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		Mormons defend traditional marriage at 
		annual conference 
		
		 
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		[April 06, 2015] 
		By Peg McEntee 
		  
		 SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (Reuters) - Less than 
		three weeks after Utah enacted the state's first nondiscrimination 
		protections for gay and transgender residents, the Mormon Church on 
		Saturday extolled the eternal value of marriage between a man and a 
		woman. 
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			 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has long held that 
			marriage is a sacred union, in life and in the hereafter, and 
			reiterated that belief in its 185th Annual General Convention in 
			Salt Lake City. 
			 
			During Utah's 2015 legislative session, the LDS Church backed 
			legislation that made it illegal for employers and landlords to 
			discriminate against people based on their sexual orientation or 
			gender identity. Gov. Gary Herbert, himself a Mormon, signed the 
			bill. 
			 
			More than 60 percent of Utah's residents and 80 percent of state 
			lawmakers are members of the faith. Utah and 36 other states have 
			legalized same-sex marriage, which the Morman Church strongly 
			opposes. 
			
			  The president of the church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles Boyd K. 
			Packer said in a speech on Saturday that faithful members of the LDS 
			Church believe that “the only legitimate, authorized expression of 
			the powers of procreation is between a husband and wife who have 
			been legally and lawfully married." 
			 
			While the church supported the nondiscrimination bill, it was not a 
			significant point of discussion at the convention on Saturday. 
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			Religious freedom acts in Indiana and Arkansas recently drew heavy 
			criticism, with opponents saying they permit businesses to legally 
			discriminate against gays and lesbians. Legislatures in both states 
			this week revised the laws to prevent certain practices seen as 
			discriminatory. 
			 
			(Editing by Kevin Murphy and Chizu Nomiyama) 
			
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