Mormonism has had an uneasy relationship with traditional Christianity from the day circa 1820 when Joseph Smith Jr. leaned against the mantle of his father's home and declared to his mother, "I have learned for myself that Presbyterianism is not true". Smith's claims of heavenly visions including word from God that the creeds of Christendom were "an abomination in my sight", with an admonition to "go not after them" aroused fierce enmity in his neighborhood. And that was in only the first days of Mormonism. By 1830, Smith had also claimed to receive visits from angels who gave him new scripture (The Book of Mormon) and the sole priesthood authority on earth, restoring the "true" Christianity of the early Church. By 1840, Smith and his family and associates had sent out missionaries and gathered increasing numbers of believers from other Christian churches in U.S.A. and Europe. Even in these early years, the claims and activities of Mormonism tended to arouse suspicion and enmity among the clergy of other Christian churches. Then in Nauvoo, Illinois circa 1840-1844, selected Mormons began practicing polygamy. And Smith began teaching that the human soul was in the beginning with God, that God was once a human, that He is the literal Father of the human soul, and that humans have the intended destiny of becoming like their Father.
Perhaps due to the combination of audacious claims and alarming success, early Mormons suffered more than usual opposition, compared to other anti-traditional sects of their time. At times this conflict turned violent, complicating the relationship that Mormons have with traditional Christianity.
Adherents of Mormonism always have considered themselves to be Christians because they believe that Jesus Christ is the Messiah and the son of God. Those who practice Mormonism call themselves Latter Day Saints because they believe the Latter Day Saint movement is a restoration of the original Christian church of the New Testament ( see Church of Christ (Mormonism)). However, as Mormonism from its beginning rejected the traditional churches, including all their sacraments, history, creeds, and debates, so various Christian churches and movements have adopted stances of regarding Mormonism as a heretical or apostate form of Christianity, a departure from the Christian faith, or more pejoratively, a cult.
On the other hand, Mormonism, or the Latter Day Saint movement, is not monolithic. Some of the doctrines and practices that distinguish the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from other Jesus-based churches originated later in the life of Joseph Smith, Jr. in Nauvoo, Illinois or under the leadership of Brigham Young, among the Mormons who followed him to Utah, after the Latter Day Saint Movement had experienced various schisms. As the movement has grown and gained worldwide fame, some denominations within the movement, such as the Community of Christ, have attempted to respond to charges through extensive ecumenical efforts, including engagement in dialog with Christianity and sometimes even relinquishing their earlier doctrines and practices. Still, many denominations within the movement, including the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (by far the largest) and many of its splinter groups including the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints still retain many, if not most, of Smith's original doctrines and practices that many Christians denounce.
Current Trends of Conflict
A Different Jesus
It is currently common to hear Mormonism accused of believing in "a different Jesus" than traditional Christianity. Framed in many ways, often including that the Mormon Jesus "is the Brother of Lucifer," this accusation likely has its root in the rejection of the traditional Christian creeds that marked the birth of Mormonism. Latter Day Saints believe that these creeds were departures from the teachings of Christ and his apostles. But many of the Christian creeds have enjoyed a general consensus among Christians for many centuries, and for those who believe what they teach, they have come to represent a litmus test for recognizing genuine and false Christianity.
Also, while Mormonism is based on a biblical belief in Jesus as the Christ, the teachings of Mormonism concerning God and Man (expounded first circa 1840 near the end of Smith's life) extend beyond the biblical narrative in ways rejected by most traditional Christian churches, including that God the Father is the father of us all, and of Jesus Christ, and of all the evils spirits, including Satan.
Differing Biblical Interpretations
In Mormonism, like in traditional Christianity, Jesus Christ is considered to be the Messiah, the Savior, the son of God and of the virgin Mary. In addition, Jesus is considered to have lived a perfect life, was a sacrifice for sin, and was resurrected. To this point, the Mormon narrative of Jesus' birth, death, resurrection, and future coming is the same as the Christian narrative, such as described in the Apostles Creed.
Nevertheless, Mormon extrapolations regarding Jesus are in many ways more similar to the earliest Christian heresies. For example, unlike traditional Christianity, in Mormonism Jesus, the Son, is distinct from the Father not just in "person", but also is a separate being: which differs from the Nicene Creed. In addition, while Latter Day Saints believe that the "mind" of Jesus was coeternal with God the Father, Mormon followers of Brigham Young generally believe in Young's doctrine that Jesus was "born" into a "spirit body", like the rest of humanity, and remained in that state until his Incarnation.
