LDS Church leaders teach that family relationships can continue beyond death via the sealing
ordinance. Today, the church commonly uses the term “celestial marriage” to refer to a monogamous union sealed in a temple for time and all eternity. However, throughout most of the 19th century, church leaders consistently taught that “celestial marriage” was synonymous with
polygamy as described in
Doctrine and Covenants section 132. The ordinance is associated with a
covenant that takes place inside
temples by those
authorized to hold the
sealing power. The only people allowed to enter the temple, be married there, or attend these sealings are those who hold an official
temple recommend. Obtaining a temple recommend requires one to abide by LDS Church doctrine and be interviewed and considered worthy by their
bishop and
stake president. A prerequisite to contracting an eternal marriage, in addition to obtaining a temple recommend, involves undergoing the temple
endowment, which involves making covenants of obedience and devotion to God. To receive the promised blessings of the sealing covenant, one must fulfill his or her promise to be obedient to all the Lord's commandments, including living a clean
chaste life, abstaining from any impure thing, and being willing to sacrifice and
consecrate all that one has for the Lord. In the marriage ceremony, a man and a woman make covenants to God and to each other and are said to be sealed as husband and wife for time and all
eternity. The religion, citing and , distinguishes itself from some other religious traditions by emphasizing that marriage relationships and covenants made in this life in the temple will continue to be valid in the next life, if the couple abides by these covenants. In the 19th century, the term “celestial marriage” was essentially synonymous with
polygamy (called
plural marriage), which many leaders taught was required for exaltation in the highest degree of the celestial kingdom.), the 1904
Second Manifesto, and the 1933 Third Manifesto. Existing plural marriages continued into the mid-20th century. The term “celestial marriage” is still used in the polygamous sense by some
Mormon fundamentalist denominations which branched from the LDS Church. In the LDS Church today, both men and women may enter a celestial marriage with only one living partner at a time. A man may be sealed to more than one woman if his
wife dies; he may then enter another celestial marriage and be sealed to both the living wife and the deceased wife (or wives). Many Latter-day Saints believe that all these sealings will be valid in the eternities, allowing the husband and all sealed wives to live together in the
celestial kingdom. In 1998, the LDS Church changed its policy and now allows women to be sealed to more than one man after her death, though not simultaneously while living. A woman may be sealed to only one husband at a time while alive, and may only be sealed to subsequent partners after she has died. Proxy sealings, like
proxy baptisms, are offered to the person in the afterlife. According to church teachings, the celestial marriage covenant, as with other covenants, requires the continued righteousness of the couple to remain in effect after this life. If only one remains righteous, that person is promised a righteous eternal companion in eternity. ==New Testament==