46°F
weather icon Clear

Hinckley set high bar for church successor

When he died Sunday at the age of 97, Gordon B. Hinckley was the oldest president in the 177-year history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.

He leaves the Utah-based church in the midst of a period of unprecedented growth — there are now an estimated 13 million Mormons, worldwide — and many attribute that growth to the efforts of Mr. Hinckley, himself.

The church began in 1830 with just six members. Not only did church membership pass the 13 million mark under Mr. Hinckley’s 13-year tenure, but much of that growth has occurred overseas, with new temples rising in Africa and South America and coverts to the faith outpaced children born into the church by a margin of 272,000 to 94,000 in 2006.

The church was born in America, but less than half its membership — 5.7 million — now live in the United States. A third of those American members live in Utah.

In promotion of that worldwide growth, Gordon Hinckley was an indefatigable traveler. Claudio Zivic, who oversees the church’s affairs in Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, recalls watching the late church president address a crowd of 50,000 in Buenos Aires in 1996: “He touched our lives in every possible way. He has taught us to be a little better, to stand a little taller and to do what is right.”

Mr. Hinckley’s commitment to expansion and focused missionary work gave the church unprecedented resources, says Rick Phillips, a sociology professor at the University of North Florida.

The Mormon Church scheduled public viewing Thursday and Friday before a funeral today. Officials expected tens of thousands to pay their respects over three days at the church’s 21,000-seat downtown conference center in Salt Lake City, built during Mr. Hinckley’s presidency to accommodate the church’s phenomenal growth.

Mr. Hinckley has set a high bar for his successor. His leadership and optimism will be missed by his church.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
LETTER: Trump opposed steel merger, too

Incoming President Donald Trump is against the merger too. So both the present and incoming administrations agreed on no merger.

LETTER: Trump talks like his favorite dictator

America made a mistake voting Putin’s pal into power. Democrats are not as insane as Republicans. The future is not looking bright for our country.

CARTOONS: How Trump draws the map

Take a look at some editorial cartoons from across the U.S. and world.

LETTER: Dave Barry’s year-ender was a hoot

Looking back on 2024. I am saving it to reread when I need a real “pick me up” in the coming months.

LETTER: Victims of LA fires will face issues

The California government’s red tape bureaucracy will be mind-numbing and unimaginably frustrating for those who lost everything.

LETTER: Finger pointing over the California fires

Finger pointed and accusations just lead people to not trust anyone, even if they’re being helped. Why does this tragedy need to be a political issue?

COMMENTARY: Unleashing growth

The 2017 Trump tax cuts are set to expire at the end of this year. Unless Congress acts now.