Is John D. Lee eligible for the Celestial Kingdom?
Question
Gramps,
As we know, J.D. Lee was excommunicated and executed for his role in the Mountain Meadow Massacre. He was then posthumously reinstated in the 1960’s. Doesn’t that mean that he has been forgiven all his sins and eligible for the Celestial Kingdom?
vandydad
Answer
Vandydad,
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints does not have, nor has it ever claimed to have, the power to forgive sins. That belongs solely to the Lord Jesus Christ. The scriptures are very clear that the Lord will forgive whom He will forgive, but we are required to forgive all men. So forgiving sins belongs to the Lord, but forgiving all those who wrong us in some way belongs to us. The Church can forgive those who transgress against it, just like all people can and should forgive those who hurt them.
For those readers unfamiliar with the Mountain Meadows Massacre the Church has addressed it officially here.
The Mountain Meadows Massacre was wrong and should never have happened. But it did, and the Church has been dealing with the fallout ever since. All those responsible will have to face God and account for their actions.
The Church also has a commandment to provide the ordinance work for everyone who has ever lived. We can’t know if these people will accept it. We can’t know if they are worthy. We can’t know if the Lord has chosen to forgive them. We can only provide the ordinances.
We do not know how the Lord views J.D. Lee. We do know that his descendants, in doing their family history like they have been instructed to do, found that he needed to have work done and worked to make it happen. The effort of the Lee family is very much parallel with what each of us has been asked to do.
Gramps

Thanks. This helps me in working with others who have questions about ancestors with a dubious past . The same would apply to them.
Gramps, while I agree with the spirit of your answer I do have to wonder if maybe the Church does have a little more say so over the forgiveness of sins than is commonly thought. After His resurrection, Jesus told the Apostles, “Whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose soever sins ye retain, they are retained.” (John 20:23) This was the Primitive Church before the current Restoration, and I know that you only said that it is The Church of Jesus Christ of LATTER-Day Saints which “does not have nor has it ever claimed to have the power to forgive sins.” However, in the restoration of the Gospel, Joseph Smith was told “that whatsoever you seal on earth shall be sealed in heaven; and whatsoever you bind on earth, in my name and by my word, saith the Lord, it shall be eternally bound in the heavens; and WHOSESOEVER SINS YOU REMIT ON EARTH SHALL BE REMITTED ETERNALLY IN THE HEAVENS, AND WHOSESOEVER SINS YOU RETAIN ON EARTH SHALL BE RETAINED IN HEAVEN.” (Doctrine and Covenants 132:46) The Church may not be so bold as to exercise this power very often, but it certainly sounds like it is definitely here.
If one is excommunicated and then restored, doesnt that wipe away the sins and start frsh in nthe Lords eyes?