When the Latter Day Saint movement was founded in the early 19th Century, most early Latter Day Saints came from a Protestant background. But Protestantism at the time was undergoing a widespread loss of consensus concerning the Trinitarian conception, as various types of transcendentalism, theosophy and unitarianism were gaining strength, especially in the region of the country where Mormonism originated. Early public teachings of Joseph Smith, Jr. contained only hints of the later full-blown rejection of the Trinity. He claimed to have received revelation only after asking questions about a subject, pondering, and praying to God for an answer. As Smith's teachings evolved, his later teachings painted a strikingly different picture of the Father and the Son with physical superhuman bodies, being one in purpose together with the Holy Spirit, but not sharing identity as the same God.
Some Latter Day Saint churches such as the Community of Christ have chosen to adopt some of the creeds of orthodox Christianity. Most others, including the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, teach some of the unique doctrines taught by Joseph Smith toward the end of his life. See Godhead (Mormonism).
Jesus as a physical being distinct from God the Father and the Holy Spirit
The Book of Mormon, published in 1830, describes God the Father, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit as being "one", with Jesus appearing as a spirit before his birth, and as a physical being after his resurrection to thousands of witnesses, who were commanded to feel the prints of the nails in his hands and in his feet. Mormons claim Jesus has stated in The Third Book of Nephi that he has come down from heaven from the Father, and that he will endow the people with the Gift of the Holy Ghost as a comforter.
In 1835, Joseph Smith, Jr. (with the involvement of Sidney Rigdon), publicly taught the idea that Jesus Christ and God the Father were two separate beings. In the Lectures on Faith, taught in 1834 to the School of the Prophets, the doctrine was first presented that within the Godhead, the Father and the Son were two distinct "personages" who were nevertheless "one" because they possess "the same mind, the same wisdom, glory, power, and fullness" (Lectures on Faith 5:2m).
In 1843, in Smith's later years, he elaborated on the doctrine of Jesus being a separate personage from the Father, providing his most well-known description of the Godhead, where God the Father, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit were each three distinct personages: "The Father has a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man's; the Son also; but the Holy Ghost has not a body of flesh and bones, but is a personage of Spirit. Were it not so, the Holy Ghost could not dwell in us." D&C 130:22. See Godhead (Mormonism).
Jesus as coeternal with God, and as the Father's "firstborn"
From the beginning, Joseph Smith, Jr. taught that Jesus Christ was coeternal with the Father. Beginning in 1833, Smith began to elaborate on the nature of "creation" and what it means to be eternal. In a revelation Smith dictated that year, Jesus Christ purportedly stated: "I was in the beginning with the Father, and am the Firstborn.... Man was also in the beginning with God. Intelligence, or the light of truth, was not created or made, neither indeed can be." (LDS D&C 93:21-23.) In his King Follett Discourse, Smith taught:
- "[T]he soul—the mind of man—the immortal spirit. Where did it come from? All learned men and doctors of divinity say that God created it in the beginning; but it is not so: the very idea lessens man in my estimation.... We say that God himself is a self-existent being.... Man does exist upon the same principles.... [The Bible] does not say in the Hebrew that God created the spirit of man. It says 'God made man out of the earth and put into him Adam's spirit, and so became a living body.' The mind or the intelligence which man possesses is co-equal with God himself.... Is it logical to say that the intelligence of spirits is immortal, and yet that it had a beginning? The intelligence of spirits had not beginning, neither will it have an end. That is good logic. That which has a beginning may have an end. There never was a time when there were not spirits; for they are co-equal [co-eternal] with our Father in heaven." (King Follett Discourse)
Thus, Smith taught that not only was Jesus Christ coeternal with the Father, but that so was the rest of humanity, and that the "spirit of man" cannot be created nor distroyed.
Smith also stated that Jesus was the "Firstborn" of the Father, a characterization that is also found in Collosians 1:15, which described Jesus as the "firstborn of every creature". While Smith never stated that Jesus Christ was literally "born" as a spirit child of God the Father prior to his physical birth to Mary , this doctrine was taught by some other Latter Day Saint leaders, primarily within the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and its breakoffs, where the idea is now widely-accepted that Jesus (and humanity) were born as spirits by the Father. In 1857, Brigham Young taught that every person, including Jesus, was "a son or a daughter of [the Father]. In the spirit world their spirits were first begotten and brought forth, and they lived there with their parents for ages before they came here." 4 J.D. 218.
