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Mormonism - The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints (Part 2)
Ever
wondered what Mormons believe? From the Church-produced television
commercials we have a hint that they place great importance on the
family and family life. But what else do they believe? It is not often
easy to find out the full complexity of the beliefs and teachings of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
Here are the teachings of the LDS
church as compiled primarily from the Book of Mormon Student Manual
(1989), the Doctrine and Covenants Student Manual (1981), and the Book
of Mormon (1989), all published by the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Photo: Mormon Temple, Salt Lake City,
Utah
Here's Part 2 of Mormon beliefs
(page references to the Book of Mormon Student Manual):
- The Church teaches that the
"Kingdom of God" refers only to the Celestial Kingdom, the
highest heaven where only Mormons who have fully repented of sins,
and married in the Temple will go (and small children who die before
age eight.)
- The Church teaches that those who
ultimately inhabit the lowest Kingdom, the Telestial, must first
pass and suffer through hell which is inhabited by wicked spirits
"where they suffer the torments of the damned, welter in the
vengeance of eternal fire; there is found weeping and wailing...and
the wrath of God is poured out upon the wicked." (from Alma
40:11-14; D&C 76:103-106)
The
Church teaches that "Eternal Life" means becoming a god
through exaltation and living in the Celestial Kingdom with God,
which only perfect sinless married Mormons can do. Marriages must
take place in the Mormon Temple to gain the Celestial Kingdom.
- The Church believes that only
selected church members may be allowed entrance to the Temple, being
a sacred place. The local church grants admission to the Temple ( a
"temple recommend") to only those members who: are tithing
10% of income, who agree that the President of the Church is
Prophet, Seer, and Revelator, keep the Word of Wisdom (no smoking,
alcohol, caffeine, drugs), keep the law of chastity (no sexual
relations if unmarried, and total fidelity if married), and are
totally honest in dealings with others. It is estimated that only
between ten and thirty percent of members have a "temple
recommend." It should be noted that these are also requirements
for baptism but not all Mormons keep the rules strictly and
therefore are not able to enter the Temple.
Photo: The Celestial Room, the most
sacred room in the Temple, and only seen by a select group of
Mormons, represents life in the presence of the Heavenly Father. The
members of the Church who participate in the Endowment Ceremony will
end that ordinance by entering this room, where they often pray,
meditate, and enjoy the Spirit of the Lord.
- The Church believes that the Godhead
has three separate Gods: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
- The Church believes that Jesus is
one God in the Godhead. He is the god called Jehovah when mentioned
in the Old Testament (while Father God was called Elohim). Jesus was
the first of infinite spirit children to be born by the Father and
Mother gods.
- The Church believes that God was
once a man who lived on earth and is flesh and bones. He through the
process of "exaltation" became a god. God is married and
there is a mother in heaven. God conceived by a physical union with
Mary, a literal son Jesus. "Just as Jesus is literally the Son
of Mary, so he is the personal and literal offspring of God the
Eternal Father, who himself is an exalted personage, once being a
man and now having a tangible body of flesh and bones." (p.12,
Book of Mormon Student Manual)
- In 1844 Smith began teaching that
the Book of Abraham teaches that God is but one link in an infinite
ancestral chain of Gods stretching back through eternity. God is
only one of innumerable Gods. The Church believes that humans are
the literal offspring of God and one of his celestial wives, and
because of this we all have the potential to achieve exaltation to
divine status after we repent of sin and live perfect sinless lives
for the rest of our earthly lives and are married in the Mormon
Temple ceremony.
- Smith taught beginning in 1844 that
God had a literal father, and that he had a father, ad infinitum. He
also taught that married male Mormons if repenting and then living a
sinless life on earth may go to the Celestial Kingdom and have the
possibility of becoming gods and "shall they be above all...
because they have all power, and the angels are subject to them.
They will have everything that our Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ
have, all power, glory, dominion, and knowledge."
- Smith taught that the Garden of Eden
was on the American continent, and near the present Independence,
Missouri, and Spring Hill, Missouri and that the biblical Adam built
an altar there. The remains of the Adam's altar and a tower were
found by the Mormons in 1838 in that area in Missouri.
Having
found the Garden of Eden, Smith taught that Independence, Missouri
would be the location of the coming Kingdom of God, called Zion, and
prophesied in 1832 that the Church will build a Mormon Temple there
for the Lord to return on the second coming. This temple was
prophesied to be built soon by Smith saying "which temple shall
be reared in this generation. For verily this generation shall not
all pass away."
- The Church teaches that Atonement is
achieved by the combination of the sacrificial death of Christ AND
by earning forgiveness of our sins by fully repenting of our sin and
NEVER repeating those sins again for the rest of our lives.
- The Church teaches that we existed
in heaven with God (our literal Father) as spirits before we became
human.
Photo: Mormons wear at all times
under their clothing, except during bathing, "sacred"
garments, usually a two-piece tight fitting undergarment with
symbols over both breasts, the navel, and the right knee. The undergarment
is supposed to bring protection to the wearer.
- The Church commands Mormons not to
drink caffeine or alcohol, and not to smoke or take drugs. The
Church requires attendance at the church for three hours each Sunday
and tithing ten percent of income. Mormon youth are strongly
encouraged to take two years to travel as missionaries recruiting
new church members. Marriage is strongly encouraged as only married
can reach the highest heaven, the Celestial Kingdom, the only heaven
of the three heavens where one can live in the presence of God, and
where husbands become gods and live with their wives through
eternity, producing spirit babies who later come to the earth as
human babies.
In
October, 1837, Joseph Smith was tried by an Ohio jury for violating
the 1816 Ohio Banking Law. Smith was the treasurer of the Kirtland
Anti-Bank in Kirtland, Ohio. The Mormons begun their own bank, but
called it an "anti-bank" and ran afoul of the state's bank
regulations. Smith was convicted of violating banking laws and fined
$1,000 (the equivalent of about $90,000 in today's dollars).
Photo: A $3 bill issued by Joseph
Smith's Bank, the Kirtland Anti-Bank, in Ohio in the1800s. Click
here to see a full-size $3 bill


To Mormon Beliefs Page 2 - Sacred
Underwear!
To Mormon Beliefs Page 3 -Masturbation To Mormon Beliefs Page
4 -National Geographic Society - no
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