Mormon Mitt
Romney for President?
By Craig Branch
Politics
have become a major focus of activism among Christians.
It used to be merely liberals versus conservatives.
People claiming to be Christians fell all along the
terrain of the political landscape.
But along came Jerry Falwell and The Moral Majority.
Conservative Christianity and conservative politics
became a major focus of time and hope for Christian
influence in culture. The concept has some legitimacy. There has been a neglected
theological dimension of the role of the Church or believers as activists in
shaping our culture. It is important to note that the baseless cliché, “you
can’t legislate morality,” is without merit. All laws and ethics
are based on someone’s morality.
The Apologetics Resource
Center put together an important conference in Birmingham
a few years ago presenting
four major views on the role of Christians and the
Church in the Public Square. Christians are called
to be salt and light – to be in the world (but
not of the world). We are called to understand and
balance the paradox of Christ’s teaching, “My
kingdom is not of this world,” with, “Thy
kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in
heaven” (see also Romans 13:1-7).
So Christians work to
influence lawmakers and even to become lawmakers,
but not to make the country into
a Christian theocracy. Our first priority is to see
people converted to Christ via the gospel and to prioritize
the spiritual kingdom, realizing that the Law can restrain
evil (and provoke it) and can have some positive effect
on the consciences of image bearers of God, but cannot
convert people. Our priority and ultimate goal in the
Kingdom is to make disciples of Jesus Christ, minister
to those truly in need, and to promote mercy and justice.
Our ultimate and proximal trust is in the triune God – not
the Republican or Democratic parties.
Today the media is abuzz with news stories, interviews,
talk show segments, and behind the scenes maneuvering
about Mormon Mitt Romney and his run for President
of the United States. The questions, charges and disputes
surrounding Romney have to do with whether an active
Mormon should be supported for President of the U.S.
On the one hand, many believe
with his good looks, charm, intelligence, winsome
style, and conservative
values, he would be the best Republican candidate to
beat Clinton or Obama. But there are other views as
well. Many Americans, especially what the press labels
as evangelicals, are negative in varying degrees of
supporting a Mormon candidate for President. Some believe
that on a pragmatic level Romney’s Mormonism
has too much of a negative stigma to gain the support
of the general population, much less evangelicals.
To complicate the issue
more, there are a number of evangelicals who have
openly stated that Romney’s
faith should not be a factor. Chuck Colson, Ralph Reed,
Southern Baptist leader Richard Land, and others have
all said, “We are electing a Commander-in-Chief,
not a Pastor (or theologian)-in-Chief.” Incredibly
Pat Robertson had Romney come to Regent University
to give the Commencement address last year! Fundamentalist
Bob Jones III of Bob Jones University endorses Romney.
The Roman Catholic conservative talk show host, Sean
Hannity naively proclaimed that since Romney said he
accepts Jesus Christ as his personal savior, it should
be enough.
But it is precisely because
of these perspectives that we need to seriously discuss
this issue. Let’s
take a moment to lay some foundations and to clarify
and define the issues for this controversy.
Mormonism is a controversial
religion. Liberals don’t
like it because of its general conservatism. Although
the liberal Democrat, Harry Reid is a professing Mormon.
Knowledgeable Christians know it is a pseudo-Christian
cult. Many other nominal Christians, naïve Christians,
and general public have varying degrees of suspicion
of Mormonism. By the way, Mormonism is slang. The official
and preferred label of Mormons is Latter-day Saints
(LDS) derived from Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. There is much confusion and ambiguity over
what Mormonism represents. This is partly due to the
history and public relations strategy of the Mormon
Church.
For example many national
polls have been taken regarding the public’s perception of Mormonism. An early
2001 CBS poll revealed that among those self-identified
as liberal, 50% said they would not support a Mormon
for President. 57% of all polled say they know little
or nothing about Mormonism. A 2006 Gallup poll revealed
that 66% of Americans are “not ready for a Mormon
president.”
A June 2006 LA Times/Bloomberg
study revealed 37% of Americans could not vote for
a Mormon candidate.
A December 2006 Newsweek poll revealed that 25% would
not vote for a Mormon; a 2006 NBC/Wall Street Journal
poll revealed that 53% could not vote for a Mormon
President Candidate. A December 2006 ABC/Washington
Post study showed that number at 35%. A Fox News study
revealed 32% not comfortable with a Mormon candidate.
These percentages ranged from 25% to 66% of the general
population being negative toward the thought of a Mormon
candidate or President, probably due to the wording
of the question, ranging from “not comfortable” to “would
not” vote for or support. But it is clear that
there is certainly a significant liability for Romney’s
Mormonism. That will be a major factor in his electability
even against Clinton or Obama.
In September 2007, the Pew Research Center found
that 39% of white evangelical Protestants have an
unfavorable opinion of Mormons while 46% have a positive
impression. A CNN poll in October 2007 found that
50% of Americans consider Mormons to be Christians
with 41% disagreeing and 9% who just don’t
know. Only 19% said they would be less likely to
vote for a Mormon for president while 77% said it
would make no difference. These last two polls indicate
that the Christian Church still has a great need
to educate its members about Mormonism.
A November 2006 AP/Yahoo poll indicated 56% of white
evangelicals in Iowa and South Carolina expressed reservations
about a Mormon candidate. 48% of non-evangelicals said
it troubled them.
Mormonism is the 4th largest religious body in the
U.S behind Roman Catholicism, Southern Baptists, and
United Methodists. There are approximately 5.6 million
LDS in the U.S. (12 million worldwide). There was an
average of 306,000 converts per year from 1990-1999.
From 2000-2003, conversions dropped to an average of
273,000 per year.
As I noted earlier, the
September 2007 Pew Research Center pole showed that
51% of Americans “have
little or no awareness of the precepts and practices
of Mormonism…53% say they have a favorable opinion
of Mormons.” This same number (52%) says that “Mormonism
is a Christian religion.” 31% say Mormonism is
not a Christian religion.
This means America is a significant breeding ground
for Mormon influence with Romney in such a respected
role and platform. On the other side there is a possibility
that the liberal press and evangelical Christian Church
would then be more motivated to expose the many contradicting
and fallacious doctrines and history of the Mormon
Church.
