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This is a very carefully prepared transcription of the "60 Minutes" program from April 7, 1996 of the Interview between Mike Wallace and LDS President Gordon B. Hinckley, and on the LDS Church in general. This transcription was accomplished by Robert J Wooley (no TLC affiliation) from a recording of the program who posted this transcript on the internet. He stated that he tried to make it as accurate as possible, though in a few places it was difficult to get the exact words. However, it is evident that his transcription is very high quality and meticulously done for which we are appreciative. Where the transcriber inserted the indicator "[cut]," it seemed in his estimation that a significant sentence or thought might have been truncated.
[Mike Wallace alone in studio, SLC temple as backdrop]
Mike Wallace (MW): If you believe, as a lot of Americans do, that this country is going to hell in a handbasket, spend some time, as we did, with the people who run the Mormon church, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Right now they are one of the fastest-growing religions in the world, and the 7th-largest church in America, and they are bucking the trend. The faithful Mormon consumes no alcohol, no tobacco, no caffeine, does not engage in premarital or extramarital sex. But isn't it true that they engage in polygamy? No, not any more. It was once, but they gave it up when Utah became a state more than a hundred years ago. It is rare, almost unheard of, for the president and prophet of the church to open up and talk as freely and easily as Gordon B. Hinckley did to us for this Easter Sunday story, which begins at the beginning in New York state, not Utah, where Mormons believe that God and Jesus appeared one day before a 14-year-old farm boy.
[Hinckley interview]
MW: Your church says God and Jesus spoke with your founder Joseph Smith back in eighteen hundred and twenty and told him to start this church. You believe that.
Gordon B. Hinckley (GBH): Yes, sir.
MW: He was 14 years old...
GBH: Yes, sir.
MW: ...a backwoods farm boy...
GBH: Yes, sir.
MW: ... in New York State.
GBH: That's the miracle of it.
MW [voiceover; footage of Marriott corporate offices]: You'd expect the head of the church to believe it, but so does Bill Marriott, chief of the Marriott hotel chain, a hard-headed businessman, and he's a Mormon.
[Interview with Willard Marriott (WM)]
MW: Fourteen years old, and God and Jesus come to see him? You believe that?
WM: Yes, I do. We believe that the early church of Jesus Christ faded away, and that it came back to Joseph Smith.
[voiceover; footage of Hatch on senate floor]
MW: And the senior US Senator from Utah, Orrin Hatch, a Mormon, believes it, too.
[Interview with Orrin Hatch (OH)]
OH: We believe that we know that this happened.
[voiceover; footage from the church film "The First Vision"]
MW: Here is how a church film portrays it. And what began with God, Jesus, and a single farm boy [footage of General Conference] has now become a worldwide religion with more than 9 million members. But more than a religion, Mormonism is a lifestyle, an island of morality, they believe, in a time of moral decay. President Hinckley acknowledges it is not easy to follow the Mormon faith. He calls it the most demanding religion in America.
[GBH interview]
GBH: It is demanding. And that's one of the things that attracts people to this church. It, it stands as an anchor in a world of shifting values.
[voiceover; footage of GBH interview]
MW: Example. Mormons adhere to a very strict health code.
[GBH interview]
MW: No alcohol, no tobacco, no coffee, no tea, not even caffeinated soft drinks...
GBH: Right.
MW: ...eat meat sparingly, exercise...
GBH: Right.
MW: ...get plenty of sleep.
GBH: Right. It's wonderful!
[voiceover; footage of people coming to church]
MW: And the result? Mormons live several years longer than most other Americans. Another reason they live longer, Mormons say, is that they suffer less from stress, because they have strong and supportive families. Many Mormons marry early and have lots of children. [Footage of Steve Young.] But Steve Young is still single. The star quarterback of the San Francisco 49ers is also the great-great-great-grandson of Brigham Young, one of the Mormons' early leaders. Steve, at 34, says that he's looking hard for a Mormon mate.
[Interview with Steve Young]
Steve Young: Do you wanna talk about the pressure I feel? Brigham Young once said, right here on these grounds, that anyone over 27 years of age that's not married is a menace to society. So here's my grandfather telling me to get with it. You don't think that I feel the pressure? I guarantee it.
[Voiceover; footage of BYU campus]
MW: As part of the pressure and focus on families, premarital sex, as we said, is forbidden among Mormons. So is adultery. Mormons don't even go to R-rated movies. But students at Brigham Young University insist that having high moral standards does not prevent them from having a good time.
[Group interview with 7 unidentified BYU students]
Woman: We like to have fun, we like to go on dates, we like to, we like to do just normal things...
MW: But you don't fool around.
Same woman: No. It's not something that I think is fun. A guy I remember, he told me, he's like, "You know, you'd be so much fun if you drank, you'd have, you know, you'd be looser and everything," and I'm like, "You know, I like to have fun knowing what I'm doing, being completely in control, and just having fun with life."
[voiceover; footage of SLC temple]
MW: And while these young Mormons stress self-control, they themselves are controlled to a remarkable degree by the church. In fact, Mormons who break the rules of morality or health are not allowed to enter sacred Mormon temples.
