Short description: Reaching godhood in Latter-day Saint theology
Exaltation is a belief in Mormonism that after death some people will reach the highest level of salvation in the celestial kingdom and eternally live in God's presence, continue as families, become gods, create worlds, and make spirit children over whom they will govern.[1][2][3] In the largest Mormon denomination, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), top leaders have taught God wants exaltation for all humankind and that humans are "gods in embryo".[4][5][6] A verse in the LDS Church's canonized scripture states that those who are exalted will become gods,[7] and a 1925 statement from the church's highest governing body said that "All men and women are in the similitude of the universal Father and Mother ... [and are] capable, by experience through ages and aeons, of evolving into a God."[8][9][10]
The LDS Church teaches that through exaltation believers may become joint-heirs with Jesus Christ.[11][12][13] A popular Mormon quote—often attributed to the early apostle Lorenzo Snow in 1837—is "As man now is, God once was: As God now is, man may be."[14][15][16]
According to Mormonism, certain ordinances are required of all those who hope to obtain exaltation. The ordinances that are required for exaltation are called "saving ordinances". The saving ordinances are
The endowment and celestial marriage take place in temples.
Latter-day Saints are taught that they can receive exaltation through performing saving ordinances. Performance of the saving ordinances does not guarantee exaltation. Rather, individuals must do their best to be faithful to the covenants that the ordinances represent. For those who have lived and died without having received these ordinances, it is believed that exaltation will be available through LDS Church vicarious temple work. Latter-day Saints perform the saving ordinances on each other in temples on behalf of those who are dead. Latter-day Saints believe that all individuals will have an equitable and fair opportunity to hear the "fullness of the gospel" and that those who did not have an opportunity to accept the saving ordinances in this life will subsequently have the opportunity to accept them in the spirit world.
Acceptance of the saving ordinances by those who have died is voluntary and does not take away the agency of those individuals. Should an individual who is in the spirit world subsequently reject saving ordinances performed for them, it would be as if these ordinances were never performed. It is taught that some will accept them, and others will reject them.[19][20]
There is currently a less common temple ordinance which confers exaltation called the second anointing.[21] It is the pinnacle ordinance of the temple and an extension of the Nauvoo endowment[22][23] which founder Joseph Smith taught was to ensure salvation, guarantee exaltation, and confer godhood.[21][24][25] In the ordinance, a participant is anointed as a "priest and king" or a "priestess and queen", and is sealed to the highest degree of salvation available in Mormon theology. The ordinance is currently only given in secret to a few select couples chosen by top leaders,[26][27][28] and presently most LDS adherents are unaware of the ritual's existence.[29][23]
Groups ineligible for exaltation
Not all LDS members were historically or are currently eligible for exaltation. Temple marriage is required for exaltation.[17] All temple ordinances including temple marriage sealings continue to be denied for non-heterosexual couples and transgender couples as of 2023.[30][31][32] Also, between 1844 and 1977, church members of black African descent were not permitted to participate in ordinances performed in temples. Because these ordinances are considered essential to enter the highest degree of heaven, this meant black people were effectively banned from exaltation.[17][18]:164
Nature of exaltation
The LDS Church teaches that those who receive exaltation will:
live eternally in the presence of God the Father and Jesus Christ;
become gods;
be united eternally with their righteous family members and will be able to have eternal offspring;
receive a fulness of joy; and;
be given everything that God the Father and Jesus Christ have—all power, glory, dominion, and knowledge.[33]
The church teaches that after death exalted individuals will continue having marital sexual relations, create worlds, and have spirit children over which they will govern as gods.[1][34][35] Recent examples of this include a 2010 church manual which states that after death exalted adherents can "develop a kingdom over which [they] will preside as its king and god."[36] This teaching is also echoed in a 2002 church manual which says exalted people "will[...] make new worlds for [their spirit children] to live on",[3] and a 2006 Ensign article which says if adherents are faithful and follow God's commandments they can receive, "a fulness and a continuation of the seeds forever, and perhaps through our faithfulness to have the opportunity of building worlds and peopling them."[37]
A 2020 Sunday School manual says, "marital intimacy is glorious and will continue eternally for covenant-keeping husbands and wives."[38] A 2013 student manual quotes a former church president who taught future exalted people can "organize matter into worlds on which their posterity may dwell, and over which they shall rule as gods."[39]
Gendered inequality in exaltation
Women and men in the LDS Church are both eligible for exaltation, but the nature of that exaltation has "conciderable uncertainty" for women, and sources point to women being "lesser deities subordinated to their husbands."[40]:iii, 71–77 Additionally, though both a husband and wife need each other for exaltation, a husband helps the wife attain it in a way the wife doesn't for the husband,[40]:55–59 and an exalted man can have unlimited wives while an exalted woman can only have one husband.[40]:38–45
Different kingdoms
Those who reject the ordinances are still believed to have the opportunity to inherit a kingdom of glory distinct from and of less glory than the celestial kingdom: the terrestrial kingdom or the telestial kingdom[41][42] Exaltation in the celestial kingdom is the ultimate goal of faithful LDS Church members.
