John W. Bryant

Mormon fundamentalist leader

John W. Bryant (born 1946) is an American Mormon fundamentalist. He was the founder and first leader of a sect that is today known as the Church of the New Covenant in Christ now headquartered near Salem, Oregon.[1][2]

Conversion to Mormonism

In 1964, Bryant was baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).[1] As a member of the LDS Church, he served as a missionary in Japan.[1] In the early 1970s, Bryant became convinced that the LDS Church had unjustifiably abandoned plural marriage and joined the Apostolic United Brethren (AUB) in Utah, led by Rulon C. Allred.[1]

Leader of polygamous sect

Beginning in 1974, Bryant began to state that he was receiving revelations from Jesus.[1] He claimed that "John the Beloved" had visited him as an angel and instructed him to form an "Order of the Ancients".[1] In 1975, Bryant claimed he was taken in vision to the City of Enoch, where AUB founder Joseph White Musser and Latter Day Saint movement founder Joseph Smith ordained him to the presidency of the church and the high priesthood.[1] At this time, Bryant claimed to be the "One Mighty and Strong" prophesied of in the Doctrine and Covenants.[3] In 1975, he founded a church as the Church of Christ Patriarchal, which later was renamed the Evangelical Church of Christ.[1] In 1979, Bryant's group established a communal settlement at the Fair Haven Ranch near Las Vegas, Nevada.[1] During his time as a leader of the group, Bryant had six wives[1] and taught his sect about drug experimentation and heterosexual and homosexual group sex.[4][5] According to sources, sect members had sexual relations during the group's temple ceremonies.[5][6][7] In 1981, the group lost the Fair Haven Ranch when they were unable to keep up on mortgage payments.[1] As a result, Bryant, five of his six wives, and some of the members of the group relocated to Marion County, Oregon, near Salem.[1]

Reorganization of church

By the mid-1980s, over 100 members of Bryant's church had moved into the Salem area.[1] When the church attempted to convert a barn on the farm to a church building, it was blocked by neighborhood protests.[1] Ultimately, Bryant left the Evangelical Church of Christ due to internal and external difficulties and it soon disintegrated.[1] However, in 1985, Bryant reorganized the church into the Church of the New Covenant in Christ, with a membership of approximately 120 families.[1]

