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Elder Gilbert, new Q12 member


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Posted

I saw a SL Trib headliner that labeled Elder Gilbert's call as a "controversial pick."  The article is behind a paywall, so I didn't bother seeking the details. 

It may be referring to the rule that new hires at the Church's higher education institutions must be temple worthy - as evidenced by a current temple recommend.

Posted
Just now, supersc said:

I saw a SL Trib headliner that labeled Elder Gilbert's call as a "controversial pick."  The article is behind a paywall, so I didn't bother seeking the details. 

It may be referring to the rule that new hires at the Church's higher education institutions must be temple worthy - as evidenced by a current temple recommend.

If Ms. Stack calls it "controversial", I support it 100%!

Posted

I have read that one of Elder Gilbert's kids went to BYU an has now left the Church, I wonder if that has fueled his hatred of BYU to try to take it out on professors

 

Elder Gilbert is a problem the church has created and other apostles will have to reign him in just like past apostles like , Moyle, Benson, Packer, McConkie etc.

Posted
1 hour ago, smac97 said:

It took real guts for Elder Gilbert to go against the academic grain, and to even critique and speak against some of the problematic aspects of modern academia.  I believe and hope and trust that Elder Gilbert, when ordained as an Apostle of Jesus Christ, will do what I have been quoting in my sigline for years: "'Conformity' is doing what everybody else is doing, regardless of what is right.  'Morality' is doing what is right, regardless of what everybody else is doing."

It takes real guts to go against the grain and act morally by *checks notes* rooting out people not conforming to orthodoxy.

Really standing up against conformity there.

Posted

On FB the pulse I got was that people didn't like him because he was a white Harvard businessman which is a perfect fit for the church's "corporation" image.

Posted
6 minutes ago, JVW said:

On FB the pulse I got was that people didn't like him because he was a white Harvard businessman which is a perfect fit for the church's "corporation" image.

This is the criticism I’m hearing the most right now on social media. 

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Duncan said:

I have read that one of Elder Gilbert's kids went to BYU an has now left the Church, I wonder if that has fueled his hatred of BYU to try to take it out on professors

I wonder if you are still torturing puppies for fun and profit. ;)

A loaded question is an informal logical fallacy—specifically a fallacy of presumption or a complex question—that embeds a controversial, unproven assumption (here, Elder Gilbert having a "hatred of BYU" and taking that hatred "out on {BYU} professors") into a query, forcing the respondent to confirm it regardless of their answer. 

1 hour ago, Duncan said:

Elder Gilbert is a problem the church has created and other apostles will have to reign him in just like past apostles like, Moyle, Benson, Packer, McConkie etc.

I am sure Elder Gilbert will learn a lot.  However, I think he has his head on straight as far as the welfare of the Church, its subordinate institutions (including BYU) and its members.  I think he truly loves these things.  Sadly, I cannot say the same for those in the Church who seek to subvert, overtly or covertly, the Church's efforts to maintain BYU's religious purposes and mandates.  

I think it is unfortunate that we have members publicly maligning an Apostle of Jesus Christ as you have done here.  I hope you have a change of heart.

Thanks,

-Smac

Edited by smac97
Posted (edited)
On 2/12/2026 at 11:23 PM, The Nehor said:

Yeah, I am not willing to compare giving up a promotion to take a less lucrative but still very lucrative job most people won’t ever have a chance of getting as the equivalent of selling all you have and giving it to the poor.

But it is a much more realistic and practical and therefore it’s a useful example, imo, and one that others would more likely consider following given where they likely are in their lives (giving up a significant, but not essential financial gain for a spiritual or charitable gain instead is going to get you further down the progression path than balking at giving it all up to devote all your time to Christ).

The rich young man was an example of what we eventually need to do, Elder Gilbert’s example can help us get to the state where we can seriously consider and accept that our giving it all up to Christ is the best choice for us and others.  We need both examples, imo.  

Edited by Calm
Posted
1 hour ago, Duncan said:

I have read that one of Elder Gilbert's kids went to BYU an has now left the Church, I wonder if that has fueled his hatred of BYU to try to take it out on professors

 

Elder Gilbert is a problem the church has created and other apostles will have to reign him in just like past apostles like , Moyle, Benson, Packer, McConkie etc.

"Hatred of BYU,"  "a problem the church has created," needing to be "reigned in" by other apostles.

