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Brigham Young taught the Latter-Day Saints that Adam was Michael the Archangel and God the Father. He also taught that Adam brought one of his many wives Eve to earth with him. Adam-God Doctrine
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September 10, 2001 NEWSWEEK - By Kenneth L. Woodward A mural at the Family History Library reflects the Mormons' new emphasis on Jesus A Mormon Moment America’s biggest homegrown religion is looking more Christian. But it’s
still a different world
Sept. 10 issue — Mention “Mormons” and you think immediately of
clean-cut missionaries, uniformed like ushers in white shirts and dark
suits, canvassing for converts two by two through the neighborhoods of the
world. Once a hated, hunted Utah sect, the Mormons are now a global church
worth an estimated $25 billion and claiming 11 million members, a slight
majority of them living outside the United States.
BUT NEXT FEBRUARY, the world will come knocking on the doors of
the Mormon Zion in Salt Lake City, host of the 2002 Winter Olympics. The
city expects 1.5 million visitors altogether, including 9,000
journalists—plus the steady eyes of television cameras for two-and-a-half
weeks. Some local commentators have already dubbed next year’s Games the
“Mo-lympics” because the church and its puritan ethos so dominate the city
Mormon pioneers created 150 years ago.
Not since the ancient Olympiads were held under the gaze of Zeus and
his randy band of gods and goddesses have the Games been staged in a locale
so thoroughly saturated by a single religion. Consider: Utah’s governor, two
senators and three congressmen are Mormons. So are all the state’s Supreme
Court justices and 80 percent of the state and federal judiciary, 90 percent
of the state legislators and at least 85 percent of the mayors, county
commissioners and local school officials. Business in Salt Lake is usually
done the Mormon way or not at all. Anticipating unaccustomed scrutiny by
international media, Gordon B. Hinckley, the church’s president and prophet,
has promised not to exploit the Olympics to proselytize visitors. But Mormon
leaders also regard the Games as a God-given opportunity to flash the many
facets of their faith around the globe. “When it comes to doing stories
about the history and culture of this place,” says Bruce Olson, director of
the church’s 34-member Public Affairs Department, “that’s us.”
NEWSWEEK Sept. 10 Issue Cover: The Mormon Way
Mormons will try to avoid the spotlight when the Winter Olympics come to
their spiritual home in Salt Lake City. But inevitably, the Games will focus
global attention on a faith that has become more Christian but still clings
to unique and sometimes mysterious beliefs and customs.
ALTERED IMAGE
But what face will Mormons wear to meet the faces that they’ll meet?
To many outsiders, they appear mysterious and clannish with their secret
temple rituals, vestiges of polygamy in rural Utah (despite official church
condemnation of the practice), zero tolerance for homosexuality and
readiness to press their temperance code on non-Mormon citizens. But for
more than two decades now, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
has worked hard to alter its image. With an infusion of converts from Latin
America, Asia and Africa since the 1950s, it is no longer a white-bread
church. Once staunchly separatist, Mormons today cooperate with other
churches in providing international relief. Above all, the church now
insists it be regarded as a Christian church, albeit one with doctrines
about God, salvation and the priesthood that differ radically from
traditional Christianity. For example: with Olympic fever heating up, the
church’s hierarchy recently advised the media that the term Mormon Church is
no longer acceptable. Henceforth, officials declared, short references to
the church should read: “The Church of Jesus Christ.” In this way the church
hopes to emphasize what Mormons share with historic Christianity, not what
makes them different.
Join Kenneth L. Woodward on Wednesday, Sept. 5, at noon, EDT, for a Live
Talk about how the Mormons will handle scrutiny in their home town
Internally, this emphasis on Jesus has been even more dramatic.