Teachings

As head of the Church of the New Covenant in Christ, Bryant has highlighted what he views as a challenge to Mormon fundamentalism: Bryant argues that Mormon fundamentalists have neglected Jesus in favor of a focus on polygamy and male patriarchy.[1][8] Bryant's own experience of being "born again" after his move to Salem prompted him to change the name of his church from the "Evangelical Church of Christ" to the "Church of the New Covenant in Christ".[1] Bryant abandoned teaching plural marriage, vowed to take no more wives, and reoriented his family life away from its previous patriarchal structure.[1][8] However, Bryant remained married to his wives in an attempt to prevent the break-up of his family.[1][8]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t J. Gordon Melton (1996, 5th ed.). Encyclopedia of American Religions (Detroit, Mich.: Gale) p. 569
  2. ^ Steven L. Shields (1990). Divergent Paths of the Restoration (Los Angeles: Restoration Press) p. 197.
  3. ^ Ogden Kraut (1991). The One Mighty and Strong (Salt Lake City, Utah: Pioneer Press) pp. 91–99.
  4. ^ Jon Krakauer (2004). Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith (New York, Anchor: ISBN 978-1-4000-3280-8) pp. 154–155.
  5. ^ a b Richard S. Van Wagoner (1989, 2d ed.). Mormon Polygamy: A History (Salt Lake City, Utah: Signature Books) pp. 214–216.
  6. ^ Brian C. Hales (2007). Modern Polygamy and Mormon Fundamentalism: The Generations After the Manifesto (Salt Lake City, Utah: Greg Kofford Books, ISBN 978-1-58958-035-0) p. 477, fn. 61.
  7. ^ John R. Llewellyn (2004). Polygamy Under Attack: From Tom Green to Brian David Mitchell (Phoenix, Arizona: Agreka Books, ISBN 978-1-888106-76-3) p. 61.
  8. ^ a b c Marsha King, "Changing beliefs led family to rearrange plural union", Seattle Times, 1985-10-13.
  • v
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Recognized leaders[a]Disputed leaders[b]Early fundamentalist leaders
Leaders of the fundamentalist sects
Apostolic United BrethrenFLDS Church
Centennial Park groupLatter Day Church of ChristLeBaron Order
Independents and other leaders
  1. ^ [a] Mormon leaders prior to the start of the fundamentalist movement and recognized by most fundamentalists as legitimate church leaders.
  2. ^ [b] Mormon leaders that made changes to church policies on plural marriage; recognition of legitimacy of leadership varies by fundamentalist group.
  • v
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Church of Christ
Organized by: Joseph Smith
Joseph Smith's original
organization; multiple sects currently
claim to be true successor
1844 (trust reorganized)
1851[note 1](incorporated)
The Church of
Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints
Organized by: Brigham Young[note 1]
and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
15 million members
Beginning in the 1920s
Council of Friends
Organized by: Lorin C. Woolley
Multiple sects claim
to be true successor
Mormon fundamentalist sects
193519541954
Latter Day Church of Christ
Organized by: Elden Kingston
approx. 2,000 members
Fundamentalist Church of
Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints
Organized by:Leroy S. Johnson
approx. 10,000 members
Apostolic United Brethren
Organized by:Rulon C. Allred
approx. 10,000 members
19892002
Centennial Park
Organized by: Marion Hammon
and Alma Timpson
approx. 1,500 members
Church of Jesus Christ
(Original Doctrine) Inc.
Organized by: Winston Blackmore
approx. 700 members
1955197419751978
Church of the Firstborn
of the Fulness of Times
Organized by: Joel F. LeBaron
Membership in the hundreds as of 2010s
Church of Jesus Christ
in Solemn Assembly
(1977:Confederate Nations of Israel)
Organized by: Alex Joseph
Status: Unknown
Church of the
New Covenant in Christ
Organized by: John W. Bryant
Status: unknown
Righteous Branch of the
Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints
Organized by: Gerald Peterson, Sr.
approx. 100 members
19551972
Church of the Firstborn
Organized by: Ross Wesley LeBaron
Extant – membership unknown
Church of the Lamb of God
Organized by: Ervil LeBaron
Status: unknown
collective membership unknown
1990198219942001
The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints and the
Kingdom of God
Organized by:Frank Naylor
and Ivan Neilsen
approx. 250 members
School of the Prophets
Organized by: Robert C. Crossfield
Extant
True and Living Church
of Jesus Christ of
Saints of the Last Days
Organized by: James D. Harmston
approx. 400 members
The Church of the
Firstborn and the General
Assembly of Heaven
Organized by: Terrill R. Dalton
Status: unknown
  1. ^ a b Multiple sects currently claim to be true successor, however, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was officially reorganized in 1844 and incorporated in 1851, after the death of Joseph Smith."An Ordinance, incorporating the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints", Laws and Ordinances of the State of Deseret, Salt Lake City, Utah: Shepard Book Company, 1919 [February 4, 1851], p. 66, retrieved June 29, 2010
Apostolic United Brethren
Organized by:Rulon C. Allred
Founded: 1954
approx. 10,000 members
1955197419751978
Church of the Firstborn
of the Fulness of Times
Organized by: Joel F. LeBaron
Membership in the hundreds as of 2010s
Church of Jesus Christ
in Solemn Assembly
(1977:Confederate Nations of Israel)
Organized by: Alex Joseph
Status: Unknown
Church of the
New Covenant in Christ
Organized by: John W. Bryant
Status: unknown
Righteous Branch of the
Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints
Organized by: Gerald Peterson, Sr.
approx. 100 members
19551972
Church of the Firstborn
Organized by: Ross Wesley LeBaron
Extant – membership unknown
Church of the Lamb of God
Organized by: Ervil LeBaron
Status: unknown
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