Why Richard Bushman, the dean of LDS historians, would welcome the Second Coming | Episode 427
Feb 11, 2026
Richard Bushman, emeritus Columbia history professor and acclaimed biographer of Joseph Smith, reflects on nine decades of Mormon life. He recalls meetings with early presidents and changing leader visibility. He explores shifts from local ward communities to global church structures. He discusses controversial eras like civil rights and women's issues, and muses on eschatology, missionary teaching, and the rise of professional Mormon history.
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An Encounter With Spencer Kimball
- Richard Bushman met Spencer Kimball once as a stake president and felt a strong, radiating love from him.
- He described Kimball's embrace as physically forceful and emotionally memorable.
Less Burden, Less Village
- Consolidated meeting schedules and reduced program intensity made church life less burdensome but also less socially immersive.
- Fewer ward roles mean bishops sometimes create positions just to give members something to do.
How Mormon History Professionalized
- The 'New Mormon History' arose as trained historians wrote for the broader profession, forcing candor about difficult facts.
- That professionalism improved respect from non-Mormon scholars and reduced outright hostility.





