Meridian  magazine
 
 
Thursday, November  29 2012  
The Other Half of Heaven: Debunking Myths about Heavenly  Mother
_By Warren  Aston_ (http://www.ldsmag.com/author/warren-aston) 
 
It is Gospel Doctrine 101 that we are the children  of God. Our spirits are 
the children of a Heavenly Father and a Heavenly Mother  in the most 
literal sense possible. We have within us the genes of Godhood, the  potential 
to 
develop and grow into the glorious, exalted beings they are. We  lived with 
them before coming to earth to gain physical bodies in their  likeness, male 
and female.  
God’s whole work is to bring to pass our  immortality and eternal life, 
bringing us back into God’s presence, redeemed and  sanctified through our 
obedience and discipline. The laws and covenants that  mark our progress on 
that 
journey home comprise the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The  framework for that 
journey, and much-needed support, is provided by the Church.  
When Elder Neal A. Maxwell of the Twelve spoke some  years ago in General 
Conference about the heavenly home-coming that the obedient  can look forward 
to, he noted that our Mother in Heaven would surely have a  role 
(http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_edn1) [i]. Yet, for most of us,  
singing the 
hymn O My Father is usually the only time the existence of  a Heavenly Mother 
is verbalized. Given the fact that she is the mother of our  spirits, why 
then do we talk so little about Heavenly Mother?  
The reasons for this silence seem to fall into  three categories. When they 
are examined in light of the scriptures and the  teachings of church 
leaders, all of them can be shown as “cultural assumptions.”  None stand up to 
scrutiny.  
Myth 1: Church leaders do not speak of her, so we  should not. 
Myth 2: She exists, but we know nothing else about  her. 
Myth 3: Our silence protects her against being  blasphemed and slandered as 
the Father and the Son are.  
Let’s examine each of these particular “Mormon  Myths” against the facts. 
Myth 1: Church leaders do not speak of her, so  we should not. 
Last year, 2011, BYU Studies published a  landmark article by David L. 
Paulsen and Martin Pulido entitled, “A Mother  There: Historical Teachings and 
Sacred Silence.” I strongly commend it to  you 
(http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_edn2) [ii]. For those unfamiliar  with 
it, BYU Studies is an 
official, scholarly, peer-reviewed  publication of the church-operated Brigham 
Young University and one whose  editorial board includes general authorities. 
The article documents over 600  cases where general authorities have spoken 
about Heavenly Mother, stretching  from the days of the prophet Joseph Smith 
down to 2010. 
Several truths emerge from this fact  alone: 
    *   The subject of Heavenly Mother has been regularly  addressed (how 
could it not?) by church leaders throughout the entire history  of the 
church. It is not, as some think, a subject spoken about in the early  days of 
this dispensation, but not now. 
    *   · All the statements affirm our unshakeable  belief in Heavenly 
Mother. That we have a Mother in the pre-mortal realms is  as basic as the fact 
that we have a Father there also. 

    *   · Significantly, the authors found no occasion  where church 
leaders have ever asked us to not speak of Heavenly Mother, or to  maintain 
some 
kind of “sacred silence” about her. 
    *   · From all this we can conclude that talking  openly about our 
belief in Heavenly Mother should not be seen as unorthodox or  controversial. 

Myth 2: She exists, but we know nothing else  about her. 
At first glance this may seem to be true. One  obvious reason is that there 
are very few references to her in scripture, as we  currently have them. 
They are there, primarily in the Old Testament,  but in their present form 
they are cloaked in allusion and allegory. To some  extent that is also true of 
the Book of Mormon’s Old World account, as Daniel  Peterson of BYU, 
building on the ground-breaking research of Margaret  Barker 
(http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_edn3) [iii], has recently  explored. 
Brother Peterson 
concludes that some of Nephi’s statements are best  understood by his awareness 
of the divine Goddess, the consort (ie. wife) of El  [ohim] 
(http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_edn4) [iv]. My feeling is that  when we 
receive the 
fullness of the scriptures that Heavenly Mother’s role will  surely be much 
more evident and powerful. 
Meantime, however, God continues to also speak to  us out of the literal 
dust - archaeological discoveries. In recent years  numerous discoveries have 
been made in the Holy Land that are intriguing, to say  the least. Both 
physical remains and texts are shedding new light on what the  ancient 
Israelites believed and worshipped 
(http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_edn5) [v]. 
These finds hint at how much has been lost to  the modern reader of these 
writings. I continue to stand in awe of how much is  coming forth in our day 
that directly confirms the truths of the Gospel.  
Latter-day Saints have an additional, vitally  important, source: the 
inspired statements made by the leaders of the church. If  one reads the 
600-plus 
statements made about Heavenly Mother, quite a complete  picture emerges of 
her. She is clearly much, much more than the divine,  stay-at-home “womb” 
generating billions of spirit children some have assumed.  
For a long time a particular favorite quote of mine  was Elder Erastus Snow 
of the Twelve in 1878: 
“What,” says one, “do you mean we should understand that  Deity consists 
of man and woman?” Most certainly I do. If I believe anything  that God has 
ever said about himself . . . I must believe that deity consists of  man and 
woman . . . there can be no God except he is composed of the man and  woman 
united, and there is not in all the eternities that exist, or ever will be  
a God in any other way.” (http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_edn6) [vi] 
Heavenly Mother possesses all the attributes of  Godhood. She and Heavenly 
Father reared and taught us in the pre-earth life. She  helped create this 
earth and formulate the Plan of Salvation. Both President  Harold B. Lee and 
President Spencer W. Kimball indicated that she can guide us  here in 
mortality. In other words, she stands beside the Father, as an equal  partner 
and 
companion, not behind him. She and Heavenly Father together are  the great 
role model for every couple who hope for an eternity together.  
Our failure to pay closer attention to the  teachings of our leaders on 
this subject has diminished not only our  understanding of God but our concepts 
of what marriage could be, our roles  within it and our understanding of 
the Priesthood. Some misunderstandings on  these matters have become almost as 
rooted as doctrine among us. They have  created expectations about the 
future that are neither doctrinal nor logical.  They have caused us to 
misunderstand the essential, eternal, equivalence of  manhood and womanhood, 
fatherhood and motherhood. 
Myth 3: Our silence protects her against being  blasphemed and slandered as 
the Father and the Son are.  
The evidence cited in the BYU Studies  article makes it clear: there is no 
authorized mandate of silence concerning  Heavenly Mother. And simple logic 
refutes the well-intentioned idea that we  protect her by hiding her. Surely 
it makes no sense that children should be  denied knowing anything of their 
mother, talking about her, loving her and  honoring her, during the most 
crucial period of their eternal journey. Doing so  with an earthly mother 
would be unthinkable; how much more so with our  Mother in Heaven? 
When President Hinckley cautioned us in 1991  against praying to Heavenly 
Mother he did not instruct us never to talk  about her 
(http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_edn7) [vii]. We are free to  
acknowledge her, talk about 
her and to give her the honor due to her. As members  of the church we can 
affirm her existence rather than apologize. There is no  need to speculate or 
teach beyond the body of material given by the leaders of  the church for 
the past 180 years. She is there in the heavenly realms with the  Father, 
watching over us in our mortal probation. 
One day the faithful will stand again in their  presence. 
Notes 
_____________________________________

