| Spencer Woolley Kimball
(1895-1985), twelfth President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
(1973-1985), came to the Presidency at the age of seventy-eight. Little new had been
expected of his administration because of his age and long history of serious health
problems, but his personal energy, broad vision, and openness to change produced a dynamic
period consistent with the Church's growing awareness of itself as an increasingly
international institution. Under his leadership, access to the temple and the priesthood
was extended, regardless of race; the number of missionaries greatly increased;
administrative innovations significantly changed Church governance; and a burst of temple
building occurred. His tenure proved to be one of the most active periods in
twentieth-century Church history. Spencer Woolley
Kimball was born March 28, 1895, in Salt Lake City, Utah. His father, Andrew Kimball, was
a son of Heber C. Kimball, a counselor to President Brigham Young, and his mother, Olive,
was the daughter of Bishop Edwin D. Woolley, Brigham Young's business manager. At that
time, Andrew was serving as president of the Indian Territory Mission in what is now
Missouri and Oklahoma, overseeing missionary work by correspondence and periodic visits
while supporting his family as a traveling dry goods salesman through Utah and southern
Idaho.
When Spencer was three, his father received a call from the
First Presidency to move to Thatcher, a Mormon settlement in the Gila Valley of
southeastern Arizona, to become president of the St. Joseph stake. Andrew earned his
living by farming and business while he presided over several thousand Latter-day Saints
in the valley and the vast surrounding area.
As a child, Spencer suffered from typhoid fever and facial
paralysis and once nearly drowned. Four of his sisters died in childhood, and his mother
died when he was eleven. After high school, he served as a missionary in the Central
States Mission from 1914 to 1916. During his second year in the mission, he served in the
St. Louis area as a supervisor of twenty-five missionaries, all older than himself.
In 1917 he attended the University of Arizona for one
semester. He then received an induction notice for army service in World War I. Although
expecting to leave any day, he married Camilla Eyring, a school teacher, on November 16,
1917. They eventually had four children: Spencer L., Olive Beth, Andrew E., and Edward L.
Delay in organizing the army contingent from his area
resulted in his being deferred, and he obtained work in a bank. When the bank failed in
1923, wiping out the Kimballs' life savings, another bank hired him almost immediately as
chief teller. In 1927 he left that bank and, with Joseph W. Greenhalgh, established an
insurance and real estate agency in Safford, Arizona. Despite hard times caused by the
Great Depression, Kimball said he would set up a peanut stand before he would become
another person's employee again. Operating his own business gave him flexibility to attend
to Church responsibilities and, with his wife, to engage in many community
activities--PTA, library, elections, city council, Red Cross, Boy Scouts, the local
college, and the organization of a radio station. He was selected as statewide leader of
the Arizona Rotary Club in 1936.
In the Church, Spencer Kimball served as his father's stake
clerk from 1917 until the latter's death in 1924. He then became counselor to the new
stake president. In 1938, when the St. Joseph Stake was divided, he was called as
president of the new Mount Graham Stake, extending 250 miles from Safford, Arizona, where
he lived, to El Paso, Texas. As stake president, he supervised Church Welfare Services
relief for victims of a major flood in Duncan, Arizona, in 1943.
On July 8, 1943, the First Presidency notified President
Kimball of his call to fill a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. Though he had
a slight premonition of the call, he felt shocked, knowing so well his own limitations.
With assurance from Camilla and after a long personal struggle, he received spiritual
confirmation several days later that the call came from God. He sold his business, moved
his family to Salt Lake City, and at the October General Conference in 1943 received the
sustaining vote of the Church's membership and was that same day ordained an apostle by
President Heber J. Grant.
For thirty years Kimball served in the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles helping with Church administration, dealing with the personal problems of
individuals, visiting stakes and missions, and teaching the gospel of Jesus Christ. In
1946, President George Albert Smith gave him the responsibility of working with Indians.