In 1909, the First Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued the following statent:
- Jesus, however, is the firstborn among all the sons of God—the first begotten in the spirit, and the only begotten in the flesh. He is our elder brother, and we, like Him, are in the image of God. All men and women are in the similitude of the universal Father and Mother, and are literally the sons and daughters of Deity." MFP 4:203.
Therefore, among followers of Brigham Young, and particularly Latter-day Saints, it is widely accepted that Jesus is a created being, although it has also been postulated that Jesus (and humanity) had a kind of pre-spirit "intelligence" that always existed and that was coeternal with God. Among other Latter Day Saint denominations, however, there is a difference of opinion. Notably, many within the Community of Christ teach that Jesus is coeternal with the Father, more in the sense taught by trinitarianism.
A Different Salvation
A second accusation currently common against Mormonism is that it contrasts with the Calvinistic tradition in teaching a "Man-based salvation" rather than a "God-based salvation". Mormonism teaches strongly that God has given humans the freedom to act and not to be acted on. This teaching puts the responsibility to accept the grace of God squarely on humans, while modern Calvinistic tradition makes God ultimately responsible for who is saved and who is not saved.
A Dangerous Church
Some traditional Christians contend that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, comprising most of Mormonism, is a dangerous organization with an excessively authoritarian leadership and an excessively demanding program. Joseph Smith organized the church under a central hierarchy. And he taught that "A religion that does not demand the sacrifice of its people will never have the power to produce the faith necessary unto life and salvation." American evangelical christians in particular, steeped in democracy and decentralized churches, are particularly suspicious of such an arrangement. Indeed, during the Utah period of the LDS Church, this arrangement (together with the effects of isolation, provocation, and a decade of receiving atrocities from other christians) may have provided the backdrop for polygamist excesses and the Mountain Meadows Massacre orchestrated by Mormons.
Different Meanings
Many Christians accuse Mormons of co-opting their language, but pouring different meanings into the words. Even those favorable toward Mormonism have sincere difficulty because through years of separation from traditional Christianity, Mormonism has indeed evolved a different dialect of Christian terminology. The glossary below will help traditional Christians and Mormons dialogue more successfully.
Most likely meaning in Mormonism or LDS Church | Term | Most likely meaning in traditional Christianity |
---|---|---|
Adam | Archangel Michael | |
Messenger. God, resurrected human, human spirit, or mortal human. | angel | bodiless spirit created by God; servant of God; neither god nor human |
Covenant immersion in water by authorized servant of God. Sacrament necessary for highest reward in heaven. | baptism | sacrament generally associated with becoming a Christian; see baptism |
The greatest virtue. The greatest of all. The pure love of Christ. God is love. | charity | |
Held back in spiritual progress or failing to achieve the highest reward in heaven. Reaping hell, albeit temporarily. | damned/damnation | |
Separation of spirit from body (physical) or spirit from God (spiritual). A legacy of the Fall of Adam. | death | |
Spirit child of God cast here without body due to rebellion. Follower of Satan. (see Satan) | devil | demon, or Satan himself; all are angels who rebelled against God and tempt humans to sin |
(Realm) Of God. No time, no space. | eternity/eternal | outside of time and space; "forever" |
Motivating hope in the unseen that is true. One of the three great virtues. | faith | |
God the Father, Man of Holiness, Father of Spirits, Elohim, Ahman. Less likely God the Son or God the Holy Ghost or God the Godhead. | God | Holy Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, who is one in essence, undivided, whose persons are distinct and unconfused |
a hold amid sorrow on the future joy of the resurrection of the dead and of eternity. One of the three great virtues. | hope | |
God the Son (currently). Earlier God the Father or ambivalent. | Jehovah | Jesus Christ, one person of the Holy Trinity |
eternity, realm of spirits, where humanity, angels, and devils came from, and where humanity will return through redemption of Christ after the resurrection. Many levels of glory or reward in heaven depending on thoughts, words, and deeds on earth. | heaven | |
Separation from God. Temporary suffering before the resurrection for most. Final separation after the resurrection (no redemption) for the Sons of Perdition. Most who go to hell will be redeemed to heaven at the resurrection. | hell | |
Spirit child of God sent here to receive body, be tested, and grow to be more like God. | Human | Person, unique and unrepeatable, created in God's image, whose existence begins with their body's conception in the womb |
In its purity, charity, the greatest of all | love | |
Final union of spirit with glorified body of flesh (no blood) and bones. Victory over physical death. Signals end of hell for most of the wicked. | resurrection | victory over death; union of spirit and body in which both are incorrupt |
