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William C. Conway

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(Redirected from Perfected Church of Jesus Christ of Immaculate Latter-day Saints) American LDS bishop and sect leader
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William C. Conway (May 15, 1865 – 1969) was an American neo-Druid and the leader of a mystical sect in the Latter Day Saint movement.

A native of Redondo Beach, California, Conway was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and held the office of high priest in the Melchizedek priesthood and bishop in the Aaronic priesthood.

In the early 1950s, Conway began to claim that he had possession of the Urim and Thummim and the seer stone that Joseph Smith used to translate the Book of Mormon. He generally accepted the teachings of Mormonism, but began to teach that the LDS Church had been incorrect to abandon the practice of plural marriage, which Smith had taught.

In 1955, a Zapotec tribe of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico declared Conway to be a prophet and the mouthpiece of Jesus Christ. Conway began claiming that he was the reincarnation of Moroni, a prophet in the Book of Mormon, and that a reincarnated Joseph Smith, "Our Druid Brother", had visited him.

In 1958, Conway published an open letter wherein he set out a number of his beliefs. He taught that menstrual blood was corrupt and that menstruation could be eliminated through righteousness. He also taught that through priesthood alchemy, common metals could be transmutated into gold and that a Book of Mormon prophet named Mulek had blessed Los Angeles to be a holy gathering place. Conway taught that the "One Mighty and Strong" prophesied of in Mormon scripture was a nineteenth-century "young white Indian" from Yucatan named Eachta Eachta Na.

Conway established a church which he called the Perfected Church of Jesus Christ of Immaculate Latter-day Saints, which he sometimes referred to as the Restored Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ of Immaculate Latter-day Saints.

Conway died at the age of 104.

Notes

  1. "Occultic Infiltration". Salt Lake City Messenger. No. 80. November 1991.
  2. ^ Melton, J. Gordon, ed. (1996). Encyclopedia of American Religions (5th ed.). Detroit, Mich.: Gale. p. 570.
  3. Introvigne, Massimo (Spring 1994). "The Devil Makers: Contemporary Evangelical Fundamentalist Anti-Mormonism" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 27 (1): 154ff. doi:10.2307/45228331. JSTOR 45228331. p. 165–166 fn. 32.

General references

Sects in the Latter Day Saint movement
New restoration sects
Church of Christ
Organized by: Joseph Smith
Joseph Smith's original 1830
organization; multiple sects currently
claim to be true successor
1844 (trust reorganized)
1851 (incorporated)
1860
(reorganization)
The Church of
Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints

Organized by: Brigham Young
and Quorum of the Twelve
14 million members
Community of Christ
(Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints)
Organized by: Joseph Smith III
More than 250,000 members
New Restoration
Sects.
185719431861
Church of the
Potter Christ

Organized by: Arnold Potter
defunct
House of Aaron
Organized by: M. L. Glendenning
1,500–2,000 members
Church of the Firstborn
(Morrisite)

Organized by: Joseph Morris
defunct
186119361951186618821884
Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints
(Gibsonite)

Organized by: Walter M. Gibson
defunct
Third Convention
Organized by: Abel Páez
Status: Continued into the 21st century
Zion's Order, Inc.
Organized by: Merl Kilgore
approx. 100 members
Kingdom of Heaven
Organized by: William W. Davies
defunct
Church of Jesus Christ of
Saints of the Most High

Organized by: John R. Eardley
defunct
Order of Enoch
Organized by: James Brighouse
extant
195519832007
Perfected Church of
Jesus Christ of Immaculate
Latter-day Saints

Organized by: William C. Conway
Status: unknown
Church of Jesus Christ
(Bullaite)

Organized by: Art Bulla
Latter Day Church
of Jesus Christ
Organized by: Matthew P. Gill
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