Traditionally, Mormon teaching focused on founder Joseph Smith as God’s
latter-day prophet whose revelations led to the restoration of the ancient
Hebraic priesthood and of the one true church. Today more than one image of
Smith is hard to find in the church’s magnificent new conference center in
Salt Lake City. Instead, the walls are lined with huge murals depicting
scenes from the life of Jesus. This change in iconography can also be seen
in local chapels, called “wards,” where Mormons gather every Sunday for
three hours. In 1971, images of Jesus appeared only five times in the church
’s official monthly publication, the Ensign; in 1999, the Ensign published
119 of them. For nearly a decade, visitors to the Joseph Smith Center in
Salt Lake were shown “Legacy,” a film about Smith and the grueling Mormon
trek to Utah. Today there is a new film, “The Testimonies of One Fold and
One Shepherd,” a Disneyesque dramatization of the Jesus story based on both
the New Testament and the Book of Mormon.
1805
Joseph E. Smith is born in Sharon, Vt.
1820
God and Christ appear to Smith in Palmyra, N.Y., and tell him not to join
any existing church but to prepare for an important task.
1823
The angel Moroni appears to Smith and tells him of golden plates that will
reveal the untold story of America during Biblical times.
1827
Smith receives tablets on Mount Cumorah, near Palmyra, N.Y.
1830
Smith’s translation of tablets into the Book of Mormon is published. The
church is founded and has 1,000 members by end of first year.
1836
The first temple is dedicated in Kirtland, Ohio.
1837
Conflicts break up Mormon communities in Missouri and Ohio
1838
Mormons settling in western Missouri are attacked by mobs. In the Massacre
at Haun’s Mill, 17 settlers die. Smith is arrested andMormons are driven
from the state.
1839
Mormons found Nauvoo, an Illinois community
1844
An angry mob kills Smith and his brother.
1846
Forced out of Illinois, the Mormons make a 1,300-mile historic trek west.
1847
Fulfilling Smith’s dream for the Latter-day Saints, some 17,000 faithful,
led by Brigham Young, settle in the valley of the Great Salt Lake.
1850
Mormons apply unsuccessfully for statehood. Debates ensue between the
Mormons and federal government over political issues and polygamy.
1857
Army is sent to Utah to oust Young as territorial governor; Mormons kill 120
immigrants in the “Mountain Meadows” massacre.
1890
Church outlaws polygamy.
1896
Utah becomes a state.
1947
Church membership grows to 1 million.
1978
Prophet Spencer Kimball opens priesthood to blacks.
1999
Mormon population increases to 11 million.
2000
The 100th Mormon temple is dedicated in Belmont, Mass.
More important, Mormon rhetoric is becoming more overtly
evangelical. In the sermons by the church’s General Authorities and in the
language of their prayers, the stress on grace and forgiveness of sins and
on Jesus as atoning savior of the world sounds almost Methodist or even
Southern Baptist. Are the Mormons going mainstream? “Not at all,” says
non-Mormon historian Jan Shipps, who has studied the Saints for 40 years.
“After a century of cultivating their separate identity as a religious
people, Mormons now want to stress their affinities with traditional
Christianity yet highlight their uniqueness.” Or as President Hinckley
declared to Mike Wallace in a 1996 interview on “60 Minutes,” “We are not
weird.”
‘AS MAN IS NOW’
Despite these changes, though, Mormons still inhabit a very different
religious world. In particular, Mormons teach that God was once “as man is
now,” that he “progressed” in knowledge and power to become a divine being
with a body. He also has a divine wife, whom Mormons call the Mother. Human
beings begin life as spirit children procreated in a “pre-existence” by the
heavenly Father and Mother, and then acquire mortal bodies at birth to human
parents. But Jesus is special in Mormon doctrine. As God’s firstborn spirit
son, he is the Jehovah of the Old Testament as well as the New Testament
savior. He is also the only human being physically begotten by God upon a
human mother, Mary. “Jesus has 46 chromosomes like everyone else,” explains
Stephen Robinson, a professor of religion at the Mormons’ Brigham Young
University. “Twenty-three of those are from his heavenly Father and 23 are
from Mary.”
Doctrines such as these—that God is a finite being with a body, is married
and eternally procreative—give the Mormon faith its distinctive theological
profile. But they also help to explain why many Christian fundamentalists
oppose Mormonism as a pernicious “cult.”
