Mormons

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Mormon Family, Mormons, Mormon Temple

Mormon is a nickname given to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Throughout the years since 1830 when the Church was organized, people who knew about the Book of Mormon, an ancient record translated and published by Joseph Smith, called members of the Church this name, often derogatorily. The nickname has become common, and members of the Church have often referred to themselves as Mormon.

The Book of Mormon bears the name of Mormon, who was the major abridger-writer of the gold plates from which it was translated. The Book of Mormon is a history of a small group of Israelites who escaped from Jerusalem in about 600 BC, just before the Babylonian Captivity. They were led by God to a promised land in the Americas. They established a civilization led by kings, judges, and prophets who taught them about Jesus Christ. They kept the Law of Moses looking forward to Christ, and Christ visited them after His resurrection, establishing His church among them. By about AD 400 the people had become so wicked that they destroyed themselves in a series of wars.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is sometimes referred to as the Mormon Church, the LDS Church, or The Church of the Latter-day Saints, but Church president Russell M. Nelson stressed that the name of the Church was specified by the Lord Jesus Christ, whose Church it is.[1] With each of these names, President Nelson said, “the most glaring omission is the absence of the Savior’s name.”[2]

Before explaining what members of the Church of Jesus Christ are, it is wise to explain what they are not:

  • Members of the Church of Jesus Christ, or Latter-day Saints, are not members of a cult, as the word "cult" is currently defined. The current connotation of the word "cult" is a
    Mormon Girls
    group that grows up around a powerful personality. Members are in the thrall of the leader and general follow bizarre practices. Joseph Smith was the founder of the Church, and the first prophet of the "Last dispensation of time." Members of the Church of Jesus Christ honor him, but they don't worship him. Instead, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is centered on Christ. Church beliefs sometimes seem bizarre to those who've received a false representation of Mormon doctrine. The restored gospel of Jesus Christ is not a new religion, and not an American religion, but is the restoration of Christ's original Church. All of the beliefs found in the doctrine of the restored Church of Jesus Christ were central in the early Christian Church that Jesus Christ established.
  • Latter-day Saints do not dress in pioneer garb or live in secretive groups.
  • Latter-day Saints do not practice polygamy.
  • Members of the Church do not refrain from sports, dancing, singing or enjoying themselves. Many famous entertainers and sports figures are members of the Church of Jesus Christ.
  • Temple rituals are not secret. Guided tours for the public are conducted through each new temple built by the Church of Jesus Christ. The covenants made in the temple are sacred and are not to be discussed outside in the world. Thus, even members of the Church who have been to the temple do not discuss their covenants with other Mormons outside of the temple.
Mormon Youth
  • Members of the Church are not polytheists. However, they do not believe in the trinity—that is, that God is a spirit who became embodied as the Christ and then went back to being a spirit containing three entities. Instead, Latter-day Saints believe that the Godhead is composed of three separate beings, God the Father, Jesus Christ (His Only Begotten Son), and the Holy Ghost. Members of the Church believe that when Jesus was resurrected, He stayed resurrected, and is a resurrected being of flesh and bone, albeit glorious and powerful beyond description. This is the same belief as the very early Christian Church.
  • Some people say that Latter-day Saints are polytheists, because they believe that men, in a process of eternal progression, can become like God, indeed that this is the Father's central goal for all of us, to make us like Him. This belief was also solid in the early Christian church. This does not mean that a plurality of Gods governs this world, except that the Godhead is made up of three beings. Latter-day Saints have little information on the details of life eternal, but more than any other church.
  • Members of the Church of Jesus Christ do not believe that non-members are disqualified for heaven. The gospel is perfectly fair. All of us are judged on what we know and do. A person who has never heard of Christ or the commandments of God cannot sin. Virtually every person who has ever lived will inherit a kingdom of glory. Only sons of perdition (who have a sure witness of Christ and then deny Him) qualify for "hell."
  • Latter-day Saints do not believe that we are saved by our works. However, the Lord judges us by our thoughts, intentions, and works.
    Mormon Couple
    After all we can do, we cannot save ourselves. It is the grace of Christ that saves us. Members of the Church of Jesus Christ do believe in the words of James, that faith without works is dead.
  • Members of the Church of Jesus Christ do not believe that the heavens are closed. Nor have they ever been. A constant flow of information from God has enlightened men and women of every age. All prophets, including those of the Old Testament, even Adam, knew the Plan of Salvation and taught of Jesus Christ. Modern prophets have the same connection with heaven.
  • Latter-day Saints do not believe that miracles have ceased. They are common-place where the power of God is manifest through the power of Priesthood authority and through faith of believers.
  • Latter-day Saints do not believe in an impersonal God. God hears all prayers and answers those who seek Him in humility. All are privy to personal revelation when they seek it.
  • Some accuse members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints of believing in a "different Jesus." Members of the Church believe in the resurrected Christ as the Word, through whom God created all things that are. He is the Savior and Redeemer, the only name through whom we may be saved. Additional scripture or the belief that He is corporeal—that we can feel the imprints in His hands and feet, should He give us that opportunity—does not diminish Him or the power of His infinite atonement. (Read more...)

What Latter-day Saints Are

Latter-day Saints are clean-living, service-oriented, education-oriented, Bible-believing Christians. Because of the priesthood authority conferred through prophets from God, all the charismatic gifts are present in the Church. Latter-day Saints are family-oriented, because they believe that God has ordained that families should be eternal units. The family is so central to God's plan for mankind, that the Lord has told them through prophets to bravely defend the sanctity of the home and "traditional" marriage.

In 2010 a book was published called American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us. The book was the result of extensive study by scholars Robert D. Putnam and David E. Campbell and yields valuable insight into the nature and social effects of American religion.

Here is what the study revealed about members of the Church of Jesus Christ:

  • Latter-day Saints are among the most devout religious groups in the country.
  • Latter-day Saints are among those most likely to keep their childhood faith as adults.
  • Latter-day Saints are among the most charitable of Americans with their means and time, both in religious and non-religious causes.
  • Latter-day Saints are relatively friendly to other religious groups.
  • Latter-day Saints are among the most likely to believe that one true religion exists, but also, that those outside their faith can attain salvation or reach “heaven.”