[in front of Assembly Hall, continuing as voiceover, with footage of temples and people in church]
MW: Living as a devout Mormon is not easy. In addition to what you cannot do, there's a lot you are supposed to do. You're expected to read scripture daily, and to read scripture together as a family at least one night a week. Students attend daily religious courses. Sunday services last three hours. But beyond that, church activities take several more hours each week.
[voiceover; footage of Ezra Taft Benson, then footage of next group interview]
MW: All of those hours and all of those rules are too much for some Mormons, who fall away. Steve Benson left the church to become one of its most outspoken critics, even though his late grandfather, Ezra Taft Benson, President Eisenhower's Secretary of Agriculture, had been a church president. Steve Benson complains that by enforcing conformity the church stifles independent thought.
[Interview with Benson (SB) and 3 unidentified others]
SB: The cultural mindset in the church is when the prophet has spoken, the debate is over.
MW: And the prophet is?
SB: Gordon B. Hinckley would be the prophet. [cut] When he has pronounced the church's position on any issue, it is incumbent upon the members of the church to pray, pay, and obey.
[GBH interview]
GBH: Well, that's a clever statement from Steve, whom I know. [cut] Now look, our people have tremendous liberty, they're free to live their lives as they please.
MW: Are they?
GBH: Oh, absolutely.
MW: Really?
GBH: Surely. They have to make choices. It's the old eternal battle--the forces of evil against the forces of good.
[voiceover; footage of GBH arriving on the dais of a meetinghouse, the chapel filled with missionaries]
MW: The critics acknowledge they represent a tiny minority of Mormons. Still, they say that too many Mormons look and act like they came off an assembly line. But these young Mormon missionaries look that way on purpose.
[addressing male and female missionaries]
GBH: You all look alike--white shirts, some of them a little wrinkled, ties. I look at you, I look at your faces, and think of your age, and I'm inclined to say, "Well, you're not much to look at, but you're all the Lord has." [GBH and congregation laugh.]
[voiceover; footage of missionaries working]:
MW: Many young Mormons leave college for 2 years, at their own expense, to be missionaries. Every day 50,000 of them go door to door in America and 150 other countries. Steve Young missed his missionary chance in college but...
[Steve Young interview]
Steve Young: I will be a missionary in a remote village at some point.
MW: You think so really?
Steve Young: Oh yeah, I think so. Even as a couple. My goaland this is kind of my own little secretbut when I get married, just to head out and finish football and, and, and be a missionary around the world. Places where Steve Youngnot that it's big really that many placesbut places where they have no idea about football.
[voiceover; more of the church-produced footage of missionaries at work]
MW: This church film demonstrates that missionaries have helped Mormonism achieve its phenomenal growth. Half its members are now from outside the United States. But until its expansion into Latin America and Africa, church membership had been overwhelmingly white.
[GBH interview]
MW: From 1830 to 1978, blacks could not become priests in the Mormon church. Right?
GBH: That's correct.
MW: Why?
GBH: Because the leaders of the church at that time interpreted that doctrine that way. [cut]
MW: Church policy had it that blacks had the mark of Cain. Brigham Young said, "Cain slew his brother, and the Lord put a mark upon him, which is the flat nose and black skin."
GBH: It's behind us. Look, that's behind us. Don't worry about those little flecks [uncertain of that word] of history.
MW: Skeptics will suggest, "Well, look, if we're going to expand, we can't keep the blacks out."
GBH: Pure speculation. [Laughs.]
[voiceover, footage of people in church]
MW: Now that blacks can be priests, the current issue is whether Mormon women will ever be priests.
[GBH interview]
GBH: Men hold the priesthood in this church.
MW: Why?
GBH: Because God stated that it should be so. That was the revelation to the church. That was the way it was set forth.
[voiceover; footage of people in church]
MW: Fact is, most Mormon women don't want to be priests. They accept that men control the church and dominate Mormon society. And this has triggered complaints about how the church handles child sexual abuse. Child abuse among Mormons is surely no greater than among non-Mormons. But a study has found that many Mormon women who went to their clergymen for help believe the clergy were just not sympathetic.
[GBH interview]
MW: The sociologist tells us, at the root of the problem is the fact that men in effect in your church have authority over women, so that your clergymen tend to sympathize with the men, the abusers, instead of the abused.
GBH: That's one person's opinion. I, I don't think there's any substance to it. [cut] Now, there'll be a blip here, a blip there, a mistake here, a mistake there. But by and large the welfare of women and children is as seriously considered as is the welfare of the men, in this church, if not more so.
[voiceover; shot of cover of new manual on dealing with abuse]
MW: President Hinckley says the church has been teaching its clergy how to handle abuse more effectively.
[GBH interview]
GBH: We're working very hard at it. There are cases. They're everywhere. They're all over this world. It is a disease, it's an illness, it's a sickness, it's a reprehensible and evil thing. We recognize it as such.
