Mormon Land

LDS leadership succession could change under a 'bold' president | Episode 412

Oct 22, 2025
Historian Gregory Prince, an expert in LDS history and leadership succession, joins to explore the implications of Dallin H. Oaks becoming the church's new prophet-president at age 93. He discusses the challenges of an aging leadership model, such as declining capabilities and generational disconnect, and considers whether adopting an emeritus status could invigorate the church. Prince highlights historical precedents of leadership decline and emphasizes the potential power of a bold president to enact significant changes.
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INSIGHT

Measured Decline In Late-Life Leadership

  • Gregory A. Prince and Lester Bush used general-conference speaking as a proxy to measure leaders' functional fitness over time.
  • They found church leaders began showing extended pre-death declines in capacity starting in the mid-1960s, increasing the risk of dysfunction while in office.
INSIGHT

Longer Lives, Not Always Sharper Minds

  • Medical advances lengthened leaders' lives but not always their cognitive capacity, creating a mismatch between physical longevity and mental functioning.
  • As average ages rose, more leaders entered the zone where dementia risk becomes substantial, raising organizational vulnerability.
ANECDOTE

McKay's Sons Reading His Talks

  • Prince described David O. McKay's late presidency where sons read his talks, showing early signs of the phenomenon.
  • That era marked the start of visible, prolonged decline in a president's public functioning.
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