Posted by
Libertybob on Sunday, March 11, 2007 5:21:04 PM
Mormonism is a cult. Mormons aren’t Christians. Mormons
worship Joseph Smith. Mormons believe in ________. (You can fill in that blank
with just about anything, and chances are Mormons have been accused of
believing it.) As a Mitt Romney presidential run is in the works, it seems that
no post or article can be written on these blog sites without the comments
eventually degrading into a debate about “what Mormons really believe.”
Obscure quotes from early Mormon leaders are cut and pasted, websites are
referred, and a full blown religious debate starts up. The debate usually involves
a mainstream Christian, a Mormon who has repudiated the faith, someone hostile
to Mormonism, a Mormon, or someone asking “why can’t we all just get along?” or
some combination of the above.
Now I believe that a religious discussion is healthy. In
fact, religion and politics (despite being the only things one doesn’t discuss
in polite conversation) are the two most interesting things to talk about. But
something about this Mormon religion generates fire whenever it is brought up…
just read a few posts on Romney in the upcoming few weeks, you’ll agree. Each
and every one so far has had an anti-Mormon poster at some point, and there is
no reason to believe that will change in the future. In fact, as the Romney
camp gets up and running, the accusations against Mormonism will only get more
intense. And while I believe that Townhall.com is primarily a place for
political discussion, I only sense more of this Mormon issue in the coming
years, especially leading up to the election and after 2009, should Romney be
elected. And it is very pertinent to the coming debate. So please bear with me,
I’d like to teach a little bit about how Mormonism differs from mainstream
Christianity. Don’t worry if you hate religion, I’ll still keep it political by
closing with how that applies to this election. But you’ll still have to read a
bit to get there…
Much of the
material below is quoted verbatim, but I am not including the all the sources
because 1) this isn’t a scholarly paper, and nobody is going to take my funding
away for plagiarism, and 2) all this info is freely available through a simple
Google search.
Establishment of the First Christian Church
When Jesus Christ lived in mortality he established a Church.(Mat. 16:18; Mat. 18:17; Acts 2:47;
5:11; 8:1; 11:26; 14:23) It was not the Church of John the Baptist who had
prepared the way before him, nor was it the Church of Peter, nor of Paul or
Apollos, nor of any other of his followers. It was his own Church. He was its
head. (Eph. 5: 23) It was his to formulate and direct.
The Church was an organization
through which his followers could work out their salvation (Phil. 2:12) and
receive help and comfort, for they were not to be left in an unorganized
condition. The Church was a necessary help and guide for each individual
seeking to walk the narrow way which leads to life.
Admission to his Church was by
baptism in water (Mat. 3:1-17; 28:19-20; Mark 16:14-16; John 3:5) and he
himself set the example by receiving baptism at the hands of John. Those who
joined his Church became heirs of salvation in that they were given the
opportunity to accept his way of life and become like Him (Mat. 6:33; 5:48).
He placed various officers in his
Church with specific duties to perform.(Luke 6:12-16; 10:1; Eph. 4:11-14) They
were commanded not only to preach the gospel in all the world, (Mark 16:15) but
also to watch over those who joined the Church, even as shepherds of the flock
(Eph. 4:11-14: John 21:15-17) guiding them in the way of salvation and guarding
them from "wolves" who might enter the fold. These officers were
headed by the Apostles, (Eph. 2:19-21) and from the scriptural record it was
obvious that the Lord intended that living Apostles should continue in the
Church, to provide constant inspired guidance.
Prophets in Christian
Church
There were prophets in the Church
also.(Acts 13:1; 15:32; I Cor. 12:28; Eph. 2:20; Rev. 18:20) In fact, the Apostles
themselves were prophets. It had been customary for God to deal with ancient
Israel in Old Testament times through prophets, and at one time he even said
that he would do nothing without first revealing himself to his servants the
prophets.(Amos 3: 7) These prophets received revelation from God as the people
needed divine help, and the revelations thus received form a large part of the
Old Testament.
The Savior had no thought of
leaving his newly organized Church without the guidance of heaven. He realized
that he soon would leave mortality and ascend to his Father in heaven.
So prophets were placed in this new
Christian Church. Their function was the same as that of the ancient prophets:
that is to receive current revelation from the Lord for the direction of the
people as their needs arose. Without such guidance from heaven, the Church would
go astray.
Therefore, Paul taught the
Ephesians: "And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some,
evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; for the perfecting of the saints,
for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body (Church) of Christ:
till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of
God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of
Christ.''(Eph. 4:11-14)
There was no indication that such an organization ever would
be changed, or that any part of it would become unnecessary.
Paul went still further in the next
verse and declared that these Church officers were to protect the members of
the Church from false doctrine, "that we henceforth be no more children
tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of doctrine."