[voiceover; footage of Jeffery Holland addressing an audience, and GBH shaking hands in a corridor]
MW: Mormon clergy are not professionals, they're not paid. Their church work is in addition to their regular jobs outside the church. Whatever the jobs, just being a Mormon is expensive. Mormons are expected to give ten percent of their salary to the church. Most of them, including Steve Young, say that's no sacrifice.
[Steve Young interview]
Steve Young: I don't really look at it as my money. You know, in my terms, it's the Lord's money, and I'd be, you know, in effect stealing from him if I didn't do that.
[voiceover; footage of meetinghouse under construction]
MW: The church reportedly takes in several billion dollars a year, and has never had a major financial scandal. Most of the money, they say, is spent building 375 chapels a year, all around the world.
[GBH interview]
GBH: We're reaching out across the world. [cut] We're not a weird people.
MW: A weird people?
GBH: Yes.
[standing in front of SLC temple]
MW: Mormons know that some outside people think they are weird.
Why? Well, for one thing, devout Mormons wear sacred undergarments
for protection from harm--cotton undershirts with undershorts
that reach to their knees.
[WM interview]
MW: Do you wear the sacred undergarments?
WM: Yes, I do. And I can tell you they do protect you from harm.
MW: Really?
WM: Uh-huh. I was in a very serious boat accident. Fireboat was on fire, I was on fire. I was burned. My pants were burned right off of me. I was not burned above my knee. Where the garment was, I was not burned.
MW: And you believe it was the sacred undergarments.
WM: I do. Particularly on my legs, because my pants were gone, but my undergarments were not singed.
[Steve Young interview]
MW: And do you think that the sacred undergarments have kept you from harm on the football field?
Steve Young: I actually take them off to play football. The sacred nature of them, I find that the nature of football, and the sweating and so forth, I actually take them off, and I think that's probably prevalent with athletics in the church.
MW: Really?
Steve Young: But my teammates have enjoyed when, you know, you're getting dressed and you're putting your garments on. They, they think they're pretty cool, a lot of them. And they're, uh, "Hey, where'd you get those?" And I always tell them, "They're way too expensive." [Both laugh.]
[voiceover; aerial footage of farmland, then of MW and GBH walking around Temple Square; then Orrin Hatch]
MW: Another curiosity. The church owns more than 3000 acres in northwest Missouri where Mormons believe that Jesus will return for his second coming. Gordon Hinckley prefers not to talk about Jesus returning to Missouri, or about sacred undergarments. He says that those points miss the point. He wants to portray Mormons as mainstream, not extreme. And for that Hinckley has hired a Jewish-owned public relations firm. Mormons hiring Jews to help spread the word? Makes sense to Senator Orrin Hatch. But then he wears a mezuzah on a chain around his neck. A mezuzah is often put at the entrance to a Jewish home as a reminder of their faith.
[OH interview]
OH: It's typical of Mormon people to love all people, but especially Jewish people. I wear a mezuzah just to remind me, just to make sure that there is never another holocaust anywhere. You see, the Mormon church is the only church in the history of this country that had an extermination order out against it, by Governor Lilburn Boggs of Missouri. We went through untold persecutions.
[voiceover; footage of buildings in SLC, then GBH greeting people]
MW: To escape the persecutions Mormons moved west, and when they reached Salt Lake, their leader, Brigham Young, pointed and declared it their promised land. And now Temple Square is their Vatican. In Salt Lake City, the church owns a TV station, a radio station, a newspaper, a department store, and a lot of the land downtown. Utah is 75% Mormon, and the church could wield political power if it wanted to. But President Hinckley says, unlike the religious right, the Mormon church does not have a political agenda.
[GBH interview]
GBH: We urge our people to exercise their franchise as citizens of this nation, but we do not tell them how to vote, and we do not tell the government how it should be run.
[Footage of missionaries coming out of chapel, shaking hands with GBH]
Missionary: Elder Smith, Houston, Texas. Can I give you a hug?
GBH: Yes. [Tall missionary embraces GBH, pushing him backwards.] Look out, you'll roll right over me! [laughs]
[voiceover; footage of missionaries continues]
MW: Gordon Hinckley says he never intended to become president of the church, but that one by one all the other church leaders with more seniority died.
[GBH interview]
MW: There are those who say, this is a gerontocracy, this is a church run by old men.
GBH: Isn't it wonderful? To have a man of maturity at the head, a man of judgment, who isn't blown about by every wind of doctrine?
MW: Absolutely, as long as he's not dotty. [Laughs.]
GBH: [Laughs] Thank you for the compliment.
[voiceover; footage of SLC temple]
MW: Mormons believe that after they die their families will be reunited, and will live together forever in heaven.
[GBH and MW chatting in lobby of meetinghouse, surrounded by onlookers, apparently the missionaries that have come out of the meeting]
GBH: We know it's there. We have an assurance of that.
MW: A lot of us who don't.
GBH: Yeah, I know that. But you could.
MW: I've thought about it. I've not been able to pursuade myself.
GBH: You haven't thought about it long enough! [All laugh.]