Doctrines such as these—that God is a finite being with a body, is
married and eternally procreative—give the Mormon faith its distinctive
theological profile. But they also help to explain why many Christian
fundamentalists oppose Mormonism as a pernicious “cult.” Even mainline
Protestants like Presbyterians and Methodists reject Mormon baptisms as
invalid. And in July the Vatican decreed that converts from Mormonism must
be rebaptized, thereby signaling that Rome does not consider the Latter-day
Saints to be Christians. The feeling is mutual. Mormons consider theirs the
only church of Jesus Christ: all others are apostate.
By far the most successful of America’s homegrown religions,
Mormonism today cannot be understood apart from its early-19th-century
roots. Like other Yankees, founder Joseph Smith (1805-1844) was obsessed by
the Bible and distressed by the competing claims of rival Christian
denominations. Along with many other unchurched Americans he longed to
recover the pure, “primitive” faith of Christ’s apostles. At the age of 14
Smith had a vision in which, he later said, God the Father and Jesus
appeared to him as bodily beings, telling him that none of the existing
churches were true. Eventually, Smith reported, he was led by an angel
called Moroni, whose figure now appears atop Mormon temples, to a place in
upper New York state, where he would find tablets of gold. With the aid of
“seer stones,” Smith said, he was able to translate the engraved texts. The
result is the Book of Mormon, which records the journey of an ancient
Israelite prophet, Lehi, and his family to the American continent some 2,000
years ago. There, after subsequent wars and rivalries among Lehi’s
descendants, Jesus appears as Messiah shortly after his Resurrection. The
Book of Mormon also prophesied the appearance of a new prophet named Joseph,
which was of course Smith himself.
ANSWERED QUESTIONS
Fantastical as it seemed to scoffers like Mark Twain, the Book of
Mormon—in diction straight out of the King James Version of the
Bible—answered many questions that troubled religious seekers. It proclaimed
that America was indeed the promised land, to which Christ would someday
return to establish his millennial kingdom on earth. (Smith later identified
places near Independence, Mo., as the locations of the primordial Garden of
Eden and of Christ’s eventual Second Coming.) It explained the origin of
American Indians—then still a puzzle to many Yankees—as lost tribes of
Israel. Millennialists accepted the book as a sure sign that the Second
Coming was approaching. Even freethinkers welcomed Smith’s belief that
humankind is essentially good, that there was no original sin and that every
individual must work out his own salvation. Above all, converts rallied to
the charismatic Smith as a latter-day “prophet, seer and revelator” through
whom God would disclose his will.
To Mormons, their early history is a sacred saga mixing supernatural
experiences with true pioneer grit. Rereading the Bible, Smith declared that
God’s new covenant—like his old one with Abraham—promised the Saints land
and progeny. But where and how would these promises be fulfilled? Turning
westward, Smith’s growing flock struggled to create a political, economic
and religious kingdom—the new Israel. In Kirtland, Ohio, they built the
first Mormon temple, blessed at its dedication, according to tradition, by
appearances of Jesus and the Hebrew patriarchs Moses, Elias and Elijah.
There Smith installed his own father as the church’s first “patriarch,”
whose personal blessing identified the Saints as members of Israel’s ancient
tribes. In this way, observes historian Shipps, Smith “Hebraicised” the
church and moved it farther from the sects of “gentile” Christianity.
In Nauvoo, Ill., a Mississippi River town built by Mormons, Smith
became mayor of a millennial city and leader of a Mormon militia. There
Smith found and translated (from a language he called “reformed Egyptian”)
the gospels of Abraham and Moses as additional Mormon Scriptures. More
important, in 1843 he revealed “the fullness of the gospel,” including God’s
eternal “plan of salvation.”
FAMILY IS FOREVER
Through the prophet, God disclosed that all human beings have divine
potential and—like him—can progress in this life and the next to become gods
themselves. Smith also revealed that heaven has three kingdoms, each more
desirable than the last. But to be “exalted” to the highest “celestial”
realm, men and women must not only grow in perfection, but also marry for
all eternity in the temple. Even their deceased ancestors could be
baptized—and married—by proxy in temple rituals. In short, family is
forever. And like their heavenly parents, divinized couples will have
dominion over new worlds and populate them with progeny of their own.