Earlier in his epistle he spoke to the Ephesian converts to
the Church who had been gathered in from the world, and comforted them by
saying, "ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with
the Saints (the members of the Church in that day were called Saints) and of
the household of God; and are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and prophets,
Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone, in which all the building
(the Church) fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord.''
(Eph. 2: 19-21)
To teach the Corinthians also that
the Church was a carefully organized unit, with all parts necessary, he
compared the Church to the human body. He taught that all converts are baptized
into one Church or body, whether Jews or Gentiles, bond or free, and all
partake of the same spirit. But, he writes, "the body is not one member,
but many. If the foot shall say, Because I am not the hand, I am not of the
body, is it therefore not of the body? And if the ear shall say, Because I am
not the eye, I am not of the body, is it therefore not of the body?'' (I Cor.
12:12-28)
And then he taught that as each
part is essential, no portion can say to another, "I have no need of
thee." All must be there, fitly joined together.
So the original organization of the
Church, with its officers, ordinances and doctrines, was intended to continue
unchanged until such a time as he explained to the Ephesians, as we all come to
a unity of the faith, and reach perfection in Christ.(Eph 4:11-14)
The events following the ascension
of the Savior also make it clear that the organization of the Church was
intended to continue on. Judas, it will be remembered, died following his
betrayal of Jesus. That left a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
Only eleven remained.
Was that quorum to go on as a
quorum of eleven or was it to be restored to its original number of twelve? And
if no one was named to succeed Judas, and still another Apostle died, leaving
only ten in the group, was the quorum to go on with only ten? And if another,
and another and another died, was the quorum so soon to disappear? What was the
intention of the Lord?
It was made manifest soon after his
ascension. A meeting of all the disciples of Jesus was called. They engaged in
prayer and supplication. They were in number about one hundred and twenty.
Peter stood in their midst and
spoke of the prediction of David concerning the betrayer Judas. He told the
saints then that a successor to Judas must be chosen as a "witness with us of the Saviour's resurrection."
A New Apostle Is Chosen
Two of their most devoted
associates were mentioned as possible successors. The Apostles did not take
upon themselves the sole responsibility of choosing this new member of their
council. They prayed and said, "Thou Lord, which knowest the hearts of all
men, shew whether of these two thou hast chosen, that he may take part of this
ministry and Apostleship, from which Judas by transgression fell, that he might
go to his own place. And they gave forth their lots and the lot fell upon
Matthias and he was numbered with the eleven Apostles.''(Acts 1: 15-26)
The Church had twelve Apostles
again. There was a great significance in this action. It demonstrated
beyond all doubt the fact that it was the plan and purpose of the Lord that the
Quorum of Twelve should continue to be a Quorum of Twelve and not a Quorum of
Eleven, or a Quorum of Ten, or Nine, finally to disappear. It gave meaning to
all that Paul told the Ephesians. It gave encouragement to the Saints. It
proved to them and to all men that the Church organization as provided by the
Savior was to go on without change as long as men were willing to hear and accept the True Gospel.
Were any other Apostles chosen in
that day? Everyone thinks first of Paul and usually the average person never
links his name with the Quorum of Twelve. But why not? Were there to be
thirteen Apostles in this Quorum of Twelve? Or did Paul succeed to the position
of some other member of that sacred council who may have lost his life?
The scripture records the death of James the brother of the
beloved disciple John. (Acts 12:2) That made at least one vacancy before the
appointment of Paul.
Is the selection of any other new
Apostle mentioned in sacred writ?
The thirteenth chapter of Acts
tells of a meeting of the prophets and teachers of the Church, some of whom are
named.
"As they ministered to the
Lord and fasted, the Holy Ghost said, Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the
work whereunto I have called them. And when they had fasted and prayed and laid
their hands upon them, they sent them away.'' (Acts 13:1-3)
Current Revelation in
Church
This was a case of current
revelation to direct and guide the work of the Church. The revelation was
addressed to the prophets and teachers who were there, and was obviously
received by those prophets, again showing the need of continuous revelation in
the true Church of Jesus Christ, through living prophets.
The scripture then goes on to say:
"So they, being sent forth by the Holy Ghost departed." In the next
chapter of this book of Acts we read of some of the experiences of these two
who had thus been appointed. Verse 14 of chapter 14 reads: "Which, when
the Apostles Barnabas and Paul heard of—."
Note that: "The Apostles
Barnabas and Paul." The name of Barnabas preceded that of Paul. The name
of Barnabas was included among those of the prophets in the meeting in Antioch
in which Barnabas and Paul were chosen for this mission by direction from
heaven. Would Barnabas have been a thirteenth or a fourteenth Apostle? Would
Paul?
The pattern established by the
Savior provided that there should be twelve Apostles and new men were appointed
to succeed the original members as they passed away.
A careful reading of the nineteenth
verse in the first chapter of Galatians is interesting. There Paul says:
"But other of the Apostles saw I none SAVE JAMES THE LORD'S BROTHER."
No further information is given on this point.
