- This article is about David O. McKay. For other uses, see David McKay.
David Oman McKay (September 8, 1873–January 18, 1970) was the ninth president of The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), serving from 1951 until his death. Ordained an apostle and member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles in 1906, McKay was a general authority for nearly sixty-four years, longer than anyone else in LDS Church history.
Early life
The third child of David McKay and Jennette Eveline Evans McKay, David Oman McKay was born on his father’s farm in
Huntsville, Utah about 10 miles east of Ogden. His
mother, Jennette, was a Welsh immigrant from Merthyr
Tydfil in south Wales. McKay’s father was a Scottish
immigrant and was called on a two-year church mission to Scotland in 1880 after David O. McKay’s two older sisters died. The young David McKay took on responsibilities to help his
mother.
McKay graduated from the University of Utah in 1897
as valedictorian and class president. Immediately afterward he was called on a mission to
Great Britain. Like his father, he presided over the Scottish district of the church.
Upon his return in fall 1899, McKay taught at the high school level LDS Weber stake academy and became principal in
1902. He married Emma Ray Riggs in the Salt Lake Temple
on January 2, 1901. McKay planned on a career in education and
educational administration until called to a full time church position in 1906.
In 1905, Apostles John W. Taylor and
Matthias F. Cowley resigned from the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles due to
disagreement over the manifesto forbidding polygamy.
In early 1906, Apostle Marriner W. Merrill died. With
three vacancies in the quorum, George F. Richards, Orson F. Whitney and David O. McKay were called in the April General Conference of 1906. David O. McKay was only 32 at the time.
Despite his church position, McKay stayed active in education. He continued serving as principal of the academy until
1908, and served on the Weber school's board of trustees until 1922
and on the University of Utah's board of regents from 1921 to 1922.
Influence on education
Within the leadership of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, McKay maintained his focus on education. As general superintendent of the church's Sunday School organization from 1918 to 1934, McKay built LDS seminary buildings by public high schools
throughout the state of Utah. Adjacent seminary buildings allowed students to take LDS
religious courses along with their secular high school education. McKay also transferred three LDS colleges to the state of Utah
in the 1920s: Snow College, Weber State University and Dixie College. He
guided the remaining LDS school in Utah, Brigham Young University into a full
four-year university.
Interestingly, the State of Utah underfunded the institutions and in 1953 the governor,
J. Bracken Lee, offered to give them back to the LDS Church. McKay, then president of the
Church said he'd accept them, but the proposal failed on voter referendum.
Besides church education, McKay stressed missionary work, and traveled
Europe extensively. Memorably, he promoted the motto “every member a missionary.” McKay even set
a goal that every member should convert one new member each year.
Heber J. Grant chose McKay to serve as Second Counselor in the First Presidency in 1934. He served in the presidency under
Church Presidents Heber J. Grant and George Albert
Smith until 1951. In 1950 he became President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, that is, the most senior
Apostle. He then succeeded President Smith on the latter's death, and was ordained on April 9,
1951.
In honor of his years of dedicated service as an educator, the Brigham Young University School of Education was named the
McKay School of Education.
As President of the Church
At 77 years, McKay would be president of the LDS Church for 19 years until his death. In this period, the number of members
and stakes in the Church nearly tripled, from 1.1 million to 2.8 million, and
184 to 500 respectively. (As of year-end 2005, there are about 12.6 million members and 2,700 stakes.)
McKay was outspoken in his opposition to communism, which he saw as philosophically opposed
to faith given its atheist underpinnings and its denial of freedom of choice. Furthermore,
communist nations generally forbid proselytizing by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Under McKay's administration, the church's stance on Africans holding the priesthood was softened. Beginning in
the mid-1950s, members of suspected African descent no longer
needed to prove their lineage was not African. Instead the church allowed dark-skinned members to hold the
priesthood unless it was provable they were African. This policy
made proselytizing and priesthood ordination much easier in South America and other
racially mixed areas like South Africa. Blacks of verifiable African descent (including
most in the US) were not allowed to hold the priesthood until after McKay's death in 1970, under
Spencer W. Kimball.