sacrament of The Lord's Supper | sacrament | Sacred ceremony of the church received by believers. Ordinance in LDS terms. |
reconciliation of human spirit with God and reunion of human spirit with incorruptible body in heaven | salvation | Restored relationship with God and consequent fullness of life |
Lucifer. The premier rebelious, fallen child of God, cast here without hope of redemption. | Satan | |
rescued from death (physical and spiritual) | saved | |
Body plus spirit. Less likely spirit only. | soul | |
spirit body with form and likeness | spirit | |
Classic Differences
Revelation
Mormonism is founded on the idea of continual revelation. The Latter Day Saint Movement opened with a vision of God, followed by visits of angels, the publication of new scripture, and revelation of new priesthood. The Book of Mormon teaches that revelation, spiritual gifts, and angelic ministrations will never cease as long as the earth lasts, unless there is no faith among men. In contrast, the traditional Christian view is as expressed by a Methodist minister friend of Smith's on hearing his claim of a vision, "that it was all of the devil,there were no such things as visions or revelations in these days; that all such things had ceased with the apostles, and that there would never be any more of them." (Joseph Smith's History)
Latter Day Saints accept as scripture several books which other Christian groups do not recognize, and which Mormons hold to be revealed by God, and therefore more correct than modern versions of the Bible, which they believe to contain errors and omissions regarding basic principles of the gospel necessary for salvation. This lowered reverence for the Bible is a source of difficulty particularly between Mormons and evangelical protestants.
Priesthood and Church
Mormonism claimed from the day the first church was organized on April 6, 1830 to have sole earthly authority to administer a church with the ordinances (sacraments) of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. At no time did Mormonism accept the authority nor the sacraments of other churches. Mormon missionaries often carried (and carry) as a central portion of their message that they are authorized by Heaven to baptize, and that other Christian ministers are not. Likewise, the church claimed (and most branches still claim) that it alone was authorized as the Church of Jesus Christ. In contrast, much of traditioal Christianity has become increasingly ecumenical, with the different churches accepting each other's sacraments and seeking to harmonize differences.
Humans
After the 1830's, starting in Nauvoo, Illinois, Smith taught that humans are coeternal with God--that the human soul existed before this universe was created and will exist after it has passed away. He taught that God the Father begat all human spirits (souls), as well as His Firstborn Son, Jesus Christ, and all the evil Spirits, including Lucifer. Smith also taught that as God was once like man, so the purpose of creation was that His children might be made like Him (the deification or exaltation of mortals). Though Mormons view this teaching as ennobling of humans, many Christians see it as belittling of the eternity of God, portraying of God as fundamentally human or superhuman. Some Christians believe that the desire to be "as gods," is the root of the original sin (Genesis 3:5).
God
After the 1830's, starting in Nauvoo, Illinois, Smith taught that God was once a man, presumably in some other time/space/universe, and had Himself a Father. As such, some Mormons acknowledge the existence of other gods, though the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost of the New Testament are the only gods worshipped by Mormons, as Mormons believe They are the one God (Godhead) of our universe.
Smith also taught that God the Father begat His FirstBorn Son, Jesus Christ, as well as all human spirits (souls) and all the evil Spirits, including Lucifer. Traditional Christianity is silent on anything beyond this universe, and though Mormons assert that they do indeed believe in the eternity of God, anything beyond or outside this time/space/universe being eternal, many Christians are very hard pressed to fathom how this teaching of Mormonism could be harmonious with the eternity of God.
Some Mormons, particularly Latter-day Saints, believe that God is married to an exalted woman, whom they speculatively call a Heavenly Mother. Her existence is referred to briefly in the Church hymn titled "O My Father" (Hymn number 292), and it is presumed in Church teachings that proclaim that each person is "a spirit son or daughter of heavenly parents." Her existence is acknowledged by Church members and leadership, though She is not worshipped.
There are no Mormon teachings about an ultimate or first Creator, and it is common in Mormonism to hear that the existence of other gods is not pertinent to our salvation.
Creation and the Universe
After the 1830's, starting in Nauvoo, Illinois, the teachings of Smith indicated that humans existed as spirit children of God before the creation, and that the purpose of Creation was to provide a probationary estate for humans, who were in reality children of God, or divine children. Traditional Christianity is silent on anything prior to birth or beyond the resurrection of the dead, and though Mormons assert that they do indeed believe in the eternity of God, anything beyond or outside this time/space/universe being eternal, many Christians are very hard pressed to fathom how this teaching of Mormonism could be harmonious with the eternity of God.