What to me is very disturbing is what the Pew research
found regarding the understanding of Mormonism among
evangelicals. Only 45% of white evangelicals and 30%
of black Protestants say Mormonism is not Christian!
Only 23% of white mainline members believe it is not
Christian. Among the unchurched, 59% say it is Christian
while only 25% say it is not. Only 29% of Catholics
say it is not Christian.
Their figures tell me two things. One, the Church
is still amiss in not educating the congregation on
cults (and apologetics in general). Cults are still
the least evangelized people group. Second, the mission
ground is more fertile for Mormon acceptance and growth
than we realize.
Romney and his campaign
still recognize the hurdles and barriers of 30% negatives,
but are seeing the “uncomfortable
with” category diminishing. If Romney can downplay
and blur the distinctions, he has a better chance.
I must respectfully disagree
with Colson, Land, Reed and other evangelicals who
say that Romney’s
Mormonism has no bearing on whether he will make a
good president. Remember the line is “We are
electing a Commander-in-Chief, not a Pastor or Theologian-in-Chief.”
I disagree with that on
several levels. First of all, everyone is a “theologian.” The question
is, are candidates good or bad theologians? What shapes
one’s worldview, the basis of ethics, truth,
morality and law are derived from religion based beliefs
(even atheists do so without realizing it).
Religion by itself is not a litmus test. But the issue
is, what are the specific beliefs of a particular religion?
For example, would we consider an Al Queda follower
of radical Islam as a candidate? What about a new ager
who consulted and sought guidance daily from spirit-guides?
What about a Klu Klux Klan member who has made a religion
out of racism? What about a Scientology leader?
Are these extreme examples?
Well, part of Islam’s
strategy is to gain power and influence in a country
through conversions, births, and gaining a majority
of the population. This is beginning to be observed
in France and parts of England. My real concern is
that an attractive Mormon candidate will become an
effective Missionary-in-Chief for the Mormon Church.
In fact, in our newspaper,
The Birmingham News, the front page of the Religion
Section had a story “Mormons
have open houses around the state.” (1/26/08).
The LDS state missions’ president noted that “the
Mitt Romney candidacy has recently prompted more questions
about the Mormon faith. To answer these questions Mormons
are having open house events around the state.” He
goes on to note, “There has been a lot of interest
in our church since Mitt’s campaign.”
I have studied Mormonism
for almost 30 years and I have yet to find a doctrine
that is essentially compatible
with historical Biblical Christianity (Evangelicalism).
Yet Mormons habitually posture themselves as “also
Christians,” and they regularly either do not
talk about their faith in a public setting, or they
utilize soft cover-up tactics by never going very deep
into their beliefs or historical studies. Often this
is because most Mormons do not know much about their
church’s history and many conflicting edicts
given by their General Authorities (because the church
covers them up), or because some doctrines are considered “sacred
knowledge” (ie. secret).
In fact the LDS Church
has a strategy to avoid the difficult questions.
I noticed this pattern whenever
I would bring up significant issues with Mormon missionaries.
Often they would parrot the line, “What you are
talking about is meat and we need to first talk about
the milk.” This is a reference to the Biblical
metaphor of a beginner’s knowledge and a more
mature understanding.
Yet this is used as a
smokescreen. Proof can be seen in the recorded lectures
of Robert Millet, religion
professor at BYU (the Mormon University), preparing
Mormon missionaries for their mission. Millet has also
been manager of Outreach and Interfaith Relations for
the LDS Church’s public affairs office.
Millet instructs the missionaries how to answer controversial
questions about their church. He says you don’t have to provide a straight answer to
every question. He goes on to say “never give meat when milk will do,” and
when asked a difficult question, don’t answer that question. Instead
redirect the question to your planned presentation.
This strategy is designed to hide the changes, cover
ups, and errors of a humanly derived religion. The
problem for them though is that their actual and official
documents are out there and retrievable.
Doctrinally, historically,
theirs is a different God, a different Jesus, a different
Holy Spirit, and a different
gospel. For most of their history they did not claim
to be Christians. Their doctrine explicitly states
that God told their founder, Joseph Smith, that all
of our creeds and adherents are an abomination in God’s
sight – that the true Christian church was lost
after the death of the apostles and that God restored
the church through Joseph Smith and the latter day
doctrines, church structure and authority. The existing
church is labeled the “whore of Babylon.” The
LDS Church has always aggressively proselytized Christian
Church members because they believe all others are
false churches.
Their God was once a mortal
man who became a God just like all heavenly fathers
have done in the past.
The true Jesus, according to LDS teaching, is a second
God who became a God and was the spirit brother of
Lucifer in the preexistence. He was begotten by God
the Father who had sex with Mary (his own spirit daughter)
in some mysterious way through a third God – the
Holy Ghost (incest? orgy? virgin birth?). Salvation
or eternal life and Godhood is achieved by a man’s
perfect obedience to all the laws and ordinances of
the (fallible) Bible plus three other infallible LDS
books of Scripture (plus ongoing teachings of their
Prophets-Presidents).
A correct understanding
of these doctrines has great importance when evaluating
the honesty or integrity
of Romney in his public statements regarding his faith.
There are other doctrines that have relevance to judgment,
policy, character, and even intelligence which we will
see in a moment. (At this point you might want to skip
down to the end of this article to read, “Why
is Mormonism a Pseudo-Christian Cult?”).
Romney wants to do damage and image control in order
to enhance his chances to take the Republican nomination.
I believe he sees this as his biggest hurdle. If he
can capture that prize, he believes that beating Hillary
may be much easier. But others believe that his Mormon
negatives spell his defeat with Clinton or Obama nationally.
So Romney is trying to
cast the issues in a way to discourage discussion
or consideration of his religion
as a factor. Romney states, “I’m not here
to run for Cardinal. And I am not here to get into
discussions about how I feel about all my church’s
beliefs and my church’s doctrines…All that
does is play into religious bigotry.”
If asked directly about
some conflicting or controversial doctrine Romney
responds, “There are caricatures
that pick some obscure aspect of your faith that you
never even think about and assume it’s a central
element of the Church. Mormon leaders have said all
sorts of things in the past and present but are not
Church doctrine.” This is “smoke and mirrors.” These
points we raise are not caricatures, are not obscure,
and are Church doctrines.
