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Dallin H. Oaks and family's inauguration photo (1971) After the resignation of Ernest L. Wilkinson as BYU's 7th president, Neal A. Maxwell , who was the Commissioner of the Church Educational System , created a search committee for a new president, without any good leads on candidates.
2006 – The church published an extensive interview about homosexuality with Dallin Oaks and Lance B. Wickman. [94] [95]: 316–322 In the interview, Wickman stated the church does not counsel against conversion therapy and that it may be appropriate for some. However, Oaks stated they cannot endorse the aversive therapies recommended in the ...
[88]: 11–12, 17 In reference to the harsh rhetoric on homosexuality of the past, the apostle D. Todd Christofferson stated in 2015, "I think we can express things better." The same year the apostle Dallin H. Oaks spoke on the topic saying, "I know that the history of the church is not to seek apologies or to give them. We sometimes look back ...
From 1971 to 1980 BYU's president Dallin H. Oaks [41]: 32 had Gerald J. Dye over the University Standards Office [99] (renamed the Honor Code Office in 1991). Dye stated that during that decade part of the "set process" for homosexual BYU students referred to his office for "less serious" offenses was to require that they undergo some form of ...
1979 – Under the guidance of BYU president Dallin H. Oaks, BYU security begins campaigns to entrap any students participating in same-sex sexual behavior and expel them from the university. [30]: 126 1979 – BYU's newspaper publishes a series of articles in April quoting BYU and church leaders [49] and gay students on homosexuality.
On January 16, 2018, the church announced that due to the call of Dallin H. Oaks as a counselor in the First Presidency, M. Russell Ballard would serve as Acting President. [5] After Ballard's death on November 12, 2023, Jeffrey R. Holland was set apart as the new acting president on November 15. [6]
1995 – The church published an article by apostle Dallin H. Oaks in the October edition of the monthly Ensign magazine. [178] in which Oaks states "we insist that erotic feelings toward a person of the same sex are irregular".
Indeed, in 2017, Dallin H. Oaks gave a talk in General Conference suggesting the text of the proclamation was composed solely by the First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles [3] which are the church’s top two leadership bodies, and are both all-male.