Under the auspices of the First Presidency, the Church of Jesus Christ spearheaded the Priesthood Correlation Program in 1961. By the
1970s priesthood quorums directed women-led organizations like the Relief Society at all levels. Such organization became known as auxiliaries. Priesthood correlation
continues to be a feature of the LDS Church.
Famous film director Cecil B. DeMille consulted with McKay during the production of
The Ten Commandments. They formed a friendship that would last
until DeMille's death. McKay invited DeMille to BYU, where he delivered a commencement address in 1957.
David O. McKay kept a steady pace of travel until he entered his 90s. His deteriorating health led to the appointment of an
additional counselor to the first presidency, as the existing leaders were increasingly infirm and often unable to preside at
church meetings. He died on January 18, 1970, at age 96.
Grave markers of David O. McKay
Family ties
McKay has multiple family ties to other influential Latter-day Saints and Utahns. His younger brother, Thomas Evans McKay (1875 - 1958) was a prominent missionary and mission leader for the LDS Church in
Switzerland and Germany. He also served as an Assistant to the
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles between 1941 and 1958.
McKay's niece, Fawn McKay Brodie, was the author of the controversial book
No Man Knows My History, a highly critical
biography of Church founder Joseph Smith, Jr. which led to her eventual
excommunication from the LDS Church.
McKay's oldest son was David Lawrence McKay, who was the eighth general
superintendent of the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. When his
father was ill, David Lawrence McKay often read his father's sermons during general conference.
One of his granddaughters is the wife of US Senator Robert Foster Bennett, and
another grandchild, Alan Ashton, was the co-founder and half-owner of early
software titan WordPerfect, which was eventually sold off to Novell and then to Corel.
A building at Utah Valley State College in Orem, the David O. McKay Events Center, was named for him after an anonymous multimillion dollar contribution
was given in his honor, probably by grandson Ashton.
Quotations
- Prediction of the fall of Russian communism: "Russia enveloped with communism - a new religious freedom must come. God will
overrule it, for that people must hear the truth, and truth in simplicity. Truly there is much for the church to do in the coming
century." (At Brigham Young University, reported in Church News,
May 28, 1960.)
- "Every member a missionary!" (Conference Report, Apr. 1959, p. 122.)
- "No other success can compensate for failure in the home." (Quoted from J. E. McCullough, Home: The Savior of
Civilization [1924], 42; Conference Report, Apr. 1935, p. 116.)
Works
- McKay, David O. (1964). Ancient Apostles. Deseret
Book.
- McKay, David O. (1955). Cherished Experiences from the Writings of President
David O. McKay, compiled by Clare Middlemiss, Deseret Book.
- McKay, David O. (1953). Gospel Ideals: Selections from the Discourses of
David O. McKay, selected by G. Homer Durham, Improvement Era.
- McKay, David O. (1959). Home Memories of President David O. McKay,
compiled by Llewelyn R. McKay, Deseret Book.
- McKay, David O. (1967). Man May Know for Himself: Teachings of President
David O. McKay, compiled by Clare Middlemiss, Deseret Book.
- McKay, David O. (1973). "My Young Friends...": President McKay Speaks to
Youth. Bookcraft.
- McKay, David O. (1957). Pathways to Happiness, compiled by Llewelyn R.
McKay, Bookcraft.
- McKay, David O. (1960). Secrets of a Happy Life, compiled by Llewelyn R.
McKay, Prentice Hall.
- McKay, David O. (1971). Stepping Stones to an Abundant Life, compiled by
Llewelyn R. McKay, Deseret Book.
- McKay, David O. (1962). Treasures of Life, compiled by Clare M.
Middlemiss, Deseret Book.
- McKay, David O. (1966). True to the Faith: From the Sermons and Discourses of
David O. McKay, compiled by Llewelyn R. McKay, Bookcraft.
- McKay, David O. (1999). in Stan Larson and Patricia Larson.: What E'er Thou
Art Act Well Thy Part: The Mission Diaries of David O. McKay. Blue Ribbon Books.
- McKay, David O. (2004). Teachings of Presidents of the Church: David O. McKay. The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints.
LDS Church publication number 36492.
External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
References
- Ludlow, Daniel H., Editor. Church History, Selections from the Encyclopedia of Mormonism. Deseret Book Company, Salt
Lake City, UT, 1992. ISBN 0-87579-924-8.
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