Soon afterwards, he awoke sensing a horrible enemy, unseen but very real, trying to
destroy him. After a struggle, he rebuked the evil spirit and obtained relief. He
concluded that perhaps the work he had just begun presented a special threat to the powers
of darkness. He publicized the suffering of Navajos during the harsh winter of 1947 and
organized relief for them, but concluded that improved roads and education were the keys
to long-term improvement. He helped establish the Church's Indian Student Placement
Services, under which LDS families with access to good schools took Indian children from
the reservations into their homes for the school year on a voluntary basis. The program
grew in two decades from one child to nearly 5,000 a year, before improved schools among
the Indians reduced the need. He preached vigorously against racial prejudice.
Among other assignments, Elder Kimball also headed the
missionary committee. As he traveled about the Church he gave hundreds of twelve-year-old
boys a dollar each to begin a mission saving fund. He visited all the missions of Europe
in 1955, circled the world in 1960, supervised the Church in South America for four
years--where he began missionary work among the Indians of the Andes--and then supervised
the missions in Great Britain.
His experience in counseling hundreds of individuals about
personal problems, especially sexual immorality, moved him to write The Miracle of
Forgiveness, a book on the process of repentance that has been well received among Church
members.
Elder Kimball suffered a heart attack in 1948 and throat
cancer a few years later. Removal of most of his vocal cords left him with a distinctive
weak, raspy voice. In 1972 successful open-heart surgery replaced an obstructed artery and
a failing valve. Since he was then age seventy-seven, he considered foregoing the surgery,
but President Harold B. Lee said his work was not finished, and he should have the
operation.
On December 26, 1973, when President Lee died, Spencer W.
Kimball succeeded him. Though already seventy-eight, President Kimball led energetically
until 1979, when a cerebral hemorrhage required two brain surgeries. He recovered well,
but in mid-1981 a third such operation left him seriously weakened. From that time until
his death in 1985, he left active leadership to his counselors, especially President
Gordon B. Hinckley. On November 5, 1985, at age ninety, President Kimball died, and was
succeeded as Church President by Ezra Taft Benson. Camilla, notable in her own right,
survived to age ninety-two.
Spencer W. Kimball's remarkable resolution and purity of
spirit grew from a solid religious background provided by parents and a strong community.
In his early teens he met a challenge to read the entire Bible. At age fourteen he taught
Sunday School. Given a believing heart, he was serious but not solemn. Short but strong
and quick, he enjoyed sports, especially basketball. He played the piano, sang, and all
his life was the center of fun and activity. Annually his classmates elected him president
of his small high school class. His verbal humor turned to wordplay rather than anecdote,
his quick wit usually directed against himself. He often joked about his being short.
He greatly missed his mother and always desired to be a
credit to his parents. He hungered for approval. His capacity for hard work as a general
authority was legendary. He had the ability to nap for a few minutes and start afresh.
Despite his serious illnesses, including typhoid fever, smallpox, two bouts of Bell's
palsy, a heart attack and later heart failure, recurring throat cancer, three subdural
hematomas, minor strokes, and scores of boils, he never slackened his efforts. He was
relatively uncomplaining in suffering and ever grateful for medical help.
Because his formal education ended at marriage, President
Kimball feared people might judge the Church negatively because of his inadequacies. He
compensated by working doubly hard. In fact, he was well educated by his wide reading. His
addresses were carefully prepared, with his own poetic eloquence. A humble man, he felt
completely at home with common folk. He expressed appreciation and love easily and
generously. There was no presumptuousness in him; he made no demands. He encouraged
publication of a candid biography that portrayed him as an imperfect man striving to meet
a divine challenge.
He and Camilla celebrated sixty-eight years of devoted
marriage. She was well-spoken, forthright, highly intelligent, and a committed Christian.
Ever supportive, she perfectly complemented President Kimball in his calling.
