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Mormonism

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Mormonism is a religion, movement, ideology and subculture that originated in the early 1800s as a product of the Latter Day Saint movement led principally by Joseph Smith, Jr. It is self-described as a form of Christian Restorationism, and it encompasses numerous religious denominations. Not easily categorized, Mormonism is generally understood as much more than a religion. Mormonism has been described at various times and in various contexts as "a sect, a mystery cult, a new religion, a church, a people, a nation, or an American subculture" (Ahlstrom 1972, p. 508).

Mormonism is distinct from the Latter Day Saint movement in that it applies to a subset of the branches of that movement. The term Mormonism is also often used to refer specifically to the theology and subculture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which is only one (though by far the largest) of the many church organizations that claim to be part of Mormonism. Other prominent churches include the Community of Christ, which sometimes distances itself from the term Mormonism, and the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Mormonism also includes numerous non-denominational adherents to the Latter Day Saint movement, and numerous cultural Mormons who are either non-religious or members of churches outside the Latter Day Saint movement.

Most people who associate themselves with Mormonism may be respectfully called Latter Day Saints (or the hyphenated Latter-day Saints in reference to the largest denomination). Other generally acceptable terms include LDS, Saints, and Mormons, although members of some sects (including a few of those belonging to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) prefer not to be identified as Mormons. A small minority view the terms Mormon and Mormonism as offensive slurs.

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Mormonism as a theology

As a theology, Mormonism as a whole includes a highly diverse and eclectic cluster of religious beliefs. There is much in common with the Campbellite, Restorationist, and Universalist beliefs prevalent in the area where Joseph Smith was raised and where he began his ministry. Smith's theology was seen by contemporary Mormons as answering nearly all of the unresolved religious questions of his day. The bedrock Mormon belief, however, is the acceptance of modern prophecy; each individual may receive personal revelation to guide himself in his personal life, and certain people (prophets) have been divinely appointed to authoritatively speak the mind and will of God, as in Biblical times. Central to this theology is the belief that Joseph Smith, Jr., the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, was such a prophet.

When asked in 1842 what The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believed in, Joseph Smith wrote what is now known as the Articles of Faith. Though the Articles of Faith are not a complete representation of the beliefs of Mormonism, they do represent some fundamental beliefs of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The Articles were intended to be a declaration of belief and not of practice, and as such they naturally fail to mention most Latter-day Saint ordinances, some of which are considered controversial by detractors of Mormonism.

Typical Mormon doctrines

Mormonism is based on belief in Jesus as the Messiah, in the Israelites as a covenant people, and in additional scripture such as the Book of Mormon; as a form of Restorationism, it professes a restoration to the earth of the original Church instituted by Christ himself and thought to have been lost in a Great Apostasy after the death of Christ. Consequently, it has had complex and uneasy relationships with both mainstream Christianity and mainstream Judaism, as discussed in Mormonism and Christianity and in Mormonism and Judaism.

Nature of God

  1. God the Father, Jesus, and the Holy Ghost are often described in scripture as one God (2 Nephi 31:21); however, the one Godhead is in reality three separate beings who are unified in purpose and heart (John 17:21-23). This belief is distinguished from the concept of the Trinity as codified in 325 at the Council of Nicea and in 381 at the Council of Constantinople.
  2. God the Father and Jesus Christ have tangible, perfected bodies of flesh and bone. The Community of Christ (one denomination of Mormonism) has rejected this doctrine and that of the Godhead in favor of Trinitarian theology.
  3. Humans are children of a Father in Heaven, and through the Atonement of Jesus Christ they can return to Him and be joint-heirs with Christ of all that the Father has (Romans 8:17).

Jesus

  1. Jesus Christ was the Only Begotten Son of God the Father.
  2. Because of Christ's suffering, death, and resurrection, all mankind is saved from death and will rise again and receive a perfected physical body.
  3. Furthermore, the Atonement satisfies the demands of justice; grace, forgiveness, and mercy (i.e. salvation) are extended to all who accept Christ as their personal Savior and become His life-long disciples.
  4. A disciple of Christ follows His teachings in humility, with faith, hope, love, charity, and gratitude.

Salvation

The Mormon concept of salvation includes more than the difference between living in heaven or being punished in hell. God will judge all men "according to their works, according to the desires of their hearts" (Doctrine & Covenants 137:9) to inherit one of three kingdoms of glory (1 Cor. 15:40; Doctrine & Covenants Section 76). Only those who outright choose Satan over God will be consigned to eternal hell. Some key doctrines relating to Mormon beliefs of salvation are listed below:

  1. Humans are responsible for their own sins, and must repent.
  2. Though individuals experience consequences of the Fall, specifically mortality, only Adam and Eve are responsible for their transgression in partaking of the forbidden fruit.
  3. Baptism by immersion for the remission of sins by one who holds priesthood authority from God is needed for individual salvation.
  4. All mankind will be saved from their mortal condition. Because of Christ's atonement and resurrection, all mankind will be saved from death before and during a thousand years after the Second Coming.
  5. Little children who die before reaching the age of 8 years are saved without baptism.
  6. Although salvation is offered through the grace of God, He will not save the unrepentant, who will be punished for their sins.
  7. To receive eternal life, one must have faith and repent. There are additional requirements for salvation and exaltation, including the ordinances of baptism, confirmation, the Endowment and Sealing (Marriage).