In an LDS scripture, the Book of Moses,[43] God tells Moses that "this is my work and my glory—to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of man." God shows Moses a vision depicting some of his vast creations including a vast number of worlds created for other people, a sampling of what God created in the past and what he will continue to do forever. Each world was prepared and peopled by God for the purpose of bringing to pass the immortality and eternal life of all of his children. Immortality refers to personal resurrection by which each individual can continue to enjoy a perfect, physical body forever. Exaltation refers to living in the presence of God and Jesus Christ; to becoming like God both in terms of holiness or godliness and sharing in God's glory.[44]
It is commonly believed by members of the Church that as God's children, people may, through the merits and mercy accorded all through the Atonement of Christ, become like God the Father. As Paul taught the Romans, "And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together."[11] Eternity will be spent in a process of eternal progression becoming more like the Father (God).
Latter-day Saints posit that God has the power to exalt mortal man and even that without the possibility, there is little reason for mortality.[45] They also point to comments made by Christ and Psalmists among others that refer to the Divine nature and potential of humans as children of God.[46][47] They include passages in the Book of Revelation that describe the joint heirship with Christ of those who overcome by faith in Jesus Christ.[48][49]
↑Carter, K. Codell (1992). Encyclopedia of Mormonism. New York City: Macmillan Publishers. pp. 553, 555. ISBN978-0-02-904040-9. "They [resurrected and perfected mortals] will dwell again with God the Father, and live and act like him in endless worlds of happiness ... above all they will have the power of procreating endless lives. ... Those who become like him will likewise contribute to this eternal process by adding further spirit offspring to the eternal family."
↑Cook, Bryce (1 July 2017). "What Do We Know of God's Will for His LGBT Children?: An Examination of the LDS Church's Position on Homosexuality". Dialogue50 (2): 6. doi:10.5406/dialjmormthou.50.2.0001.
↑ 21.021.1Prince, Greg (15 August 1995). "Ordinances: The Second Anointing". Power from on High: The Development of Mormon Priesthood. Salt Lake City: Signature Books. pp. 189, 191. ISBN978-1560850717. http://signaturebookslibrary.org/power-from-on-high-06/. "On 10 March 1844 Smith delivered a discourse on the subject of Elijah in which he gave his most complete explanation of the second anointing. He said ... [t]he function of the ordinance was to assure salvation ... Other ordinances considered essential for exaltation were generally held to be conditional—that is, the ordinance enabled exaltation, but the subsequent righteousness of the recipient secured it. By contrast, the second anointing guaranteed one's exaltation, and thus may be viewed as the crowning ordinance of Smith's ministry."
↑Blythe, Christopher James (May 2011). Recreating Religion: The Response to Joseph Smith Innovations in the Second Prophetic Generation of Mormonism (MA). Utah State University. p. 31. [Alpheus] Cutler was among the few trusted followers of Joseph Smith to receive their endowments during the Mormon Prophet's lifetime. And when Smith revealed the pinnacle ordinance of Mormonism, the second anointing, Cutler was the sixth person to receive it—on November 15, 1843, a week before the president of the quorum of twelve apostles, Brigham Young, received his second anointing. Through this ceremony, Joseph Smith ordained Cutler to the office of king and priest, a position that contained the fullness of the Melchizedek Priesthood.
↑Buerger, David John (1983). "'The Fulness of the Priesthood': The Second Anointing in Latter-day Saint Theology and Practice". Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought16 (1): 21, 36–37. doi:10.2307/45225125. https://www.dialoguejournal.com/wp-content/uploads/sbi/articles/Dialogue_V16N01_12.pdf. "Godhood was therefore the meaning of this higher ordinance, or second anointing, for the previously revealed promises in Doctrine and Covenants 132:19–26 implicitly referred not to those who had been sealed in celestial marriage but to those who had been sealed and ordained 'kings and priests,' 'queens and priestesses' to God. ... [I]t is not known to what degree the conferral of godhood by the second anointing was held to be conditional or unconditional. Most of the earliest nineteenth-century comments explicitly dealing with the second anointing clearly imply that the ordinance was then held to be unconditional. ... The unconditional promise of exaltation in the highest degree of the celestial kingdom as gods and goddesses inherent in this priesthood sealing ordinance of Elijah was weighty indeed ....".