 

Can you give x3 SPECIFIC and/or concrete things you do not like about him or that he has done?

I read articles from the Salt Lake Tribune and Newsweek about how awful he is. All of these seem based upon primarily anonymous quotes from BYU professors and Reddit accounts. The only ones who give their names then paint broad accusations with no specifics. Lots of accusations and character assassinations about how awful he is, but I have yet to see any details.

The only thing that I can find is the list of the 4 categories, which I agree seems like a strange way to rank people. 

But beyond the 4 categories are there there SPECIFIC that someone can name that he has done? Did he fire someone he shouldn't have? Did he execute a policy that was inhumane? What exactly makes you and others declare such strong offenses about him, besides hearsay and bandwagonning because some anonymous people on the internet don't like him?

Posted
15 hours ago, The Nehor said:

If you want a list of why he would be considered controversial here are some of the highlights I found digging around various reports:

  • Strictly orthodox when operating in academia which has some faculty concerned of what he might do with even more power
  • Described as a “culture warrior”, the most extreme one since J. Reuben Clark and Ezra Taft Benson
  • Some say he is paranoid about secular groups in academia supposedly out to harm the Church
  • Reports that women disproportionately did not get promotions or advancements in CES under his administration when he had the final decision.

I have no idea if these are true, exaggerated, or wrong. Hard to fact check these. The third bullet is probably the strongest from skimming some of his published addresses. Has a very us vs the world mentality. I could see that be a hindrance in some ways but it wouldn’t have to be depending on approach.

I found some of his papers on disruptive innovation which is what he wrote quite a bit about when at Harvard. Nothing there that I think would heavily influence an approach to being an apostle.

This list matches what I have read - we likely read the same articles. However, pretty much all of it is quotes from anonymous sources with vague claims. 

There are more than 5,000 employees at BYU. I can guarantee you that any workplace with 5K people can find at least a handful who will anonymously say bad things about its leaders. In every workplace I've ever been at, all of the worst employees constantly complained about the bosses (these employees also didn't contribute and felt like they were victims).

But can you or anyone else give any specifics to back these anonymous internet claims and character assassination?

(As I said, the only thing I can find is the 4 categories list from his BYU-I days. I feel that his fabulous work in creating and shepherding Pathways to become the program it is more than counterbalances this)

Posted
55 minutes ago, The Nehor said:

It takes real guts to go against the grain and act morally by *checks notes* rooting out people not conforming to orthodoxy.

Really standing up against conformity there.

How did he "root [people] out people not conforming to orthodoxy"????

What did he do? How many people were fired? Can you name any of them?

I really want those who are so offended to give some concrete examples other than internet hearsay.

Posted
2 hours ago, smac97 said:

 I am persuaded that he is a disciple of Jesus Christ, that he believes in the Restored Gospel, and that he loves both the institution that houses it and the people who are trying to live according to it.  
 

I definitely agree with you here.

2 hours ago, smac97 said:

It took real guts for Elder Gilbert to go against the academic grain, and to even critique and speak against some of the problematic aspects of modern academia. 

If he was at a nonLDS institution, I would also agree with this.  But I don’t see how this is going against the grain given it’s CES we are talking about.

Was he publishing similar critiques prior to working for the Church? (Serious question as I haven’t researched him and I don’t see a reason why this kind of stuff would have come up for him prior to that.)

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Duncan said:

to reign him

I tried, but I must….because the image needs to be right in my head and it’s not suppose to be a crown, but straps.  😛 

“Rein him in” like the reins on a horse, not “reign” as in what a ruler does.

https://www.dictionary.com/articles/reign-vs-rein

Edited by Calm
Posted
48 minutes ago, JVW said:

On FB the pulse I got was that people didn't like him because he was a white Harvard businessman which is a perfect fit for the church's "corporation" image.

That is what I see a lot of. Combined with talk of Jesus grabbing up illiterate peasants to be his disciples/apostles.

Then again historically the apostle that appears to have moved the needle the most and probably ensured Christianity thrived was Paul who was from the privileged elite. Trained as a pharisee, fluent and literate in Greek, Roman citizenship, pretty much the whole elite package. Paul didn’t seem to think much of Peter either.

So are the Clark Gilberts of the world the ideal apostles and Jesus just worked with those that weren’t ideal because that is all he had? I dunno.

