Joseph W. Musser ordained Rulon C. Allred into the Council of Friends. The Council refused to admit Allred; this resulted in a split, whereby followers of Allred became known as the Apostolic United Brethren. Musser ordained a new council, known as the 1952 New Priesthood Council.[14] The line of succession of the AUB is as follows:[13]
Under Leroy Johnson's leadership, Marion Hammon and Alma Timpson were dismissed from the Short Creek community in 1983; they went on to create the Centennial Park group (or "Second Ward") in Centennial Park, Arizona. "Second Ward" distinguishes it from the FLDS Church, which is known as the "First Ward".[19][20]
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the Kingdom of God
This group (also known as the Nielsen/Naylor group)[21] primarily resides in the Salt Lake Valley. It broke with the Centennial Park group after Marion Hammon died in 1988.[22][23] Frank Naylor (apostle) and Ivan Neilsen (high priest and bishop) disagreed with Alma Timpson's leadership of Centennial Park, prompting them to create a new group known as the "Third Ward" with Naylor presiding;[23] they likewise primarily reside in the Salt Lake Valley. They have formed a close association with Winston Blackmore's community of Bountiful, British Columbia.[22][23]
The School of the Prophets has its headquarters in the Salem, Utah area. In 1968 Robert C. Crossfield published the Book of Onias, which contained revelations he claimed to have received since 1961. These revelations chastised LDS Church leaders for their abandonment of the celestial laws. Crossfield was excommunicated in 1972.[27] The continuing revelations were later published as the Second Book of Commandments.[28] In 1982 Crossfield formally established the School of the Prophets, overseen by a president and six counselors[27] and headquartered in Salem, Utah.
Ron and Dan Lafferty served in March 1984 as counselors in a local school of the prophets for the Provo, Utah, area.[29] Four months after being removed from the school for refusing to renounce their revelation calling for the killing of certain individuals,[30] the Laffertys murdered their brother Allen's wife and infant daughter.
Robert C. Crossfield, founder and president (1968–2018)[31]
True and Living Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Last Days
The True and Living Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Last Days (TLC) has its headquarters in Manti, Utah. Membership is estimated at 300 to 500. Organized in 1994, the TLC was a new "restoration" for the "very last days" before the Second Coming of Jesus. While the church initially grew rapidly it has since stagnated, declining in numbers and converts since it ceased missionary efforts in 2000.
The Church of the Firstborn and the General Assembly of Heaven
The Church of the Firstborn and the General Assembly of Heaven was originally organized in Magna, Utah by former members of the LDS Church.[33] It practices polygamy and the law of consecration. Its leader, Terrill R. Dalton, purports to be the Holy Ghost and the father of Jesus.[34] However, the group may have declined in numbers after its relocation from Idaho to Montana[35] and Dalton's and assistant Geody Harman's arrest for (and conviction of) two counts of rape.[36][37][38]
^Hales, Brian C (2009). "Rulon C. Allred". MormonFundamentalism.com. Archived from the original on 12 January 2011. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
^McKinley, Carol (March 5, 2011), Inside a troubled fundamentalist Mormon sect, Salon Media Group, Inc., retrieved March 11, 2011, In just a few weeks, Jeffs has gone on a rampage, kicking out at least 40 of his most pious men. One of those faithful is Merril Jessop, a 70-year-old FLDS bishop.
^Hales, Brian C. (2006). Modern Polygamy and Mormon Fundamentalism : The Generations after the Manifesto (JWHA pre-release. ed.). Salt Lake City, Utah: Greg Kofford Books. ISBN1589580354.