To anyone who reads and accepts the
divine word, there can be no doubt that steps were taken in those days to
perpetuate and maintain the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles as leading officials
of the Church, with world-wide jurisdiction.
Part of the divine commission given
the Twelve was to go into all the world and preach the gospel to every
creature.(Mark 16:15) This they undertook to do. They traveled throughout the
known world. Paul's journeys are most often noted in the sacred word, but
evidently all traveled.
As they went from city to city,
they preached the gospel of Christ and him crucified.
Converts were made, despite severe persecution which at times ended in death.
Bishops Were Local
Officers
Since the Apostles were commanded
to go into all the world and preach to every creature, they could not stay in
any one city to supervise their new converts. That would have been contrary to
the nature of their call. They depended upon local Church government to carry
on the work in their absence. After converting a group of believers, the
Apostles therefore appointed local officers, known as presiding elders or
bishops to conduct the affairs of the Church in each locality. The bishops or
presiding elders thus appointed had purely local jurisdiction. Bishops were
usually appointed in the larger congregations, presiding elders in the smaller
ones.
The names of some of these bishops
or presiding elders are known today. Titus, to whom Paul wrote the epistle by
that name, presided in Crete and is so designated in the footnote at the end of
the epistle. Timothy, to whom also Paul wrote epistles, presided in Ephesus as
its first bishop, as is also mentioned at the end of the second epistle to
Timothy in the Bible. Linus was named the first local presiding officer in
Rome.
Since the Church grew rapidly at
first, there soon came to be many small branches in as many different cities,
and in each case a bishop or presiding elder directed the work in his own
locality. Each bishop was equal in authority to every other bishop. The office
was purely a local one since the Apostles were the general authorities. There
was no thought in that day that a bishop would preside over any other bishop.
Repeated visits by the Apostles to
many of these branches of the Church is recorded in scripture. Using the pen
also to assist them in their responsibility of Church-wide supervision, they
wrote epistles to the various branches, and hence we have in our Bibles today
the epistles of Paul, Peter, James, John and Jude.
The picture of the early Church,
then, was one of many branches in many cities, presided over by local officers
known as bishops or elders, with men of general authority or jurisdiction,
namely the Twelve Apostles, having over-all supervision.
Persecution Interrupts
Process
But evil men raise obstacles to the
work of God. This was true even in the life of the Savior, who regretted the
rebelliousness of the people in the city of Capernaum. (Matt. 11:23)
It was so with the work of the
Twelve and the spread of the early Christian Church.
Persecution became severe, first
from the Jews, then from the Romans. Numerous members of the Church lost their
lives. It became a crime to own Christian scripture, and many texts were
destroyed, never to make it into the Bible. One by one the Apostles became
martyrs. The severity of the times prevented the surviving ones from
communicating with each other or holding meetings to carry on the work of the
Church. This also prevented the filling of vacancies as had been the original
intent.
At last only one Apostle remained.
He was John. Seized by his persecutors he was subjected to vicious treatment.
It is reported that at one time he was thrown into a vat of boiling oil. But Christian
lore is that he had been promised by the Savior that he would live until the
Second Coming of the Christ. (John 21:22-23) Therefore his tormenters could not
kill him.
He was banished to the Isle of
Patmos where he remained for some time, directing the work of the Church as the
last of the general authorities on earth.
John Outlived Peter
Peter and Paul had died at
approximately 68 AD, probably at Rome. In that year John was ministering in
Ephesus. It was after that he was sent to Patmos, where he remained until the
death of the Emperor Domitian in 96 A.D. (Eusebius, Eccl. Hist. Vol. 3, ch.
23.)
Then the Lord took John out of the
ministry. Nothing is heard of him after about the year 101.
Why was John not permitted to tarry
longer in that place? Because wickedness had nearly taken over the Church.
Doctrines and ordinances were changed, authority was ignored, sin became
rampant, even among the membership of the Church.
It will be remembered
that nearly
every one of the epistles of the Twelve had been written to combat some
form of
apostasy in the Church. A careful reading of them will reveal this
fact. Some
members denied the Christ, others no longer believed in a resurrection,
the
doctrines of the Jews had corrupted much of the Christian procedure,
the glamour
of the pagan rites crept into the Christian rituals. The true doctrine
of God was lost. Philosophy from Greece had almost argued away the
simple
truths of Divinity. Man was rejecting the Christ and his Church and
setting up
teachings and forms of his own.
But this all had been predicted. The Lord foresaw this
apostasy. (Matt. 24:9-12; Acts 20:29-30; 2 Thess. 2:11; 2 Tim. 3:1-5; 2 Peter
2:1-3; 2 Tim. 4:1-3) As he would not perform further miracles before the unbelievers
at Capernaum, neither would he leave his anointed Twelve in an apostate group.
So John was taken from among men.
Drifted Without Direction
This left the Church, drifting as
it was, without any general authorities. It left the several branches in the
scattered cities of the known world with only local authorities to direct them.
