Lester E. Bush Jr. Explained

Lester Earl Bush Jr.
Birth Date:22 November 1942
Birth Place:Atlanta, Georgia
Nationality:American
Occupation:Historian, Physician
Known For:Research into the origins of the "Negro doctrine" in the LDS Church
Spouse:Yvonne DeCarroll Snow (m. 1967)
Children:Jared Bush
Awards:Best article (1973) by the Mormon History Associated for "Mormonism's Negro Doctrine: An Historical Overview"

Lester Earl Bush Jr. (November 22, 1942-November 23, 2023) was a historian and member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (LDS Church) who published influential research into the origins of the "Negro doctrine," a now-abandoned church policy which excluded African-Americans from membership in the church's priesthood and from participation in a number of other church practices. He also published historical research into other topics, including a medical history of Brigham Young and reviews of LDS health and medical practices.

Bush was born on November 22, 1942, in Atlanta, Georgia. He married Yvonne DeCarroll Snow on August 24, 1967.[1] He was a physician with undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Virginia, a master's in public health from Johns Hopkins University, and a long-standing interest in Mormon history.

Mormonism's Negro Doctrine: An Historical Overview

In 1973, Bush's article "Mormonism's Negro Doctrine: An Historical Overview" was published in , receiving the best article award from The Mormon History Association in the same year. His research found that the priesthood ban was originally established by Brigham Young, the successor to church founder Joseph Smith and that there was no evidence of a prophetic revelation or doctrine which had caused the policy to be adopted. The end of the ban was announced on June 8, 1978 as a "revelation" received by Spencer W. Kimball, the president of the church, and canonized as Official Declaration 2. According to his son, Edward L. Kimball, LDS apostle Mark E. Peterson "almost surely" recommended to Spencer Kimball on May 25 that he should consider Bush's article while Kimball was deliberating whether to change the church policy.

The end of the "Negro doctrine" was the "most exciting single event of the years I was church historian," recalled official LDS historian Leonard J. Arrington. "I was thrilled and electrified. ... For many days I talked with a host of friends and relatives on the telephone and in person. Everyone was elated -- and sobered." However, neither Arrington nor any other official church historians had researched or written about the background of the ban prior to the revelation. According to Chad L. Nielsen, Bush's article in Dialogue was "the single most important article on the history of the priesthood ban. ... Bush demonstrated the ability scholars have to create a paradigm shift among the Mormon community. ... Bush radically revised what was understood about the origins of the priesthood ban." According to Darius Gray, co-founder of the Genesis Group, a grassroots organization for Black Latter-day Saints, "No other single individual had a greater effect on addressing the past policy of restricting those of African descent from the priesthood and temple attendance."

According to the Juvenile Instructor, an academically leaning blog focused on the history of the Latter-day Saints, "Mormonism's Negro Doctrine" was "a master work of scholarship that not only revolutionized how historians, sociologists, and other academics view the church’s history of race relations, but was also a significant factor leading to Official Declaration 2," which ended the Negro priesthood ban.[2]

Other works

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lester E. Bush photographic collection, 1880-1886 . University of Utah Libraries, Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library . 295 South 1500 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0860 . 2023-09-04 .
  2. Web site: G. . David . Stephen J. Fleming . Revisiting: "Mormonism’s Negro Doctrine: An Historical Overview" . Juvenile Instructor . January 25, 2010. 2023-09-06 .