 (http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_ednref1) [i] Elder Neal A. 
Maxwell, “_The Women of God_ 
(http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1978/04/the-women-of-god?lang=eng) ,” 
April 1978 General Conference, available online  at  
(https://www.lds.org/general-conference/1978/04/the-women-of-god?lang=eng)  
More recently, in a 2010 devotional address at BYU  Provo Elder Glenn L. 
Pace of the Seventy spoke of the celestial homecoming in  similar terms: “…
when you stand in front of your heavenly parents in those royal  courts on 
high and you look into Her eyes and behold Her countenance, every  question you 
ever had about the role of women in the kingdom will evaporate into  the 
rich celestial air, because at that moment you will see standing directly in  
front of you, your divine nature and destiny.” (“_The Divine Nature and 
Destiny of  Women_ (http://speeches.byu.edu/?act=viewitem&id=1886) ,” March 9, 
2010). Available  online 
 
 (http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_ednref2) [ii] _BYU Studies vol. 50 
no. 1, 2011,  70-126_ 
(https://byustudies.byu.edu/showTitle.aspx?title=8665) . The article can be  
downloaded for $2.00 
(https://byustudies.byu.edu/showTitle.aspx?title=8665) 
 
 (http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_ednref3) [iii] Margaret Barker’s 
forthcoming book The  Mother of the Lord (Vol 1: The Lady in the Temple) due 
for release late  September 2012 will show how the veneration of Mary, the 
mother of Jesus, has  roots in the earlier belief among the Israelites in a 
female  deity.
 
 (http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_ednref4) [iv] Daniel C. Peterson, “
Nephi and His Asherah: A  Note on 1 Nephi 11: 8-23” in Mormons, Scripture, 
and the Ancient World:  Studies in Honor of John L. Sorenson, Davis Bitton, 
ed. (Provo: FARMS,  1998), 191-243; condensed in the article “Nephi and His 
Asherah,” _Journal of Book of Mormon  Studies 9/2_ 
(http://maxwellinstitute.byu.edu/publications/jbms/?vol=9&;num=2&id=223)  
(Provo: Neal A.  Maxwell 
Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2000), 16-25. This is available  online 
 
 (http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_ednref5) [v] Other non-LDS 
scholars, notably Jewish scholar  Raphael Patai in his The Hebrew Goddess (3rd 
ed.) 
 (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1990) and William G. Dever, “A 
Temple  Built for Two: Did Yahweh Share a Throne with His Consort Asherah?” in  
Biblical Archaeology Review 34/02 (Mar-Apr 2008), 55-62 establish that  a 
female deity was an integral part of worship in ancient Israel until the  “
reforms” introduced by Josiah around 621 BC, Lehi and Nephi’s  time.
 
 (http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_ednref6) [vi] Journal of  
Discourses, 19: 269–70, March 3, 1878.
 
 (http://www.ldsmag.com/article/1/11842#_ednref7) [vii] First Counselor 
Gordon B. Hinckley,  “_Daughters of God,” address at  the General Women’s 
Meeting, October, 1991 available online_ 
(http://library.lds.org/nxt/gateway.dll/Magazines/Ensign/1991.htm/ensign%20november%201991%20.htm/daughters%20of%20g
od.htm?fn=document-frameset.htm$f=templates$3.0)  

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