↑Buerger, David J. (15 December 2002). "Joseph Smith's Ritual". The Mysteries of Godliness: A History of Mormon Temple Worship. Signature Books. p. 89. ISBN978-1560851769. https://books.google.com/books?id=P08mAQAAIAAJ. "Brother Brigham Young, I [Heber C. Kimball] pour this holy consecrated oil upon your head and anoint thee a king and a priest of the most high God ... And I seal thee up unto eternal life, that thou shalt ... attain unto the eternal Godhead and receive a fulness of joy, and glory, and power; and that thou mayest do all things ... even if it be to create worlds and redeem them."
↑Kramer, Bradley H. (2014). Keeping the Sacred: Structured Silence in the Enactment of Priesthood Authority, Gendered Worship, and Sacramental Kinship in Mormonism(PDF) (PhD). University of Michigan. p. 33. The public/open secrecy of temple-work in general stands in contrast to the actual and absolute secrecy of one particular feature of its ritual corpus: the ordinance known variously as the Second Anointing (or Second Anointings), second endowment, or the Fullness of the Priesthood. The blessings of this ordinance are conferred onto only a very small number of Mormons, usually after the better part of a lifetime of faithful and loyal service. ... These rites are a closed, absolute secret. Only those Mormons considered most trustworthy by high Church leadership are invited to participate, and they are expressly instructed not to disclose anything about the ordinance, including their own participation in it, to anyone, including family (only married couples participate in the rite).
↑Quinn, D. Michael (1992). "17. Mormon Women Have Had the Priesthood Since 1843". in Hanks, Maxine. Women and Authority: Re-emerging Mormon Feminism. Salt Lake City: Signature Books. p. 377. ISBN1-56085-014-0. http://signaturebookslibrary.org/?p=1171. "Currently some women have received this 'fullness of the priesthood' with their husbands. In the Salt Lake temple, the second anointing still occurs in the 'Holy of Holies' room which James E. Talmage wrote 'is reserved for the higher ordinances in the Priesthood...' The second anointing for both men and women is distinct from ordination to church priesthood offices."
↑Buerger, David J. (15 December 2002). "Joseph Smith's Ritual". The Mysteries of Godliness: A History of Mormon Temple Worship. Signature Books. p. 66. ISBN978-1560851769. https://books.google.com/books?id=P08mAQAAIAAJ. "In practice today the second anointing is actually the first of two parts comprising the fullness of the priesthood ceremony. ... First, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles or First Presidency recommends a couple to the president of the church."
↑Simmons, Brian (December 2017). Coming out Mormon: An examination of religious orientation, spiritual trauma, and PTSD among Mormon and ex-Mormon LGBTQQA adults(PDF). University of Georgia Theses and Dissertations (PhD). Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia. p. 65. [A] current temple recommend [allows one] to participate in temple ordinances. In order to hold a current temple recommend, a person must attest to their ecclesiastical leaders that they maintain faith in the LDS Church, and live according to the standards (including no sexual activity outside of heterosexual marriage and abstaining from coffee, tea, alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs).
↑Ricks, Shirley S.. Encyclopedia of Mormonism. New York City: Macmillan Publishers. p. 465. ISBN978-0-02-904040-9. "A husband and wife who are married[...] are promised they shall inherit 'thrones, kingdoms[...] and a continuation of the seeds forever and ever.'[...] They share in the promises of eternal posterity made to Abraham and Sarah[...] '[that they should] continue as innumerable as the stars'[...] and enjoy a continuation of seeds forever, or eternal increase."
↑"Revelation 1". New Testament Seminary Student Manual. LDS Church. 2023. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/manual/new-testament-seminary-student-manual-2023/revelation-1?lang=eng. "The object of our earthly existence is that we may have a fullness of joy, and that we may become the sons and daughters of God, in the fullest sense of the word, being heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus Christ, to be kings and priests unto God, to inherit glory, dominion, exaltation, thrones and every power and attribute developed and possessed by our Heavenly Father. This is the object of our being on this earth. In order to attain unto this exalted position, it is necessary that we go through this mortal experience, or probation, by which we may prove ourselves worthy, through the aid of our elder brother Jesus"