Posted (edited)
On 2/13/2026 at 1:55 PM, The Nehor said:
Quote

It took real guts for Elder Gilbert to go against the academic grain, and to even critique and speak against some of the problematic aspects of modern academia.  I believe and hope and trust that Elder Gilbert, when ordained as an Apostle of Jesus Christ, will do what I have been quoting in my sigline for years: "'Conformity' is doing what everybody else is doing, regardless of what is right.  'Morality' is doing what is right, regardless of what everybody else is doing."

It takes real guts to go against the grain and act morally

Yes, it does.  Just look at this and previous threads.  He has members of the Church publicly disparaging him.  I suspect his efforts as CES Commissioner were undertaken with the understanding that his efforts would yield that result, and he proceeded anyway.

On 2/13/2026 at 1:55 PM, The Nehor said:

by *checks notes* rooting out people not conforming to orthodoxy.

Whom did he "root out"?

And what evidence exists that he did so because of their "not conforming to orthodoxy"?

And what does "not conforming to orthodoxy" mean in the context of BYU faculty/administration?  He spoke of working against the "loss of administrative governance" of BYU.  Again, I do not think he was tilting at windmills.  I think he stopped and rolled back efforts by some at BYU which were calculated to subvert the Church's "administrative governance."  I have said previously:

Quote

I have, in recent years, become concerned about reports of developments at BYU, particularly as pertaining to faculty and administration speaking/acting against the doctrines and practices of The Church.  I have even gone so far as to consider whether there has been some manifestations of a "Long March through the Institutions"-type phenomenon in which some BYU faculty/administration deliberately seek subvert The Church by using their positions to influence and encourage BYU students to stray from the teachings and principles of the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ, particularly as to matters regarding marriage, sexuality, and CRT.  I think the hullabaloo over Elder Holland's 2021 speech (in which he quoted Pres. Oaks, who in turn was quoting Elder Maxwell, re: "muskets" and the Nauvoo temple) was, for me, a pretty clear indicator that my concerns along these lines were justified (along with the more recent hand-wringing and histrionics at the Tribune).

And this:

Quote

I think something similar can be said about recent controversies about BYU's governance, including hiring/retention policies for faculty and administration.  To paraphrase Kathleen Flake, I think such matters are "about competing views of what should be done with the Church's doctrines and policies pertaining to marriage, sexuality, abortion, race relations, etc. and who gets to say so."

I suspect there have been, and are, members of the faculty and administration at BYU who have "competing views" (that is, "competing" against the Church's position) on certain issues which have both a substantial religious/doctrinal dimension and also get a lot of attention in the sociopolitical and social media spheres.  

I suspect that some of these folks have attempted, overtly or subversively or both, to speak and act against the Church and its doctrines and practices, to do so by (mis)appropriating their positions of influence over BYU students, and do these things while also drawing a paycheck from BYU
...

I bear no ill will against any BYU faculty/administration who may have, in recent years, been trying to push BYU and BYU students in directions contrary to the Restored Gospel and the Church that houses it.  We live in a pluralistic society, we have extraordinary rights under our system of laws to do as we please, we have the most freedom and the most rights of any people in the history of the world.  However, these folks have no right to speak and act against The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints while drawing a paycheck from the school it sponsors.  This is particularly so for those who have done so in a surreptitious, "Long March through the Institutions" sort of way.  These folks cannot continue in this way and stay at BYU.

I am quite pleased to read about Elder Gilbert and Pres. Reese and what they are doing at BYU.  They are preserving its unique character and purpose.

I think these issues needed to be addressed, and cannot be reduced or characterized to merely "not conforming to orthodoxy."

On 2/13/2026 at 1:55 PM, The Nehor said:

Really standing up against conformity there.

Yes, he really did.  "Conformity" would be kowtowing to trends popular in academia, including having religious schools abandon their religious character and purpose and mandates, and/or allowing elements of BYU faculty/administration subvert the institution or otherwise speak/act against it (and, by extension, the Church), from within.

Yes, he really did.  Some members of the Church are publicly berating him for not conforming to their sociopolitical preferences and ideologies.

"'Conformity' is doing what everybody else is doing, regardless of what is right.  'Morality' is doing what is right, regardless of what everybody else is doing."

There are, I think, people in the Church who think "morality" means altering the doctrines of the Church to suit the preferences and dictates of others, particularly doctrines and policies pertaining to marriage, sexuality, abortion, race relations, etc.  To be sure, the Church can learn, and has learned, some things from "The World."  However, "The World" has some things to learn from the Church, such as pertaining to the Law of Chastity and marriage.