Noah Feldman,
a law professor at Harvard University recently wrote
an excellent
article for the NY Times. [1]
He traces “the Mormon path to normalization over
the course of the 20th century” after the public
relations fiasco of polygamy before and after statehood
at the turn of the century.
He notes the path to normalization “depended heavily on the avoidance
of public discussion of its religious tenets.” Heretical doctrines like
baptism for the dead and men becoming gods were avoided. Feldman writes, “Where
religious or theological conversation could not be avoided, Mormons depicted
themselves as yet another Christian denomination alongside various other Protestant
denominations.”
He notes that, “Another part of the Mormon
assimilationist strategy was to participate actively
in politics…the condition for political success
was that nobody asked about the precise content of
Mormon religious beliefs.” He characterized this
strategy as “soft secrecy” which would
hold “soft bigotry at bay.”
Feldman notes that when
the Mormon Church is confronted with the fact that
their beliefs are not truly Christian, “they
find themselves in an extraordinarily awkward position.
They cannot defend themselves by expressly explaining
their own theology, because it is heretical to Christianity.”
The December 6th Speech
Mitt Romney decided to make a well-crafted, well
publicized strategic speech in part to halt a slide
in the polls before the Iowa caucus, but to also address
accusations that he was avoiding strong identification
with his Mormon faith.
He gave his speech at
College Station, Texas at the George Bush Presidential
Library. George Herbert Walker
Bush introduced him. In the speech Romney attempted
to change the debate and public discussion from doctrinal
differences to a principled discussion of religious
liberty. In a USA Today story on the speech, writer
Kathleen Parker wrote, “He not only raised the
bar for political discourse, but he also effectively
made a case for uniting all faiths in defense of Western
civilization.
Well, let’s see if
indeed Romney accomplished these goals:
After introducing patriotic
remarks Romney began, “Today,
I wish to address a topic which I believe is fundamental
to America’s greatness: our religious liberty.
I will also offer perspectives on how my own faith
would inform my Presidency.” That was a hopeful
objective but unfortunately, wasn’t accomplished.
Romney had much to say
about the history and importance of religious faith
in America. He also affirmed the
establishment clause of the First Amendment saying, “No
religion should dictate to the state nor should the
state interfere with the free exercise of religion.” And
he correctly seems to understand the error of separation
engendered by secularists. He also affirmed that our
government should “not insist on a single strain
of religion.”
Romney also affirmed that “religion” needs
to have an influence on the “weighty threats
that face us.” He then asked the next logical
question, “Given our grand tradition of religion
tolerance and liberty, some wonder whether there are
any questions regarding an aspiring candidate’s
religion that are appropriate. I believe there are.
And I will answer them today.”
But this is where Romney
again became the “artful
dodger,” and began his contradictions. First
he claims that he believes in his Mormon faith and
will endeavor to live by it.” He will not “disown
one or another of its precepts.” He “will
be true to them and to my beliefs.”
But then Romney states
that “no authorities
of my church…will ever exert influence on presidential
decisions…I will serve no one religion, no one
group, no one cause, no one interest.” But Romney
takes solemn vows to follow and support the LDS general
authorities and doctrines of the LDS Church. But then
he said, “I will take great care to separate
the affairs of government from any religion, but I
will not separate us from the God who have us liberty.” Also
he vowed in the Mormon Temple ceremonies to promise
to use all his talents to further the Mormon Church
and to follow the Prophet. So, which oath comes first?
The Mormon Prophet and Apostles (General Authorities)
publish and pronounce “Scripture,” doctrinal “truth.” Remember
the LDS Church believes it is the reconstituted Church
of the first century, and the New Testament was written
by Apostles.
The fifteenth
LDS “prophet, seer, and revelator” Gordon
Hickley (who passed away on January 27, 2008) delivered
an address to their General Conference (2003) stating, “The Church
will not dictate (i.e. force) to any man what he should
think or what he should do. The Church will point out
the way and invite every member to live the gospel
and enjoy the blessings that come of such living. The
Church will not dictate to any man but it will counsel,
it will persuade, it will urge, and it will expect
loyalty from those who profess membership therein.”
One amazing concession
Romney made, which should be analogous to his digging
his own grave, was “Some
believe that such a confession of my faith will sink
my candidacy. If they are right, so be it…Americans
do not respect believers of convenience. Americans
tire of those who would jettison their beliefs, even
to gain the whole world.”
Romney only partially answered
three questions about his faith. One, he is a true
follower of Mormonism;
two, he said he would separate his church’s doctrine
and authority from the Presidential office (which is
a contradiction); and three, he answered “the
most fundamental question” covering his belief
about Jesus Christ, “I believe Jesus Christ is
the Son of God and the Savior of mankind.”
Although he conceded
that his “church’s beliefs about Christ
may not all be the same as those of other faiths.” I
am sure that Romney calculated
that speaking about Jesus Christ in terms that sounded
consistent (knowing they are not) with ordinary American
Christianity (Protestants and Catholics), would reassure
voters that in the end there is nothing especially
unusual about Mormonism.
Romney did play the “tolerance card” several
times during his speech. He stated that difference
among religions “are not bases for criticism
but rather a test of our tolerance.” Romney tries
to cut off any efforts to get him to “describe
and explain his church’s distinctive doctrines.” He
says that would enact the religious litmus test that
the Constitution prohibits.
This is a very
important issue. Romney’s “scapegoat” tactics
must be challenged otherwise he will be able to hide
from legitimate questions. The founding fathers inserted
a provision in the Constitution expressly prohibiting
any religious test for office. In other words, the
prohibition refers to the government barring people
from becoming a candidate or holding office based on
which religion they belonged to. It does not bar voters
from considering religious beliefs or convictions (especially
as they apply to values, allegiances, worldview, and
relationship to government) as they make their choices.
It is noteworthy that
former Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist,
and grandson of the former Mormon
Prophet Ezra Taft Benson, Steve Benson is featured
in a story titled, “Ex-Mormon Cartoonist Says
Romney Not Telling Truth,” following his speech
(Editor and Publisher, 12/18/07).
Benson responded with “Yeah right!” to
Romney’s claim of not allowing the church’s
teachings to influence decisions in the White House.
