In his biography of his father,
Joseph Fielding McConkie states: Other accounts of the meeting suggest that McConkie sought out permission and generously interpreted McKay's counsel: Three days after meeting with McKay, McConkie wrote in a memo to Clare Middlemiss, McKay's secretary, "President McKay indicated that the book should be republished at this time." Another account was given in an audio interview of
Oscar W. McConkie Jr. on June 26, 2017:
Changes between the first and second editions The second edition of
Mormon Doctrine, with its approved revisions, was published in 1966. Horne states, "The most obvious difference between the two editions is a more moderate tone." Other notable changes in the second edition also include the removal of sentences stating: • "Suicide is murder, pure and simple, and murderers are damned", • "No doubt psychiatry ... has some benefit ... but in many instances, it is in effect a form of apostate religion which keeps sinners from repenting....", and • that all those using condoms or other artificial contraception are "in rebellion against God and are guilty of gross wickedness." Additionally removed were references to evolution, including: • one stating that the "official doctrine of the Church" asserted a "falsity of the theory of organic evolution", along with sentences stating • that "There were no
pre-Adamites", • that
Adam was not the "end-product of evolution", and • that there "was no death in the world, either for man or for any form of life until after the Fall of Adam." In later printings of the second edition, changes were made to statements regarding Black people in the
pre-mortal life. The 1969 printing retained the controversial statements, but printings of the second edition by 1978 reflected the new church policy. ==Third edition==