Life and Salvation
Mormonism teaches that all men will be judged according to their thoughts, words, and deeds. (Book of Mormon) Mormonism emphasizes the importance and reality of the agancy of man, that God will not alienate from man the ability to walk his own path, that man is an agent to act and not to be acted upon, save by the eternal law at the last day (The Book of Mormon). That the atonement of Christ gives sinful man power and forgiveness to walk in holiness by faith day after day, (Moroni 10:34) moving with a clean slate to ever greater faith, hope, and love. That God "is more liberal in his views and boundless in his mercies than we are willing to believe or to receive." (Joseph Smith) That those "of all nations" (Peter) who seek faith, hope, and love in this life will enter paradise immediately on death, while those who largely waste their probation will be cast into the darkness of hell to be buffeted until their redemtion and bodily resurrection through the atonement of Christ. That at the resurrection, all will be redeemed to Heaven and receive the greatest reward they are capable of receiving, except those who rebel in the light of day and are again cast into the abyss to become permanent Sons of Perdition. (D & C 76) Mormonism teaches that faith, repentance, baptism, laying on of hands for the Gift of the holy Ghost, the Temple Endowment, and Eternal Marriage are all necessary for the highest reward in Heaven.
Unorthodox Latter Day Saint Practices
In addition to the classic differences, those arguing to exclude Mormonism as a branch of Christianity propose that the practices of Mormonism are not within the range of permissible Christian practices.
Latter Day Saint Rituals
Salvation by means of ritual and good works
While Mormonism is certainly not alone among organizations that practice symbolic rituals in the name of Jesus Christ, some Christian organizations exclude Mormonism from Christianity because of the Latter Day Saint belief that God's gracious salvation is obtained by means of certain rituals, and by a virtuous life.
Calvinism, a type of evangelicalism, teaches that salvation is based on God's granting to some the gift of faith, and of good works. Their ability to believe, and to do works that are acceptable to God, is not at all of themselves, but wholly from the Spirit of Christ. The gift of the Spirit is not granted because of their first believing, or because of the performance of any ritual, or because of their good works meriting God's acceptance. In other words, salvation is God's rescue of sinners from the penalty and the power of sin, not the reward due to righteous actions, according to Calvinism.
Although Calvinists and Evangelical protestants do not deny the need for works, most adhere to the belief that grace alone will save man (sola gratia). That is, they teach that good works are not the basis of their acceptance by God, but rather the product of his acceptance. Faith, not works, is the instrument by which salvation is received; and works proceeding from faith do not make the person worthy of salvation, but rather are the outworking of salvation already received by faith, according to the evangelical understanding.
Many evangelicals, especially dispensationalist Protestants, teach that sola fide, salvation by faith alone, means that if only a person professes belief in Jesus Christ, they are Christians and they are saved. These evangelicals are particularly distrustful of any form of doctrine which speaks of the necessity of good works. Nevertheless, many of those who adopt this view do not believe that Latter Day Saints who profess belief in Jesus Christ are Christians. This is because their understanding of salvation rests on the eternal deity of Christ, according to the trinitarian conception.
Baptism for the dead
One unorthodox practice is baptism for the dead, practiced by some Mormons, including the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) demonstrates their belief that non-Latter Day Saints do not have the Priesthood authority to act in the name of God, and that non-Latter Day Saint baptisms (or any other Christian ordinance) are not legitimate. In Mormonism, baptism is considered to be a prerequisite to exaltation comparable to salvation or theosis in other Christian religions. The LDS Church conducts baptisms and other ordinances for everyone (posthumously if not done while the person is living) who has not been baptized by a LDS-Priesthood-authority. Many Christians interpret this to mean that LDS Church does not consider them truly Christian, as baptism has always been a rite of initiation or entrance into Christianity. By posthumously baptizing Catholics, Orthodox, and other Christians in the same way that they posthumously baptize Jews, Muslims, and other non-Mormons, they demonstrate that all such people are equally separate from the Mormon faith and need to be given the chance to posthumously embrace it or become members of it, so that they can enter the Kingdom of God.
Polygamy
Non-Use of the Cross
Latter-day Saints do not typically use the Christian cross as a symbol of their faith. While the weather vanes that were built atop the earliest Latter Day Saint temples were often in the form of a cross, many modern Latter-day Saints are purportedly disturbed by this symbol of Christ's death, and say that they prefer instead to focus upon his life.