Benson, a life long Mormon
until he left the church in 1993 says one of the
reasons he left in disgust
was because church “officials tried to fool church
members and the general public into believing that
his 94 year old grandfather and church President was
still capable of leading the church.” He saw
with his own eyes that he was very much debilitated.
Steve Benson states, “the only way Romney could
be truly independent of the church as U.S. President
would be disavow Mormon doctrine. He hasn’t done
that.” Benson also after citing several examples
like the teaching on blacks and polygamy says, “The
Mormon Church has publicly flipped 180 degrees when
it feels it’s necessary for its image, for its
financial solvency, and for political expediency.”
Mormon Theocracy Not all are created equal. There are religions like
Islam that fundamentally believe in a theocracy. They
believe in conversion by persuasion and by the sword.
Mormonism has another
problematic issue. The founding “Prophet” Joseph
Smith preached for and tried to organize a version
of theocratic rule within the framework of his prophetic
leadership. He organized a strong Mormon militia, became
its General, and attempted to maneuver his way to establish
himself as Governor of Illinois or President of the
U.S. When he was killed by a mob in a gun battle, he
was running for President of the U.S.
Brigham Young,
the second “Prophet” even
attempted to form a Mormon theocracy in the Utah territory.
Even when petitioning to become a state, the Mormons
then had only one political party, the People’s
Party.
Now all that is but a faded memory. But one must still ask, what are the foundational
beliefs that generated such actions?
Another
major “Prophecy” held by the
Mormon Church which Romney needs to explain is called
the “White Horse Prophecy.”
Joseph Smith’s frustration with the U.S. Government
early on prompted a public declaration, “if Congress
will not hear our petition and grant us protection,
they will be broken up as a government, and God shall
damn them, and there shall be nothing left of them – not
even a grease spot.”
In this declaration was
recorded in 1843 that Smith prophesied the “White Horse Prophecy,” taken
from the image in the book of Revelation. In it he
prophesied that there will be a day when the U.S. Constitution
will “Hang by a thread” and then will be
preserved only by the Church riding in on a “White
Horse” (i.e. the Mormon Church leaders).
Recently Mormon apologists have tried to place doubts on this prophecy and
treat it as spurious. But the problem is that a chain of more contemporary
General Authorities have repeatedly quoted and affirmed portions of it. Sixth
Prophet Joseph F. Smith repeated it at a General Conference in 1912. [2]
Earlier Brigham Young declared it in the Tabernacle, [3] and
again 13 years later. [4]
Apostle Reuben
Clark presented it at General Conference in 1942
. [5] Apostle – Prophet
Ezra Taft Benson affirmed it twice in General Conferences.
[6]
So does Romney agree or disagree with this string
of General Authorities who affirmed the White Horse
Prophecy section of the Mormon Church coming in to
take over and save our country?
Some Political-Social Issues
It appears that Romney’s “flip flopping” has
more to do with his Mormonism than people realize.
Many are concerned about his changing positions on
abortion and same-sex marriage. Questions should also
be raised regarding stem-cell embryonic research, polygamy,
and his view on the black race.
In one sense Romney embodies
a trait found within Mormonism namely that of internal
inconsistencies and
contradictions. For example, one of Mormonism’s “God
directed” foundational doctrines was and is polygamy
(Joseph Smith had to justify his philandering).
Polygamy
Second LDS prophet Brigham Young took the bulk of
Mormons to Utah after Smith was killed in 1844. Utah
was a U.S. territory and monogamy was not the law of
the land. But pressure mounted in Congress regarding
the practice of polygamy and President James Buchanan
renounced Young as territorial governor and sent troops
to Utah.
“Prophet” Young still continued to try
to establish a theocratic Mormon state partly because
of the teaching and practice of polygamy. Young had
scores of “wives.” But Congress continued
to press Utah to cease polygamy. No statehood would
be considered.
There ensued a long protracted
period of back and forth antagonism between the LDS
Church and U.S. government
over polygamy. During that time some LDS leaders, including “Apostles” were
imprisoned.
Finally in 1890 the LDS
Prophet Wilford Woodruf issued a “Manifesto” which supposedly ended plural
marriage. This order (or advice) to suspend the public
practice of polygamy came just 10 years after the same “Prophet” received
a revelation that plural marriage (polygamy) was absolutely
essential to exaltation (godhood). The revelation went
so far as to damn anyone who would even hinder Mormons
from obeying plural marriage.
Woodruff proclaimed this “Manifesto” only
4 months after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality
of the Edmunds – Tucker Act which would have
disincorporated the LDS church and seized most of its
assets if they did not cease the practice of polygamy.
But even with the Manifesto, many LDS, including leaders
and general authorities continued to secretly practice
polygamy. This led some Mormons to go outside the U.S.,
to Mexico, and either live with or be married to plural
wives. Romney’s grandfather was one of those.
So polygamy continued “under the table” from
1890–1904. Utah was allowed statehood in 1896.
But, in 1904 Senator –elect, Reed Smoot, a LDS
apostle, came under Senate hearings because of the
continued polygamy in Utah. Then “Prophet” Joseph
F. Smith issued a second “manifesto” which
eventuated in the excommunication of any Mormon who
practiced plural marriage. Two Mormon apostles were
excommunicated during that period.
So goes the history of
LDS flip-flops for convenience and pragmatism. Romney
now says polygamy is “bizarre.” But
he is a “temple Mormon,” and he was a bishop
and stake president for many years (Mormon equivalent
to a pastor over several Mormon congregations). Plural
marriage by proxy (polygamy) continues to be performed
in their secret temple ceremonies, because it is an
eternal decree. Romney needs to be asked specifically
how can he as a faithful Mormon, call polygamy “bizarre” if
it is an eternal decree in his church and still performed
in their temple ceremonies?
Even for many years after
the “Manifesto,” LDS
leaders, including general authorities and Woodruff
were doing it. Another example of a public image and
secret reality.
This is still an issue because tens of thousands
of people in what is termed, Fundamentalist Mormon
groups, have continued to practice polygamy without
prosecution in Utah. That is until recently with the
prosecution of Warren Jeffs.