There was no longer on earth a court of last appeal. Each bishop or presiding
elder was left to his own devices.
The Church now suffered from a
three-fold attack:
1. A great intensified persecution,
during which the government itself became the chief aggressor, branding
Christians as disloyal, and treating them as traitors. This resulted in
wholesale massacres, and in forcing the surviving Christians underground.
2. The influence of philosophy on
the simple truths of the gospel, resulting eventually in a completely different
concept of the existence of God and the introduction of many of the Greek
mysteries as doctrines and practices in the Church. As a result of this we see
a new and completely different interpretation of the doctrine of deity which
eventually led to the adoption of the Nicene creed. From Egypt came the
adoration of the Mother and Child, Gnosticism and Neoplatonism obscured the
true Christian creed; from Phrygia came the worship of the Great Mother, and
from non-Christian dramatic rituals came a mass with its congeries of prayers,
psalms, readings and recitations.
"Christianity did not destroy paganism; it adopted it.
The Greek mind dying, came to a transmigrated life in the theology and liturgy
of the Church; the Greek language, having reigned for centuries over
philosophy, became the vehicle of Christian literature and ritual; the Greek
mysteries passed down into the impressive mystery of the mass.'' (Durrant,
Caesar and Christ, p. 595.)
3. Jealousies, intrigue and
personal ambitions within the Church itself.
For two hundred years after the disappearance of John the
Beloved, this condition grew. The Church became divided in many ways. No longer
was there agreement on doctrine. The fundamental belief in the nature and being
of God became a source of major dispute. Such a simple ordinance as baptism
became a subject of debate. The mode was changed, and also the purpose. At this
time too was introduced the doctrine that no divine authority was required to
perform a baptism. Infant baptism was begun. Efforts of some bishops resulted
in bitterness and bloodshed.
But as persecution by the
government subsided, the Church again grew in membership, partly because of its
acceptance of popular views and practices of pagan churches of the day, and
partly because it lowered its own standards.
A Political Opportunist
Then came the days of Constantine
the Great. With an eye to political advantage, and not because of conversion,
for he remained a sun-worshipper through most of his life and was not baptized
as a Christian for 25 years, he saw personal political advantage in fostering
the Christian religion.
He was of the opinion that with the
renewed popularity of this now changed Christianity, it was the religion of the
future. Having recently fought a long civil war he felt that a state religion
as popular as Christianity had become, would help him solidify his empire. He
therefore took the Christian religion under his wing. Making it the favored religion
of the state gave to the emperor vast influence in the operation of the Church,
which in later times virtually became a department of the civil government,
placing the emperor in a position to direct it very much as he directed other
departments of his government.
Noting the division which existed
in the Church in his day caused by hundreds of years of bishops interpreting
the Christian teachings differently, Constantine set out to settle the
difficulty. First he turned to Africa where was developing a most bitter
schism. This he attempted to set in order by his authority as emperor. He did
not accomplish it as a representative of the Lord because he was not yet
himself a Christian. He was still a sun-worshipper. He had no ecclesiastical
authority and claimed none. But he was all powerful politically. It was by his
political authority as emperor that he intervened in the African dispute.
More Civil Power in Church
A short time afterward, again by
his authority as emperor and civil ruler of the western half of the Roman
Empire, he called a council of all bishops of that part of the empire which was
under his control. This meeting was at Arles. Certain of the clergy who were
present objected to the decisions made there concerning baptism and the
authority of the Church. Constantine resorted to force to bring them into line.
A massacre ensued, blood flowed, a number of the objectors who escaped with
their lives were banished, but Constantine had his way. In the place of bishops
who opposed him he appointed other bishops of his own choice and by his
political authority as emperor. But this was only the beginning of installation
of bishops by civil rulers.
He called a council of all bishops
of the Church to settle the Alexandrian dispute over the doctrine of the nature
of God. He listened to the arguments of the contending bishops. He favored the
Athanasian side. The Arians who still objected were banished and he appointed
new bishops in place of them. And by what power? By divine authority? He had
none. He acted as emperor and the authority by which he appointed these bishops
was political, not divine. They became appointees of Constantine, not of the
Lord.
In this Nicene council
Constantine—uninspired, unbaptized, still a sun-worshipper, a man who had
committed murder within his own family—by his political power took the steps
which gave to later Christianity its doctrine concerning the nature of the God
whom they worshipped. This Nicene Creed is still used by many Christian
churches today, and almost all of them believe in the same conclusions.
Even then, Constantine could not
make up his mind to stay with his decision, for afterward he vacillated from
one opinion to the other, part of the time supporting Arius and his view and at
other times sustaining Athanasius. The persuasion of his friends alternately
changed the official doctrine of the Church from one side to the other over a
period of a few short years.
Let every honest Christian ask
himself if God directs his Church through such a man as Constantine!
