matter is to uphold the rights of consenting adults to freely choose
their own relationships, while also protecting children from abuse wherever it
occurs."44
But Vicky Prunty disagrees, "We don't believe this is about consensual sex.
This is about domestic abuse and children who have no rights. Polygamy is not
protected under religious freedom; it is against the law. Why do you think you
don't have to obey the law, and we do? "
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But Steven Butt feels it is
the Mormons who are abusive, and society should not throw the "baby" of
polygamy out with the bathwater. "Fundamentalist Mormon polygamist child
abusers are reaping what they've sown when outraged society reacts harshly
toward their abuses."45 And how does he reconcile his lifestyle with
the New Testament teaching on marriage? He carefully avoids doing so,
focusing instead on the well-worn argument of the Patriarchs. But whether
Christian or not, Steven Butt seems to find success in plural marriage as
difficult to come by as his Mormon counterparts. One of his former wives left
him and is now a founding member of Tapestry Against Polygamy.
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Portrait
of Joseph F. Smith and family (Source: Utah State Historical Society).
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The
enslavement and abuse of women and children in America continues today under
the pretext of "religious freedom" and the protection of "privacy." The privacy
in the bedroom argument is often used as a defense: whatever consenting adults
choose to do in the bedroom is not anyone's business. But in polygamy, the
relationships often involve young girls who are nowhere near the
age of a consenting adult, and incest is frequently a factor. "Polygamy and its
inherent abuses such as statutory rape, child abuses, teen pregnancy, Medicaid
fraud, welfare fraud and incest affect all segments of our society. The price
of polygamy in terms of humanity and public funds is staggering."46 The
Christian church can no longer afford to be silent as women and children are
abused on its front doorstep. We must take a strong stand against polygamy in
America, for if the Church of Jesus Christ is quiet in the presence of such
terrible evil-it becomes as guilty as those who practice it.
For information on polygamy and major
polygamous organizations:
1 T.B. H. Stenhouse, Rocky Mountain Saints (New
York: D. Appleton and Company, 1873), 301, 302.
2 Doctrine and Covenants 132:4, http://scriptures.lds.org/dc/contents.
3 Doctrine and Covenants, 132:18, http://scriptures.lds.org/dc/contents.
4 D & C 132:37-39, http://scriptures.lds.org/dc/contents.
5 Jacob 2:23, 24, http://scriptures.lds.org/jacob/2.
6 D & C 42:22, http://scriptures.lds.org/dc/42.
7 Stenhouse, 201.
8 Ibid. 183.
Jerald and Sandra Tanner,
Polygamy and Truth (Salt Lake City Messenger, Issue No. 66 January,
1988), http://www.xmission.com~country/reason/polyg.htm,
Reason website (Tanner website - http://www.utlm.org)
9 Mary Ettie V. Smith, Mormonism: Its Rise, Progress,
and Present Condition (Hartford: Belknap & Bliss, 1870), 91.
10 Ibid. 217.
11 John Hyde Jr., Mormonism: Its Leaders and Designs (New
York: W.P. Fetridge & Company, 1857),
164.
12 Smith, 156.
13 Jerald and Sandra Tanner, Joseph Smith and Polygamy,
p. 41-47, Reason , http://www.xmission.com/~country/reason/polyg.htm.
14 Hyde, 79.
15 Tanner, Polygamy and Truth (Salt Lake City
Messenger, Issue No. 66 January, 1988),
Reason, http://www.xmission.com/~country/reason/polyg.htm.
16 Hyde, 84, 87.
17 Froiseth, Jennie Anderson, Editor, Women of
Mormonism: The Story of Polygamy (Detroit: C.G.G. Paine, 1882), 61.
18 Hyde, 74.
19 Ibid. 179.
20 Froiseth, 94.
21 Hyde, 178, emphasis original
22 Froiseth, 55, 112.
23 Linn, The Story of the Mormons (Hackensack: New
Jersey, 1901), 457.
24 Smith, 293-307.
25 Ibid. 310, 311.
26 Hyde, 145.
27 Ibid. 57.
28 Ibid. 61, 62.
29 Tanner, Polygamy and Truth ( Salt Lake City
Messenger, Issue No. 66 January, 1988), 11, Reason, http://www.xmission.com/~country/reason/polyg.htm
30 Charles A. Rubenstein, Polygamy, Polygamy in
Jewish History, http://www.polyamory.org/Howard/je2.html
31 Walter Martin, "Martin Under Fire", http://www.waltermartin.org
32 Genesis 9:7.
33 Genesis 20:1-13.
34 1Kings 11:4.
35 Exodus 21:10; Leviticus 21:13; Deuteronomy 17:17.
36 Rubenstein, Polygamy, http://www.polyamory.com/Howard/je2.html.
37 Ephesians 5:31-32.
38 Ephesians 5:27-30.
39 1 Timothy 3:2, 12.
40 Hyde, 52, 54.
41 Tapestry of Polygamy, Rising from the ashes,
June 2, 1998, http://www.polygamy.org.
42 Ros Davidson, Sins of the Fathers, (Salon,
Mothers Who Think) July 2000, http://www.salon.com.
43 John S. Butt, The Right of Consenting Adults to Choose
Plural Marriage, http://www.bfree.org.
44 Ibid.
45 Letter from Tapestry Against Polygamy to all Utah
County Prosecutors, 2000, http://www.polygamy.org.