Do not be naïve to
think that monogamous marriage is necessarily an
inviolate standard in America. What
is the reason or basis of the monogamous standard for
marriage? Other cultures allow polygamy. What is our
basis for the exclusivity of monogamous marriage?
Currently Mormon polygamous and civil liberty groups
in Canada are pressing the issue there. Homosexual
groups successfully challenged the marriage law and
now same-sex marriage is allowed there. So is marriage
simply a social construct, not based on any core religious
or biological reality? And if what constitutes marriage
and a family is just a matter of personal preference,
why should polygamy be excluded as an option?
So how can Romney be a
faithful Mormon, and call polygamy “bizarre,” and
if the society continues to drift away from a Judeo-Christian
base
and consensus, what is to prevent Romney from another
flip-flop?
The Negro Race
From the early years until 1978, the Mormon church
taught that God cursed the disobedient Lamanites (Israelites
who migrated to America) with a dark skin. Negroes
were banned from progressing to eternal life and godhood.
They were denied the priesthood which was necessary
step on the road to eternal life. The Mormon Church
had instituted racial bigotry and placed it at the
level of divine revelation.
But in 1978 the LDS Church
issued an “Official
Declaration” which extended “priesthood
and temple blessings to all worthy male members of
the Church,” a “revelation” received
by Prophet Spencer Kimball.
Before the “revelation,” the Book of
Mormon read that when blacks converted, their skin
would turn to “white and delightsome.” After
the revelation, the text was changed to “pure
and delightsome.”
As one prominent Mormon
scholar, Richard Bushman, professor at Columbia University
responded to NPR regarding
Latter-day revelation, “I think one of the most
distinguishing characteristics of Mormonism is its
sense that revelation was not restricted to one time
in history, but it can break forth at any time.”
So new revelation can justify utilitarian flip-flops?
Homosexuality and Same-Sex Marriage
Romney ran against Edward
Kennedy in the 1994 Massachusetts Senate race and
wrote the homosexual Log Cabin Republican
group that, “I am more convinced than ever that,
as we seek to establish full equality for America’s
gay and lesbian citizens, I will provide more effective
leadership than my opponent…we seek to establish
full equality for gays.”
Today Romney says, “From Day One, I have opposed
the move for same-sex marriage, and its equivalent,
civil unions.” In response to this, Romney claims
that on some issues the landscape changed but not him
when he held the above position. In 1994, homosexual
marriage wasn’t even on the political or judicial
radar screen. He points out that in 2003 the Massachusetts
Supreme Court ruled that the state constitution mandated
same-sex marriage and he called for a constitutional
amendment to ban it.
But what does that tell
us about the intellectual capacity and ability to
think through the consequences
of decisions on issues. Surely he should have known
that “seeking to establish full equality for
gays” would include same-sex marriage! If not,
why not?
Abortion
In a 1994 debate for senator
with Teddy Kennedy, Romney stated, “I believe that abortion should
be safe and legal in this country. I believe that since
Roe v. Wade has been the law for 20 years, we should
sustain and support it. “And…the right
of a woman to make that choice.”
Later as Massachusetts
governor, Romney vowed to “preserve
and protect a woman’s right to choose and I am
devoted and dedicated to honoring my word in that regard.
I will not change any provision of Massachusetts’s
pro-choice laws.” In 2002 he stated in a meeting
with a pro-choice group that, “I will not allow
any chipping away of Roe v. Wade. You need someone
in Washington like me.” He maintained that position
until 2005.
But in 2005 Romney claims
to have moved from “an
effectively pro-choice “position” to a
different one today. But his position today is very
muddied.
Romney claims that he
was personally opposed to abortion but chose to support
the “pro-choice” law.
He now says he wants the Supreme Court to overturn
Roe v. Wade which would allow states to determine their
own abortion policies. But he also says he supports
the 2004 Republican plank calling for a Human Life
Amendment to the Constitution, banning abortion nationwide.
But why is Romney against abortion? Is it because
the unborn is a human life and needs to be protected
from murder? It would seem so in light of his support
of an expansion of the 14th Amendment which adds due
process and equal protection clauses to unborn children.
But is Romney blindly
and irrationally following his Mormon Church’s teaching on the subject?
Romney stated in 2005, “I believe that abortion
is the wrong choice except in cases of rape, incest,
and to save the life of the mother…the states,
through the democratic process, should determine their
own abortion laws and not have them dictated by judicial
mandate.”
Why do I say this is irrational
and consistent with his Mormonism? Romney must answer
the question, on
what basis is abortion wrong – because the unborn
is a live human person?
Well the LDS position
is exactly the same as Romney’s.
Their prophet Gordon Hinckley in an official general
conference address spoke on the abortion issue asking “What
has happened to our regard for human life? There is
no greater miracle than the creation of human life.”
Human life? Hinckley goes
on, “While we denounce
it, we make allowance in such circumstances as when
pregnancy is the result of incest or rape, when the
life or health of the mother is judged by competent
medical authority to be in serious jeopardy, or when
the fetus is known by competent authority to have serious
defects that will not allow the baby to survive beyond
birth.”
The LDS Church also does
not classify abortion as murder because in their
theology, murder is an unpardonable
sin – beyond the blood of Christ. The LDS authorities
have no “revelation” on when life begins,
even though Hinckley, their “prophet” called
the unborn, “human life.”
The LDS position has other
social/moral issue implications. For example, what
about embryonic stem-cell research?
The official LDS position reads, “The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has no official
position on the moment that human life begins. Further,
the Church has not taken a position on the issue of
embryonic stem-cell research.”
In Summary
When all is said and done,
many Christians and conservatives will vote either
for the most conservative candidate
or for the one who can pragmatically beat Hillary or
Obama. Christian political and cultural activists like
Colson, Richard Land, Cal Thomas, and the late Jerry
Falwell like most of Romney’s positions and experience.
Even Marvin Olasky, editor
of World magazine put it, “If he faces Hillary Clinton, I’ll
vote for him in a Utah minute.” They like others
echo the famous line of Martin Luther who said, “I’d
rather be governed by a wise Turk than a foolish Christian.”
And I would agree with them to a point. We normally
would want a President who most closely holds to our
values and moral issues even if he is an unbeliever
(by common grace). But there are additional factors
at work here.