Part of State Government
Frequently after that, emperors
appointed some of the clergy and deposed others, set in order various matters
within the Church, called councils, and otherwise directed what was called the
work of God. They did so because they had made the Church a department of the
Roman Empire, which made them the head of the Church, and all they did was by
political but not divine power. Can anyone say then that the Church was still
the Church of God? Or was it the Church of Caesar?
The Roman Emperors claimed for
themselves the right of convoking councils. They supported this pretension on
the principle that the maintenance of order and tranquility in the empire
devolved on them, and that, in consequence, they had to end controversies that
disturbed this order. . . . It was also the emperor who confirmed the decisions
of the council and gave them the force of law for the whole empire."
Another emperor who becomes a case in point was Phocas, who,
in the seventh century, became displeased with Cyriacus, bishop of
Constantinople, divested him of his title as the universal head of the Church,
and conferred this title upon Boniface III, the Roman pontiff who accepted it.
By what authority we ask? Again it was political. The record does not show
whether the Emperor Phocas was even a member of the Christian Church.
In the middle of the sixth century, Justinian I assumed
control of the Church as part of his empire, and took from the people their
right of "common consent" in local matters within the Church; declared
that only the clergy should have a voice in the affairs of the Church, and said
further that the only voice the clergy could have was to accept and ratify the
acts of the emperor in the direction of religious matters. If they refused to
comply, they would be banished.
During this early period there
developed a feeling among the bishops that those who presided in large centers
of population should have pre-eminence over those in country towns and
villages.
This led to the practice of bishops
in metropolitan areas assuming authority over the bishops of the villages and
towns, which changed the former equality that had existed among the bishops in
the beginning. Also when new congregations were organized in suburbs of these
metropolitan areas, the metropolitan bishops appointed others to preside there.
These latter became known as bishops of the suburbs and the fields.
Rivalry Among Bishops
Subsequently there developed
extreme rivalry between the metropolitan bishops, until at last there were only
two remaining in the contest—the bishop of Rome and the bishop of
Constantinople. The other three contenders, at Alexandria, Antioch and
Jerusalem were eliminated by the conquest of the Arabs. Finally they parted
company, after excommunicating each other, and two principal Christian Churches
resulted, the Eastern Church with headquarters in Constantinople, and the
Western or Roman Church with headquarters at Rome. Thus we have today two
so-called Catholic or universal Churches, each one claiming to be the true
Church, each repudiating the other as heretic.
The western Church developed faster than did the Church in
the east. Through aggressive policies, the bishops of Rome soon became dominant
in political matters, especially as the Roman Empire began to crumble. This
gave them vast powers among the European nations. They directed the policies of
the kings of those lands, collected taxes and interfered in the internal
affairs of the nations.
This developed a resentment among
some of the rulers of western Europe which added strength to Martin Luther in
his fight against the sale of indulgences.
The story of Luther is well known and need not be reviewed
in great detail here. As he sought to reform the existing Church he was rebuked
and excommunicated.
His actions interested some of the
German princes, while others were strongly opposed to him. King Henry the VIII
of England likewise joined the forces in opposition to Luther, and published a
book in defense of the pope for which he received the title "Defender of
the Faith" which still is carried by British kings.
One of Luther's closest friends was
Prince Frederic the Wise, elector of Saxony, who protected him from
assassination and defended him before the emperor. Frederic was a peacemaker.
But in 1525 he died and was succeeded by his brother Prince John, who was of a
different temperament. John believed in the teachings of Luther. He clearly saw
that Luther's views and those of the pope were incompatible. One or the other
must be abandoned. He decided to withdraw his support from the pope and sustain
Luther.
Church Formed by Civil
Power
To accomplish this he decided to
organize a church separate and distinct from that of Rome. He appointed Luther
and his friend Philip Melanchthon to draw up the form of worship, set up the
type of church government which would conform to Luther's views, and decide
upon the duties and salaries of the clergy.
This the reformers gladly did, and
the new Church came into being under the sponsorship of Prince John of Saxony.
Ordinances were performed and sermons were preached, and the people were
directed by this new Church in their religious activities. And by what
authority was this new Church established? By the authority of Prince John of
Saxony. And who was he? A political figure. Did he hold the necessary divine
authority to establish the Church of God? He claimed none, and had none. His
only authority was political.
Other German princes fell into
line, although there were some who remained loyal to the pope. But the new
church, called after Luther, was under way. Many of its doctrines seemed as
remote from the scriptures as were those they sought to "reform," but
they became popular nevertheless and the movement spread.
In Scandinavia the kings themselves
also took a leading part in stripping the Catholic bishops of their power,
setting up the Protestant Churches in their own countries, and bestowing
authority upon them to carry on their work. They made the new Protestant faith
the state religion of their realms, and the people accepted it. Was there
divine authority involved in this establishment of a new Church? None. It was
the political authority of the kings which brought about the change.