Pre-mortal life, human existence, and the afterlife

Mormons generally believe the spirit passes through at least four stages of existence.

  1. Pre-mortal existence as spirit children of the Heavenly Father.
  2. A time of probation and gaining experience on earth, away from the presence of God (see Spiritual Death).
  3. A spirit world where the spirits of the dead reside until the resurrection. There, those who died without the opportunity to accept the restored Gospel in life will be taught by those who did accept the gospel in life (this is the reason why some Mormon sects, such as The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, believe in vicarious baptism for the dead).
  4. Post-resurrection judgment and inheritance (for most people) of a kingdom of eternal glory (either Celestial, Terrestrial, Telestial). However, those who knowingly deny and defy God, as Satan did, will become Sons of Perdition after coming forth in the last resurrection. They do not inherit a kingdom of glory, but instead are sentenced to receive a punishment reserved only for those who know God lives and still choose to follow Satan. Culturally, members of the LDS Church often refer to this punishment as Outer Darkness.

Scripture

  1. The writings accepted as scripture by the church are collectively called the Standard Works.
  2. The Bible is the word of God as far as it has been translated correctly. There are various opinions about how literally to understand the Bible, even if correctly translated. Latter Day Saints generally believe that the truths in the Bible can be supported and understood with the assistance of the Holy Spirit and the truths contained in The Book of Mormon.
  3. The Book of Mormon is the word of God.
  4. The Pearl of Great Price and the Doctrine and Covenants are also the word of God.
  5. Any revelation or official statement by a prophet-president is considered doctrine, and some of it has been accepted as scripture. The Doctrine and Covenants has many of the revelations of modern prophets.

Mormonisms' beliefs about other Christian and non-Christian religions

Mormons believe that:

  1. Joseph Smith, Jr. was guided in restoring the Gospel of Jesus Christ and reestablishing the church organization that existed at the time of the New Testament Apostles.
  2. All other Christian churches drifted away from Christ's Church during the Great Apostasy, but nonetheless contain much truth.
  3. Only the church established (or restored as Mormons believe) by Joseph Smith has divine priesthood authority to perform ordinances necessary for salvation; nevertheless, many other sects and faiths (even non-Christian religions) have much of value to teach people.

Polygamy and early Mormonism

Main article: Plural marriage.

Publicly and privately, Joseph Smith, Jr. insisted that he had been required by God to follow the practice of plural marriage prior to his death. Joseph told Mary Rollins Lightner that an angel "came to me three times between the year of '34 and '42 and said I was to obey that principle or he would [s]lay me." The practice was highly controversial before and after Joseph's death. As for his own personal feelings about plural marriage, no record from Smith himself has been found. Historians debate the real numbers but generally agree that between 1841 and 1843 Smith had married 28 to 33 women. Gouverneur Morris Professor of History, Emeritus at Columbia University, Dr. Richard Lyman Bushman recently has written: "Joseph himself said nothing about sex in these marriages." He goes on to explain that there were other "marriage experimenters" in those times that "focused on sexual relations" but Joseph "so far as can be told, never discussed the sexual component of marriage, save for his concern about adultery." (Bushman, 438-441.) Even Fawn Brodie, a critical author of Joseph Smith, said, "There was too much of the Puritan [in Joseph] to be a careless libertine." (Brodie, 297.)

Joseph Smith never publicly taught polygamy. However, the Church adopted the practice in 1852 when Orson Pratt, under the direction of Brigham Young (president of the Church at the time), publicly announced that the Church was practicing plural marriage under commandment of God. He further stated that the Church believed they had a constitutional right to practice polygamy, which view they held for decades. The United States government opposed polygamy for years but it was not until the Edmunds-Tucker Act of 1887 was enforced that the LDS Church began to abandon the practice. The Act officially dissolved The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as a legal corporation, required the Church to forfeit to the government all property in excess of fifty thousand dollars, and stripped Latter-day Saints of their voting rights. These provisions prompted the 1890 Manifesto which officially ended the practice of plural marriage among Latter-day Saints. Today, polygamy is still practiced by a number of small splinter organizations, that are not part of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, who disagree with the LDS Church in regard to the polygamy issue. See Polygamous Mormon Fundamentalists for an overview of some of these groups.

Historical Book of Mormon

See also: Archaeology and the Book of Mormon, Linguistics and the Book of Mormon.

Recently, a few Latter Day Saint scholars have begun questioning the historical accuracy of the Book of Mormon, as well as the reliability of much of the early Church's recorded history. The book by Grant Palmer, "An Insider's View of Mormon Origins," has caused a resurgence of this type of questioning, leading a small number of Latter Day Saints to begin to view the Book of Mormon as a work of either allegory or fiction, particularly among members of the Community of Christ. However, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints continues to strongly proclaim that the Book of Mormon is the word of God and the vast majority of Latter-day Saints believe the Book of Mormon is factual.

Reference

  • Ahlstrom, Sydney E. (1972), A Religious History of the American People, Yale University Press, New Haven
  • Bushman, Richard Lyman (2005), Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling, Alfred A. Knopf, New York
  • Brodie, Fawn M. (1945), No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith the Mormon Prophet, Alfred A. Knopf, New York

See also

External links

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