In the first place, like I said earlier, the Kingdom of God is not going to
be ushered in by politics. The initial Christian Church thrived and grew amidst
horrible governance and persecution under Nero.
The Presidency is just
one arm of government. We have Senate and House elections
too to come. But again
the Kingdom of God is foremost. Like James Dobson,
on this, I believe a Romney vote would be a compromise
to the Church’s mission. Based on enough factors
I’m afraid that a successful campaign by Romney
will further the damning influence of the Mormon Church.
And there are two many
negatives regarding his track record, and potential
issues related to the Mormon
Church’s core values. To me the analogy of a
wolf in sheep’s clothing, and Satan appearing
as an angel of light, fit too close with Romney.
I agree with
Kevin Alan Lewis of the Evangelical Law Institute
who writes, “There is an ongoing
gospel war and a culture war. When there is a conflict,
the gospel takes priority…So in sum, a vote for
Romney is likely to be a de-facto vote to mainstream
a false religion.” [7]
But even if he wins, we
will perhaps be even more diligent to take seriously
the “Great Commission.” As
for me, I’m voting for Huckabee.
Why is Mormonism
a Pseudo-Christian Cult? This section is not written as an apologetic, demonstrating
why Mormonism is wrong. Contact our office or go to
our website for that information. This section is designed
merely to expose the unbridgeable gap between Mormonism
and Christianity.
Anyone is offended by being
labeled a cult member, largely because of the very
negative connotations drawn
from the sensationalistic oriented media coverage of
groups like Jonestown, Waco, Heaven’s Gate, etc.
And in fact, the word “cult” is not used
in the Bible.
But if one accepts the categories of true and false,
right and wrong, good and evil, then there can be a
true and false category in religion. We accept that
counterfeit money exists, identity theft exists. That
is because there is a criterion for true and false.
Ironically, the fact that Mormons object to being
labeled a counterfeit, not true, a cult, actually makes
my point. I say ironic because they have in fact repeatedly
and consistently claimed the same thing about us.
If their church authorities,
if their scriptures, claim that the historical (from
the 2nd Century) Christian
churches are wrong, an abomination in God’s sight,
teach man-made false doctrines – then they are
admitting to a standard and they are it, and all others
are wrong or counterfeits. And it must be permissible
to declare it.
The Bible, while not using
the explicit more modern term “cult,” does
repeatedly warn about false teachers, false prophets,
false gods, false Jesus,
false gospel, twisters or pervertors of Scripture leading
to death, and false representatives of the true faith.
Some example passages are Mat. 7:15; 24:23-24; 2 Pet.
3:16; 2:1-3; Gal. 1:6-9; 2 Cor. 11:3-4, 12-15; 2 Tim.
4:3-4; Titus 1:9-13). The standards for the Christian
faith are there, as well as our responsibility is given
to warn others for prevention and for rescue.
Christianity and Mormonism teach differing sources
of authority, different Scriptures, a different God,
a different Jesus, a different Holy Spirit, a different
gospel or plan of salvation, a different doctrine of
hell, a different doctrine of the Fall, the nature
of man, virgin birth, atonement, a different cosmology,
etc., etc. These are essential and defining criteria.
It is not like comparing two breeds of dogs, but it
is like saying a dog is a cat (trying to masquerade
as a dog).
Authority
The starting place
for comparison and evaluation is to identify the
sources
of authority, from which everything
else flows. Whereas Protestant Christianity holds to
the Bible as the only final authority, Mormonism explicitly
teaches that there are four books of Scripture, plus “the
inspired words of our living prophets become scripture
to us. Their words come to us through conferences,
Church publications, and instructions to local priesthood
leaders.” [8] Even though they include the King
James Version Bible as one of their scriptures, they
conveniently
add the escape clause, “as far as it’s
translated correctly.” So when one points to
where the Bible contradicts their theology; they can
dismiss it as an error or translation/transmission.
They go on to state that “many plain and precious
parts are missing.”
Mormon “prophets,” “apostles,” and “Church
publications,” explicitly pontificate that theirs
is “the one true Church” and that “we
cannot accept that any other church can lead its members
to salvation in the kingdom of heaven.” They
go on to state “The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints is the one and only true Church.” [9]
Mormonism’s
second “prophet,” Brigham
Young, proclaimed and published, “Every intelligent
person under the heavens that does not, when informed,
acknowledge that Joseph Smith, junior is a Prophet
of God, is in darkness, and is opposed to us and to
Jesus and his kingdom on earth.” [10]
Third LDS “prophet,” John
Taylor wrote that Christianity in his day was “a
perfect pack of resources” and that “the
Devil could not invent a better engine to spread
his work than
the Christianity of the nineteenth century.” [11]
Joseph Fielding
Smith, LDS “Apostle” and
10th LDS “Prophet” wrote in Doctrines of
Salvation under the heading “Christendom wholly
Apostate in 1820,” that “there was not
one fundamental truth belonging to the plan of salvation
that was not, in the year 1820, so obscured by as to
make it unrecognizable, or else it was entirely denied.” [12]
An official LDS pamphlet, “Which Church is
Right?” states that by the second century, “wickedness
had nearly taken over the church. Doctrines and ordinances
were changed….Christianity did not destroy paganism,
it adopted it.” It goes on to rhetorically ask
the question whether God’s true Christian Church,
which alone could provide salvation, exists on the
earth? Here the LDS Church answers, “Until 1830
there was not….The restored Church is known as
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”
LDS apostle Bruce McConkie
wrote in his popular theology book, Mormon Doctrine,
that “virtually all of
the millions in apostate Christendom have abased themselves
before the mythical throne of a mythical Christ” (p.269).
Mormonism claims
that God the Father and Jesus together bodily appeared
to
Joseph Smith (yet even differing
accounts are full of contradictions, discrepancies,
and contradict the Bible) who later restored the apostate
Christian church as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints. In Mormon scripture, Joseph Smith claims to
have visited Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches,
seeking which of them to join, but God appeared to
him and said not to join any of them, that all professing
Christian churches were “all wrong” and
were “an abomination in God’s sight.” [13]
In the official teaching periodical of their church,
The
Ensign, we read that there was a complete apostasy
and that Satan sits in the place of God as the head
of the Christian churches. [14]
So clearly they have (1)
agreed that it is correct to call other so-called
Christian churches to be fatally
false, and (2) that they are lying when they claim
to be “also a Christian Church” as if they
are of the same genre or another denomination.