In Switzerland, where Calvin and
Fartel worked out the reformation, again the political power took a hand. The
civil government (Council) of Geneva took over the religious authority of the
Catholic bishop and effected the change to Protestantism.
The change, though disguised in a
religious habit was yet essentially political. For the Council which abolished
the bishop had made itself heir to his faculties and functions; it could only
dismiss him as civil lord by dismissing him as the ecclesiastical head of
Geneva and in so doing it assumed the right to succeed as well as to supersede
him in both capacities . . . . Because of the change the civil authority became
ecclesiastical.
Another Formed by Civil
Power
At about this time King Henry the
Eighth in Britain wished to change wives. Although the story is denied in
certain circles, history clearly indicates that he made an appeal to Rome for a
divorce, was denied, and in anger seized the property of the Church; and with
the cooperation of Parliament, organized a Church of his own, the Established
Church of England.
Again we ask, was it done by divine
authority? It was a political act. Then was this the Church of God which had
been established, or was it manmade to suit the convenience and needs of the
king?
Branches of the Protestant movement
developed in other nations. All were efforts either to reform the existing
Church or to organize a new church, based on individual views gained from a
private reading and interpretation of the Bible which had so recently been
given to the world.
In no case was a new revelation
from heaven even claimed. In no case was any restoration of divine authority in
the ministry professed. It was admitted on every hand that where the state
religions were organized, they were developed and authorized by the political
agencies which ruled the land, and therefore possessed only political but not
divine authority.
In later periods of the
reformation, even as today, certain groups formed Churches of their own
entirely out of a desire to read and study the Bible and follow the dictates of
their own conscience as a result. These churches had no political significance,
but yet in common with the state religions, they claimed no divine authority
for their acts either.
Divine Power Comes Only
From God
If none of these Churches possessed
any divine authority, by what right could they perform the saving ordinances of
God?
The scriptures plainly teach that
only those divinely commissioned may perform ordinances which are acceptable to
the Lord. Many are the instances wherein the scripture shows that God rejected
unauthorized ministers. (I Samuel 13:8-15; I Chron. 13:9-10; Matt. 7:21-29;
Acts 19:1-6; Acts 19:13-16)
This lesson was taught well to the
Hebrews. In the fifth chapter of the epistle by that name the writer discusses
the priesthood and its functions.
"AND NO MAN TAKETH THIS HONOR
UNTO HIMSELF, BUT HE THAT IS CALLED OF GOD AS WAS AARON."
That is the pattern of the Lord. No
man can minister in the ordinances and priesthood of God except he be called as
was Aaron.
How was Aaron called?
By turning to the 28th chapter of
Exodus we learn the facts. In the first verse God says: "And take thou
unto thee Aaron thy brother and his sons with him, from among the children of
Israel, that they may minister unto me in the priest's office."
These words were spoken to Moses, who was a prophet of God.
The Lord gave him the instructions quoted above, authorizing him to call and
ordain to the ministry, Aaron and his four sons.
That constituted
revelation—revelation at the time, for a particular need.
The pattern for calling men to the ministry was made clear.
God would give a revelation to his prophet, and the prophet under that
direction would call to the work the individual thus designated.
We read in Hebrews as above quoted
that no man can have this honor, that is, of serving in the ministry of God,
unless he is called as was Aaron.
That means then that in the true Church of God there must be
a prophet, there must be current revelation, by which men are called into the
work by God himself.
As In Days of Peter and
Paul
Note how this fits into the
situation as it existed in the days of Peter and Paul. The latter wrote an
epistle to Timothy, who evidently was a young man. Paul counselled Timothy to
allow no man to despise his youth. Then he said: "Neglect not the gift
that is in thee, which was given thee BY PROPHECY, with the laying on of hands
of the presbytery." (I Tim. 4:14)
In the time of Martin Luther and
King Henry the Eighth, there was not a man on earth who believed that God was
then giving revelations. On the contrary, they taught that the heavens were
sealed, revelation was ended, there were no more prophets, all of the word of
God was in the Bible.
Since there was no revelation, and
since there were no prophets, how could men be called of God to the ministry?
Obviously they were not. Their calls were from men in political authority, or
from those who assumed the right to organize Churches of their own.
Without divine authority, man
cannot officiate for the Lord.
Without a divinely approved
ministry there can be no Church of God on earth.
Without revelation through a living
prophet there can be no approved ministry.
Societies may be organized, and
some of them may be called Churches. But if there is no divine direction
according to the plan which God has provided, we must admit that the societies
or Churches are man-made organizations without divine appointment.
Such groups may accomplish much good. They may be a great
comfort to their members. But when it comes to saving souls in the Kingdom of
God, that is a different matter.
Lost Books
From the doctrinal
divisions of the early reformers, many Churches today have renounced the sectarianism
and tried to rely exclusively on the Bible and their interpretation of the
teachings therein to guide the doctrines of their church. This has not done
much to bring about a unity of the faith, as doctrinal differences still
abound. Does anyone believe that with the changes the early Christian church
went through that it’s scripture was unaffected? Not only did the church that
Christ establish fall under persecution and eventual corruption, but so did the
scripture.