People sometimes perceived him as a strict moralist because
of his seriousness in preaching, but he understood individuals' failings. He was the soul
of kindness and unfailingly thoughtful. He carried on a massive correspondence, answering
children's letters and writing to people he had counseled. He had great compassion for
those struggling physically, socially, and spiritually. He expended huge energies trying
to improve the conditions of the American Indians. As President and Prophet of the Church,
he sought and obtained revelation that Church members of black ancestry could be full
participants in all aspects of the Church. Few Church leaders called forth the affection
that this unassuming man did.
Many changes resulted from the explosive Church growth
during his twelve-year administration: from 630 stakes to about 1,500; from organization
in 50 countries to 96; and from 3.3 million members to nearly 6 million. At the time of
his death, nearly half the Church's membership had known no other president.
Many of the accomplishments of President Kimball's
administration came from the effort to cope with this growth, and particularly the
expansion into new areas of the globe. He organized the First Quorum of the Seventy to
enlarge the number of General Authorities and called as members of that quorum men from
Europe, Asia, and South America. The world was divided into areas with a presidency made
up of General Authorities in each area. He held numerous regional conferences and solemn
assemblies. All of this reflected an effort to give the members closer contact with the
general Church leadership. To meet leadership needs, additional General Authorities were
called for limited terms of approximately five years and others were given emeritus
status.
An influential address in 1974 set out his vision of
expanded missionary effort. The total number of full-time missionaries increased during
President Kimball's administration by more than 50 percent, with many young women and
older couples swelling the ranks. The fastest growth of the Church occurred in Latin
America and Asia, but the Church also began organized activity in Communist-dominated
countries and in sub-Saharan Africa. A center established in Jerusalem under the aegis of
Brigham Young University stirred up protest by some orthodox Jews. The fifteen temples in
operation when he became President grew to thirty-one around the world at his death, with
eleven more under construction or announced. The use of computers to maintain records
greatly increased the efficiency of temple work.
All of this activity exemplified his challenge to the
Church to "lengthen your stride," and his personal motto was Do It!
Despite all this growth, in his preaching and policies
President Kimball emphasized the return of the Church to the simple basics of good living
and Church service. He articulated a threefold mission for the Church: to proclaim the
gospel, to redeem the dead, and to perfect the Saints. He preached about improved family
life, planting gardens, cleaning up yards, maintaining personal journals, and writing
family history. Church meetings were compressed into three hours on Sunday to reduce the
demands on members and to allow more time for family activity. Streamlined Church
organization was approved for small groups. He urged Church members to give charitable
service and backed up his preaching with Church relief for victims of a burst dam in
Idaho, an earthquake in Mexico City, and famine in Ethiopia.
Ironically, this peace-loving and kindly man became
involved in a number of contentious public issues. First Presidency statements addressed
the issues of homosexuality, abortion, and pornography, evincing serious concern about the
permissiveness of American society. The First Presidency opposed installation of an MX
missile system in the United States and objected doubly because it was projected for the
Utah-Nevada desert. Controversy arose over the role of Church historical writing and was
accentuated by the purported discovery of significant historical documents by forger Mark
Hofmann. The First Presidency endorsed equal rights for women but opposed the Equal Rights
Amendment as an improper means to a desirable end. Sensitivity to women's issues resulted
in Churchwide meetings for women and for girls, a statuary park in Nauvoo as a monument to
women, authorization for women to pray in all meetings, speaking by women leaders in
general conference.
No event in the twentieth-century Church matched the
excitement attending President Kimball's announcement of receiving a revelation on
priesthood in 1978, ending more than a century of limitation on admission of Church
members of black African ancestry to priesthood office and temple ordinances. The
announcement made no doctrinal statement, but simply said that the Lord had indicated that
the time for change had come. The change was implemented immediately, giving great impetus
to missionary work in Africa. The announcement of this revelation was added to the
Doctrine and Covenants as Official Declaration--2.
From a man of whom little more than a brief caretaker
administration was expected, remarkable achievements came. President Spencer W. Kimball's
energetic leadership and willingness to break new ground produced twelve years of
unequaled growth and change in the modern Church. |