To review, the
LDS church proclaims that in the first century, the
Apostles
were killed and therefore the
authority and direct revelation was lost. The Christian
church went into a “Great Apostasy” and “false
ideas were taught as truth, and much of the knowledge
of the true character and nature of God the Father,
Jesus Christ, and Holy Ghost was lost.” Also
the “full gospel” truth was lost until
the “Restoration” through their prophet
Joseph Smith, with its restored and new revelatory
truth. [15]
On the official
LDS website lds.org one will find dozens of articles
with titles
such as “Apostasy
and Restoration,” referring to Christian churches.
Most revealing is the statement, “While the same
terms are used by Latter-day Saints and other Christians
for the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (or Holy Ghost),
Latter-day Saints understanding of the three members
of the Godhead is significantly different from that
of traditional Christianity.” [16]
So let the Mormon cease from taking offense when
Christians point out that the Mormon Church is not
orthodox Christianity, but a pretender, a counterfeit.
At the same time we must also insist that the Mormon
Church, like Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and most
other religions have the constitutionally protected
right and privilege to believe and practice lawfully
in America.
But we also have the right
to point out and make our case regarding the false
claims of Mormonism’s
identification as Christianity. Now I will clarify
and demonstrate the obvious differences between Biblical,
historical Christianity and Mormonism in the essential
doctrines. In a legal arena this would be a case of
fraud.
Even a broken
clock is right twice a day. So it is with the commentary
of
Michael Otterson, director of
media relations for the Mormon Church. He writes, “The
question, ‘Are Mormons Christian?’ is a
good starting point for this discussion. When some
conservative Protestants say Mormons aren’t Christian,
it is deeply offensive to Latter-day Saints. Yet when
Latter-day Saints assert their Christianity, some of
those same Christians bitterly resent it. Why? Because
both sides are using the same terms to describe different
things…Mormons have no argument with assertions
they are not ‘creedal Christians,’ or not ‘orthodox’ Christians,
or ‘Trinitarian Christians!’ Frankly, the
whole point of Mormonism is that it is different.” [17]
But then Otterson goes
on to say that in order to best understand “how different,” one needs
to go to Mormons themselves to find out – not
to “pastors of other faiths, secular journalists,
or by those whose self-interest lies in marginalizing
a growing religion.”
Whereas I agree that secular journalists are not
necessarily a good source (unless they are objective),
but most Mormons do not have much depth of knowledge
on Mormon doctrines and history. They have been fed
an elementary diet, unfortunately much like many Christians.
The information on Mormonism
which follows is directly from official, authoritative,
LDS sources and is a
reflection of some 30 years of study and interaction
with Mormons, including several “general authorities.”
God
Christianity
teaches that there is only One True God whose nature
and Being is eternal (no beginning or end), omnipotent,
omniscient, omnipresent, immutable
(unchanging), triune. The Father is God, Jesus
the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God. They
are not “a god,” or
each separate gods. There is not another true God.
There are many false gods and it is forbidden to worship
these false gods (Deut. 6:4; Hosea 4:12; Is. 2:8,20;
17:8; 31:7; Jer. 10:5,10; Ps. 45:6,7; Gal. 3:20; 1
Tim. 1:17; 2:5; Jas. 2:19; Jude 25). God explicitly
denounces the existence of any other true god (Is.
44:6, 8; 43:10; 45:5, 20, 22).
Mormonism explicitly
denounces and declares that God is not a Trinity,
stating that
belief to be pagan.
Mormon apostle Bruce McConkie in his authoritative
book, A New Witness for the Articles of Faith writes, “The
false gods of Christendom bear the same names as the
true gods of the Bible. Beyond this they have little
resemblance. They are described in the creeds that
the Lord told Joseph Smith were ‘an abomination
in his sight’ (JS.H 1:19). Worship of the true
and living God leads to salvation; the worship of false
deities does not.” [18]
Mormonism teaches
that there are many true gods. Their Father, Son,
and
Holy Ghost are three separate
Gods for this world. “Apostle” McConkie
writes, “As each of these persons is a God, it
is evident, from this standpoint alone, that a plurality
of Gods exists….in addition there is an infinite
number of holy personages, drawn from worlds without
number, who have passed on to exaltation, and are thus
gods.” [19]
In another official
church publication and manual, “Celestial
Marriage: Key to Exaltation,” the church authorities
write, “man is a literal child of God and has
the potential, if faithful to divine laws and ordinances,
of becoming like his heavenly parent…Less well
understood, however, is the fact that God is an exalted
man who once lived on an earth and underwent experiences
of mortality…The progression of our Father in
heaven to godhood, or exaltation, was strictly in accordance
with eternal principles…The Lord would have all
his children attain exaltation, was strictly in accordance
with eternal principles…The Lord would have all
his children attain exaltation.” [20]
As the Mormon Prophet
Lorenzo Snow wrote, “As
man is, God once was. As God is, Man may become.” So,
the Mormon God (the Father) was once a sinful human
who through perfect works became a God and there are
many Gods like him in other worlds, and other men (Mormons)
may also attain Godhood.
Jesus Christ
The
second person of the one true eternal God Being
took on a human nature being born of the virgin Mary.
He was fully God and fully man. He bore all
sins of those who come to Him by faith alone and His righteousness is
imputed
to those who receive His as their Lord and Savior. Jesus warned of many
false Christs and prophets who would come in His
name, misleading many in the latter
days (Mt. 24:3-5; 23-24). Paul also warned of false apostles and carriers
of a different Jesus (2 Cor. 11:3-4, 13-15). The Mormon “Jesus” has
an entirely different DNA. He is not even a clone.
Their Jesus only exists
in the minds and on the pages of Mormon leaders.
Let’s begin
with their view of the virgin birth. In the LDS Church
publication, Family Home Evening
Manual; they depict Jesus as being begotten the same
natural way we are begotten by our mortal fathers.