Any reading on the
history of the current compilation of the Bible will reveal that there were hundreds
of different manuscripts that were asserted as authoritative, and councils of
uninspired men convened to argue about which ones would be accepted. The
apocrypha contains some of those books that were never included. But the book
that Christians base their faith, while it may have been written under
inspiration, was certainly not compiled under inspiration. Since no original
texts exist, one must also believe that nor corruptions have crept in from
manual transcription and language translation. It must be claimed that the
Bible survived in perfection based on faith. That is a faith I do not have
after seeing the degradation of the Christian church itself.
Even more convincingly,
there are books that may never have made it to the councils’ editing room
floors, further impeding their ability to make wise judgments. The apostles
lived and directed the early Christian church for almost 100 years after the
death of Christ. Does anyone truly believe that only 26 epistles or accounts
are all they accomplished? Practically every Israelite prophet was persecuted
in their time, so why do we assume that all their writings were held in
reverence? The so-called lost books of the Bible are those documents that are
mentioned in the Bible in such a way that it is evident they were considered
authentic and valuable, but that are not found in the Bible today. Sometimes called missing scripture, they
consist of at least the following: book of the Wars of the Lord (Num. 21:14);
book of Jasher (Josh. 10:13; 2 Sam. 1:18); book of the acts of Solomon (1 Kgs.
11:41); book of Samuel the seer (1 Chr. 29:29); book of Gad the seer (1 Chr.
29:29); book of Nathan the prophet (1 Chr. 29:29; 2 Chr. 9:29); prophecy of
Ahijah (2 Chr. 9:29); visions of Iddo the seer (2 Chr. 9:29; 12:15; 13:22);
book of Shemaiah (2 Chr. 12:15); book of Jehu (2 Chr. 20:34); sayings of the
seers (2 Chr. 33:19); an epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, earlier than our
present 1 Corinthians (1 Cor. 5:9, 2 Cor 13:1); possibly an earlier epistle to
the Ephesians (Eph. 3:3); an epistle to the Church at Laodicea (Col. 4:16); an
account of Moses and the Egyptians that was either lost or changed into the
account in our current Bible (2 Tim 3:8); and some prophecies of Enoch, known
to Jude (Jude 1:14) but not referenced anywhere in the Old Testament. To these rather clear references to inspired
writings other than our current Bible may be added another list that has
allusions to writings that may or may not be contained within our present text,
but may perhaps be known by a different title; for example, the book of the
covenant (Ex. 24:7), which may or may not be included in the current book of
Exodus; the manner of the kingdom, written by Samuel (1 Sam. 10:25); the rest
of the acts of Uzziah written by Isaiah (2 Chr. 26:22).
Matthew's
reference to a prophecy that Jesus would be a Nazarene (2:23) is interesting
when it is considered that our present O.T. seems to have no statement as
such. (There is a possibility, however,
that Matthew alluded to Isaiah 11:1, which prophesies of the Messiah as a
Branch from the root of Jesse, the father of David. The Hebrew word for branch in this case is netzer, the source word of Nazarene and
Nazareth. Additional references to the
Branch as the Savior and Messiah are found in Jer. 23:5; 33:15; Zech. 3:8; 6:12;
these use a synonymous Hebrew word for branch, tzemakh.)
The foregoing items
attest to the fact that our present Bible does not contain all of the word of
the Lord that he gave to his people in former times, and remind us that the
Bible, in its present form, is rather incomplete. It gives insight into what
many scholars believe may have been the last verse chronologically to have been
written which has found its way into our current version of the bible “and
there are also many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they should be
written every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the
books that should be written. Amen” (John 21:25).
Strait Is the Gate of Christ
Christians state that salvation
comes only through Jesus Christ. In him and in him alone is there redemption.
But he works in his own way. God's way is not man's way. The Lord provided that
salvation should come through his gospel, functioning through his Church,
wherein are prophets and Apostles for the "perfecting of the Saints, for
the work of the ministry and for the edifying of the body of Christ.''
(Ephesians 4:11-13)
There are hundreds which claim to
be such. Simply open up your phone book and you can have a choice of many Gods
and Churches, all claiming to be the True Church of Jesus Christ.
But where is there such a Church?
How will we recognize it when we see it?'
Let us remember the lesson of Paul to the Corinthians
already quoted. The Church is likened to a human body. It must be all fitly
joined together." No one part can say to another, "I have no need of
thee."
Is there such a Church upon the
earth?
Until a little more than a hundred-seventy
years ago, there was not. It had been lost through the falling away I have just
described. Mormons believe that in 1830 the Almighty restored his Church to
earth again. He has raised up modern prophets and Apostles to direct the work.