Thanks,

-Smac

Edited by smac97
Posted

I’m grateful for all the negative commentary regarding Clark Gilbert on this thread! Silly me, I’m embarrassed to have to admit I was naive and foolish enough to think it was the Lord who had called Elder Gilbert to be an apostle, but it’s now painfully obvious I was mistaken!  When are the leaders of the church going to wake up and realize that the church needs to be led by popular people, people as popular and accepted by the world as were the ‘rock star’ prophets of old?! Thanks to the many keen insights provided by the sagacious Peggy Fletcher Stack, and all the other enlightening comments from the unbelievers, embittered quasi-believers and apostates who’ve graciously taken the time to participate on this thread, I’ve been freed from my ignorance and am now able to bask in the glorious light of sparks!!

11 Behold, all ye that kindle a fire, that compass yourselves about with sparks: walk in the light of your fire, and in the sparks that ye have kindled. This shall ye have of mine hand; ye shall lie down in sorrow. (Isaiah 50)

Posted (edited)
27 minutes ago, Anonymous Mormon said:

"Hatred of BYU,"  "a problem the church has created," needing to be "reigned in" by other apostles.

 

Can you give x3 SPECIFIC and/or concrete things you do not like about him or that he has done?

I read articles from the Salt Lake Tribune and Newsweek about how awful he is. All of these seem based upon primarily anonymous quotes from BYU professors and Reddit accounts. The only ones who give their names then paint broad accusations with no specifics. Lots of accusations and character assassinations about how awful he is, but I have yet to see any details.

The only thing that I can find is the list of the 4 categories, which I agree seems like a strange way to rank people. 

But beyond the 4 categories are there there SPECIFIC that someone can name that he has done? Did he fire someone he shouldn't have? Did he execute a policy that was inhumane? What exactly makes you and others declare such strong offenses about him, besides hearsay and bandwagonning because some anonymous people on the internet don't like him?

I know one brother who this exactley happened to, PH.D. in a certain area, from a prestigious university, that has members that do what he does maybe less than 25 i'd imagine

"Under him, the requirements for being hired as faculty began to include a sort of "loyalty oath," which is stricter than even what is required to hold a temple recommend. It basically uses one's testimony as a job requirement, but in an ambiguous way that leaves BYU higher-ups in charge of determining if your testimony and loyalty to the church is high enough. There are other aspects to it, but for some it's basically become "I don't want to make this comment in Sunday School because it might be seen as controversial and so-and-so could mention it to the boss and I could lose my job." I posted this below, but my chances of being hired at BYU are pretty small now since my spouse has left the church and that has begun to factor in as well regarding the potential faculty's loyalty to the church."

I meet with him via zoom usually once a week. He doesn't live in the US anymore and couldn't get hired at BYU, and their loss

here's another comment I found from someone

"

"He’s definitely on the very conservative end of the spectrum, which is one thing. But what majorly bugs me is that he’s really opposed to moral relativism and DEI. He’s actually described these as being ‘worldly influences’ in quite a number of CES events.

As someone who is an immigrant and has suffered direct racism from other members, it doesn’t sit well with me for obvious reasons. And his view in the past was that racism is something that is worldly. But it doesn’t really work in practice because the self-improvement requires self-realization, of which is then some element of DEI. He cited Mandela and reconciliation, but doing so requires self-understanding.

I also once had a discussion with other members where I pointed out that in Judaism, doing good is placed higher than being pious. The response from quite a few members was that we do good because Jesus said so. But by that response, does it mean that non-Christians are incapable of doing good things because they don’t believe in Jesus?

And different cultures have different values. Does it mean that a matriarchal society is inherently lesser? I don’t think so. But based on past talks and speeches, I would think he would say so."

and i've seen this type of comment a few times

"

"Like all the “adjunct professors” At BYU — their secret code for “a woman who can teach this as well as a highly paid faculty member, but who we won’t hire fulltime, AND will pay her in ‘blessings’ instead of a living wage.”

BYU’s bread and butter is being a shady employer, forcing people who could/should be compensated properly to work for peanuts and pats on the head."

The Church is its own worst enemy, forget evangelicals, atheists etc. it's the people in the church

Edited by Duncan

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