History of Latter Day Saint Dialogue with Mainstream Christianity
Early Latter Day Saint Antagonism Toward Christianity
In Joseph Smith's Wentworth letter, he listed the following as the 11th Article of Faith:
- "We claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may" (11th Articles of Faith).
Thus, at least in theory, Latter Day Saint are expected to be tolerant of other religions and religious lifestyles. However, early leaders and members of the Latter Day Saint movement at times voiced views concerning "the Christian world" which could be considered antagonistic. Much of this had to do with the sometimes violent and deadly conflicts that early Latter Day Saints had with mainstream Christians.
The Church's founder and first prophet, Joseph Smith, Jr., at times criticized what he saw as important flaws in Christianity. He once said,
- "we may look at the Christian world and see the apostasy there has been from the apostolic platform; and who can look at this and not exclaim, in the language of Isaiah, 'The earth also is defiled under the inhabitants thereof; because they have transgressed the laws, changed the ordinances, and broken the everlasting covenant?'" (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, pg 15).
In another instance, Smith said,
- "The teachers of the day say that the Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Ghost is God, and they are all in one body and one God. Jesus prayed that those that the Father had given him out of the world might be made one in them, as they were one [one in spirit, in mind, in purpose]. If I were to testify that the Christian world were wrong on this point, my testimony would be true" (Ibid, pg 311).
As for Catholicism and Protestantism, Smith had these words:
- "Here is a principle of logic...I will illustrate by an old apple tree. Here jumps off a branch and says, I am the true tree, and you are corrupt. If the whole tree is corrupt, are not its branches corrupt? If the Catholic religion is a false religion, how can any true religion come out of it?" (Ibid, pg 375).
Smith's grievances with other religions seem to be primarily doctrinal in nature. On the other hand, from a personal or secular point of view, Smith at times showed considerable tolerance and acceptance for the members other faiths:
- "I am bold to declare before Heaven that I am just as ready to die in defending the rights of a Presbyterian, a Baptist, or a good man of any denomination; for the same principle which would trample upon the rights of the Latter-day Saints would trample upon the rights of the Roman Catholics, or of any other denomination who may be unpopular and too weak to defend themselves" (Ibid, pg 313).
Mormonism and Christian Ecumenism
Typically, Latter Day Saints believe that most traditional Catholic, Orthodox or Protestant adherents have much truth, and strong faith in Christ, which is essential for their salvation. They also believe that most of these people will have the opportunity to accept the "full" gospel of Jesus Christ prior to the "final judgement," and that many (if not most) that truly have faith in Christ will be "saved" or possibly even exalted.
Mormons believe that differences in the Trinity and some Latter Day Saint conceptions of the Godhead are relatively minor and can be supported by biblical scripture, ante-Nicean tradition, similar beliefs in some protestant churches and modern revelation.
Ecumenical Efforts by the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Brigham Young, the leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the majority of Mormons after Smith's death, also sounded a conciliatory tone, saying,
- "Some who call themselves Christians are very tenacious with regard to the Universalians, yet the latter possess many excellent ideas and good truths. Have the Catholics? Yes, a great many very excellent truths. Have the Protestants? Yes, from first to last. Has the infidel? Yes, he has a good deal of truth; and truth is all over the earth." (Discourses of Brigham Young, pg 10).
In the last several decades, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been making a sustained effort to demonstrate that Latter-day Saints' beliefs are associated with Christianity. These efforts have included participation in ecumenical endeavors, adding the subtitle "Another Testament of Jesus Christ" to The Book of Mormon, and recently re-branding of the church's official logo to place more emphasis on the phrase "The Church of Jesus Christ."
Ecumenical Efforts by the Community of Christ
More so than the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Community of Christ has made dramatic efforts to reconcile its doctrines with mainstream Christianity, and to appear more orthodox to Christians.
See also
References
- Stephen E. Robinson; Are Mormons Christians?; Bookcraft, Inc.; ISBN 0-88494-784-X (Hardcover 1991)
- Joseph Fielding. Smith; Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith; Deseret Book Company; ISBN 0-87747-655-9 (Softcover 1976)
- John A. Widstoe; Discourses of Brigham Young; Deseret Book Company; ISBN 0-87747-664-0 (Softcover 1954)
External Links
- A mainstream Christian criticism of LDS teachings: http://www.bcmmin.org/
- Assertion that Mormons are Christian from All About Mormons
- Are Mormons Christians? FAQ by Jeff Lindsay