Under the guidance of heaven they
organized his Church according to the pattern of ancient times. The powers of
the priesthood have been brought back to earth by the ministry of angels. All
the gifts and powers of former days have been restored. They did not come from
any existing organization. They did not come from any manmade society, nor from
any political unit. They came from heaven. Holy angels brought them to earth,
pure and undefiled.
This restored Church is known as
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, with headquarters in Salt Lake
City. Its organization meets all of the specifications of the scripture. It
possesses the divine priesthood of God. It is headed by prophets and Apostles
as was the Church in the days of Peter and Paul.
It invites all men to receive its
message, for it is a message of salvation for everyone, whether Jew or Gentile,
bond or free.
In a pamphlet entitled The
Strength of the Mormon Position, the late Elder Orson F. Whitney, of the
Council of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, related the following incident under the heading "A Catholic
Utterance":
Many years ago a learned man, a
member of the Roman Catholic Church, came to Utah and spoke from the stand of
the Salt Lake Tabernacle. I became well-acquainted with him, and we conversed
freely and frankly. A great scholar, with perhaps a dozen languages at his
tongue's end, he seemed to know all about theology, law, literature, science
and philosophy. One day he said to me: "You Mormons are all ignoramuses. You
don't even know the strength of your own position. It is so strong that there
is only one other tenable in the whole Christian world, and that is the
position of the Catholic Church. The issue is between Catholicism and
Mormonism. If we are right, you are wrong; if you are right, we are wrong; and
that's all there is to it. The Protestants haven't a leg to stand on. For, if
we are wrong, they are wrong with us, since they were a part of us and went out
from us; while if we are right, they are apostates whom we cut off long ago. If
we have the apostolic succession from St. Peter, as we claim, there is no need
of Joseph Smith and Mormonism; but if we have not that succession, then such a
man as Joseph Smith was necessary, and Mormonism's attitude is the only
consistent one. It is either the perpetuation of the gospel from ancient times,
or the restoration of the gospel in latter days."
So What Does All This Have to do with Mitt Romney?
So you see, its true, Mormons
really aren’t Christians. Not in “traditional” sense anyways… But if a
Christian is one who believes in Christ, then surely they qualify. Unless they
believe in other things Mormons have been accused of believing. Such as believing in a different Christ, or polytheism, or space aliens… Interesting, but not the purpose of this blog.
But now I am digressing onto a
theological pulpit. But so will all the commentators who can’t keep on the
topic at hand. In this election, don’t let simple statements such as “Mormons
aren’t Christians” allow you to be distracted, because they might indeed be
true, just not in the sense that is implied. They may be lies. They may be
taken out of context. There is too much information on the web these days, both
accurate and spun, to know what is true and what is not if you don’t have some
background in the subject. Just make sure you don’t believe the first thing you
read, especially not a mere emotional statement given to repudiate a religion
that a spiteful commentator obviously doesn’t believe in. After all, isn’t the
truth what we are all looking for?
Chances are you won’t find much of
it on blog postings about Romney…
Now, as I had promised to say how
all this applies to the election, I will first point out that I myself am a
member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. I believe everything
I have just been elaborating on in the past few pages. But I will not vote for
Romney simply because he is a member of the same church I belong to. You have
to do more than belong to my church to get my vote. Harry Reid is a case in
point. He claims to be a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints, yet he makes political decisions and leads others in ideas that I hold
to be in direct conflict with my beliefs.
Because we live in a republic (not
a democracy, more on this another time…) we elect men and women to run the
government in our stead. We DON’T elect people to represent us. We use the principle
that Plato claimed as the basis of his utopian society of having the wisest
among the citizens control the government. Rather than having those in power
simply make decisions based on what a majority of their constituents want, we are
to elect people who are wise and will do the best job at keeping the government
to its original intended purpose. That is a fine distinction that most people
do not understand. The purpose of a democracy is majority rule. The purpose of
a republic is to seek the wisest leaders, at the selection of the populace.
That today’s politicians repeatedly
claim to be representing their citizens rather than claiming to govern well is
quite revealing.
Thus, there are two conditions that
any candidate should meet before getting your vote. First, they must have the
same political beliefs. Secondly, you should trust them as honest men. If a man
holds your beliefs but is a scoundrel, putting him in office will not keep good
government. If a man is honest but the political equivalent of Lenin, electing
him will not keep good government.
There is no religious test for
political office. Unfortunately, with all the Mormon bashing spewed forth by
people who claim to be conservative whenever Romney is discussed, the two main
tests are being ignored. It doesn’t matter what one’s religion is. I’d even
vote for a Muslim if I thought him honest and strong on the war against Islamic
radicals.
Does Romney meet the qualifications
of honesty and political “right”ness? Well, I think he is the front runner, but
since I don’t have to decide until election day, I’ll sit back and see what he
stands for.
It’s a embarrassment that people
who claim to be mainstream Christians won’t.