There is even a graphic printed of Daddy + Mommy =
you, and then, Our Heavenly Father + Mary = Jesus. “Apostle” Bruce
McConkie wrote, “Begotten means begotten, and
Son means son, Christ was begotten by an Immortal Father
in the same way that mortal men are begotten by mortal
fathers.” [21]
Remember the LDS “Father” is a physical
exalted man of flesh and bones. Someone needs to explain
to Mormons what the word “virgin” means,
and they need to be reminded that Mary was God’s
own spirit daughter.
Wait, it gets
worse. LDS doctrine teaches that both Jesus (who
became a God)
and Lucifer were brothers,
literal sons of Father God and mother God, in the preexistence.
[22] Again Bruce McConkie reiterates, “The
devil is a spirit son of God born in the preexistence
(D&C
76:25-26)…when the plan of salvation was presented…Satan
offered to come into the worlds as the Son of God to
be the Redeemer.” [23]
The LDS Jesus
had a beginning. He had not always been a God. They
write “all men and women are…literally
the sons and daughters of Deity…Every person
who was ever born on earth was our spirit brother or
sister in heaven. The first spirit born to our heavenly
parents was Jesus Christ.” [24] In addition to
these insurmountable differences, the Mormon Jesus
atoned
only for Adam’s transgressions versus the Biblical
Jesus who atoned for all believers personal sins. The
Mormon Jesus’ atonement was not able to cleanse
some people of all their sins.
If this isn’t enough,
the current LDS prophet uncharacteristically directly
revealed this fact in
a message delivered to members in Switzerland and Southern
France, and printed in the official LDS Church News
(6/20/98),
“In hearing of Jesus Christ, President Hinckley
spoke of those outside the Church who say Latter-day
Saints ‘do not believe in the traditional Christ.
No I don’t. The traditional Christ of whom they
speak is not the Christ of whom I speak.’”
There are many additional
examples but this should suffice. So the LDS counterfeit
Jesus was not always
God, was one of many Gods, was created, was the Spirit
brother of Lucifer, atoned only for Adam’s transgression,
and offers only conditional salvation.
The Gospel
And finally the LDS “gospel” is exactly
opposite the gospel of Christianity. The Christian
gospel is that full salvation, eternal life, everlasting
life in the presence of God is a free gift, not as
a result of works – by grace alone. Good works
are a result of being changed, being saved (Eph. 2:8-10;
Titus 3:4-8). Justification is a forensic term meaning
that we are declared no guilty based on the pure righteousness
of Christ imputed or transferred to our account. We
are saved not based on our righteousness but on His
(Rom. 3:20-5:2; 1 Jn. 5:11-12; Phil. 3:9; almost the
whole book of Galatians, especially beginning at 2:16).
The law requires perfection (Mt. 5:48; Gal. 3:10;
Jas. 2:10), which is unattainable by all humans but
only accomplished for us by Christ. His substitutionary
atonement takes our deserved death, and takes us all
the way into the very presence of God (exaltation),
by grace and not by works (Eph. 2:4-9).
But the Mormon “different gospel” (Gal.
1:6-9; 2 Cor. 11:3-4) is exactly opposite. First we
must decipher the semantics in order to compare “apples
with apples.” Mormonism has two meanings for
salvation – unconditional and conditional.
Unconditional salvation
is their “salvation
by grace.” Their Christ’s atonement was
for Adam’s sin and therefore only conquered physical
death for all. Everyone will be resurrected and thus “saved” by
grace.
But conditional salvation is gained by grace (resurrection)
and their works (perfection). This must be earned by
complete obedience to all commandments, no sin, not
even a temptation. This brings one to exaltation; the
very presence of God where a man can still progress
to become a God. But again, the Bible explicitly teaches
that grace and works cannot be mixed for salvation
(Rom. 11:6).
Hear the different
gospel of Mormonism. “Salvation
in the kingdom of God is available because of the atoning
blood of Christ. But it is received only on condition
of faith, repentance, baptism, and enduring to the
end by keeping the commandments of God.” [25]
Also among the
requirements for exaltation is “those
who live the commandments of the Lord and receive eternal
life (exaltation) in the celestial kingdom will receive
special blessings.” Among “specific ordinances
we must have received to be exalted…repent of
all wrongdoings…speak the truth always…listen
to and obey the words of the prophets of the Lord.
In other words, each person must endure in faithfulness,
keeping all the commandments until the end of his life
on earth.” [26]
And again, “apostle” and
tenth “Prophet” Joseph
Fielding Smith wrote, “No unclean person can
enter there…Therefore each who enters the kingdom
must of his own free will accept all the laws and be
obedient to them…Unless a man can abide strictly
in complete accord, he cannot enter there…if
there is one divine law that he does not keep he is
banned from participating in the kingdom…we must
be worthy in every point, or we fail…Every law
must be obeyed, and no member of the Church can have
a place there unless he is in full accord.” [27]
This is Mission Impossible.
Craig
Branch
Notes
- “What
is it About Mormonism,” NY Times, 1/6/08.
- Conference
Report 1912, p. 10
- Journal of
Discourses, 2:182.
- Journal of
Discourses 12:204.
- Conference
Report, Oct. 1942, p. 70.
- Conference
Report, Oct. 1961, p. 70; and Apr. 1963, p. 113.
- www.lawandjustice.org
- Gospel
Principles, 1995 ed, p 55.
- The
Master’s
Church, p 7-8.
- Journal of
Discourses, V8, p 223.
- Journal of
Discourses, V6, p 167.
- Doctrines of
Salvation, p 282-283.
- Pearl of Great
Price, 1:19.
- 12/84, p 8-9.
- “The
Great Apostasy,” www.mormon.org.
- LDS
Newsroom – The
Godhead.
- “On Faith,” Washington
Post, 12/10/07.
- A New Witness
for the Articles of Faith, p 55.
- Mormon Doctrine,
p 576-577.
- “Each
Father had a Father,” Doctrines of Salvation,
2:47.
- Family House
Even Manual, pg 547.
- Gospel through
the Ages, pg 16.
- Mormon Doctrine,
p 192-193.
- Gospel Principles,
p 9.
- “What
the Mormons Think of Christ,” pg 20.
- Gospel
Principles, p 290-292.
- Answers to
Gospel Questions, V3, p 26-27.
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