At 38, Smith was murdered by Illinois state militia. But before his
death, he had secretly begun adding progeny in this life: like the Hebrew
patriarchs, Smith took on extra wives—much to the consternation of his first
wife, Emma. Two years later, when successor Brigham Young led the bulk of
the Saints westward to build their Zion in Utah, they brought the “higher
principle” of plural wives with them. “They believed, as we do now, that
plural marriage is one of the experiences you should have to become like
God, who has more than one wife himself,” says Salt Lake City author Anne
Wilde, a plural wife and one of some 30,000 rogue Mormons who still practice
polygamy.
Although a majority of 19th-century Mormons were not polygamous,
most of their leaders were. Citing religious freedom, the church fought for
more than 40 years to defend their plural marriages. Under pressure from the
federal government, President-Prophet William Woodruff finally renounced
polygamy in 1890, but the change produced a severe crisis. God’s
self-described “peculiar people” had to abandon the social practice that
most set them apart from other groups.
CORPORATE STRUCTURE
Eventually, the crisis proved liberating. Where their grandparents
labored to create a closed, almost socialistic kingdom on earth,
20th-century Mormons redirected that same communal spirit and energy into
capitalistic enterprise. As they do today, Mormons helped other Mormons—to
find jobs, establish businesses and eventually build up huge enterprises
like the Marriott Hotel chain and Huntsman Chemical Corp. At the same time,
the practice of tithing personal incomes at 10 percent produced cash for
real estate and other church investments. Today Mormons have the only church
structured like a corporation, with all donations flowing from local wards
to the headquarters in Salt Lake and back again according to need. And when
young Americans began experimenting with drugs and dropping out, Mormons
began advertising their abstemious purity code (no nonmarital sex, no drugs
or alcohol or caffeine) and the importance of strong families. By 1960, the
church was adding members faster by conversion than by reproduction. In the
public’s view, notes historian Shipps, “the transformation from satyrs to
saints was complete.”
Today almost every member of the Salt Lake hierarchy is a
successful, politically conservative businessman—and white. The males-only
priesthood was opened to blacks in 1978, after a special revelation, but the
appeal of Mormonism to people of color is mainly among the less well-off.
The poor are attracted by the emphasis on family, clean living and a lay
priesthood open to every “worthy” male. Unlike Roman Catholic clergy, the
Mormon priesthood is a true patriarchy, giving males divine authority and
power now and in the hereafter. A priest’s highest function lies within the
family. As husband and father, he confers blessings on his children and his
spouse in this life, and presides over all of his descendants in the
celestial kingdom to come.
Newsweek On Air: A Mormon Olympics
Mormonism is also the busiest of religions. There are organizations
for every member of the family, and every Mormon is “called” to perform
duties requiring visits to the temple or to other Mormons’ homes.
Ironically, since the men who run the local congregations (wards) and
districts (stakes) hold full-time secular jobs, they rarely see their
families because church work is so time-consuming. And the afterlife in
heaven brings no rest. There, according to Smith’s revelations, priests and
their families continue their missionary and temple work, laboring to
persuade deceased non-Mormons to convert, while pursuing the learning
process that leads to the “fullness” of exaltation to heaven’s highest
realm. Eternal progression to godliness means there is always more work to
do. In this sense, eternity is not the end of time but its infinite
extension.
Compared with this eternal agenda, the coming of the Olympics to
Salt Lake City is a brief diversion. Still, the media spotlight will be
searching and intense. Good hosts the Mormons will be—to the point of
tolerating more alcoholic consumption than allowed in normal times
(following story). The church wants to see Salt Lake profit from the Games;
it doesn’t want the blame if their hometown’s huge investment fails. But
instead of missionaries asking questions on the streets, there’ll be
reporters wondering what lies behind the church’s many veils. It could be
Mormonism’s moment of truth.
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280
News Flash:
The Mormon church is unhappy about an article in Newsweek that says the church is trying to appear more Christian. LDS Mainstreaming